Well, the state of Minnesota just took a sharp detour from progressive talking points and straight into political thriller territory—with a plot so twisted it’d make Tom Clancy roll over in his grave. On Tuesday, federal prosecutors indicted 57-year-old Vance Boelter on six counts of murder related to the shocking back-to-back shootings of two state politicians and their spouses. But the jaw-dropper isn’t just the carnage—it’s who Boelter says put him up to it.
In a letter addressed to FBI Director Kash Patel, Boelter claims he was “hired by U.S. Military people off the books” starting in college. But that’s not even the wild part. According to Boelter’s own handwritten manifesto, he was personally approached by Minnesota Governor Tim Walz to carry out an assassination plot against sitting U.S. Senators Amy Klobuchar and Tina Smith.
Boelter alleges that when he refused, Walz threatened his family, set up a phony meeting, and tried to have him killed. And if you think that’s just delusional nonsense from a madman, consider this: Boelter was appointed by Tim Walz to the state’s Governor’s Workforce Development Board. That’s not some crackpot rant. That’s a public record. Boelter challenges authorities: “If [Walz] says he doesn’t know me… look in the files.”
This isn’t the usual lunatic with a manifesto blaming video games or fluoride. Boelter’s claims are specific, politically targeted, and grounded in provable facts about his connections to state leadership. He even refers to the alleged hit list and his intention to “spill all the beans,” naming names and offering up enough red meat to keep conspiracy forums buzzing for months.
What makes this even murkier is the fact that Boelter didn’t fire at any law enforcement during his two-day manhunt. He emphasized this in his letter, claiming it was all personal, not random, and meant to send a message to those who crossed him.
Of course, the media is already tying itself in knots. Some are trying to paint him as a conservative Christian lunatic because of his past as a pastor and GOP registration. Others are pointing to his ties with Walz and progressive state programs as proof he was a left-wing insider who went rogue.
The truth? It’s too early to tell. But what’s not in dispute is this: Minnesota is staring down a political scandal of biblical proportions, and the more they try to bury it, the more the public will demand answers. Somebody better start spilling some beans—before the whole pot explodes.
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