Thursday, May 14, 2026

CIA

**The CIA does not have the legal right or authority to raid the office of the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) Tulsi Gabbard—or any U.S. government office—and seize or "steal" documents in the manner described.** Reports of such a "raid" are unverified allegations that Gabbard's own office has explicitly denied. Even if some form of document transfer or dispute occurred, it would not align with the CIA's statutory powers, which strictly limit the agency to foreign intelligence activities and explicitly prohibit domestic law-enforcement-style actions like raids.

### What the Reports Actually Say (and Don't Say)
Recent claims (as of May 13–14, 2026) stem from testimony by CIA whistleblower James E. Erdman III during a Senate Homeland Security Committee hearing. He alleged that the CIA took back approximately 40 boxes of files related to the JFK assassination and the MKUltra program from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI, which Gabbard heads). These files were reportedly being prepared for declassification under a presidential executive order.

- Media outlets (e.g., Fox News) and social media amplified this as a "CIA raid" on Gabbard's office, with some tying it to broader declassification battles.
- **ODNI's official response**: DNI Press Secretary Olivia Coleman stated directly on X: "This is false — the CIA did not raid the DNI’s office."
- Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL) has demanded the files' return and threatened a subpoena, citing presidential declassification directives, but this remains a dispute over records access rather than a confirmed raid.

This fits a pattern of tension: Gabbard's ODNI has pushed declassifications (including over CIA objections in prior cases), while the CIA has historically guarded its archives. Earlier reports noted Gabbard's team retrieving files *from* a CIA facility in 2025 for declassification processing. No independent verification confirms a forcible raid occurred, and the DNI's denial undercuts the premise of your question.

### CIA's Legal Authority: Where It Comes From and Why It Doesn't Allow This
The CIA's powers are narrowly defined by statute and executive orders. It has **no domestic law-enforcement role** and cannot conduct raids, searches, or seizures on U.S. soil against U.S. persons or offices like the DNI.

- **Core statute (National Security Act of 1947, as amended)**: The CIA's functions are limited to foreign intelligence collection, analysis, and covert actions *abroad* (at the President's direction). Explicitly: It "shall have no police, subpoena, law-enforcement powers, or internal-security functions." (50 U.S.C. § 3036).
- **Executive Order 12333** (Reagan, 1981; still governing): Regulates U.S. intelligence activities. It allows limited domestic collection only in specific foreign-intelligence contexts, with strict rules against targeting U.S. persons without oversight. It does *not* authorize raids or seizures.
- **Oversight structure**: The DNI (Gabbard) is the head of the entire Intelligence Community, including the CIA. The CIA Director reports to the DNI, who has statutory authority over budgets, personnel, and access to *all* intelligence information across agencies (Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004). The President can direct declassification through the DNI. A subordinate agency like the CIA cannot unilaterally "raid" its overseer.

Domestic raids/searches require:
- A court warrant (for law enforcement).
- Involvement of agencies with those powers (primarily the FBI/DOJ).

The CIA has none of this. Historical abuses (e.g., 1970s domestic spying exposed by the Church Committee) led to tighter restrictions precisely to prevent the CIA from acting like a secret police force inside the U.S.

### Bottom Line
The CIA has no legal "right" to raid Tulsi Gabbard's (or any) office and take things. Its charter forbids it, the DNI oversees it, and declassification fights are resolved through executive authority and oversight committees—not unilateral seizures. The current story appears to be an unconfirmed whistleblower claim amid ongoing transparency battles, explicitly denied by the office in question. If new verified evidence emerges showing otherwise, it would represent a serious breach of law and chain of command, subject to congressional oversight and potential investigation. Claims like this often circulate in polarized environments, but the law is clear: the CIA's role is foreign intelligence, not domestic raids.

Henry McClure
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**The Indictment of Tashella Sheri Amore Dickerson: Accountability, Allegations, and the Ongoing Legal Battle Over BLM Oklahoma City Funds**

The viral social media post by comedian and commentator Terrence K Williams, featuring a dramatic “FOX NEWS ALERT” graphic and bold “BOMBSHELL” text, is substantively accurate. On December 3, 2025, a federal grand jury in the Western District of Oklahoma returned a 25-count indictment against Tashella Sheri Amore Dickerson (also known as T. Sheri Amore Dickerson, Rev. T. Sheri Amore Dickerson, or Sheri Dickerson), charging her with 20 counts of wire fraud and five counts of money laundering. The indictment was unsealed on December 11, 2025. Prosecutors allege that Dickerson, as Executive Director of Black Lives Matter Oklahoma City (BLMOKC) since at least 2016, embezzled at least $3.15 million in donor and grant funds—primarily returned bail checks—into her personal bank accounts and those of an LLC she controlled between June 2020 and October 2025.

