FBI agents have begun visiting people’s houses to ask questions about offensive social media posts which challenge the official narrative.
One such incident was reported by a woman called Olla Abdeljawad, who filmed agents visiting her home in Stillwater, Oklahoma.
When the woman asked the agents to identify themselves, they refused before claiming they had already shown the woman their IDs.
Wow. The FBI reportedly sent agents to a woman’s house in Stillwater, Oklahoma to question her over her political beliefs that she posted on Facebook.
— Robby Starbuck (@robbystarbuck) March 29, 2024
Unless these guys are impersonating federal agents, this is a very serious red line they’ve crossed. 😳pic.twitter.com/q3nwukWPfA
“What we’d like to do is have a conversation with you about some social media posts that you’ve made. Would you be willing to talk to us about that?” asks one of the agents.
The woman refuses to talk until a lawyer is present after the agent asks her for contact information.
“No, I’ll get back to you,” states Abdeljawad.
Another agent asks the woman to have her attorney “contact the FBI office in Oklahoma City.”
The agents proceeded to tell the woman that “Facebook gave us a couple of screenshots of your accounts.”
“Well you can’t arrest me for freedom of speech, we live in America, so it’s kind of weird that you want to come talk to me about me exercising my freedom of speech,” responds the woman.
“We do this every day, all day long we talk to people, it’s just an effort to keep everybody safe, make sure that nobody has any ill will or bad intent or anything like that,” responds one of the agents.
When Abdeljawad asks if the FBI would question “all the citizens in America” who used Facebook, the agent responds, “We certainly would if we had any sort of concerns.”
The woman later confirmed the individuals were FBI agents.
“Just verified with local law enforcement that, the indivs who came to my home, really were FBI per their license plate. My lawyer will contact the OKC field office,” she said.
“The lawyer did inform me that these instances are now common, but the lawyer doesn’t believe that FB sent them the screenshots of my posts.”
“Rather, it seems like a fishing expedition. I do not fear them. My only concern as, I told the cop is that, someone in my state will do something or that they would and then use my posts in a malicious attempt to “smear” me.”
“Just *remember, I am a Muslim, an obligated protector of creation. I enjoin what is good and forbid what is wrong.”
One user on X called Kam St. Martin posted, “The FBI came to my house over a TWEET! Not cool. My pinned tweet that’s still up.”
The video shows a man who introduces himself as an FBI special agent who wanted to speak to someone over a post about “the Baton Rouge subject.”
Watch
🚩The FBI came to my house over a TWEET!
— 𝐊𝐚𝐦 𝐒𝐭.𝐌𝐚𝐫𝐭𝐢𝐧 (@KAM4Texas) March 29, 2024
Not cool.
My pinned tweet that’s still up.
@elonmusk pic.twitter.com/5GauyJTXTt
The tweet in question features an image of a black man who St. Martin claims killed her cousin.
“This monster drugged my 27-year-old cousin at the L’Auberge Casino in Baton Rouge last February. He dumped her half naked dead body like trash. Rap sheet a mile long. He walks today on PROBATION. Damion Matthews may you reap what you have sown,” it states.
🚨This monster drugged my 27 yr old cousin at the L’Auberge Casino in Baton Rouge last February. He dumped her half naked dead body like trash.
— 𝐊𝐚𝐦 𝐒𝐭.𝐌𝐚𝐫𝐭𝐢𝐧 (@KAM4Texas) February 20, 2024
Rap sheet a mile long. He walks today on PROBATION .Damion Matthews may you reap what you have sown. @govjefflandryy pic.twitter.com/pW7Bo9HsjQ
The post has 39,000 likes.
READ: Biden’s FBI Now Surveilling Trump Supporters ahead of Election