Wednesday, April 5, 2023

The way one radical pro-abortionist who firebombed a pro-life center was caught will put a smile on your face

 

The way one radical pro-abortionist who firebombed a pro-life center was caught will put a smile on your face

Photo by Vladimir Shipitsin from Pexels

After the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, dozens of churches and pro-life pregnancy centers were firebombed by radical pro-abortion terrorists nationwide.

Nearly a year later it seemed as though no one would ever be held accountable.

But the way this radical pro-abortionist who firebombed a pro-life center was caught will put a smile on your face.There is no doubt the FBI has been slow walking, or even no walking, the investigations into the violent attacks on churches and pro-life centers.

You can run but you can’t hide

Last year, on Mother’s Day, Wisconsin Family Action – a pro-life 501(c)(4) non-profit organization headquartered in Madison, Wisconsin – was viciously attacked by pro-abortion terrorists.

This attack was part of a nationwide reign of terror from pro-abortionists and their radical socialist allies that began roughly one week after the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade was illegally leaked to Politico.

Left-wing radicals firebombed the organization’s headquarters with a Molotov cocktail, and spray painted the message, “If abortions aren’t safe then you aren’t either,” on the side of the building.According to reports, upon entering the building, law enforcement investigating the attack discovered multiple broken Mason jars, including one with a singed cloth still tucked into it, as well as a purple disposable lighter nearby.

But most importantly, police were also able to recover DNA from the scene.

Burrito bites

Nearly 10 months after the attack, law enforcement identified Hridindu Sankar Roychowdhury, a 29-year-old former University of Wisconsin-Madison doctoral student, as a suspect.

And in what had to be the easiest police work of all-time, they tracked the left-wing radical down to a protest at the Wisconsin State Capitol over the construction of an Atlanta, Georgia police training facility last month.Investigators proceeded to conduct surveillance of the protest, and observed Roychowdhury toss a half-eaten burrito into a public trash can, allowing them to retrieve the burrito and other contents the suspect threw away.

Using the “quarter portion of a partially eaten burrito wrapped in waxed paper, a soiled napkin, a crumpled napkin, a stack of napkins, the wrapper of the burrito, a crumpled food wrapper, [and] four unopened hot sauce packets,” they found in the trash can, police were ultimately able to compare the DNA found at the crime scene to the DNA on Roychowdhury’s burrito.

And wouldn’t you know it, the Justice Department found that the DNA was a match.

“On March 17, 2023, law enforcement advised that a forensic biologist examined the DNA evidence recovered from the attack scene and compared it to the DNA collected from the food contents,” the Justice Department said. “The forensic biologist found the two samples matched and likely were the same individual.”

It’s about time

From there, law enforcement proceeded to track Roychowdhury from Madison to Portland, Maine – he obviously thought it was the other Portland – and then to Boston, where he purchased a one-way ticket to Guatemala City, Guatemala.

But once the suspect arrived at Boston Logan International Airport to flee the country, he was arrested and charged with one count of attempting to cause damage by means of fire or an explosive.

“According to the complaint, Mr. Roychowdhury used an incendiary device in violation of federal law in connection with his efforts to terrorize and intimidate a private organization,” Assistant Attorney General Matthew G. Olsen said in a statement. “I commend the commitment and professionalism of law enforcement personnel who worked exhaustively to ensure that justice is served.”

“Violence is never an acceptable way for anyone to express their views or their disagreement,” FBI’s Counterterrorism Division Assistant Director Robert R. Wells said. “Today’s arrest demonstrates the FBI’s commitment to vigorously pursue those responsible for this dangerous attack and others across the country, and to hold them accountable for their criminal actions.”

Of course, it did take nearly a year for this arrest to occur, and the idea that someone could firebomb a building for the express purpose of political intimidation and only be charged with one count that has nothing to do with domestic terrorism seems rather absurd.

The Family Research Council has documented more than 100 violent attacks on pro-life organizations and churches since the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe was leaked.

And for most of those more than 100 attacks, the extremist left-wing group, Jane’s Revenge, has taken responsibility.

Yet, the arrest of Roychowdhury was one of the very first arrests connected with the attacks to yield any semblance of justice for the victims.

Meanwhile, the Biden regime is targeting peaceful pro-life activists, like 47-year-old father Mark Houck and 87-year-old Holocaust survivor Eva Edl, for having the audacity to pray outside of abortion factories.

In the case of Houck, the FBI sent dozens of heavily armed stormtroopers to his home for a pre-dawn raid in which they stormed his home and drug him out in front of his wife and children.

But when it comes to a left-wing radical, like Hridindu Sankar Roychowdhury, they simply quietly pick him up in the middle of an airport without any fuss and no weapons drawn.

It’s almost like there’s a double-standard in America’s justice system that gives left-wing radicals a pass for literal domestic terrorism while pro-life Christians are treated like Al Capone for simply existing.

Informed American will keep you up-to-date on any developments to this ongoing story.RELATED ARTICLES

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