This was not the national Black Lives Matter organization (such as the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation). BLMOKC is a local chapter that raised more than $5.6 million after the 2020 murder of George Floyd, much of it through national bail funds (including the Community Justice Exchange, Massachusetts Bail Fund, and Minnesota Freedom Fund). These funds were routed through the Arizona-based Alliance for Global Justice (AFGJ), which acted as BLMOKC’s fiscal sponsor because the local chapter was not itself a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit. The grants were explicitly intended to post pretrial bail for protesters arrested during racial justice demonstrations and, once cases resolved, to create a revolving bail fund or support other Section 501(c)(3)-permitted social justice activities. AFGJ’s rules prohibited personal use, real estate purchases without approval, and required full accounting.

According to the indictment, when bail money was returned to BLMOKC after cases were adjudicated, Dickerson allegedly diverted the checks directly into her personal accounts rather than the organization’s. She then allegedly spent the money on recreational travel (including trips to Jamaica and the Dominican Republic), tens of thousands of dollars in retail shopping, at least $50,000 in food and grocery deliveries for herself and her children, a personal vehicle, and six real properties in Oklahoma City deeded either to her personally or to Equity International, LLC—an entity she exclusively controlled. The indictment further alleges she submitted two false annual reports to AFGJ claiming that all funds had been used solely for tax-exempt purposes.

These details match the tweet’s claims almost verbatim. The spending list—six properties, a car, shopping, and $50,000 in food deliveries—is drawn directly from the federal charging document.

Dickerson, a longtime Oklahoma City activist, BLM organizer, Women’s March National Board member, and associate minister at the Church of the Open Arms (a United Church of Christ congregation that has supported BLM fundraisers), has described herself publicly as an “unpaid protester.” She also holds Universal Life Church minister credentials. In a Facebook Live video posted shortly after the indictment became public, she stated she was not in custody, was “fine,” and declined to make an official comment on the case. She framed the charges as evidence that “you are doing the work,” suggesting they were politically motivated attacks on activists. Some reports note she has maintained her innocence and that the case remains active.

As of May 2026, the federal case is ongoing. Dickerson was arraigned in December 2025 and released on conditions. A court date was set for January 2026, and while some sources reference a potential trial window later in 2026, no final trial date has been widely reported in public coverage. The investigation, handled by the FBI Oklahoma City Field Office and IRS-Criminal Investigation, continues. She faces up to 20 years per wire fraud count and 10 years per money laundering count, plus substantial fines. Like all defendants, she is presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

This case does not exist in isolation. It fits into a broader pattern of scrutiny over financial accountability within various Black Lives Matter chapters and related activist organizations. The national BLM network faced earlier controversies over transparency, executive compensation, and property purchases by leaders (most notably Patrisse Cullors in 2021), though those rarely resulted in criminal charges. Local chapters have sometimes operated with loose oversight, fiscal sponsors, and rapid influxes of donations during periods of heightened activism. In Oklahoma City, some local activists had reportedly raised financial concerns about BLMOKC prior to the indictment. These disputes reflect longstanding tensions in grassroots movements: the tension between urgent activism and the need for rigorous financial controls, especially when handling millions in public donations. Critics on the right often point to such cases as evidence of hypocrisy or systemic mismanagement; supporters sometimes view them as politically weaponized attacks or isolated incidents amid otherwise vital organizing work.

The truth of the matter, as it stands today, is straightforward: federal prosecutors have presented a detailed indictment supported by an investigation from the FBI and IRS, alleging a multi-year scheme in which funds intended for bail support and social justice were allegedly redirected for personal enrichment. The viral post captured that reality accurately, even if the accompanying graphic was stylized for maximum impact. What remains unresolved are the ultimate facts of the case—Dickerson’s defense, any mitigating context, and the outcome of a trial. In the meantime, the episode underscores a perennial challenge for nonprofit and activist organizations: ensuring that the passion driving the mission does not outpace the safeguards needed to protect donor trust and organizational integrity.

The ongoing disputes with Dickerson herself center on this active criminal prosecution. Beyond the courtroom, they echo larger public debates about leadership accountability in movements that have mobilized billions in donations since 2020. Whether the allegations prove true or not, the case serves as a reminder that even the most righteous causes require rigorous stewardship of resources—something the justice system is now actively testing in Oklahoma City.

Henry McClure
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Otis

**Review: "Your Healing Changes Your Circle" (YouTube Short by Powerful Manifestation)**

This concise, impactful 30-second clip delivers a profound truth about personal growth and relationships. In it, two speakers discuss how we initially attract and bond with people who share similar "psychological wounds." As we heal, evolve, and raise our vibration, those connections often naturally fade if the other person stays stuck—leading to distance, "growing apart," or even a period of loneliness before new, healthier people enter our lives.

