Wednesday, August 10, 2011

'OBOTs' admit lying in scheme to punk WND

Now deny ex-Fannie Mae chief James Johnson is their White House contact

By Jerome R. Corsi
© 2011 WND



This is the fifth in a series of continuing articles aimed at exposing the "OBOTs" – radical supporters of Barack Obama dedicated to disrupting people who question his eligibility to be president.

The first article exposed former California lawyer William L. Bryan, aka "P.J. Foggy." The second article exposed Foggy's sidekick, Kurt Coleman, aka "Rikker." The third article exposed James A. Johnson, former head of Fannie Mae, as "JimBot," the White House contact and organizer of the "Fogbow" OBOTs posting on Bryan's website Fogbow.com. The fourth article documented Internet posts by Bryan confirming the identification of Johnson.

Editor's note: The following article, including the taped telephone recording, contains sexually suggestive language that some will consider offensive.


NEW YORK – In the disinformation world propagated by the radical Obama supporters known as OBOTs, " short for "Obama Robots," participants typically post their strongly partisan and frequently acerbic comments under a user name to hide their identity.

Following WND articles exposing the OBOT claim that James A. Johnson, former head of Fannie Mae, was their White House contact, organizer and funder, OBOT posters on Fogbow.com have changed their story and contend they lied in an effort to "punk" WND.

Jerome Corsi's book, "Where's the Birth Certificate?" is available for immediate shipping, autographed by the author, only from the WND Superstore

Foggy denial

Currently Bill Bryan, the creator of Fogbow.com who posts under the username "P. J. Foggy," has issued repeated denials that Johnson is involved with the OBOTs posting on Fogbow.com.

In his various posts, Bryan justifies the lying as part of an elaborate campaign the OBOTs conduct to "punk birthers," with tactics that have included falsifying documents, influencing court proceedings and harassing ordinary citizens who dare to question Obama's eligibility to be president.

Bryan's current theme is that by lying in his posts on Fogbow.com, he convinced WND to publish a story falsely identifying Johnson as "JimBot" on Fogbow.com.

Exhibit 1 clearly shows Bryan bragging about lying, in a comment posted on Fogbow.com Aug. 1.


Again, on Aug. 2, as seen in Exhibit 2, Bryan boasted he would post comments on the WND forum claiming he lied if WND wrote additional stories on Johnson.


This leaves Bryan in the position of either having impersonated the identity of Johnson though his various posts dating from 2009 until last week or claiming he had always been lying about Johnson.

A brief look at a Fogbow.com webpage from mid-July gives a snapshot view of the foul language, insults and ridicule that occasion every mention of WND on the website.

Bryan, himself, typically takes the lead in bathroom language, as seen in Exhibit 3.


Despite repeated phone calls from WND, Johnson has not commented.

NeonZX is 'not grumpy'

WND has previously reported that NeonZX uses the username "JimBot" as a type of double-cover that permits prominent Democratic Party operative Johnson to make phone calls and direct the group.

NeonZX/JimBot posted on his YouTube site a video of himself entitled "Grumpy Neon?" in which he playfully mocks Bryan for putting him on the "grumpy" list. In the video, which has since been removed, NeonZX displays a kitten, repeating a theme in the various videos of cats and kittens he has posted on his YouTube channel. BirtherReportDotCom post a rendition of the video with its own commentary.



Exhibit 4 is a screen capture of NeonZX taken from the "Grumpy Neon?" video.


A second video on the YouTube channel is revealingly titled "NeonZX."


This video displays an image of the extraterrestrial adversary known as "Dalek" from the British science fiction television show "Dr. Who," which NeonZX uses as his avatar when posting on Fogbow.com.

According to administrative records maintained on Fogbow.com, NeonZX joined the website at 7:27 a.m. on March 10, 2009.

When checked by WND, NeonZX had posted 1,064 comments on Fogbow.com, for an average of 1.21 posts daily.

NeonZX, upon registering, listed he was 49 years old.

With typical "punking" humor, NeonZX mocked the idea that posters on Fogbow.com shared identities, drawing from the character of "Neo," the character played by Keanu Reeves in the "Matrix" movies, as seen in Exhibit 5.


WND has now had two phone discussions with NeonZX in which he refused to provide his identification.

The phone number, with a Washington, D.C., area code, traced to a disposable cell phone purchased by an identified user.

Neon ZX initiated the second phone call, which he taped and posted on TheRegulator.net, only to remove it a short time later.

"[Fogbow.com] isn't an organized effort," NeonZX said in the phone call, continuing to protest the contention that Johnson had organized the effort from the White House.

"It's just a bunch of us out here having fun."

Exhibit 6 shows a NeonZX Internet post on Politijab.com in which he contradicted the claim the OBOTs were not organized, bragging instead that: "Of course, I let them believe as they wish, but we here all know the true hierarchy of the organization. Wouldn't it blow their mind if only they knew how deep the rabbit hole really is?"


In Exhibit 6, NeonZX also bragged about his sophistication with phone technology, suggesting he could use high-security cellphones, complete with secure-encryption systems.

Larry Sinclair charges NeonZX with death threat

Larry Sinclair, the author of the book "Barack Obama & Larry Sinclair: Cocaine, Sex, Lies & Murder," has filed criminal charges against NeonZX that resulted in an FBI investigation.

As WND reported in February 2008, Sinclair alleged that he used cocaine and engaged in homosexual acts with Barack Obama when Obama was an Illinois state senator. In 2009, NeonZX taunted Sinclair with a photo of a Fox News report on a Daytona Beach resident burning down a rental home in an outdoor grill fire, as seen in Exhibit 7.


NeonZX told WND he posted the picture because he saw an Internet video of Sinclair using a barbeque grill in an enclosed porch area.

"If he was stupid enough to use a grill in an enclosed area, I thought he was stupid enough to burn down his house," NeonZX told WND, denying he intended his Internet posting to represent a threat to Sinclair's life.

Sinclair reported the incident to the FBI and told WND that Special Agent Brenda Borne of the Washington, D.C., FBI office had interviewed NeonZX, who Sinclair identified as one "James Berry."

NeonZX confirmed to WND that the FBI had interviewed him over the Sinclair incident, but he equivocated when asked by WND if the investigation was continuing.

FBI Special Agent Brenda Borne did not return repeated WND calls asking for comment.

Exhibit 8 shows a posting on DailyKos.com on Oct. 17, 2010, in which NeonZX made clear the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia had made public Sinclair's book as part of a plaintiff's exhibit.













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