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In late May and early June, conspiratorial web sites such as TheFreeThoughtProject.com reported that a veteran group had stumbled upon a disturbing bunker in Tucson, Arizona, that was being used for child sex trafficking: According to the Tucson Police Department, the group stumbled onto private property on 31 May 2018 off Interstate 19 and West Valencia Road in Tucson. But what they found is nothing more than an abandoned homeless encampment. In a statement on the incident posted to their public Facebook page, Tucson police reported: Tucson Police Sgt. Pete Dugan told us the department patrols many areas that have washes and deserts, and that law enforcement officers there are no strangers to homeless encampments. He also said the department has had officers, detectives, and command staff at the site investigating since the initial reports, along with human trafficking experts, and that no evidence of human trafficking has been found: Immigration authorities confirmed their findings were in concurrence with those of Tucson police. In a statement, ICE told us: Despite the fact no credible evidence has surfaced indicating the site was anything more than a shelter used by the local homeless population, conspiracy theorists have latched on to the suggestion of pedophilia, as they so often do. In late 2016, outlandish rumors circulated that Hillary Clinton was running a pedophilia ring out of a Washington D.C. pizza parlor. Since then, a veritable cottage industry of disreputable web sites have regularly hawked clickbait stories about elite pedophile rings. For those sold on the far-fetched idea that a local police department would provide cover for a vague ring of child predators, the findings of investigators have fallen on deaf ears. Conspiracy theories about a sex cult rocketed across the Internet. The disreputable blog BigLeaguePolitics.com, for example, employed the headline, Rothschilds and NXIVM Sex Cult Tied to Alleged Sex-Trafficking Land in Tuscon. Big League Politics further reported (without any supporting evidence whatsoever) that the cover-up goes back more than a decade and has to do with the Clintons and Nxivm, a self-help organization whose founders in April 2018 were indicted by the United States Department of Justice on sex trafficking charges. The blog also reported that the mayor of Tucson's surname is Rothschild, but it is unconfirmed whether he is related to the dynastic family so often linked to anti-Semitic conspiracy theories. (It did not take us long to confirm that he is not). Conspiracy theories often circle back to the idea that a secretive global cabal (run by the Rothschilds or George Soros, depending on which wealthy Jewish person's name is most convenient) is waiting in the wings to seize power. In these narratives the cabal creates false flag mass casualty incidents as pretext to take all America's guns away — or, alternatively, these same people (who must be remarkably busy) prey on children. Even though Tucson police released their findings casting serious doubt on the veracity of child trafficking claims on 4 June 2018, social media users continued to troll their Facebook page (How much are the Rothchilds paying these days, one person asked.) Men from the veteran group were still apparently visiting the site, as evidenced by videos they were making and posting to the platform YouTube. Craig Sawyer, founder of the organization Veterans for Child Rescue, for example, went into detail about his explorations of the site and finding what he believed to be a rape tree:
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