### What Works Well
- **Relatability**: The message resonates deeply. The comments section explodes with thousands of likes and personal stories—people sharing experiences with friends, family, romantic partners, and even trauma bonds that dissolved after their own healing journey. It validates a common but often isolating experience.
- **Simplicity and Clarity**: No fluff, no over-the-top production. Just straightforward dialogue that feels like an insightful conversation you'd overhear (or wish you had) with a wise friend.
- **Empowering Angle**: It frames change positively. Healing isn't just internal—it ripples outward, reshaping your entire social circle for the better. Hashtags like #manifestingriches, #abundance, #motivation, and #lawofattraction tie it into broader self-improvement themes without feeling forced.

### Impact
With over 3.3 million views and 81k+ likes, it's clearly striking a nerve. Many viewers describe it as "100% true," eye-opening, or even life-affirming. It explains why old friends drift away, why you might feel repelled by former connections, or why new aligned people appear once you're in a healthier place.

### Minor Critique
It's short (as expected for a YouTube Short), so it doesn't dive deep into *how* to navigate the loneliness phase or rebuild consciously. Some might want more nuance around maintaining relationships through growth or the role of boundaries vs. total detachment. Still, for a quick hit of wisdom, it's perfect.

**Overall Rating: 9/10**  
Highly recommended if you're on a healing or self-growth path. Watch it when you're questioning shifts in your friendships or relationships—it'll give you peace and validation. This is the kind of content that sticks with you and sparks real reflection.

Henry McClure
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Otis

**Kansas Liquor Drink Tax Statutes (K.S.A. 79-41a01 et seq.) – Full Analysis**

The Kansas **liquor drink tax** is a 10% excise tax on the sale of alcoholic drinks (including cereal malt beverage) at licensed clubs, caterers, drinking establishments, public venues, and temporary permit holders. It is **not** the same as the separate gallonage tax on wholesale liquor or the general retailers’ sales tax (drinks subject to this tax are exempt from sales tax). The tax was enacted in 1979 following the constitutional change allowing liquor-by-the-drink sales.

### 1. Definitions & Imposition (K.S.A. 79-41a01–79-41a02)
- **Alcoholic liquor** includes everything defined in K.S.A. 41-102 plus cereal malt beverage (K.S.A. 41-2701).
- **Tax rate**: 10% on **gross receipts** derived from the sale of alcoholic liquor (or acquisition cost of free samples). The consumer pays it; the licensee collects and remits it.
- Payment is monthly (due by the 25th of the following month), with detailed reporting and record-keeping requirements. The Kansas Department of Revenue administers and enforces it like the retailers’ sales tax.

### 2. State-Level Distribution of Revenue (K.S.A. 79-41a03(d))
When the state treasurer receives the revenue:
- **25%** → State General Fund (unrestricted).
- **5%** → Community Alcoholism and Intoxication Programs Fund (state-level alcohol/drug programs).
- **70%** → Local Alcoholic Liquor Fund (created in 79-41a04(a)).

Special rules apply for sales at the Kansas State Fairgrounds or within certain STAR bond districts (up to 100% can go to bond debt service).

### 3. Local Allocation (K.S.A. 79-41a04(b)–(c))
The **local alcoholic liquor fund** money is distributed quarterly to cities and counties based on **where the tax was collected**:
- **Cities > 6,000 population**: 70% of tax collected inside city limits.
- **Cities ≤ 6,000 population**: 46⅔% of tax collected inside city limits.
- **Counties**:
  - 70% of tax collected in unincorporated areas.
  - 23⅓% of tax collected inside cities ≤ 6,000 population.
- Railway-car drinking establishments have a special equal-share rule among qualifying counties.

Distributions go directly to city or county treasurers (March 15, June 15, Sept. 15, Dec. 15).

### 4. Mandatory Use Restrictions – The “Intended Use” Provisions (K.S.A. 79-41a04(d)–(e))
This is the **core of any “Project Otis”–style argument** about proper accounting and spending. The statute is **highly prescriptive**:

**For cities > 6,000 population** (e.g., Topeka):
- Deposit full amount received.
- Credit **exactly ⅓** to city **general fund** (unrestricted use).
- Credit **⅓** to a **special parks and recreation fund** → may be spent **only** for “purchase, establishment, maintenance or expansion of park and recreational services, programs and facilities.”
- Credit **⅓** to a **special alcohol and drug programs fund** → may be spent **only** for services/programs whose **principal purpose** is:
  - Alcoholism and drug abuse prevention and education,
  - Alcohol and drug detoxification,
  - Intervention in alcohol and drug abuse, or
  - Treatment of alcoholics/drug abusers (or those in danger of becoming so).

