How brainwashed QAnon parents like Matthew Coleman have kidnapped & killed their own kids based on warped conspiracies
QANON has fueled child kidnappings and even murders with brainwashed parents abducting and killing their own kids after becoming consumed by the movement's warped conspiracy theories.
Several horrifying incidents in recent years have been linked to the wide-ranging theory, which in part claims that a cabal of left-wing cannibalistic pedophiles is running a global child sex trafficking ring.
The latest in a series of horrific incidents linked to the far-flung theory came this week following the arrest of 40-year-old after allegedly murdering his two young children with a spear gun.
Coleman, who owns a surfing school in Santa Barbara, reportedly told investigators that he killed his two-year-old son and 10-month-old daughter because he believed they were "serpent monsters."
According to the affidavit, Coleman explained that he was "receiving visions and signs revealing that his wife, A.C., possessed serpent DNA and had passed it on to his children."
While he allegedly admitted that he knew killing his children was wrong, he saw it as "the only course of action that would save the world."
Mom-of-two Neely Petrie-Blanchard, 34, allegedly shot dead her own lawyer in Colorado back in November last year because she believed he was part of a government cabal stealing her children.
Meanwhile, dad-of-five Alpalus Slyman, 29, led cops on a 20-mile police chase in Boston in June 2020 with his kids in the backseat screaming for him to stop.
Slyman live-streamed the chase on social media, in which he was heard saying "QAnon, help me. QAnon, help me."
Slyman had reportedly had become convinced that his oldest daughter and her mom were part of a plot against him, and the police were coming to abduct his children.
He ranted at his children about a video of Hillary Clinton eating children's brains - and the chase only ended when he crashed his minivan into a tree.
QAnon mom Emily Jolley also snatched her six-year-old son Terran Butler, taking the boy during a court-supervised visit on September 26 in Greater Salt Lake, Utah.
Her Facebook page was found to be awash with conspiracy theories - including anti-Vax and Covid denial posts - and she had repeatedly claimed her son had been "legally kidnapped".
She baselessly accused her son's dad Timothy of being part of a child sex trafficking ring - in classic QAnon style - and pals said she spent months planning the snatch.
Her mom Laraian was also arrested for obstructing cops as she also claimed to have an arrest warrant for the dad from a made-up court - with Jolley later protesting the real arrest warrants against her were "fake".
And then Cynthia Acbug from Colorado is alleged to have plotted with other QAnon believers to have had her son kidnapped from foster care.
She lost custody of her son when she was suspected to have been lying about his health problems in January 2019, and then lost custody of her 15-year-old daughter when she revealed her mom's plot.
Police say Acbug told her daughter that her brother was being raised by "evil Satan worshippers" and "pedophiles".
Her daughter reportedly told cops her mom had "gotten into some conspiracy theories" and she was "spiraling down it" since her brother had been removed.
TERROR THREAT
QAnon has been previously labeled a “domestic terror threat” by the FBI over its tendency the inspire violence.
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QAnon's narratives now seem to be focused on fantasies that either Trump is on the cusp of returning to office, or is secretly still running the government from Mar-a-Lago.
It continues to fixate on nonsense claims that the election was somehow stolen from Trump.