Last month, a rumor linking Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro to the July 13 assassination attempt against Donald Trump went viral online—with the likes of Infowars host Alex Jones, former CIA operator Shawn Ryan and other high-profile pundits promoting it.
To date, the source of that rumor, Hadassah Feinberg, has provided zero evidence to substantiate her claim—which alleges, among other things, that the conspiracy between Shapiro and President Joe Biden unfolded at a Denim Coffee shop in early July.
According to the phony “federal whistleblower,” the plot was hatched at Denim Coffee (yes she really alleges this)
I HAVE OBTAINED FOOTAGE OF THE CONSPIRACY!!!!!
🤡 https://t.co/YPrKGRC34o pic.twitter.com/ih3I0owyYz— Ken Silva (@JD_Cashless) March 9, 2025
Feinberg has also made numerous claims of varying degrees of plausibility about her background—including that she’s a U.S.-Israeli dual citizen who worked on counterterrorism at a Jerusalem bus station in 2010, that she was “preliminarily accepted for employment with the FBI,” and that she is a “federal whistleblower” who was targeted in 2023 for exposing Shapiro’s corruption.
The only evidence she’s publicly provided about her acceptance into the FBI is a screenshot of an email response to an online application. In court documents, meanwhile, she’s talked about suffering from PTSD due to the attacks on her—which she says has hurt her career as a “teacher, therapist, and mandated reporter.”
Nevertheless, Butler District Attorney Richard Goldinger has taken steps to investigate her latest complaint against Shapiro. Pennsylvania law allows private citizens to file a criminal complaint against another person. Among other allegations, Feinberg said in her Feb. 7 complaint that Shapiro received $500,000 as an “assassination reward.” […]
— Read More: headlineusa.com