Elon Musk hits back at CNBC reporter over claims that Hispanic Texas mall shooter was a 'white supremacist': 'Bull****'



CNBC reporter David Faber confronted Elon Musk in a recent interview over remarks the tech magnate made on Twitter. After parsing Musk's past criticisms of billionaire leftist George Soros, Faber zeroed in on a tweet concerning the Allen, Texas, mall shooter.

Musk rebutted the intimation that he had amplified unhinged conspiratorial thinking and turned the tables, calling into question Faber's understanding of the atrocious event and its perpetrator.

"You do some tweets that seem to be or at least give support to some who would call others 'conspiracy theorists,'" Faber said early in the interview.

Musk replied, "Some of these conspiracy theories have turned out to be true," citing the Hunter Biden laptop story as a prime example.

Ostensibly looking to trip Musk up, Faber referenced a tweet Musk wrote on May 9 pertaining to the Allen, Texas, mall shooting and the allegations circulated in the liberal media that the Hispanic shooter was a "white supremacist."

"When you link to somebody who's talking about the guy who killed children in a mall in Allen, Texas," said Faber. "You say something like it might be a bad psy-op. Not quite sure what you meant."

Musk's controversial tweet was in reply to a meme posted by Josie Glabach, known as the Redheaded libertarian on Twitter.

The meme, titled, "This sounds like a psyop," suggested that mental gymnastics were required to arrive at the conclusion the shooter was a white supremacist.

The meme was captioned, "A employee of state funded media told us a Jewish lady and a Korean guy radicalized a Mexican neo-nazi gang member ... According to a recent diary that appeared on a Russian social media site ... That happened to have receipts of the gun used and pictures of nazis pulled of[f] Reddit and the internet ... Even though he doesn't speak Russian."

Musk responded, "Didn't the story come from @bellingcat, which literally specializes in psychological operations? I don't want to hurt their feelings, but this is either the weirdest story ever or a very bad psyop!"

\u201c@TRHLofficial Didn\u2019t the story come from @bellingcat, which literally specializes in psychological operations?\n\nI don\u2019t want to hurt their feelings, but this is either the weirdest story ever or a very bad psyop!\u201d
— The Redheaded libertarian (@The Redheaded libertarian) 1683650187

Explaining his tweet to Faber, Musk said, "In that particular case ... I think it was incorrectly described to be a 'white supremacist,' actually."

Musk noted that the evidence for the white supremacist claim "was some obscure Russian website that no one's ever heard of, that had no followers, and the company that found this is Bellingcat."

"Do you know what Bellingcat is? Psy-ops," said Musk.

The Twitter CEO provided Faber with a summary of his views on the matter, "I'm saying I thought that ascribing it to 'white supremacy' was bull****. And that the information for that came from an obscure Russian website and was somehow magically found by Bellingcat, which is a company that does psy-ops."

Bellingcat is purportedly an open-source intelligence outlet based in the Netherlands, founded in 2014. It has received funds from various sources, including the European Commission, Soros' Open Society Foundations, and the American government's National Endowment for Democracy.

The May 9 article on the Bellingcat website, penned by Aric Toler, detailed posts made on the Odnoklassniki account allegedly belonging to the now-deceased 33-year-old Hispanic gunman, noting it "espoused far-right viewpoints and contained pictures of Garcia showing off at least two Nazi tattoos."

Bellingcat reported that one month before the May 6 shooting, a post detailing a selection of tattoos, including a swastika and an SS symbol, appeared on the page. The post indicates that the shooter was "culturally appropriating" symbols such as the black panther and the swastika for his own purposes.

The account was also reportedly laden with identifying documents, such as a speeding ticket with the shooter's name and date of birth both conveniently visible.

While Musk claimed Bellingcat found the account, Toler noted that the Odnoklassniki page was first mentioned in a May 8 New York Times report and admitted that it was "unclear how the investigators cited in the article learned about this account."

Bellingcat creative director Eliot Higgins did not take well the suggestion that his outfit was in the business of spreading disinformation, tweeting early Wednesday, "If @elonmusk thinks Bellingcat is a psy-op than its a reflection of the absolute garbage he consumes from the likes of Aaron Mate. As a 'tech guy' I'm sure he's familiar with the phrase 'Garbage in, garbage out'. That's how his brain works."

In response to Faber's suggestion that there was no proof the shooter was not a white supremacist, Musk concluded, "I would say there is no proof that he is."

Hank Sibley, the regional director of the Texas Department of Public Safety, indicated that the evidence points to him having been a Hispanic Nazi.

"We do know that he had Neo-Nazi ideation," said Sibley. "He had patches, he had tattoos, even his signature verified that. That’s one thing we do know. We’re trying to get into his computer and on social media and find out whether he had anything that he publicized."
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Father rushed to Allen Outlets to save son from mass shooting, but nothing would prepare him for what he experienced: 'Just unfathomable to see carnage'



A frantic father rushed to the Allen Premium Outlets on Saturday after his son informed him there was a shooting at the mall in Texas. However, nothing would prepare the concerned dad for what he would encounter next.

Steven Spainhouer – a former police officer and former Army officer – received a call from his son on Saturday. His son – who works at the H&M store at the Allen Premium Outlets – told Spainhouer that there was an active shooting situation. He said that he couldn't contact 911 because the phone lines were busy.

Spainhouer instructed his son to shelter in place and to not open the door.

Spainhouer then raced to the outlet mall, which took him approximately six minutes. He was surprised to see that no police or EMTs were at the site of the shooting.

Spainhouer told KHOU, "I never imagined in 100 years I would be thrust into the position of being the first first responder on the site to take care of people."

"I found seven people shot in front of the store," Spainhouer told MSNBC. He called 911 and told them, "We have a mass casualty incident."

"The first girl I walked up to was crouched down covering her head in the bushes, so I felt for a pulse, pulled her head to the side and she had no face," he explained.

Speaking about the third victim he attempted to help, "I started chest compressions on him, he spit up blood, and then he just looked at me and expired in front of me."

"The others were too far gone," he said.

Spainhouer found a child who survived the mass shooting by being protected by his deceased mother.

He said, "So when I rolled the mother over, he came out, and I asked him, 'Are you OK?'"

The boy said, "My mom is hurt, my mom is hurt."

"So rather than traumatize him anymore, I put him around the corner, sat him down," Spainhouer recalled. "He was covered from head to toe, like somebody poured blood on him."

"No one can see what they saw today and not be affected by it. It's not a situation that I would wish upon anybody. It's just unfathomable to see the carnage," he said.

"It's tough when you see a family that's out shopping, having fun, then get wiped off the face of the Earth because somebody with a gun has some other type of issue," Spainhouer declared.

Eight people were shot and killed at the Allen Premium Outlets, located about 25 miles north of Dallas. There are at least seven others injured during the mass shooting.

Authorities have yet to release the name of the shooter.

WFAA reported that the suspect is in his 30s and lived with his parents in Dallas.

The outlet noted that the FBI questioned the family at their Dallas home, adding that investigators "have also asked for a translator."

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Texas mall shooting: Store employee talks about what he saw during shooting rampage www.youtube.com