A person — or more often a group of two or more acting together — who enters into a secret agreement to commit a crime against someone, while simultaneously disguising or denying their role. A Conspiracy Flipper doesn’t just orchestrate the conspiracy; they also flip the blame onto their victim by labeling them a “conspiracy theorist” or dismissing their evidence as unstable or false.
Key Point:
All conspiracies require at least two people. Those who engage in the act itself — whether in law enforcement, government, or other positions of power — are the true Conspiracy Flippers, because they both commit the conspiracy and flip the narrative to conceal it.
Key Point:
All conspiracies require at least two people. Those who engage in the act itself — whether in law enforcement, government, or other positions of power — are the true Conspiracy Flippers, because they both commit the conspiracy and flip the narrative to conceal it.
Example:
Officer John ROMERO and his associates fabricated reports and orchestrated my kidnapping. When I presented evidence, they tried to dismiss me as delusional. That’s what Conspiracy Flippers do: commit the conspiracy, then flip the narrative to protect themselves.
Officer John ROMERO and his associates fabricated reports and orchestrated my kidnapping. When I presented evidence, they tried to dismiss me as delusional. That’s what Conspiracy Flippers do: commit the conspiracy, then flip the narrative to protect themselves.
by Watchlist Subject 9596690-00 September 22, 2025
