Eric Molitor, the victim in the alleged FBI plot to kidnap Michigan Democratic Governor Gretchen Whitmer, broke his silence during a Trump rally held at Van Andel Arena.
Speaking to Real America’s Voice reporter Ben Bergquam, Molitor claimed that the FBI orchestrated the entire plot and even tricked people into participating.
“The FBI set everything up. They drove people, they paid for everything. They wrote the script,” Molitor said. He said Governor Whitmer himself decided the best time for the operation in collaboration with the FBI and state police.
“Governor Whitmer himself opened his schedule book and decided with the FBI and the state police when it was the best time to ride during the day, ride at night. And then they lied to them. We even have evidence that he told them, ‘Get the crowd in the truck, and don’t tell me what you’re doing until he’s on the road.’ It’s 100% organized. Governor Whitmer, if he can’t do it for someone like me, he’s going after someone else,” Molitor added.
Molitor was one of those involved in the plot to kidnap Governor Whitmer, which made headlines around the world last year. He claims he was tricked into participating in what he believed to be civil defense force activities against Antifa and BLM in his area.
Ben Bergquam: Let me ask this part without asking… I don’t know if you are still going through the legal battles.
Eric Molitor: I quit, man. I stopped. This is one of them. He’s still out there pushing this as if it’s a legitimate thing if there’s a kidnap plot against him that he set up with the FBI.
Ben Bergquam: Walk me through what really happened that night.
Eric Molitor: Oh my goodness. I did not go on what is known as the Nighttime Ride. I was tricked into a daytime ride, and Oh, my gosh. Again, there are many entries. However, I have set up a civil defense force for my area of ​​Wexford, Cadillac City, because Antifa and BLM are coming there.
Through this process, I’ve met Adam Fox, who lives down here in Grand Rapids, actually. After a while, they got me a job in private security, which was amazing. I thought that stuff was really cool. He’s a good guy, by the way. The FBI, the government lied about this guy being in prison.
Anyway, he grabbed me and asked if I wanted a ride. I asked, “Yeah, what do you think?” I think this is a good thing to do.
Nothing was said about the Governor or anything else. Anyway, he and Dan Chappel, the original FBI informant over there, the other guy who lied over there, he came to get me, him and Adam Fox. We got to Elk Rapids, which is an hour away from my house. Nothing was said. It was a truck with three people. We talk about women, alcohol, guns, like Americans.
Anyway, we got up to Elk Rapids, and they said, ‘He’s a cottage.’ I still haven’t put it together. I think maybe Antifa BLM is trying to hold up in private places instead of doing these hotels and motels that we hear about.
Ben Bergquam: Are you more into security or what?
Eric Molitor: I used to. I thought that we were. When we got up there, and I was in a truck with people 100 miles from my house, and they started talking about Whitmer’s Cottage, and there, man, my heart sank. I don’t know if I will make it out of the situation alive. I don’t know what happened.
After this incident, Molitor was arrested at a family gathering where law enforcement allegedly pointed a gun at his children. He now faces charges of material support for terrorism because of the video he was asked to take during the ride and felony firearm because he had a sidearm.
When asked about the current state of the law, Molitor said he has stopped fighting. He was frustrated that Governor Whitmer continued to portray the plan as a legitimate threat to his life.
Molitor ended the interview with a call to action, asking residents to contact their representatives and form civic groups in their communities. He stressed the importance of understanding how the system works and being active in being accountable.
“If they can’t do it for someone like me, they’ll go after someone else,” Molitor said.
WATCH:
JUST IN – Victim of FBI plot to kidnap Michigan Governor Whitmer says:
“The FBI set everything up. They drove the people; they paid for everything. They wrote the script.” pic.twitter.com/qeaQRUP8pJ
– The Post Millennial (@TPostMillennial) July 20, 2024
Last year, The Gateway Pundit reported that Eric Molitor, twin brothers William and Michael Null, were acquitted by an Antrim County, Michigan jury on charges of providing material support for terrorist acts and illegal possession of firearms. All three were jailed for up to 20 years for the crime.
Eric Molitor wept in court after the verdict was read.
All of these plots were hatched, planned, paid for, and executed by paid FBI informants.
An FBI informant pushed a brutal plan to kidnap Whitmer. That’s all the setup.
In an October 2020 press conference, the FBI announced it had foiled a “right-wing militia” plot to kidnap and kill Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer.
The Whitmer kidnapping plot is in the media 24/7 and is being used to bludgeon Trump with only a few weeks until Election Day.
The FBI used at least 12 informants in the Michigan Whitmer kidnapping case.
The case, which we now know involves almost all FBI agents and informants, took another hit in August.
Michael Hills, the attorney for Brandon Caserta, one of the six defendants, produced text messages showing FBI field agents telling informants to lie, frame innocent people and delete text messages.
One female FBI agent admitted during testimony that she slept in the same hotel room, and the same bed, during a training weekend with FBI target Barry Croft. She goes the extra mile to get her man!
And… he smoked pot with her too.
A female FBI agent told the court, “Sometimes informants have to play together.”
Of the 14 people charged in the plot, nine were convicted or charged, while five were eventually acquitted.