The FBI & DOJ are probably the most dysfunctional law enforcement organizations in America. Once again a domestic terrorist makes it past the FBI and make no doubt that's what this kid is. No he's not a kid, he's a calculating murderer who was hell bent on creating terror on his teachers, classmates, school. He knew exactly what he was doing and executed a plan of attack. Some people will call it crazy smart.

 

Just maybe if the FBI and all the cronies in law enforcement were not chasing people who are not a threat like Motorcycle Clubs for instance they could spend a little more time following leads like this that would save lives of children.

 

We're not to sure what the FBI is smokin nowadays since the shooter Nikolas Cruz posted on a youtube channel under the username of Nikolas Cruz. Good Lord "school shooter" doesn't send up a red flag, sound the alarm, general quarters or at least an honorable mention 5 months ahead of the shootings.

 

God help us all if this is what our National Security looks like. 

 

CNN Story: 

 

Ben Bennight, the 36-year-old YouTube video blogger from Mississippi, noticed in September an alarming comment on a video he'd posted. He told CNN he immediately contacted the FBI.

 

 

 

 

"Im going to be a professional school shooter," read the comment, left by a user with the name Nikolas Cruz, the same name of the suspected shooter who opened fire at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Wednesday, killing at least 17 people.


It was one of at least two alleged threat reports about the suspected shooter that the FBI received, according to a law enforcement official. In both cases, the FBI did not share the information with local law enforcement, the official said. 

 

Hello, Hello Helloooooo! Like call the local Sheriff have 'em check this guy out. Of course these college educated G men are above that, huh?

 

Bennight emailed a screenshot of the comment, which he shared with CNN, to what he thought was an FBI tip line, but the email address was invalid, he said. Bennight said he followed up with a phone call to the FBI. The comment on YouTube has since been pulled down.

 

According to Bennight, agents from the FBI's field office in Mississippi contacted him and came to his office to conduct an in-person interview the next morning. Bennight told the agents he didn't know anything about the user, he told CNN.

 

That was the last contact he had with the FBI until Wednesday, he said.

The FBI special agent in charge of the Miami division, Robert Lasky, confirmed Thursday morning that the bureau received a tip last year about the YouTube comment.


"No other information was included with that comment which would indicate a time, location or the true identity of the person who made the comment," Lasky said during a news conference. "The FBI conducted database reviews, checks but was unable to further identify the person who actually made the comment."


It's not clear whether the FBI ever identified the suspect in the other alleged threat report.


The YouTube comment and Bennight's efforts to alert the FBI were first reported Thursday by BuzzFeed News.


On Wednesday afternoon, after Cruz was arrested, Bennight got a call from an agent in the FBI's Miami field office, who wanted to follow up on the September incident, he said. A few hours later, FBI agents from the Mississippi office paid Bennight another visit.

 

"I saw the story kind of go across my news feed, but I didn't pay a whole lot of attention to it," he recalled Thursday in a phone interview with CNN. "But when the FBI said it was the same name, the first thing that went through my mind was, 'Wow, I hope you were at least watching this guy that I alerted you to months ago."

 

"I think in today's online world, it is very difficult to narrow down who does what without more information," Bennight told CNN's Jake Tapper later Thursday, "and unfortunately, I wasn't able to provide them with much."

 

Noting that he doesn't know exactly what it takes for the FBI to investigate these sorts of tips, Bennight acknowledged that "had more time and effort been put into finding out who the username belongs to, ... they may have been able to find out who this person was and put him on their radar."

 

Are Texas Schools Safe? NO!

 

Respect,

 

Popeye