Blaze News exclusive: LGBTQ activists harass, intimidate couple determined to protect kids from genital mutilation in NH



Last week, Blaze News introduced you to New Hampshire Peace Action, an NGO with Soviet roots and alleged terrorist ties that has already been criminally referred to the state AG's office for alleged charity fraud and RICO violations. In addition to its foreign policy activism, this group also trains a corps of volunteer "peacekeepers" who then provide private security services at local public events.

In Part II of this two-part exclusive series, Blaze News reveals that rather than keep the peace, these NHPA peacekeepers attempt to help far-left organizations bully into silence anyone who might dare oppose them.

Stephen and Beth Scaer are two such people. With the help of body cameras affixed to their clothing, the Scaers have captured multiple instances of physical intimidation, verbal harassment, and yes, even criminal violence from NHPA peacekeepers and other pro-trans activists.

NHPA did not respond to Blaze News' requests for comment.

'We couldn't stand by and do nothing': The Scaers' activism

By the hostile reaction they repeatedly incite from NHPA peacekeepers and other leftists, you might think that the Scaers are a physically commanding, formidable power couple, imposing their will without mercy. Instead, they are a pair of 61-year-old grandparents who simply want to keep children in their community from forced sterilization.

The Scaers then began making regular trips to the statehouse, often wearing cardboard signs denouncing the attempted legal erasure of sex differences and the gender-related medical misconduct imposed on vulnerable people.

Their political involvement began years ago, when they joined pro-life advocacy groups as an expression of their Christian faith. They were so passionate about the cause that they even traveled to the New Hampshire statehouse in Concord — about 35 miles north of their home in Nashua — to provide a pro-life witness to participants at some local women's marches that popped up across the country in early 2017 in response to the election of former President Donald Trump.

It was there that the Scaers first encountered NHPA peacekeepers, though back in 2017, these peacekeepers did actually provide some security, they told Blaze News. "They made space for us in their permitted area," Beth Scaer said.

"I looked forward to their presence."

That same year, the Scaers learned through a Christian organization that bills permitting men to enter women's bathrooms and play on their sports teams were under consideration in New Hampshire. So the couple decided to expand their activism and publicly protest these measures on behalf of women and children.

"We couldn't stand by and do nothing," Beth Scaer explained to Blaze News.

Photo shared with Blaze News. Used with permission

The Scaers then began making regular trips to the statehouse, often wearing cardboard signs denouncing the attempted legal erasure of sex differences and the gender-related medical misconduct imposed on vulnerable people, especially children. Stephen Scaer also began a social media account, @Sidewalk_Steve, to share his work and expose the bullying nature of those attempting to impose their radical agenda on the rest of the state.

— (@)

During their protests against the transgender agenda, the Scaers once again began interacting with NHPA peacekeepers, but this time, the peacekeepers were not nearly so accommodating. In fact, they had become overtly contentious.

Beth Scaer has been shocked by the rapid change. She told Blaze News that one of the peacekeeper leaders "started out as very helpful, but in the last couple of years she has been taking sides against us."

"It's very weird."

Though he has not had any personal interaction with NHPA peacekeepers, New Hampshire Republican state Rep. Mike Belcher reported their actions to the state attorney general, describing them as a "private paramilitary-type group" that assumes "false authority" and issues "unlawful orders" in an effort to prevent conservatives like the Scaers from exercising their First Amendment rights. He believes NHPA's ultimate purpose for its peacekeepers is "to usurp police powers of the State on behalf of far-Left partisan public demonstrations."

What's more, the NHPA peacekeepers apparently have no legal right to pose as a security force in the first place. Blaze News confirmed with the permits and licensing division of the state Department of Safety that the NHPA has never had a state-issued security guard license required of anyone or any group "soliciting" security-related "work" in New Hampshire.

Earlier this month, New Hampshire Attorney General John Formella pledged to submit relevant materials about NHPA to the appropriate state investigative agencies to assess for probable cause, Belcher told Blaze News. Formella did not respond to Blaze News' request for comment.

