Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Man Trying To Steal Car Tells Police He's A Federal Marshal Because Trump Declared Martial Law

Man Trying To Steal Car Tells Police He's A Federal Marshal Because Trump Declared Martial Law
Tulsa Police Department

Officers with the Tulsa Police Department arrested a man who pretended to be a federal marshal and attempted to steal an Audi from a car dealership.

Dealership employees said they told the man, identified as Randy Cantwell, that the Audi could not be taken out for a test drive. But Cantwell was persistent, declaring that the dealership had stolen the car and that it was within his authority as a federal marshal to repossess it.


Cantwell's attempt to drive off the lot proved fruitless. Realizing he was stuck once employees blocked the dealership's exits, he opted to walk away from the lot.

The Tulsa Police Department noted that officers arrived on the scene and spoke with Cantwell, who provided his identification but could provide no proof that he was a federal marshal. Cantwell also claimed that he became a federal marshal when former President Donald Trump "enacted martial law."

Former President Trump never declared martial law while in office, though many of his supporters have wrestled with "fantasies" that he might declare martial law in swing states that he lost in the 2020 general election.

A screenshot of a tweet from an account allegedly belonging to Trump announcing that he'd invoked martial law made the rounds in December 2020, in the aftermath of Democratic President Joe Biden's win and as the Trump White House ramped up its campaign to overturn the election results.

The tweet was ultimately proven to be fake but that did not stop the former President's most enthusiastic supporters, QAnon adherents and assorted conspiracy theorists among them, from declaring that the process of "draining the swamp" had begun or that the tweet had been removed from Trump's Twitter account by the opposition.

Cantwell was arrested for false impersonation of law enforcement.

The news of his arrest soon garnered significant social media attention and he was widely mocked online.



Suggestions that the Trump administration should have invoked martial law–and should do so anyway should Trump run for office again and take power in 2024–continue to permeate right wing circles.

Last year, Michael Flynn, Trump's former National Security Advisor, after he appeared to endorse an overthrow of the United States government.

"No reason, I mean, it should happen here. No reason. That's right," Flynn responded to a member of the audience at a Dallas event who inquired whether a coup not unlike the one that happened in Myanmar in February 2021.

Lawyer Sidney Powell, who has represented Flynn in the past, insisted Flynn had not encouraged "any act of violence or any military insurrection." She attributed the furor surrounding Flynn's comments to media distortion.

A Parler account belonging to Flynn later claimed that his comments were taken out of context.

However, in December 2021 Flynn shared an advertisement from the We the People Convention, an Ohio activist group, which called for Trump "to exercise the Extraordinary Powers of his office and declare limited Martial Law" to suspend the United States Constitution and civilian control of federal elections.

The ad said such a move would be necessary "in order to have the military implement a national re-vote that reflects the true will of the people," reiterating Trump's blatant lies that the 2020 election had been stolen.

More from People/donald-trump

Pete Buttigieg
Flagrant/YouTube

Buttigieg Explains What He Wants 'Everyday Life' To Look Like For Americans In Pitch Perfect Rant

On his Substack Wednesday, former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigiegwrote about why he decided to enter the "manosphere" and sit down with the hosts of the Flagrant podcast.

The manosphere is defined as a "varied collection of websites, blogs, podcasts, and online forums by men and for men often promoting masculinity, misogyny, and opposition to feminism. Communities within it include men's rights activists, incels, Men Going Their Own Way, pick-up artists, and fathers' rights groups."

Keep ReadingShow less
Jennifer Vasquez Sura
Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images

Abrego Garcia's Wife Forced To Move To Safe House After Homeland Security Shares Her Address On Social Media

The name Kilmar Abrego Garcia has been in the news steadily since his abduction by the Department of Homeland Security's Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the United States Supreme Court unanimously ordering he be returned to his family in Maryland.

But much less has been said or written about Abrego Garcia's American-born wife, Jennifer Vasquez Sura. The pair have been married since 2019 and share a child.

Keep ReadingShow less
Sarah Michelle Gellar
Michael Buckner/Variety via Getty Images

Could SMG return to the IKWYDLS reboot?

Sarah Michelle Gellar? More like "Sarah Dead Gellar."

At least that’s what the iconic scream queen told director and best friend Jennier Kaytin Robinson when she tried to pitch all the ways to bring back Helen Shivers’ frozen corpse to life for the I Know What You Did Last Summer reboot.

Keep ReadingShow less
Pete Hegseth
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Hegseth Dragged After Report Reveals He Demanded His Own Makeup Studio At Pentagon

Hating drag queens and insisting on traditional gender roles is a Republican article of faith at this point.

So why is far-right MAGA Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, who has tried to kick trans people out of the military, demanding that a makeup studio be added to the Pentagon press briefing room for him?

Keep ReadingShow less