Andy Ngô Identified North Texas Antifa

Andy Ngô On CNN

Andy Ngô – author of the New York Times best seller Unmasked – identified members of an antifa operation in Dallas.

Ngô, unmasked the antifa operatives, associated with Elm Fork John Brown Gun Club on his Twitter feed.

He did so hours after we published about the group disrupting homeless operations.

Ngô states that members of the Elm Fork John Brown Gun Club targeted a UNT student and a prolife prayer she led. He also links to a Human Events piece detailing the harrassment by members of antifa while at UNT.

He names Christopher Guillott as a leader of the Elm Fork John Brown Gun Club. Ngô states Guillot directed efforts against Kelly Neidert.

Andy Ngô Identified Antifa Members

In another report, an antifa member died carrying out a terror attack in 2019. This person was from the Washington state chapter.

Garrett Lee, made open threats on Twitter with no response from law enforcement. Lee is also an extremist member of antifa based in Dallas.

North Texas Antifa Directs Threats
Andy Ngô Identifies North Texas Antifa

Andy Ngô Biography

Ngo was born and raised in Portland, Oregon. His parents fled Vietnam in 1978. They had been subjected to forced labor and communist re-education camps.

Ngo volunteered with AmeriCorps while attending the University of California, Los Angeles. He graduated with a graphic dessign degree.

Potential For Homeless Violence Increases

Homeless Violence

The potential for homeless violence increases after a group from outside Dallas forced city staff including city marshal and homeless staff to surrender on a homeless sweep.

Reports say more than three dozen people showed up to stop the city’s efforts. City staff including the Office of Homeless Solutions and Marshals participated.

Homeless Violence

The group led by the Elm Fork John Brown Gun Club carried long rifles. They obstructed the orderly tasks of city government. This led to the negotiated surrender where city staff left without doing their job.

This follows Dallas Police surrender to agitators with firearms at Dealey Montessori last year.

Homeless Violence
Photo from Elm Fork John Brown Gun Club Instagram page shows armed persons “patrolling” a homeless encampment in South Dallas.
Homeless Violence

Per one report the city will not enforce whether people continue living in the homeless encampment under Interstate 45.

Homeless Violence

The presence of the Elm Fork John Brown Gun Club reminds Dallas citizens of the George Floyd protests.

Homeless Violence

Dallas saw a number of outside groups come into the city to agitate for violence. It led to a police response that injured bystander civilians.

These groups seemed to be encouraged by city council efforts to defund the police led by council members Bazaldua, Blackmon, Narvaez, and others.

Several are concerned that the criminal problem of homelessness will continue as long as there is a protection racket. Some have theorized that the protection racket comes from local drug dealers using these camps as a buffer to encroach on new territory.

Homeless Violence Raising Money For Schools?

The group also appears to be raising money as an unregistered charity. It is unclear where this school supply money would go in the request above. Is it for a Dallas student or another student outside the area? Will it go to a college aged student?

There is no clear indication and beyond Instagram this appears to be an antifa style operation.

Our Calling: Homeless Left In Cold

Our Calling Left In Cold Caring For Homeless

Our Calling and the homeless were left out in the cold when Our Calling, located just outside Downtown Dallas, was not included when Dallas City Council approved an exception for churches to operate as emergency homeless shelters during extreme cold.

City Council and staff has worked for years on a policy that would create a legal way for churches to open their doors to the homeless on freezing nights. Staff from Our Calling said a change made in the final hour will now leave 270 people out in the cold.

Our Calling Left In Cold Caring For Homeless

“I think what they are communicating is they don’t care about minorities that are poor, and they sure don’t want them Downtown, and now they don’t even want them a half mile away from Downtown,” said Pastor Wayne Walker, with Our Calling, which is a discipleship ministry to the unsheltered homeless.

Two years ago, the city gave Pastor Wayne Walker a citation for sheltering the homeless during a freezing night.

Our Calling is located immediately outside Downtown, near The Cedars, a community experiencing economic revitalization, bringing calls of racism and privilege.

Dallas Mayor Pro Tem Adam Medrano, Adam Bazaldua, and Omar Narvaez – the Woke Caucus as some refer to them – seemed to justify limiting the homeless at Our Calling.

“We are listening to our constituents, we have enough shelter Downtown. We do. This was supposed to spread it out throughout the city,” said Dallas Mayor Pro Tem Adam Medrano.

This same constituency pushed defunding the police earlier in the year and re-programming funds away from the police department. Their previous stances seem more in favor of bike lanes than actually social services for those in need.

Earlier this year these same members of City Council were prepared to push through $1.9M in CARES Act funding for the Lorenzo Hotel until D12 City Council Member Cara Mendelsohn called attention to the issue.

Additionally, these more challenged socioeconomic areas of Dallas received a smaller percentage of the city rental assistance program than their more wealthy neighbors.

Our Calling

Our Calling is on the frontline of the battle to cure homelessness. They’re on the streets every day meeting the unsheltered homeless of Dallas County, learning their stories, identifying their needs, and theysay connecting their hearts to Christ. We have formed lasting connections with thousands of individuals who we are proud to be able to include among our friends.