As reported
here, Fetzer and Halbig were on their way to crash the School Board Meeting. Whatever the plan was, it flopped as no one took the bait and they were left looking like the insensitive, ignorant douches they are:
http://www.newstimes.com/local/article/Newtown-school-board-greets-Sandy-Hook-skeptics-5458442.php
Newtown school board greets Sandy Hook skeptics with silence
Nanci G. Hutson
Published 10:07 pm, Tuesday, May 6, 2014
NEWTOWN -- They came and they spoke, but their words fell flat with a respectful but thoroughly disgusted audience.
A dozen or so self-described skeptics of official accounts of the Sandy Hook school shooting appeared Tuesday night at the Board of Education meeting, each taking the allotted three minutes to address pointed questions to board members.
Wolfgang Halbig,
the most prominent member of the group, raised questions about
everything from the scale of police response that day to their refusal
to accept his expert help in analyzing the event. He suggested that his
legitimate efforts to get answers have been thwarted, and accused board
members of toeing an official line.
"Board members, these are your children," Halbig said. "We want answers. We want truth.''
But board members refused to take the bait, remaining silent
throughout presentations by Halbig and several of his supporters who
followed him to the microphone. The audience, which included First
Selectman Pat Llodra and several other town officials who had come to
support the board, also stayed silent.
The only public response came from Newtown resident Jim Fitzpatrick,
who was the last to speak. Unable to let this group have the last word,
he said, "It's a shame to see this circus come to town, and I'm
offended by the people who have come, and these conspiracy theories.
Newtown has conducted itself wonderfully.''
He was greeted with a round of light applause, quickly waved silent by Board Chairman Debbie Leidlein.
Halbig, a former Florida state trooper and U.S. Customs inspector,
describes himself as a school safety and security consultant. He claims
to have given school safety training and assessments to thousands of
school districts nationwide, and to be a frequent speaker on safety at
school board conferences across the country.
He is one of the more prominent of those who question official
accounts of what happened the day of the school shootings. In numerous
interviews he has criticized police response as inadequate, and on his
website, sandyhookjustice.com, he poses 16 questions he says officials
have never satisfactorily answered about the event. He also claims to
have been threatened for persisting in his efforts to get answers to
those questions.
Halbig's "16 Questions" have become a regular theme among online
writings by conspiracy theorists, who began raising questions about
Sandy Hook within days of the mass shooting that killed 20 first-graders
and six faculty members on Dec. 14, 2012.
School and civic leaders have done their best to ignore these theorists.
Before the meeting, Llodra declined to comment on Halbig's
appearance, saying she would rather keep her sights on doing what's best
for her town and its residents.
"We know what happened to us and to our community, and our families
and our schools, on Dec. 14, 2012," said Llodra, who took a seat at the
board table to show solidarity with the members."We want to be as
transparent as possible, but we have things to do on a daily basis, and
this particular level of dialgoue I'm referring to our attorneys."
None of the victims' families attended.
The strategy of town and school leaders was to give this group as little attention as possible. And it worked.
A half-hour before the meeting started, Halbig's followers rallied in front of the Municipal Center. One man dressed in a Revolutionary War-era uniform wave a hanging effigy of Governor Dannel Malloy.
At one point when the group blocked the sidewalk, town officials
asked them to stand on the grass so as not to block the walkway. A
policeman was then posted at the front door, and the door locked until
the meeting was ready to begin.
When public comments concluded, the group left the room, with a
police officer standing guard at the door to assure an orderly exit.
Earlier Tuesday, a group of Halbig's supporters visited the Danbury offices of the
United Way of Western Connecticut, demanding records about the use of
charitable funds collected on behalf of the Sandy Hook community. Chief
Executive Officer Kim Morgan said the group was told that all financial documents for the non-profit agency can be found online.
"I would prefer not to give them a voice in the mainstream media, and
to reassure the public that all of our financial documents are online
and can be accessed by anyone,'' Morgan said.
Seven members of the group, some carrying still and video cameras,
then visited the offices of the News-Times, asking to meet with a
reporter. A News-Times editor met with one member of the group, Nevada
attorney Day Williams, who asked for a story about their visit to United
Way, but the request was declined.
School board members used the door on the opposite side of the "truthers'' to enter the building.
Noting that he has served with many school boards over the years, newly installed Superintendent Joseph Erardi Jr. was clearly impressed with how the board handled such a sensitive event.
"I was incredibly proud of the school board this evening," he said.
One audience member, though, couldn't quite contain himself, adding as Fitzpatrick finished his comments.
"It's crazy," he said, shaking his head. "It's sad.''
Photos of the idiots on parade:
 |
Wolfgang Halbig, a former Florida State Trooper and school principal,
asks questions about the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting during
the public participation section of the Board of Education meeting at
the Newtown Municipal Center Council Chambers in Newtown, Conn. Tuesday,
May 6, 2014.
Photo: Tyler Sizemore |
 |
Melbourne San, of Rome, N.Y., dressed as a patriot walks into the
Newtown Municipal Center Council Chambers in Newtown, Conn. for the
Board of Education meeting Tuesday, May 6, 2014. Wolfgang Halbig, a
former Florida State Trooper and school principal, spoke during the
public participation part of the meeting, asking questions about the
Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting on Dec. 14, 2012.
Photo: Tyler Sizemore
|
 |
Melbourne San, of Rome, N.Y., dressed as a patriot uses a prop for
demonstration outside the Newtown Municipal Center in Newtown, Conn.
before the Board of Education meeting Tuesday, May 6, 2014. The prop
reads "Here hangs Gov. Malloy Oath Breaker" and "Expose me w/ Sandy
Hook...I'll give you back your 2nd Amendment rights!" |
 |
A crowd watches during the Board of Education meeting at the Newtown
Municipal Center Council Chambers in Newtown, Conn. Tuesday, May 6,
2014. |
 |
Wolfgang Halbig, a former Florida State Trooper and school principal,
speaks about the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting before the Board
of Education meeting at the Newtown Municipal Center Council Chambers in
Newtown, Conn. Tuesday, May 6, 2014. |
 |
Dan Bidondi, of Infowars.com, speaks at the Board of Education meeting
at the Newtown Municipal Center Council Chambers in Newtown, Conn.
Tuesday, May 6, 2014. |
 |
Wolfgang Halbig, left, a former Florida State Trooper and school
principal, and Melbourne San, of Rome, N.Y., laugh before the Board of
Education meeting at the Newtown Municipal Center Council Chambers in
Newtown, Conn. Tuesday, May 6, 2014. |
 |
Melbourne San, of Rome, N.Y., dressed as a patriot uses a prop for
demonstration outside the Newtown Municipal Center in Newtown, Conn.
before the Board of Education meeting Tuesday, May 6, 2014. |
 |
James Fetzer, of Oregon, Wis., speaks during the Board of Education
meeting at the Newtown Municipal Center Council Chambers in Newtown,
Conn. Tuesday, May 6, 2014. |
 |
Kevin Laprade, of Woonsocket, R.I., speaks at the Board of Education
meeting at the Newtown Municipal Center Council Chambers in Newtown,
Conn. Tuesday, May 6, 2014. |
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This one on Fetzer found on the Interwebs and posted for laughs. Cuz after this sick Hooker fiasco Fetzer deserves everything coming to him: