A Restored Grace

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A Restored Grace

A Restored Grace

@arestoredgrace

God 1st ✝️ Mother 👩‍👧Anti-human trafficking advocate FL 💪🏻 NGOs need an overhaul 💥 Fighting the fake grifters getting rich & famous off anti-trafficking

Florida Sumali Ekim 2023
128 Sinusundan249 Mga Tagasunod
A Restored Grace
A Restored Grace@arestoredgrace·
@takenaps So many questions. Why did all 5 passengers in his vehicle to the hospital get rid of ALL their clothing and wear scrubs out of the hospital? Sketchy
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Bobby Sauce
Bobby Sauce@takenaps·
If you got shot in the neck why would your shirt burst up and out? It wouldn't. But if you are not believing the official story (because you are a rational human person living on Earth) yoU ArE eViL, apparently. Makes sense
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Mark Slapinski
Mark Slapinski@mark_slapinski·
OMG The death of Virginia Giuffre is now being investigated as a HOMICIDE
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Bobby Sauce
Bobby Sauce@takenaps·
I remember when Ed Gallrein said "@RepThomasMassie stands with the ladies of The View" and now 1 month later JD Vance is going on The View 🤣
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A Restored Grace
A Restored Grace@arestoredgrace·
@Torncurtainorg What a bizarre funeral message to preach when a young couple from her family, whose child was SA’d is in attendance. 100% NOT God who told him to preach that. Loathesome
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Torn Curtain I Joshua Simone
Torn Curtain I Joshua Simone@Torncurtainorg·
Joni Lamb Daystar CEO Funeral Service Done by Jentenez Franklin and He Claps Back at the "Critics". As we all know Joni Lamb passed away at the age of 65 years old before her time. Daystar has not revealed her cause of death. Jentenez Franklin who conducted the funeral decides to address all of Joni Lamb's critics and "haters" as he gave the eulogy for her funeral. He opens up saying to criticize is the smallest size". He goes on a bizarre rant talking about how hard ministry is for leaders meanwhile him and Joni live lives like lifestyles of the rich and famous. He uses this sermon to compare Joni Lamb to Mary at Bethany. Joni Lamb spent decades in the ministry and is nothing like Mary and Bethany. The Bible says that leaders will be judged with greater harshness because their leadership roles come with high accountability. People were trying to hold Joni Lamb accountable for the adulterous marriage to Doug Weiss and the SA of Baby lamb which seemed to be covered up. Not to mention Joni Lamb and Jimmy Evans horrible mistreatment of Jonathan & Suzy Lamb. People like Jentenez Franklin and Joni Lamb want the power, wealth and prestige without the accountability and responsibility that comes with it. Jentenez Franklin had a lawsuit recently from another ministry claiming he stole millions of dollars. People like Franklin just don't get it, we were criticizing Joni but holding her to account.
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Nate Eaton
Nate Eaton@NateNewsNow·
One-on-one with Skye Lazaro, Kouri Richins' former attorney. Her thoughts on the sentencing, her interactions with Richins, why she ended up leaving the case and more. Tonight on "Courtroom Insider." 7 pm MDT | East Idaho News YouTube channel.
Nate Eaton tweet media
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laura jo
laura jo@UnFencedUnKept·
@PrettyLiesAlibi Didn’t Kouri’s mother’s lover die the same way Eric died?
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A Restored Grace
A Restored Grace@arestoredgrace·
@NateNewsNow Who allocation was full of covert sociopathic threats and manipulation. She’s sociopathic
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Nate Eaton
Nate Eaton@NateNewsNow·
Kouri Richins says she did not murder her husband and will fight so she can eventually go home to her sons.
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A Restored Grace nag-retweet
Mayra Flores
Mayra Flores@MayraFlores4TX·
When you realize that Jesus fed 5,000, but only 500 followed him after the meal. He had 12 disciples, but only 3 went farther into the garden, and only 1 stood by him at the cross. The closer you get to the cross, the smaller the crowd becomes.
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🇺🇸Lionel🇺🇸
🇺🇸Lionel🇺🇸@LionelMedia·
Chandra Levy, a 24 year old intern in Washington, vanished on May 1, 2001 just days before she planned to return home. A year later, her remains were discovered in Rock Creek Park. Authorities ruled her death a homicide, yet no one has ever been definitively held responsible. Early media attention focused heavily on her relationship with Congressman Gary Condit, but that angle ultimately led nowhere. Ingmar Guandique was later convicted, only to have that conviction overturned due to serious issues with witness credibility and investigative missteps. The case has remained unresolved for decades. Now, Levy’s parents are raising new questions, suggesting her interest in UFOs, possibly connected to Condit’s role on the Intelligence Committee, may have placed her in danger. They point to alleged warnings she received and are calling for greater transparency from the government regarding unidentified aerial phenomena and potential links to missing persons cases.
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Michael Brown
Michael Brown@MichaelDBrown·
If anyone knows what Roger Hudson, @VictorMarx's campaign manager, is posting on X, could you let me know? I just looked and apparently he's now locked down his account. He follows me, but I can't see his posts. Interesting that a campaign manager for a gubernatorial candidate that wouldn't answer a simple question I posed to him, has now prevented me from seeing his posts. 👀
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Ryan Elijah
Ryan Elijah@ryanelijah·
My statement on my decision to run for Congress.
Ryan Elijah tweet media
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A Restored Grace
A Restored Grace@arestoredgrace·
@blaiseforet @pastorlocke Watch The Religion Business for more information on Copeland. The producer was on the Shawn Ryan Show and did a great interview. This scandal has long been ‘known’ to insiders in the evangelical community. I do not believe Locke has pictures. He’s a mess.
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A Restored Grace
A Restored Grace@arestoredgrace·
Tim Ballard’s house of cards is on fire. Anyone supporting him at this point does so ‘in defiance’ of testimony and evidence.
Damion Moore@DDLMoore

There comes a point when mythology collapses and only the truth remains. That point has arrived for Tim Ballard. For years, Ballard built a reputation that depended on myth rather than scrutiny. He presented himself as a central figure in a moral crusade while discouraging the very questions that would test his claims. His supporters followed suit, treating inquiry as hostility and criticism as betrayal. That posture is no longer sustainable. The declaration of Greg Rogers, a former FBI Special Agent with decades of undercover experience, states plainly that the “couples ruse” is not a legitimate investigative technique. It violates established standards and serves no operational purpose whatsoever. This is not opinion from critics. It is professional assessment from someone who spent a career doing the work Ballard claims to have done for profit. Aaron Asay, an insider with direct operational involvement, provides sworn testimony describing conduct and practices that contradict the public narrative. His account raises serious concerns about how operations were conducted and how participants were treated. Ryan Fisher’s declaration speaks to the origins and intent behind the organization itself. Krista Kacey’s declaration adds further allegations regarding internal conduct. Deanna Hanks provides an independent account placing Ballard, under his silly alias, in circumstances that raise additional questions about his behavior. The deposition of Jon Lines, a career Homeland Security official, further undermines Ballard’s claims of expertise. His testimony calls into question the depth and nature of Ballard’s actual experience. These accounts do not exist in isolation. They all align. They are reinforced by the Davis County criminal investigation, which includes internal communications, witness statements, and investigative findings that challenge public claims about operations, fundraising, and methods. These are law enforcement materials, not speculation. More telling is what has happened among Ballard’s former allies. Sean Reyes, once publicly aligned with Ballard, has distanced himself in the face of these allegations and the accounts of the women involved. Glenn Beck, an early supporter and financier, has acknowledged his failure. And the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints took the extraordinary step of excommunicating Ballard for conduct it deemed incompatible with its standards. Yet the Church has chosen silence when transparency is needed. If the institution found the conduct serious enough to remove him, then it bears responsibility to release the underlying findings. Withholding those records while allowing the public to speculate what they knew serves no one. It protects neither truth nor accountability. These are not critics. These are former supporters, financiers and institutional allies. They helped create and prop up the myth. Still, the most basic questions remain unanswered. How many children were rescued? Who took custody of those children? Where did all that money go? These are not unreasonable demands. They are the minimum standard for any organization that has raised hundred-of-millions under the banner of "saving the children". There has been no clear accounting. Instead there has been deflection, outrage, and a continued attempt to replace evidence with emotion. Supporters continue to repeat claims that have not been substantiated while ignoring a growing body of sworn testimony and documented records. The record now speaks for itself. Depositions. Declarations. Court filings. Investigative materials. American Crime Journal has compiled and continues to expand a legal archive containing these primary documents. This archive is not commentary. It is the evidence itself, available for public examination. This is no longer a matter of competing narratives. It is a matter of documented claims versus unanswered questions. Those who continue to defend Ballard are no longer doing so in the absence of evidence. They are doing so in defiance of it. The only question that remains is how much more of this record must surface before accountability is no longer optional. #TimBallard #OperationUndergroundRailroad #OUR #ACJInvestigates americancrimejournal.com/acj-investigat…

