LGBT Hate Hoax - Was Firebombing Week Before Nov Election False Flag?
Multiple Arrests Expected in Tulsa Donut Shop Investigation
In this article by The V1SUT Vantage:
Hate Hoaxing Tulsa-Style: When There are NO ‘Stochastic Terrorists’
Donut Shop and Drag Queens: Setting Stage to Scream “HATE”
How About That GoFundMe? LGBT Activist Group OKEQ as Beneficiary
Second Act: Put Up a CAMERA Just in Time for an Election
LGBT Activist Groups Publicly Pounce: Amplify Hate Narrative in Synchronized Stereo - Stitt and Stochastic Terrorism to Blame
Trouble in Donut Hole Paradise: Co-Owner Conflicts Over CAMERAS Lead to Protective Order
Tulsa Fire Takes Lead Investigative Role: Anticipate Multiple Arrests
Unbalanced Politicking: Mayor Bynum Weighs in on ‘Hate’ for Some but Not for Others
OKEQ & Funny Money: Not First Questionable Accounting of Donated Funds
Hate Hoaxing Tulsa-Style: When There are NO ‘Stochastic Terrorists’
The growing narrative painting anyone outside of heterosexuality as a persecuted population has become a predictable power grab. Deemed ‘stochastic terrorism’, the statistics surrounding hate crimes against LGBT people are concerning until all of the hate hoaxes are purged from the data, causing the entire campaign to disperse like a mist in the desert.
Within the ever-growing vernacular of wokism, stochastic terrorism is to alternative sexualities as systemic racism is to people of color. Victimization is power, and power is worth lying to obtain.
The script is dramatic, but what were LGBT activists to do if there were no stochastic terrorists in a place like Tulsa as a major election approached? Perhaps they took a cue from Jussie Smollett and orchestrated their own hate crime.
Donut Shop and Drag Queens: Setting Stage to Scream “HATE”
This Tulsa drama began on October 15, 2022, at The Donut Hole, a small business within the Brookside area of Southcentral Tulsa opened by a romantically linked couple in 2021. The shop’s co-owner, Sarah Swain, arranged for local artist Daniel Gulick to host an event at the shop entitled The Queens Dirty Dozen which featured donut sculptures and donuts served by drag queens clad in 1950’s style attire.
While the clothing was demure, the event’s menu says it all for another family friendly drag event:
Within hours of the event ending, shop owner Swain took to Instagram with news of an overnight break-in at the shop. With no investigation, hate was already to blame, despite an empty cash drawer and laptop being taken.
thedonuthole (posted October 16, 2022)
“Last night we had the privilege of being able to be a part of the vision of The Queens Dirty Dozen; An art installation donut shop ran by drag queens. The event was an enormous success with over 500 guests attending, and an overwhelming reaction of laughing, jokes, fun and good times were had by all.
Unfortunately, there was also a reaction of hate and we were the victim of somebodies malicious acts. But in ones attempt to rain on our parade, the community answered by showing overwhelming support.
From the GoFundMe that was started by Queens Dirty Dozen, goals were surpassed in less than one hour. Repairs will be made and all extra proceeds will be given to the Tulsa Equality Center to help spread acceptance, tolerance and love.
These malicious acts have resulted in thousands of dollars going towards the cause this entire event was meant to support. Love wins.”
The local media gobbled up the hate narrative with no investigation required (News8/ABC affiliate, Fox23, Newson6/CBS affiliate, 2News/NBC affiliate).
How About That GoFundMe? LGBT Activist Group OKEQ as Beneficiary
Following the break-in, the shop’s owners gave conflicting reports as to who set up a GoFundMe account to support repairs to their business. From a “friend” to “Queens Dirty Dozen” to “Daniel Gulick” (the artist), public comment about the organizer of the fundraising effort varied.
It appears from GoFundMe’s site information that Sarah Swain organized the fundraising effort (bottom left below), which quickly raised far more than the goal of $2,500 needed to replace a glass door and window ($29,045 total). As with many event-driven, online fundraisers, much of the money was donated within a few hours of the break-in.
Both shop owners publicly stated any extra funds beyond the cost of repairs would be going to Oklahomans for Equality (OKEQ) and its Denis R. Neill Equality Center, an LGBT activist and highly political, non-profit based in Tulsa. The Donut Hole already had a working relationship with OKEQ and was listed within their Equity Business Alliance “directory of gay-welcoming businesses in the Tulsa community” prior to the break-in.
Second Act: Put Up a CAMERA Just in Time for an Election
In October 2022, Oklahoma politics were at the pinnacle of insanity. Incumbent Governor Kevin Stitt (R) is no favorite of the progressive, activist crowd. Stitt’s protection of biological females in bathrooms and locker rooms, rejection of a third gender option on birth certificates and stance against the injection or mutilation of children in the name of transgenderism made him a prime target of far-leftist attacks. At that time, tens of millions of dollars in dark money, much from leftist donors, the cannabis industry and Oklahoma’s Native tribes, was flooding the Oklahoma airwaves in an effort to knock Stitt out of the governor’s office on election day, November 8th.
