Elon Musk-hating hackers have doxxed Tesla owners in the United States, releasing an interactive map showing their names, addresses, phone numbers and emails.
The disturbing website, called DOGEQUEST, also provides the locations of every Tesla showroom, charging station and the known residences of Department of Government Efficiency employees.
It even lists FBI Director Kash Patel’s home and uses a symbol of a Molotov cocktail as its cursor.
The site’s operators said they will only remove identifying information about Tesla drivers if they provide proof that they sold their electric vehicle amid a national boycott of the car maker.
It is unclear where the hacker got the information about the Tesla owners, but it has caused a lot of concern – with Musk labeling it ‘extreme domestic terrorism.’
‘Encouraging destruction of Teslas throughout the country is extreme domestic terrorism!!’ he wrote on X Tuesday night.
Some online have called for FBI Director Patel to act to take down the website and go after the cyber group behind it after President Donald Trump declared anyone enacting violence against Teslas and its dealerships would be labeled ‘domestic terrorists.’
The president’s remarks last week came amid fiery mass protests at showrooms across the world as leftists hit out at Musk for his efforts to slash government spending.
Five protesters were arrested for disorderly conduct at the Manhattan demonstration and one was taken into custody for resisting arrest, obstruction and violation of local law, The New York Daily News reported.
There have also been more than a dozen acts of vandalism against Tesla vehicles, dealerships and charging stations since Donald Trump’s inauguration, according to police and local reports.
FBI Director Kash Patel has launched an investigation into former Director James Comey’s secret “honeypot” operation involving 2 female undercover agents who targeted President Trump’s 2016 campaign, according to The Washington Times.
Last October it was revealed that according to an FBI whistleblower, former Director James Comey inserted two female agents inside the Trump campaign in 2016.
The Washington Times reported that the female agents were directed to act as “honeypots” and travel with Trump and his staff.
This was an “off-the-books” operation and was separate from Comey and Obama’s Crossfire Hurricane operation (launched in July 2016) that targeted Trump based on false Russian collusion lies.
The whistleblower told Congress last year that the “honeypot” investigation was hidden from DOJ Inspector General Michael Horowitz, another Obama-appointed lackey for the regime.
One of the undercover agents involved in Comey’s operation was transferred to the CIA so she would not be a potential witness.
The other undercover agent was promoted to a high-ranking position at the FBI
The details of this investigation were kept from President Trump’s criminal defense attorneys.
On Tuesday, The Washington Times reported that Kash Patel launched an investigation into Comey’s “honeypot” operation.
Recall that Kash Patel was former House Intel Chairman Devin Nunes’ top deputy for years and helped blow the Spygate and Russiagate stories wide open.
Nobody knows the Comey-McCabe-Brennan-Clapper-Spygate scandal better than Kash Patel.
According to The Washington Times, the FBI is looking for the undercover honeypots.
Dan Bongino, a former Secret Service agent, was named as the FBI’s next deputy director.
President Trump congratulated Mr. Bongino on Sunday night and described him in a Truth Social post as a man with “incredible love and passion for our country.”
Bongino, a native of New York’s Queens borough like Mr. Trump, is also a former NYPD police officer and has bachelor’s and master’s degrees in psychology from the City University of New York and a master of business administration degree from Penn State.
“Great news for Law Enforcement and American Justice! Dan Bongino, a man of incredible love and passion for our Country, has just been named the next deputy director of the FBI, by the man who will be the best ever Director, Kash Patel,” Mr. Trump said.
“Working with our great new United States Attorney General, Pam Bondi, and Director Patel, Fairness, Justice, Law and Order will be brought back to America, and quickly. Congratulations Dan!” the president wrote.
Bongino said that his new role is not about politics but about professionalism, leadership and accountability.
A 12-year veteran of the Secret Service under George W. Bush and Barack Obama, Mr. Bongino was previously an NYPD officer between 1995 and 1999.
Following his time in law enforcement, he launched his political and media career, making unsuccessful bids for Congress in 2012, 2014 and 2016.
He waded into online media, when he launched the Bongino Report in 2019 as an alternative to the Drudge Report, saying founder Matt Drudge had “abandoned” Mr. Trump’s supporters.
He later joined Fox News as a contributor and host and became a successful podcast host and radio broadcaster on Cumulus, where he was signed to replace “The Rush Limbaugh Show” on its talk radio stations.
In 2022, he joined Rumble as a content creator with his podcast after YouTube banned his program after he questioned the effectiveness of masks in stopping the spread of COVID-19.
FBI employees were terminated or forced to quit Thursday within hours of FBI Director Nominee Kash Patel’s testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
At least 20 executive assistant directors, assistant directors and special agents in charge from throughout the U.S. were forced out of the agency, according to sources.
Several officials had already boxed up their offices before they were officially notified of their termination.
The FBI declined to comment on the terminations.
After Thursday’s hearing, Mr. Patel, despite clashing with the Senate’s Democratic minority, appeared on a glide path to confirmation.
Patel, who has served in high-level adviser positions related to national security, said at his confirmation hearing that he planned to stop the “weaponization” of the FBI.
“There will be no politicization of the FBI. There will be no retributive actions,” he told senators.
More than any other personnel decision former President Donald Trump, the president-elect now, has made for his incoming administration, his decision to pick attorney Kash Patel to lead the FBI as the bureau’s next director has electrified Trump’s most ardent supporters.
The raw energy with this selection may be because Patel is viewed as one of the movement’s most aggressive fighters–he was critical in the effort to undercut in Trump’s first term the Russia hoax against the then-president and then later led counterterrorism efforts in the White House–but it’s perhaps even more because of the distrust American conservatives have in the FBI over the past several years that finding someone who just will not appease the world’s preeminent law enforcement agency’s bad actors and will aim to steer the bureau back towards actually enforcing the law and away from political witch hunting.
Senators may disagree with Patel on one thing or another, but they cannot legitimately argue that the person who led counterterrorism activities for the Trump White House including overseeing the raid that killed ISIS leader Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi, serving as a senior adviser to the Director of National Intelligence, as chief of staff at the Pentagon, and as a top attorney for the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI), as well as a long and illustrious career both as a prosecutor and as a public defender, is not qualified for the job. So see, this move by Trump puts these forces that his base has long distrusted and sought to counter in check–if not checkmate–and that’s why his base is so excited.