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A Restored Grace
A Restored Grace@arestoredgrace·
@DDLMoore You’re doing great work, once again. Thank you for your continued pursuit in this matter. It matters.
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Damion Moore
Damion Moore@DDLMoore·
The public is being asked, once again, to choose between narrative and evidence. On one side stands a carefully constructed mythology: a man cast as a savior, an organization framed as a moral crusade, and a story designed to flatter the sensibilities of those who prefer heroes to scrutiny. On the other side now sits something far less convenient... sworn testimony. The declaration of Aaron Asay does not emerge in isolation. It joins the deposition of Jon Lines, the statements of Ryan Fisher, and the declaration of Krista Kasey. Individually, each account raises serious concerns. Taken together, they form something far more difficult to dismiss: a pattern. What is alleged is not merely poor judgment or isolated misconduct, but a breakdown of the very standards the organization claimed to uphold. Asay, an insider with direct operational involvement, describes conduct that, if true, would stand in stark contradiction to the public image that has been so aggressively marketed. His account of admissions, operational violations, and internal concerns mirrors, in substance if not in exact detail, what others have already placed on the record. This is the point at which serious observers are expected to look not for perfection in witnesses, but for consistency across them. And that consistency is precisely what is emerging. There are recurring themes: blurred boundaries under the guise of operational necessity, internal objections dismissed or ignored, and a structure in which accountability appears to have been optional rather than essential. The additional allegations regarding financial opacity and the treatment of dissenting voices only deepen the concern. These are not the hallmarks of a disciplined organization. They are the symptoms of one that has ceased to question itself. None of this, it must be said, constitutes a final legal judgment. These are allegations, sworn but still subject to challenge. But to pretend they are trivial, or worse, to ignore them entirely, is to abandon the very idea of inquiry. Because when multiple individuals, operating in different roles and at different times, describe overlapping conduct, the question is no longer whether something happened. The question becomes how much has yet to be fully understood. The tragedy here is not only what may have occurred behind the scenes, but how eagerly the public narrative was accepted without examination. A story that reassured was preferred to one that investigated. And now, as the record expands, that preference is proving costly. What is required now is not outrage, nor reflexive defense, but scrutiny. Relentless, unsentimental scrutiny. The kind that does not bend to reputation, ideology, or the comforts of belief. Because if these accounts are even partially true, then what has been presented as a moral enterprise begins to resemble something far more troubling. And that is not a conclusion to be avoided. It is one to be confronted. #TimBallard #OperationUndergroundRailroad #OUR #HumanTrafficking #ACJInvestigates americancrimejournal.com/acj-investigat…
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Ryan Jones
Ryan Jones@RyanJones·
First world problem: I’m boarding my @Delta flight. Family with kids boarded ahead of me. They’re sitting in the back. I’m 1A. They put 3 bags in the first class overhead. I say excuse me I’m in 1A can you leave me room for my bags and take yours to your seat please? Flight attendant yelled at me and made me put my bag in the middle of the plane. I know it’s petty but If you’re in first class that should be your space.
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