'Antifa tactics': Peacekeepers' actions caught on video

Undeterred from advocating on behalf of children, the Scaers estimate they have engaged in political activism at the statehouse about 50 times, interacting with NHPA peacekeepers and other trans activists on at least a dozen occasions. Their experience led them to wear body cameras during these outings in case they need to share video evidence with law enforcement and/or the media.

The videos of NHPA peacekeepers' interactions with the Scaers shared with Blaze News evince a group eager to engage, frequently addressing the Scaers or blocking their path, even as they profess that they want the couple to leave. They also surround the Scaers, infiltrate their personal space, and issue orders that do not correspond to any local, state, or federal law. They even threaten to sic law enforcement on the Scaers for taking pictures or simply walking about public property.

'Aren't Christian men supposed to control their women?'

Stephen Scaer explained to Blaze News that the NHPA peacekeepers employ these kinds of "Antifa tactics" — crowding, swearing, and taunting — "to get a reaction." "They want to trap you and ... get you on an assault charge," he said, citing an unnamed cop as his source.

Though the timestamps on the following videos show an array of dates and times, all were filmed at a Pride event called Rainbow Recess, sponsored by the New Hampshire ACLU and held on the statehouse lawn on June 2, 2024. The peacekeepers are easily identifiable by the yellow lining and peace signs on their vests.

One male peacekeeper, covered in tattoos, threatened to unleash his "unkind side" because Beth Scaer took pictures of one of the booths set up at Rainbow Recess. "They are not giving you consent," the man asserts, though New Hampshire law does not forbid taking photographs of others in public, with or without consent.

— (@)

Several peacekeepers then seem to get into a camera war with the Scaers, with both sides snapping photos of the other. "I'm just taking pictures," said one man before adding, "Don't take my picture."

"I'm asking you not to take my picture," he reiterates.

"Doesn’t work that way, buddy," Stephen Scaer retorted in the attending X message.

— (@)

On other occasions, the peacekeepers physically obstruct the Scaers' movements. In the video below, the tattooed man attempts to prevent Beth Scaer from accessing literature freely offered at a nearby Pride tent.

— (@)

Another video shows Beth Scaer attempting to escape to a different area of the statehouse lawn as the peacekeepers shadow her movements, sometimes even strangely waving or flapping their arms, perhaps to create a larger barrier between Beth and the Pride participants.

"Don't touch me!" Beth warns one of them.

"I'm not touching you. Don't worry, I'm not," the tattooed man replies. "How do you like my hand right in your camera?"

"You have to be back eight feet!" the older male peacekeeper insists at another point, prompting Beth to reply in exasperation, "You're following me! How can I step back when you're following me?"

At various times, one of the female peacekeepers calls Beth Scaer "hideous" and Stephen Scaer a "crybaby" and a "coward" and even ridicules the couple's Christian faith. "Aren't Christian men supposed to control their women?" she mocks at one point.

Meet TRA Eileen Ehlers who with her husband Bob st@lk3d @BethRS62 outside of the Rainbow Recess event at the State House. She called me a coward, but note how quick she turns her back when I confronted her. She preys on the weak. #NHPolitics
— (@)

Though the Scaers are Christians, they told Blaze News that they do not make their faith a regular feature of their political activism. "We work with people from all beliefs to protect women and children," Beth said.

One of Rep. Belcher's Democrat colleagues in the state House, Rep. Tim Horrigan, claims to be a member of NHPA. When asked about the treatment the Scaers received from NHPA peacekeepers during the Rainbow Recess event, Horrigan told Blaze News that he did not witness anything personally, but based on videos he has seen, "nothing ... supports the accusations" made by Belcher, the Scaers, and others.

"To repeat what I just said four sentences ago: I WAS NOT THERE!" Horrigan's statement to Blaze News concluded.

'I watched the footage': The Scaers document other trans activists

The peacekeepers are not the only LGBTQ+ activists who have harassed or attempted to intimidate the Scaers. The couple have chronicled other instances of bullying committed by individuals with no known ties to NHPA, though they often followed a similar playbook.

Earlier this year, dozens of transgender activists lined a hallway inside the state Legislative Office Building in anticipation of protesting a bill to protect women's sports. Beth Scaer attended the legislative hearing as well, taking pictures of the activists and their signs, much to the activists' chagrin.

Paolini yelled, 'F*** you!' and grabbed Beth's phone and yanked it down, ostensibly in an unsuccessful attempt to knock it out of Beth's hand.

The radicals attempted to block Beth's way and ordered her to stop taking pictures, insisting that taking pictures of them was somehow unlawful because two adults had brought along their child. Impervious to their demands, Beth continued her trek, so the activists began crowding around her in a menacing manner and requested that she stop taking pictures, even as several of them had whipped out their phones to take pictures or video as well.

"Could you be a bit more polite to people?" one woman in a face mask passive-aggressively asked Beth as she tailed along beside her.

Brave Beth repeatedly reminded the group that she had not done anything wrong since "this is a free country." However, when the activists stepped too close, Beth ordered to them to "stay away."

— (@)

One trans activist late last summer even resorted to violence to keep the Scaers from recording her public activism. At an alien event called Exeter UFO Festival in August, Beth was attacked by Laurie Paolini, a 61-year-old woman whose adult child identifies as transgender.

Almost from the moment the Scaers arrived at the festival, wearing their signature anti-transgender sandwich signs, Paolini, who was then a stranger to the Scaers, showed signs of hostility. She repeatedly approached the Scaers, asking heated — though civil — questions and even once stopped to snap a selfie with Stephen.

— (@)

Then, suddenly, Paolini lost her cool. According to an arrest report, she gave Beth Scaer the middle finger, then proceeded to walk toward her until her middle finger was pressed to Beth's raised phone. A moment later, Paolini yelled, "F*** you!" and grabbed Beth's phone and yanked it down, ostensibly in an unsuccessful attempt to knock it out of Beth's hand.

The entire incident was, of course, caught on Beth's body camera:

(Warning: Language)

— (@)

Paolini later told an Exeter police officer that Beth had "shoved a phone in her face" and then "started following her around." Another woman gave the officer a similar version of events. But Beth's bodycam tape didn't lie.

"I watched the footage," the officer wrote in the report. "... When Scaer took out her phone, at no point did she shove her phone in Paolini's face as she claimed and Scaer did not approach Paolini with her phone, it was Paolini who went up to Scaer."

Paolini was arrested and charged with simple assault, a misdemeanor. In March, she pled guilty and was issued a fine of $372, which was immediately suspended, provided she has no further contact with Beth Scaer and otherwise has one year of "good behavior."

Blaze News left a message at a phone number believed to be Paolini's but did not receive a returned call.

'I know you provoke them': NH officials apparently refuse to help

The Exeter police officer who investigated Beth Scaer's run-in with Paolini helped secure the Scaers some measure of justice in the face of constant physical threats and harassment from NHPA peacekeepers and other trans activists. But in most cases, cops have not been very helpful for the couple.

The Scaers have contacted New Hampshire State Police — the law enforcement agency in charge of policing the statehouse and its grounds — to report the NHPA peacekeepers for following them, barring their path, and engaging in other acts of aggression and intimidation during the Rainbow Recess event cited in an earlier section. Beth even furnished the agency with video evidence to support their claims.

'It is beyond parody that so many Democrats and so-called "moderate Republicans" are letting themselves be dictated to by a small histrionic group of far-left ideologues.'

To date, no official report has been filed with the agency. Trooper Chris Rollston even reportedly insinuated that the Scaers got what they deserved. "I know you provoke them," Rollston allegedly told Beth, referring to the peacekeepers.