Given the political landscape and fundraising windfall after the initial break-in, it’s suspect that two weeks later and just a few days after an outdoor security camera was installed at The Donut Hole, the business experienced an unsuccessful firebombing perpetrated by a MAGA hat wearing, Louisville slugger carrying caricature of a stochastic terrorist.
As captured by that brand new camera (timestamp 10/31/2022; 2:35 AM), first the assailant taped what the media described as an anti-LGBT note containing Bible verses on the door of the business next door, the Purple Glaze pottery studio.
Unlike the first incident, this criminal lacked the strength to break the donut shop’s window with his/her initial bat-swings, settling for smashing the shop door’s glass and tossing in a highly ineffective Molotov mocktail with so little force that the bottle failed to break or ignite anything within the shop.
Again, in the midst of the chaos, on the day of the second incident, Donut Hole owner Sarah Swain took time to provide a lengthy report on social media, and the GoFundMe donations again began to pour in:
This time, the vitriol and the video went national and dominated the statewide media cycle, with many dutifully repeating the same claims of stochastic terrorism:
The incident was loudly positioned as proof that stochastic terrorism was on the rise across America:
In contrast to the media frenzy, the general public wasn’t buying the suspiciously contrived narrative, the timing or the MAGA hat, as evidenced by many of their comments:
LGBT Activist Groups Publicly Pounce: Amplify Hate Narrative in Synchronized Stereo - Stitt and Stochastic Terrorism to Blame
On November 4th, just days before the statewide election, a bevy of the major LGBT lobbying groups and progressive, political non-profits (GLAAD, Freedom Oklahoma, Black Wall Street Times, Equality Business Alliance/OKEQ, Black Queer Tulsa, Oklahoma Equity Law Center/OKEQ) all promoted unified and official statements labeling The Donut Hole incident as stochastic terrorism caused by Governor Stitt’s positions.
Among those pontificators was Joshua Payton, an attorney who specializes in transgender name changes in contradiction to Oklahoma law and publicly expresses his belief that activist judges should override rather than accurately interpret law.
Payton operates his Oklahoma Equality Law Center in partnership with OKEQ, the non-profit to receive the excess GoFundMe donations from the incident. Payton’s statement about the firebombing:
Trouble in Donut Hole Paradise: Co-Owner Conflicts Over CAMERAS Lead to Protective Order
With ample publicity from the media and a host of LGBT activist groups, The Donut Hole’s owners quickly became Tulsa’s newest, progressive victim-heroes, but the high didn’t last long.
Shortly after the October 31st firebombing, a major conflict erupted within the romantic and business relationship of The Donut Hole’s owners, much of which appears to involve the camera recently installed at the shop.
In a protective order filed by Swain (2/28/2023) against her business partner and now former boyfriend Brian Hunter, Swain claims that on November 2nd, just two days after the firebombing event, Hunter allegedly punched her at his home and chased her down in his car. She claims to have video of the incident.
Swain did not report the incident to police at the time. This publication can find no prior evidence or pattern of violent behavior associated with Hunter or the couple.
Oddly, on the day following the alleged punching incident (11/3/2022), the couple posted a cozy photo on Instagram as they donated the excess funds from the GoFundMe fundraiser to OKEQ at its Dennis R. Neill Equality Center (Tulsa). When analyzed up close, the receipt for the donation totals just $3,500.
Donations to the GoFundMe fund totaled $29,045, and repairs following the break-in were publicly estimated by the owner at $2,500. Even with the additional expense of replacing the door glass again following the second incident, over $20,000 remains publicly unaccounted for. No other posts or announcements have since been made by the business about donating the remainder of the funds to OKEQ as announced.
Was the couple perhaps fighting about the GoFundMe money on November 2nd? Is it possible that Hunter, a registered Republican, learned the firebombing was not an act of hatred and violence as portrayed to the Tulsa community but a planned and political hate hoax?
Based on available information, it appears Brian Hunter wanted the camera that captured the alleged hate crime taken down while Sarah Swain was busy putting up more equipment:
11/28/2022 - According to the PPO petition, Swain alleges she and Hunter had a conflict at her home. Shortly after, the GoFundMe for the shop was disabled.
12/20/2022 - In the PPO petition, Swain alleges Hunter assaulted her in the presence of a security contractor she hired to install more equipment at the shop. Swain states the installer called police at the time, yet no report of any call is listed within TPD records for the address. Swain further reports Hunter, on the following day, coordinated the removal of the new equipment through the same contractor.
2/10/2023 - Hunter reports to TPD that Swain assaulted him at the shop (TPD incident #2023000078720).
2/28/2023 - Swain claims Hunter took down the cameras (now multiple) at the shop. On the same day, she makes a report to police for larceny valuing $200 or more (TPD incident 2023009683) and files the PPO against Hunter (PO-2023-0662).
Swain has a history of filing protective orders. In 2019, Swain requested a protective order against one Justin Michael Youngblood. That order was not granted as the court determined the claim failed to meet the statute for stalking.
