Former Trump official Mike Gill dead days after Washington DC carjacking: report

The Bobster

Senior News Editor since 2004

Former Trump official Mike Gill dead days after Washington DC carjacking: report​



By
Social Links for Patrick Reilly



Published Feb. 3, 2024

Updated Feb. 3, 2024, 8:56 p.m. ET








Former Trump official Mike Gill, who was shot by a carjacker Monday in Washington D.C., died from his wounds on Saturday, Fox 5 DC reported.

“It is with profound sadness that I wish to inform the community of the passing of my husband, Mike Gill,” his wife, Kristina Gill, said in a statement.

Former Donald Trump official Mike Gill died days after he was shot by a gunman on a carjacking spree in Washington D.C. 5
Former Donald Trump official Mike Gill died days after he was shot by a gunman on a carjacking spree in Washington D.C. LinkedIn
Person standing on a sidewalk, with a a black coat. 5
Mike Gill, who was shot by a carjacker Monday in Washington D.C., died from his wounds on Saturday, Fox 5 DC reported. Metropolitan Police Department
Mike Gill standing at a podium giving presentation. 5
“It is with profound sadness that I wish to inform the community of the passing of my husband, Mike Gill,” his wife, Kristina Gill, said in a statement. Mike Gill / Linkedin
Mike Gill 5
Gill had served as Trump’s chief operating officer of the Commodity Futures Trading. Mike Gill / Linkedin
[IMG alt="Gill, seen here with his wife and three children in a photo from just two weeks earlier
"]https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/02/gill-seen-wife-three-children-75706170.jpg?w=1024[/IMG] 5

Gill, seen here with his wife and three children in a photo from just two weeks earlier Sean Gill / Facebook

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“His sudden departure has left a void in our lives that can never be filled.”

Gill had served as Trump’s chief operating officer of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

Drew Maloney, President and CEO of the American Investment Council and Gill’s friend for 15 years, said he was “grateful” for their friendship.

“Mike was not just a close friend; he was an extended member of o
ur family. Our daughters’ friendship blossomed into a beautiful bond, and it was a testament to Mike’s warmth and kindness that he welcomed us into his life with open arms,” Maloney told Fox 5 DC.

Former CFTF Chairman J. Christopher Giancarlo remembered Gill as “one of the most wonderful, honest, earnest, and open-hearted persons on this earth.”

“Words cannot express the tragedy of the loss of this fine man, colleague, and cherished friend,” Giancarlo added. “He will be sorely missed and long remembered.”

The father of three was picking his wife up from work when 28-year-old Artell Cunningham got inside his parked car outside of an office building on K street and shot him in the head around 5:45 p.m., according to police.

After the shooting, Cunningham fled on foot. He tried to steal another vehicle around 7 p.m. on 3rd Street. About 10 minutes later, he fatally shot 35-year-old Alberto Vazquez, Jr. and drove off in his car.

He stole two more cars before he allegedly opened fire at a D.C. police officer along I-295 and a Maryland State Police trooper who was assisting a disabled vehicle along I-95 in Laurel, Maryland around 2:30 a.m. the next day.

No officers were injured.

Around 4:30 a.m., Cunningham was shot and killed by New Carrollton police officers after he allegedly came at them with two guns in Prince George’s County.

Officials believe the rampage was the result of a mental breakdown.

Gill had been working as senior vice president for Capital Markets at the Housing Policy Council when he died.

He is survived by his wife and three children, Sean, Brian, and Annika.
 
"SUSPECT" that looks very much like a black negro in the news photo....
1707027014349.png
(apparent nigger) killer of White Trump aide - SHOT AND KILLED BY POLICE
the suspect was shot and killed by officers after he “displayed two handguns.”
 
Mike Gill was not a stupid man, would not have made frivolous accusations. Wealthy people do own drug treatment centers, like Alida Rockefeller up in Minneapolis. Drug dealers creates their customers. The singer, Prince lived in Mpls, Prince was going to blow the whistle on their operation, so he was snuffed out.

Record $274 Million Verdict Awarded Against Talk Show Host After Radio Rants​

Aaron Keller Sep 29th, 2017, 3:12 pm



Michael-Gill-2.jpeg




A New Hampshire jury has awarded a record-breaking $274 million verdict – which attorneys say is at least ten times greater than the previous state record for a personal injury claim – against a radio talk show host and businessman who accused three other businessmen of dealing “heroin” and “machine guns” in a warehouse. Those allegations came through a series of politically-charged billboards, online broadcasts, radio shows, and Web postings.

The lawsuit was filed by Dick Anagnost, who runs his own investment company; Andrew Crews, the CEO of a series of car dealerships; and William Greiner, a bank chairman.

The lawsuit accused talk show host Michael Gill and political operative Aaron Day of defamation.

Gill, the talk show host, used billboards both to advertise his business, Mortgage Specialists, and to carry defamatory messages against the plaintiffs, sometimes using vulgar language, the lawsuit alleged. Gill operated a well-visited Web site called “State of Corruption” and hosted a show called “SOC Radio,” both of which carried similar content to the billboards. The radio show appeared both online and on a local news/talk radio station in New Hampshire, the plaintiff’s attorneys tell LawNewz.com.


Over a series of broadcasts, Gill allegedly ranted about several of the plaintiffs. According to court documents, one of the broadcasts went this way:


“Now I told you, and I’ve been telling you, the heroin dealers are in this state are Anagnost and Crews. Now who are these people? Well a couple of the wealthiest men in our state. That’s how they got wealthy, ok. They have a warehouse. I brought this up. We had witnesses, distributing and unloading drugs and machine guns from trucks.”