The Scaers have likewise interacted with another security official, Chris Vetter, who is reportedly in charge of protecting the New Hampshire House. As with Rollston, those interactions have not led to any appreciable results.

In fact, Beth believes Vetter might harbor resentment against her for some reason, perhaps because of her activism. She even suggested to Blaze News that he may have been "spreading rumors" about her, though she did not elaborate on the nature of those rumors.

"My only guess is that Christopher Rollston was possibly counseled by Christopher Vetter about me not being someone he likes."

Neither the Department of State Police nor NHSP Troop D, the troop to which Rollston reportedly belongs, responded to Blaze News' request for comment.

The troopers are not the only authorities in the state who seem ambivalent about the cause of protecting kids against the transgender agenda. The state's most powerful political leader has thus far refused to take action, even after the legislature passed multiple bills related to protecting women and children against transvestic men.

One bill, H.B. 396, simply gives businesses and localities the option of preserving sex-segregated spaces, including bathrooms, locker rooms, sports teams, and correctional facilities. Yet Gov. Chris Sununu, a Republican, previously threatened to veto the measure.

Sununu has since walked back some of his prior statements and has suggested more recently that he may be more amenable to signing H.B. 396 and others like it. He can even opt not to take any action on the measures, which would mean they would become law after five days.

Cornerstone, a Christian advocacy organization in New Hampshire, hopes that Sununu will not prevent a tepid bill like H.B. 396 — which simply permits the possibility of sex-segregated spaces — from becoming law. "Only the most far-left 10% of our state opposes biological sex separation in our locker rooms, restrooms, and jails," said a statement from executive director Shannon McGinley. "It is beyond parody that so many Democrats and so-called 'moderate Republicans' are letting themselves be dictated to by a small histrionic group of far-left ideologues."

Sununu did not respond to Blaze News' request for comment.

With so few people in their state willing to take a stand to protect women and children, the Scaers believe they must continue fighting, no matter what torment befalls them. They even view the fight as personal now that one of their loved ones has died after first falling victim to the transgender agenda, though they asked Blaze News not to disclose further details about this private tragedy.

As part of that fight, Stephen Scaer is running as a Republican for the state Senate in district 13, which includes the blue city of Nashua. While winning would be nice, he told Blaze News the real purpose behind his campaign is to bring more awareness to the horrors of the transgender movement.

"I'm just using it to promote my cause of protecting boys and girls from this medical scandal and getting boys out of girls' sports and private spaces," he said.

"I just want to give people a choice."

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Blaze News exclusive: NH 'peace' organization accused of fraud, unlawfully deploying security detail to harass conservatives



It is no secret that far-left activist organizations have besieged state capitals in recent years, wailing and flailing about and ordering legislators to kowtow to their demands on issues ranging from so-called LGBTQ+ rights to gun control.

One Republican state representative in New Hampshire went beyond simply complaining about or ignoring one particularly virulent organization in his state and instead decided to do some research into it. What he found was evidence of possible charity fraud, RICO violations, and alleged ties to terrorist organizations, to say nothing of its extra-governmental security force apparently designed to intimidate conservatives and deny them their civil rights.

For the first part of this exclusive two-part series, Blaze News spoke with New Hampshire state Rep. Mike Belcher (R-Carroll) to learn more about the allegations he has leveled against New Hampshire Peace Action in hopes of bringing the organization's unsavory and perhaps unlawful tactics to a swift and peaceful end and to encourage state law enforcement to conduct a thorough investigation of it.

NHPA did not respond to Blaze News' request for comment.

'A Russian-influence operation': NHPA background and history

On the surface, New Hampshire Peace Action seems like a traditional left-leaning antinuclear organization, mainly advocating nonviolence and claiming to want to engage in peaceful, respectful protest and community dialogue. On its website, NHPA envisions building "a more peaceful and just future for all" by promoting "international relations ... based on cooperation instead of competition and conflict."

'I found an awful lot of references to the original organization actually being a part of the Soviet United Front operations of the Communist International.'

