A QAnon influencer is organizing anti-mandate lawsuits in courts throughout the country
Tweet text:
Alex Kaplan
@AlKapDC
NEW from me: A QAnon influencer has been organizing online anti-mandate lawsuits in courts throughout the country. The effort has involved the widow of former Sen. Fred Thompson, & it has been promoted by one of the biggest funders of the Arizona audit.
A QAnon influencer is organizing anti-mandate lawsuits in courts throughout the country
mediamatters.org
11:48 AM · Oct 12, 2021
https://www.mediamatters.org/qanon-conspiracy-theory/qanon-influencer-organizing-anti-mandate-lawsuits-courts-throughout-country
An online show host who is a prominent supporter of the QAnon conspiracy theory has been organizing an effort to use the courts to block mandates on masks and vaccines around the country. The effort has involved the widow of former Sen. Fred Thompson (R-TN), and it has been promoted by one of the biggest financial backers of the Arizona election audit.
The QAnon influencer -- Terpsichore Maras-Lindeman, known online as Tore -- originally gained prominence in the far-right by appearing in a 2020 conspiracy theory film called Shadowgate (created by a QAnon-supporting former Infowars personality). She was later cited as a witness before the Supreme Court by Sidney Powell as part of Powells efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election, and in late September she apparently attended a meeting involving former Trump adviser Steve Bannon. Tore has also previously been convicted of violating consumer protection laws in North Dakota, and she has made a significant amount of money streaming on Twitch.
Since September, Tore has turned her attention to coronavirus-prevention mandates. In early September, she filed a lawsuit against the Ohio school district her daughter attends to block a mask mandate. And later that month, she filed a request for a writ of mandamus before the Ohio Supreme Court asking judges to block Gov. Mike DeWine or any of his agents from requiring anyone in the state to take a vaccine, provide a DNA sample, wear a medical device like a mask or have their temperatures taken.
On her show (and in her filing), Tore has claimed that the legal justification for her case is that the Ohio Constitution has provisions that bar anyone from forc[ing] us to take any medication or to participate in any health care system. That means data collection, data information, temperature taking, masks. (Her filing also includes an exhibit Q, potentially a reference to QAnon.)
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