**For counties** (including Shawnee County) and small cities:
- Slightly different math (extra 23⅓% of small-city collections must go straight to the county’s alcohol/drug fund).
- Of the **remainder**: **⅓ general fund**, **⅓ special parks & recreation fund** (same restricted use as above), **⅓ special alcohol & drug programs fund** (same strict “principal purpose” test).
- In counties with an **alcohol and drug advisory committee**, the board of commissioners **must request and generally follow** the committee’s recommendations on alcohol/drug fund expenditures (unless overridden by unanimous vote).

Moneys in the special funds are under the direction of the governing body, but the statute explicitly limits their use. There are narrow exceptions (e.g., Butler County has a community support/domestic violence option).

### 5. Key Takeaways & Relation to Shawnee County / Project Otis
- The statute **does** codify an “intended use” framework: roughly one-third of local revenue is unrestricted (general fund), but the other two-thirds are **ring-fenced** for parks/recreation and especially alcohol/drug prevention/treatment.
- Local governments **must** maintain the special funds and can be audited for compliance. The “principal purpose” language for the alcohol/drug fund is intentionally narrow.
- Shawnee County receives its statutory share (~$2.1 million annually cited in public comments) and is subject to the county-specific split in 79-41a04(e). Topeka (as a large city) follows the city rules.
- **Project Otis** (the ongoing citizen advocacy effort) focuses on accountability for these funds—particularly whether the county is properly allocating, tracking, and spending the alcohol/drug and parks portions versus folding everything into general spending or other priorities. The statutes provide a clear legal benchmark for that debate, though they do **not** create a specific “Project Otis” or name any particular project.
- No major statutory changes have altered these core splits or restrictions in recent years (statutes current as of 2026).

In short, the law is **not** silent on use—it deliberately directs a significant portion of the revenue back into alcohol-related services and parks while giving local governments flexibility with the general-fund slice. Any claim of misuse would turn on whether the special funds are being maintained and spent in accordance with the “principal purpose” and parks-only rules. For the most current county budget documents or audits showing actual expenditures, check Shawnee County’s official financial reports or recent commission meeting packets.

Henry McClure
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Otis

**Project Otis** is a local advocacy initiative in Shawnee County, Kansas, primarily promoted by resident and activist **Henry McClure** (the user in this conversation). It focuses on the proper use and potential reallocation of revenue from Kansas' **liquor-by-the-drink tax** (a 10% tax on gross receipts from alcoholic liquor sales by clubs, bars, caterers, drinking establishments, etc.).

### Funding Details (Kansas Liquor Drink Tax)
Kansas statutes (primarily **K.S.A. 79-41a01 et seq.**) govern this:

- The state collects the **10% liquor drink tax**.
- Distributions from the **Local Alcoholic Liquor Fund** (in the state treasury) go to cities and counties based on where the tax is generated:
  - Larger cities (>6,000 population) typically receive **70%** of collections from their area.
  - Counties receive shares for unincorporated areas or smaller cities.
  - Remaining portions often flow into **Special Alcohol & Drug Programs Funds**, general funds, and **parks/recreation funds** (with statutory splits, e.g., roughly 1/3 each in some localities).

- **Shawnee County-specific figure**: Approximately **$2.1 million annually** flows to the county from these collections (as repeatedly cited by McClure in public comments).

**Intended uses** (per state law, e.g., K.S.A. 79-41a04 and related sections):
- Primarily for **alcohol and drug abuse prevention, treatment, and related programs**.
- Some allocations support **parks/recreation**, law enforcement, or general government purposes, but with restrictions emphasizing public benefit tied to the tax's origins (addressing impacts of alcohol sales).

### Core Argument of Project Otis
McClure contends that the county is **not using** these funds as originally intended (e.g., for alcohol-related social services, treatment, prevention, or specific community projects like "Old Otis"). He has urged commissioners in multiple meetings (including the May 11, 2026 work session) to review allocations, "finish Otis," and redirect the ~$2.1M toward its statutory or historical purposes rather than general spending or other priorities.

No large-scale formal county project named "Otis" appears in official records — it seems to be McClure's branding for this accountability/advocacy effort, possibly referencing a prior or proposed initiative ("Old Otis"). He has raised it repeatedly in public comment periods, sometimes tying it to broader transparency, economic development, or opposition to certain spending (e.g., questioning elected officials on boards like Go Topeka).

### Context and Status
- This is **not a county-run project** with dedicated budgets or official documents but an ongoing citizen push for fund accountability.
- Kansas law requires these revenues to support specific categories, and local governments must comply (with audits possible). McClure has referenced Attorney General opinions on proper use.
- In meetings, commissioners typically thank speakers and move on without immediate action.

For the most current details, check recent Shawnee County Commission meeting videos/minutes on their site or YouTube, or McClure’s public statements (e.g., on Facebook/YouTube under mcre1). If you have more specifics or want me to pull a particular meeting transcript, let me know!

Henry McClure
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