"Peace activists are often told that we’re naive to think that nonviolence will be effective," NHPA said in a recent statement. "Many of us think the idea that violence will bring about peace is far less sensible. In a world with nuclear weapons and serious environmental problems, war is too dangerous and costly for us all at this point."

Rep. Belcher, however, believes that the organization's peaceful rhetoric is actually a front for a more insidious — in fact, possibly violent — Marxist agenda. "So if they're all about peace, and they're all anti-war, and that's what they're all about, you would expect them to take sort of a universal pro-peace position on every conflict in the world. But that's not at all what they're doing," Belcher explained to Blaze News.

Just by clicking around on the NHPA website and various groups linked to it, including its parent organization, National Organization Peace Action, Belcher claims he discovered that NHPA has its roots in pro-Soviet advocacy. "I found an awful lot of references to the original organization actually being a part of the Soviet United Front operations of the Communist International," he said. "So it looks like that organization was founded as a Soviet-influence operation.

"And if you were to ask me what it looks like they're up to today, it kind of looks like there's still a Russian-influence operation."

The website for National Organization Peace Action seems to speak glowingly about Soviet actions during the nuclear arms race of the 1980s, especially compared with the actions of then-President Ronald Reagan: "Mikhail Gorbachev was profoundly influenced by the worldwide antinuclear campaign, setting aside time to confer with [antinuclear] leaders," whereas "the Reagan administration, on the defensive, was forced to modify its positions."

In addition to its apparently pro-Soviet origins, Belcher also noted that NHPA not only strongly condemns Israel but may even promote groups with ties to Hamas and the Palestine Liberation Organization.

"New Hampshire Peace Action is a founding member of this other organization [National Organization Peace Action] that is actively providing what appears to me to be material support for multiple foreign terrorist organizations," Belcher claimed.

Belcher reiterated to Blaze News that his goal in pointing out a possible association between NHPA and Hamas is not to advocate for Israel or Palestine in the latest war in Gaza but to advocate for Americans and their interests. "Perhaps even more important than the fact that many of these organizations are supporting foreign terror organizations," he said, is that "many of these organizations are also directly calling for revolution and insurrection in the United States of America openly on these various accounts and on these various websites."

National Organization Peace Action admits on its website that it has partnered with the Progressive Caucus in Congress and counts Reps. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) and Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) among its allies.

On its website, NHPA claims that it is against the violence perpetrated by both Israelis and Palestinians but that it focuses largely on the Israeli government "because the U.S. Government, thus American taxpayers, directly fund it."

Possible 'charity fraud': NHPA and its mysterious 'education fund'

Belcher does not just object to NHPA's supposedly Soviet influence. He also alleges that it falsely presents itself as a charity able to collect tax-deductible donations when it is not.

IRS code distinguishes between nonprofits whose donations are tax-deductible and nonprofits whose donations are not. Those whose donations can be tax-deductible are classified as a 501(c)(3). Those whose donations cannot be are classified as a 501(c)(4).

'That looks like commingling of funds. That is criminal.'

NHPA is a 501(c)(4), as evidenced by a newsletter message posted to its website last February. "Your membership dues help fund out [sic] 501c4 work: lobbying, legislative engagement, coalition building, and electoral politics," the message said.

Screenshot of nhpeaceaction.org taken on June 21, 2024

Yet despite making this direct link between NHPA membership dues and the group's "501c4 work," NHPA elsewhere insinuates that purchasing an NHPA membership or making other donations to NHPA could be tax-deductible in defiance of federal tax law. "Note that if you would like your donation/membership to be tax deductible, please put that in the note field when you checkout," it says under the Join/Donate tab of its website.

Screenshot of nhpeaceaction.org taken on June 21, 2024

Third-party sites give mixed results regarding NHPA's tax status. One site, Charity Navigator, lists it as a 501(c)(4). However, Project World Impact, an organization that attempts to connect donors with nonprofits that might be of interest, lists NHPA as a 501(c)(3).