This publication made multiple attempts to contact Brian Hunter through his attorney, eventually sending a list of questions as requested about the October 15th and 31st incidents at his business and the PPO order against him. To date, Hunter has not chosen to respond with his side of this story.
Tulsa Fire Takes the Lead Investigative Role
The initial investigation of the firebombing appeared void of Tulsa police. According to TPD records, it was over 33 hours before the incident was reported by Brian Hunter. The scene was clean, the news of a hate crime was widely spread, and the donations were again coming in before the call to law enforcement was made. Beyond the verification and timing of that call, TPD would not provide any additional information about the ‘firebombing’ without a subpoena.
The Tulsa Fire Department (TFD) provided the initial response to the scene. In contrast to the hype coverage by the media, the actual TFD incident report is underwhelming in its accuracy:
On Monday, October 31st, the call came from a passing motorist at 7:55 am. It is publicly unknown who the reporter was or why a passing motorist called for the fire department when all that could be seen from the street was a broken glass door.
Fourteen (14) fire units were dispatched, the first arriving at The Donut Hole just five minutes after the initial call (8:00 am). Finding only minimal damage, nine (9) of those fire units were promptly called off prior to arrival. The entire time on scene for TFD that day was just 34 minutes and the report provides the following description of the “firebombing”.
The report states that one (1) TFD employee used “suppression” to put out what appears to be the equivalent of a lit candle on the shop’s tiled floor.
Unbalanced Politicking: Mayor Bynum Weighs in on ‘Hate’ for Some but Not for Others
Tulsa mayor G.T. Bynum (R) posted information about the incident after visiting the shop that week, leading citizens to believe police were leading the investigation of an “anti-LGBT” hate crime, though it appears TFD was always in the lead on this case as an arson investigation (Fire incident case 2022-056796).
Bynum was quick to visit the donut shop where no one was hurt to declare, “Bigotry and violence will not carry the day in Tulsa. In our city, #lovewins.” Conversely, last month, when an actual hate crime spree took the lives of two men based upon the color of their skin, Bynum and the local media avoided any mention of bigotry.
Tulsa Fire Investigators Anticipate More Than One Arrest in The Donut Hole Case
The V1SUT Vantage spoke with Tulsa Fire Department (TFD) investigator Captain John Sawyer about the ongoing investigation. Sawyer was not able to fully disclose all evidence collected thus far in the case but was able to provide the following facts:
The LGBT hate letter - TFD has the note the perpetrator taped to the neighboring door of the Purple Glaze pottery studio, which has not been made public during the investigation. Sawyer does not believe TPD has a copy of the letter and described it as a Word document (not hand-written), including at least two Biblical scriptures and multiple pictures that appear to have been copied from internet sources.
The case is federal - TFD investigators are cross-deputized, and due to the nature of this investigation, this is also considered an ATF (federal agency) case.
Arrests expected - When asked if TFD expects to make multiple arrests in this case, Sawyer replied, “For sure.”
Where were the shop’s owners? - At the time of the crime, both of The Donut Hole’s owners report they were “at the lake”. No other details concerning their location are publicly available at this time.
Damage was minimal - Sawyer described the damage to the shop as “very minimal”, consisting of a broken glass on the door and no fire damage.
No insurance involved - No insurance claim was filed by the shop owners related to the incident.
An incurious local media - Sawyer confirmed that no other journalist or media outlet has requested follow-up information on this initially sensationalized story.
The Molotov cocktail - TFD collected the unbroken, intact bottle containing a “red liquid”. TFD could not further discuss the contents of the bottle.
No Pattern of Hate Crimes in Area so What Was This?
This publication spoke with Jim Stunkard, the owner of neighboring business The Purple Glaze, to whose door the firebomber taped the purported hate letter. Stunkard states the area is safe and no similar incidents beyond some random window breaks have happened during his time there. The letter was removed prior to his staff arriving that day, and no one from his business has been contacted related to the investigation. His shop does not have any outdoor cameras.
Was this truly a hate crime stoked by stochastic terrorism? Could it have been a crime of opportunity after a random break-in brought unexpected donations, or was it a hate hoax crafted and carried out by Stitt-hating activists wishing to score victim points in time for a major election? Immediately following the event, what caused a conflict so large that it severed both the personal and professional relationship between the shop’s owners? Who holds the remainder of the GoFundMe donations? With many security cameras throughout the crowded Brookside area of Tulsa, shouldn’t this have been a quickly solved case for Tulsa police?
Given the perpetrator’s body type and proportions bear no resemblance to either of The Donut Hole’s owners, many questions remain as to how many persons of interest may be involved.
OKEQ & Funny Money: Not the First Questionable Accounting of Donated Funds
As Tulsa awaits multiple arrests in the now federal investigation of the donut shop firebombing, it seems the loudest, non-profit voices warning of crushing waves of anti-LGBT stochastic terrorism haven’t always been fully transparent with their donors. Stay tuned for more on OKEQ’s campaign to convince all, censor many and disclose little about what may not be as it appears.