
On August 25th of last year I wrote a post that preemptively assessed the alleged threat that Brandon Wayne Bryant poses to the Missoula community, and in that post I referenced the double-homicide case that all three Missoula residents pictured above were arrested for. Today I’m going to write more explicitly about what I only hinted at last August:
Recently a new person arrived on the scene where the social circles I circulate in have their little rag-tag sense of community. I was sympathetic, at first, of the criminal charges this person is facing, and the seeming pariah status this person achieved in their respective social circles, but that was before I learned about the double homicide of William and Yesenia Larsen in 2020, allegedly committed by several Missoula residents arrested in March of 2021, who this person may have some connections to.
Before I get to the connection mentioned above, the sentencing of Cory Spurlock to life in prison last month is now being challenged by the Trump administration with “unprecedented” pressure to put Spurlock to death. Huh?
A man who was the target of a Trump administration effort to put him to death after Biden-era prosecutors said they would not pursue capital punishment was sentenced to life in prison, prosecutors said.
U.S. District Judge Mirandu Du sentenced Cory Spurlock on Monday after jurors returned a guilty verdict against him in September.
…
Federal prosecutors said in a July 2024 notice that they would not pursue the death penalty, then filed a formal notice stating that they would seek death on April 10, just 12 days before the intended start of Spurlock’s trial.
The reversal came after the U.S. attorney general’s office under the administration of President Donald Trump issued a Feb. 5 memo that stated federal prosecutors would be expected to seek death in some cases and directed the attorney general’s capital review committee to re-evaluate cases from President Joe Biden’s administration in which prosecutors decided not to do so.
Spurlock’s federal public defenders previously said the situation was “unprecedented.”
If this case becomes a political tug-of-war between the Trump administration and federal prosecutors, the attention will focus solely on Spurlock, but MY focus is on the liberal campus culture that influenced TWO Israelis, Orit Oged and the person I didn’t name in August’s post but will now–Hila Tzipora Chase.

Ten years ago Orit Oged attended Bezalel Academy and produced an art video, which the image above is taken from. You can see that video, titled “The Untangled Routine”, and several other videos here, including one called “Pineapples $ Lasers”.
For those squares out there who don’t know about pineapples, they’re a notorious symbol of “hook-up” culture, so I find it interesting that the video shows two ping pong paddles hitting a pineapple back and forth.

To confirm it’s not just me making this pineapple claim, here’s a quote from Men’s Health magazine:
WHETHER WORN ON clothing or jewelry, pushed around in a shopping cart, or otherwise put on display, an upside-down pineapple is a subtle signal that someone is a swinger or looking for a swinger party. Just to be clear: Swinging is a form of non-monogamy, wherein a couple enjoys swapping sexual partners with another couple or sets of couples. It’s where the “wife swap” and “keys in a bowl” stereotypes come from.
What consenting adults do behind closed doors is none of my business, but that’s not what we’re talking about here. What we’re talking about is an aspect of drug culture that doesn’t respect the boundary between adult and minor, and THAT is the kind of charge Hila Chase is currently facing.

Doing circus shit, like acrobatics, is apparently where Hila Chase met Orit Oged and, since both women identify as Israeli (among other things), I’m sure they hit off quickly.
For Hila’s part in adding to Missoula’s campus culture, “they” got allowed to help the “Design Team” that Seth Bodnar relied on to rebrand the University of Montana. Here’s a list of names and the disciplines they came from:

Before I cut all communication with this individual I was taken to the “communal” house that New Jersey daddy owned right by Interstate 90. That’s how I was able to use the Montana Cadastral site to get this info:

The press-release last month from the United State Attorney’s Office depicts Cory Spurlock as quite a monster, but answer me this: do monsters exist in a vacuum?
“There were no bounds on the defendant’s cruel and violent actions,” said First Assistant United States Attorney Sigal Chattah for the District of Nevada. “There is no parole in the federal system. The defendant will never walk outside of the prison walls. I want to thank our federal and local partners for relentlessly pursuing this case and ensuring justice for the families and community.”
“This was a horrific act of targeted violence. Spurlock’s callous and blatant disregard for human life was unconscionable,” said Special Agent in Charge Christopher S. Delzotto for the FBI Las Vegas Division. “The FBI will never stop pursuing those who threaten our communities’ safety. Thanks to the tireless work of our FBI personnel in the Reno Resident Agency and our committed law enforcement partners, Spurlock was located, prosecuted, and will not harm another person in our community again.”
One of my concerns back in August was the veracity of claims of sexual assault directed at a local employee of a thrift shop, someone who has since left Montana, I am told.
I was also told the FBI had been questioning other employees of that thrift store, and that the question of human remains had come up. Don’t worry, as a former member of the “Carcass Club”, I’m sure there’s a reasonable explanation for that.


Needless to say, I am STRONGLY ENCOURAGING my oldest, who graduates high school this year, to NOT consider UM, like at all, ever. And that was before I met another likely example of Borderline Personality Disorder.
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