Screenshot of projectworldimpact.com taken on June 21, 2024

Some of the confusion may stem from yet another NHPA-related organization — New Hampshire Peace Action Education Fund — that is a verifiable 501(c)(3) but that seems to have no public-facing presence outside NHPA. A quick search for such an "education fund" on the NHPA website directs users to the board of directors, many of whom seem to serve NHPA and NHPAEF concurrently. Otherwise, New Hampshire Peace Action Education Fund has no other unique page on the NHPA website.

Even though NHPAEF has no independent website or even an independent page on the NHPA website on which to market itself and its mission, New Hampshire Peace Action Education Fund is listed on NH Gives, a website showcasing nonprofits within the state. There, it partially presents itself as NHPA and uses the same vision and missions statements that appear on the NHPA homepage.

Screenshot of nhgives.org taken on June 21, 2024

Between the NHPAEF's lack of "public presence," NHPA and NHPAEF's shared address and directors, and an apparent "common pool of donated funds," Belcher believes that NHPAEF "is not actually a separate organization" from NHPA.

"I think there's charity fraud going on here," he told Blaze News.

Tax filings for NHPAEF further muddy the waters between NHPAEF's fundraising and NHPA's direct action. In its form 990 from 2019, NHPAEF claimed to have raised money for "two rallies to draw awareness to the need to change foreign policy" and a "completed season of bird-dogging presidential candidates about issues of peace and nuclear disarmament," among other events.

Yet the IRS website clarifies that a 501(c)(3) organization — such as NHPAEF — "may not attempt to influence legislation as a substantial part of its activities and it may not participate in any campaign activity for or against political candidates" (emphasis added). In other words, it may not be what the IRS calls "an action organization."

Belcher also argued that such policy-related events would normally be handled and promoted by a 501(c)(4) such as NHPA, rather than a 501(c)(3) like NHPAEF.

Though he cautioned that he may not understand all the nuances of federal tax law, Belcher said that "if they have a 501(c)(4) arm, a social welfare arm, that is undertaking those activities ... and they're saying they're funding those activities from their (c)(3) arm, that looks like commingling of funds.

"That is criminal."

A woman at a phone number listed on New Hampshire Peace Action Education Fund tax filings told Blaze News that NHPA and NHPAEF are "sister organizations." She also verified that NHPAEF is a 501(c)(3) and that NHPA is a 501(c)(4). When Blaze News asked further questions, the woman asked for our contact information so that someone else could answer them. We never received a return call.

'Marshals and de-escalators': NHPA's 'peacekeepers'

The third allegation that Belcher has made against NHPA is that it trains a cadre of security personnel and then offers their services to various left-wing organizations in violation of New Hampshire law, which requires a state-issued license for any person or organization "soliciting work" related to that performed by a security guard.

NHPA currently has only two major projects listed on its website. One of them is related to "education" regarding Palestine. The other is NH Project Peacekeeper, which the NHPA calls "a roster of trained volunteer peacekeepers who act as marshals and de-escalators for public events around NH."

'I think it's a big step toward normalizing the deployment of paramilitary along with left-wing protests in order to deny conservatives their right to public protest [and] their right to assembly.'

NHPA even offers an email address for those wanting to "request peacekeeping services through the NH Peacekeeping Project" for their particular event. In other words, NHPA seems to be "soliciting" security-related "work."

A representative from the permits and licensing division of the state Department of Safety confirmed to Blaze News that NHPA does not currently have a state-issued security guard license, nor has it ever had such a license.

With that credential missing, it's perhaps little wonder that those trained as its "peacekeepers" have no interest in keeping the peace. In Part II of this two-part exclusive series, Blaze News will explore recorded interactions between some NHPA "peacekeepers" and a New Hampshire couple who want to protect children against sterilization and genital mutilation as advanced by the so-called transgender agenda.

