An increasingly paranoid Jose “Chille” DeCastro went live again on Tuesday with a second in a planned line of attacks on YouTube channels featuring police bodycam videos which he alleges are part of a nationwide psychological operation on behalf of the police.
In DeCastro’s latest theory, the nationwide psyop began after the death of George Floyd. In DeCastro’s contention, the massive backlash felt across America that gave rise to protests was not because American cared about Floyd, but because they were enraged at the police who killed him.
At this point the psyop began on a nationwide level in order to rehabilitate the police in the view of the public. Several pro-police YouTube channels were created along with an unofficial nationwide network to tip off these channels as to which case numbers were to be requested by these channels to feature.
DeCastro’s evidence of this conspiracy came with the owner of Columbus Police Body Camera’s announcement that he had been fired from his job as a police officer for violating his station’s social media policy.
Because the man said “our” and “we” instead of “my” and “I” at times when discussing his channel, DeCastro pounced on this as proof of a larger conspiracy as the man was not acting alone in the production of his channel.
YouTuber DeCastro also became enraged at the large number of superchat donations that the Columbus Police Body Camera channel received during the broadcast DeCastro reviewed. He screamed in outrage, at one point, that the owner of the channel would soon make more money off of his YouTube channel than he would as a police officer.
DeCastro then directed his fans to donate to his PayPal account and make the amount a monthly reoccurring payment. While he admitted he’d be attacked for making the request, he said it wasn’t out of line to further his goals.
Addressing his Constitution Headquarters board game, DeCastro claimed that he had sent off the game pieces to his “branding guy” this week. He said he needed another week to finish the article and amendments pieces of the game and then it will be “done” and sent to the same “banding guy.”
Once the “branding guy” put the pieces and cards together, DeCastro will take the game to the printer and make an order between 1,000 and 5,000 copies. He promised that the game will be out by “April.”
DeCastro also announced that his Constitution HQ channel has gained 40 subscribers since he rebranded the channel. He reaffirmed his plans to fill the channel with support videos for the game once the copyright process was finished.
This is an ongoing news story.