Why is Wolfgang Halbig working with an Attorney who is linked to the FBI?
“Hoax of a Lifetime” Hoaxer makes another strange decision.
Wolfgang Halbig hires representation with ties to the Government Agency he opposes.
The internet’s biggest Sandy Hook Hoaxer makes an interesting move by hiring attorney Andrew Crumbie, a lawyer from Connecticut. Crumbie was born in Jamaica and came to the United States for a different kind of life. Why is Andrew Crumbie mixing it up with Wolfgang Halbig and Kay Wilson to expose Sandy Hook conspiracies? Afterall, Crumbie was chosen for long-term assignment to the FBI in Connecticut.
Andrew Crumbie
Arrested in 2013 for strangulation and assault charges
Before he was in the FBI, Wolfgang Halbig’s newest attorney got himself arrested for strangulation and assault charges. That is fascinating! Read the entire story here:
The eventful life of Andrew R. Crumbie took an unhappy turn Tuesday. The former state police official was arrested by West Hartford police on Tuesday, April 9th. He was charged with strangulation, assault, disorderly conduct and interfering in an alleged incident involving Crumbie’s wife, according to West Hartford police. Crumbie made an array of accusations in 2007 against former Governor M. Jodi Rell’s administration and her chief of staff, M. Lisa Moody, for discrimination and retaliation after he was demoted from a position at the state police lab. The matter was settled in 2008 with Crumbie assigned to work at Capital Community College.
Crumbie, according to a biography on his firm website, serves in a number of public positions, including “the Client Security Fund Committee, appointed by Connecticut Supreme Court Chief Justice, The Honorable Chase Rogers; the Cultural Competency Committee of the Public Service and Trust Commission, appointed by Connecticut Supreme Court Chief Justice, The Honorable Chase Rogers; Chairman of the Connecticut Citizenship Fund Committee, appointed by Connecticut Secretary of State, The Honorable Denise Merrill.” He’s also a member of the board of the St. Francis Foundation.
Crumbie was released on a $10,000 bond. He is scheduled to return to court on May 28th. Crumbie declined to comment on his arrest.