In another broadcast, Gill even told listeners the original lack of a defamation suit against him was proof that the plaintiffs were, indeed, drug dealers, court documents revealed:

“I accused Anagnost and Crews, and Greiner by the way, of being drug dealers . . . They’re fine citizens, you know, Anagnost and Crews, right. You didn’t hear Anagnost and Crews one time saying they weren’t drug dealers now did you? Because I didn’t hear that. In fact, if you go on to read it, they both say they don’t want to sue me. Really. I’d sue you. And you’d sue me back, wouldn’t you. But why aren’t they. Because it is the truth, and you know it’s the truth.”

The original lawsuit also said Gill accused one of the three plaintiffs of extortion.

Ironically, several of the plaintiffs and their families have helped finance and manage a nonprofit drug and alcohol addiction recovery center. (New Hampshire has been hit hard by the nation’s opioid and heroin crises.) The lawsuit also argued several of the defamatory broadcasts also linked in the plaintiffs’ philanthropic activities, including this one:

“Dick Anagnost, that’s right, I name names. And Crews. They are your heroin dealers in this state. Been for twenty years. They own the treatment center. Hope Treatment Center. So they’re selling you drugs, killing your children and the ones who don’t die, you own the treatment center . . . They are not only going to have the heroin business, they’re going to have the pot business.”

Another went as follows:

“Anagnost, Crews are selling heroin. Did you just hear that? They have a warehouse that we’ve had witnesses in with the distribution of this heroin. There’s no question about that. Who are the people who own . . . New Hope Treatment Center. It’s Anagnost and Crews . . . I told you about Anagnost and Crews. Heroin. Drug dealers that own these treatment centers.”

The actual name of the treatment center, the plaintiff’s court filings say, is “Hope for NH Recovery.”


Aaron Day, the one-time leader of the state’s Republican Liberty Caucus, was also sued in his individual capacity, but previously settled for slightly more than $1 million, sources tell LawNewz.com. Day resigned both his state and national posts with the caucus in early 2016, the group reports. The original lawsuit was filed April 15, 2016.

The jury deliberated for half a day Thursday and for a few hours Friday before returning the verdict. Attorneys for the plaintiffs believe the previous record award for a lawsuit in New Hampshire was a $21 million award.

The plaintiffs were represented by Shaheen & Gordon, P.A.

[Image of Michael Gill via screen capture from YouTube.]


This post has been updated.
 
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businessman who accused three other businessmen of dealing “heroin” and “machine guns” in a warehouse.
YOU TELL ME?

 
Mike Gill, “Now I told you, and I’ve been telling you, the heroin dealers are in this state are Anagnost and Crews.
Heroin has to get in somehow.
 
The father of three was picking his wife up from work when 28-year-old Artell Cunningham got inside his parked car outside of an office building on K street and shot him in the head around 5:45 p.m., according to police.
Gill was in the driver's seat. LONE carjackers invariably go to the driver door to carjack.
Negro got into passenger side. This was a hitman, a dumb negro hitman who was figuring he could get away easy. I'd surmise those who hired the hitman convinced him getting away would be easy.
 
Artell Cunningham
iu



Artell Cunnigham: Serial carjacker who killed former Trump official Mike Gill and another man on same night shot dead by police​

Story by Shanmugapriya Murugesan • 12h
MARYLAND, UNITED STATES: A 28-year-old serial carjacker died at the hands of the police around 4.30 am last Tuesday, January 30, after hijacking multiple vehicles and causing the deaths of two individuals.



To provide context, Artell Cunningham's initial victim was Mike Gill, a married father of three, shot on K Street NW in Washington, DC, around 5.45 pm last Monday.


Unfortunately, Gill succumbed to his injuries in the hospital on Saturday, February 3. Gill was a former Trump administration official.


Merely 90 minutes later, Cunningham fatally shot Alberto Vasquez Jr, a father of two, in a separate carjacking nearby. He then continued his crime spree, stealing more cars at gunpoint.


Following these tragic incidents, Cunningham was confronted by two New Carrollton Police officers and ultimately killed on the northeast outskirts of DC's Maryland suburbs.


The confrontation occurred after the suspect had committed a series of carjackings and violent acts, resulting in a deadly outcome.
 
The lawsuit [against Gill] was filed by Dick Anagnost, who runs his own investment company; Andrew Crews, the CEO of a series of car dealerships; and William Greiner, a bank chairman.
So, with drug dealers and pesky money, enter their 3 requirements for laundering drug money and how they've pulled it off, SO FAR. Their money trail is out there just waiting to be found.
By IRS maybe?

Investment company

The Private Investment Industry Should Turn Its Focus to Anti-Money ...

Bad actors have laundered money through private investment companies by depositing funds into their investment accounts and quickly seeking to withdraw the funds (also known as pass-through activity or short term activity). In one case, a bad actor was able to launder approximately $1 million

Car dealerships are ideal to launder drug money, happens all the time

Owner of Colorado Car Dealership Sentenced for Structuring and Money "Money is the fuel that drives and motivates drug dealers, and for that reason, laundering drug money is a serious federal offense," said U.S. Attorney John Walsh. "During the investigation of a drug trafficking organization, it was determined that this car dealer was laundering proceeds to hide illegal

BANK CHAIRMAN
The one in charge with ability to do things after hours or with a willing employee who gets a cut, ought to be a no-brainer

Former cooperative chairman claims trail to graft, money laundering charges
The former chairman of a cooperative entered a plea of not guilty in the Sessions Court when facing two charges of corruption and
 
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