For now, we will share just one of several videos showcasing the antics of these alleged NHPA "peacekeepers," who are easily identifiable by the yellow lining and peace signs on their vests. The anti-trans couple always wear body cameras to record just such interactions. In this case, they are simply trying to walk on the grounds of the state capital during a Pride event earlier this month.

"Go back to your corner," the female "peacekeeper" repeatedly orders. She also allegedly called the wife "a b****," though if she did, that incident was not included in the video. The male "peacekeeper" then denounces the husband as a false Christian.

"You think you're a Christian, but you're not," he says. The husband immediately replies that he made no remark about his religious identity.

Meet TRA Eileen Ehlers who with her husband Bob st@lk3d @BethRS62 outside of the Rainbow Recess event at the State House. She called me a coward, but note how quick she turns her back when I confronted her. She preys on the weak. #NHPolitics
— (@)

Belcher believes that these and other NHPA "peacekeepers" are actually a "paramilitary" group that parades about public events, impersonating law enforcement by wielding "false authority," to intimidate other New Hampshire residents and deny them their civil rights. "I think it's a big step toward normalizing the deployment of paramilitary along with left-wing protests in order to deny conservatives their right to public protest [and] their right to assembly," he told Blaze News.

'A web of malign influence': Belcher takes action

Because of his findings on the organization's website and the series of videos showing its "peacekeepers" attempting to prevent people from exercising their constitutional rights, Rep. Belcher decided to take action against New Hampshire Peace Action. Earlier this month, he penned a formal letter to New Hampshire Attorney General John Formella, an appointee of Republican Gov. Chris Sununu, as an official criminal referral for NHPA.

In his X profile picture, Horrigan is wearing a pink vagina hat made infamous during the 2017 women's march in Washington, D.C.

NHPA, its parent organization, and some of its affiliates "represent a web of malign influence on New Hampshire and America posing as 'charitable' and 'social welfare' organizations, and these matters may fall under further laws prohibiting material support to terrorist organizations, the Logan Act against conflicts, failure to register as a foreign agent, and RICO statute violations," Belcher wrote.

"This group must not be allowed to challenge the legitimacy of the State through the usurpation of law enforcement functions for partisan and political ends to terrorize New Hampshire citizens," his letter closed.

— (@)

Belcher also persuaded six of his Republican colleagues in the state House to sign the letter as well. Though he did not reach across the aisle to find bipartisan support for the letter, he told Blaze News that not a single Democrat has expressed any interest.

In fact, one of his Democrat colleagues in the New Hampshire House, Rep. Tim Horrigan, even openly admitted to being a part of NHPA. In an X exchange with Belcher, Horrigan called Belcher's allegations "total bulls***." NHPA has "always been quite clear (in my mind, at least) about which donations are tax deductible & which aren't," he added.

In his X profile picture, Horrigan is wearing a pink vagina hat made infamous during the 2017 women's march in Washington, D.C. He also previously acknowledged that he and other Democrats have been either directly or indirectly "influenced by Marx."

Horrigan told Blaze News that the type of "arrangement" between NHPA and NHPAEF "is not unique to NHPA" and may, in fact, be used by "many right-wing groups." He also asserted that the arrangement is not "illegal," adding that if it is, "many, many other groups will have to change the way they do business."

Democrats may not support an investigation into NHPA, but AG Formella has already given Belcher a listening ear about the contents of the letter. During a phone conversation with Belcher on Thursday, Formella pledged to initiate the review process by submitting relevant materials about NHPA to the appropriate state investigative agencies "to assess for probable cause," Belcher told Blaze News.

Belcher is encouraged by Formella's response. "I think that's a perfectly reasonable place to start," he said.

"I am thankful for the attorney general taking this matter seriously and initiating a review of the allegations," Belcher added in a statement. "Given the circumstances and evidence, I strongly suspect there will be a finding that probable cause exists to pursue a full investigation."

Blaze News left a message for Formella with the New Hampshire Department of Justice but did not receive a response.

Next week: Part II of this two-part series.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!