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Minister Michael Lewis Arthur Meyer shares why he's protecting Sarah Stanley & River Jennings

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#EastIdahoNews Michael Lewis Arthur Meyer is the man behind Walking for the Forgotten Ministry and Veterans on Patrol based in Tuscon, Arizona. He tells Stanley and River are in one of “dozens” of safe houses he’s been operating in secret across the country for the past seven years. “She’s in a safe location with her son, and everything she needs will be provided for her and her son,” Meyer says. “Under no circumstances will Walking for the Forgotten Ministry reveal the location of Sarah and River. Our Safehouse Program is now publicly compromised by criminals who continue to target a fit and loving mother as well as her 3-year-old.” Meyer is well-known to law enforcement in Arizona and elsewhere. In 2014, he was involved in the standoff with federal officers at the Bundy Ranch in Nevada and was reportedly given the nickname “Screwy Louie.” A year later, he climbed an 80-foot light pole in Surprise, Arizona waving an upside-down American flag. Police talked him down after four hours and he was charged with criminal trespass. The next month, he climbed the same light pole and stayed up for two hours. Meyer has also been charged with burglary, theft and criminal damage. The minister, who is not a veteran, has posted conspiracy videos on social media about sex trafficking and veteran homelessness. He claims to have run nine homeless shelters and helped 14,000 immigrant children who were “dumped” on his property in Arizona. He asks his followers to send money to assist in his “rescue operations.” “We have over 300 members across America involved in walking for the Forgotten Ministry,” he tells . The group has at least two pages on the social media platform Telegram. One has over 10,000 subscribers, the other has around 25,000. It’s unclear how Stanley found Meyer, but Jennings remembers his ex-girlfriend gradually becoming obsessed with extreme fringe beliefs during her pregnancy and after River was born. Meyer tells one of the main concerns he and Stanley have with providing Jennings access to River is the father wants to have his son vaccinated - not just against COVID-19, but all vaccines. “He’s trying to get this kid so he can vaccinate him and virtue signal to other families in Seattle. That’s not going to happen. We’re not going to allow anyone to inject the child with a bioweapon,” Meyer says. Meyer says the only judge he answers is to is the “God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob,” and the judges in Stanley’s case have no authority. “Our church can mediate anything between father, mother and son,” he says. “Let’s get the family courts out of our ways and sit down and actually hold mediation. Our whole job is to find a solution for the problems.” Read the entire story here:

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