The Royal Canadian Mounted Police have set up a temporary detachment in the town of Richmound, Saskatchewan, as locals fear violence from the QAnon influencer and cult leader who recently moved into the area, reported Vice on Wednesday.
Romana Didulo, who recently took up residence in an abandoned school in the area, claims to be the rightful Queen of Canada — and to be fighting a secret society of pedophiles who rule the country. Roughly ten devoted followers travel with her and obey her orders.
RCMP officials assured the town at a meeting on Tuesday that Didulo's group poses no risk to the community, and that they are doing stops of vehicles that leave the school. The cult reacted angrily to the proceedings, with a nightly livestream denouncing local townspeople as "Nazis."
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Per an earlier report, Didulo's cult sent threatening letters to locals in Richmound, saying, "failure to Cease and Desist, IMMEDIATELY, from your Rothchild/CCP based communistic, unfair, demoralizing, and immoral activities and behaviors while 'serving the (We the People)' and 'before the (We the People)' under the present Natural Law WILL surely bring forth judgment upon yourselves and if found guilty of ‘Crimes Against Humanity’ or ‘Treason’ you WILL face publicly broadcast executions upon yourselves, and underserved devastation upon your children, grandchildren and families."
Among other activities, Didulo has been printing her own "interdimensional" currency for her followers.
The QAnon movement, which began under former President Donald Trump's administration and purported to be based on an intelligence officer predicting mass arrests of the true enemies of America, has splintered into a number of factions, including another group that gathered multiple times in Dallas in the hope that a still-living John F. Kennedy would reveal himself to take the mantle of their fight.
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