From Helen Jeong's NBCLosAngeles.com report entitled "Omar Navarro, Ex-congressional Candidate, Gets 4 Years in Prison for Embezzlement":
A former candidate in previous California congressional races was sentenced to federal prison for embezzling nearly $250,000 from his political campaign and spending the money on personal expenses, including trips to Las Vegas.
Omar Navarro, who challenged Rep. Maxine Waters for California’s 43rd Congressional District from 2016 and 22, was sentenced to 48 months in federal prison after he pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud last June.The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has said after raising millions of dollars during the four election cycles, the 37-year-old defrauded his campaign committee by pocketing some of the money.
Although he knew federal law strictly prohibits the personal use of campaign funds, Navarro funneled campaign cash to himself between July 2017 and February 2021, the DOJ said.
To read Jeong's entire article, click HERE.
For further information about Omar Navarro, check out my 12-17-23 EVERGREEN REVIEW article entitled "The Silent Civil War: The Radicalization of the Evangelical Right":
The QAnon movement persisting without Q is exemplified not just by Newmax but also by Omar Navarro (who ran for California’s 43rd congressional district for the fourth time after having served six months in jail for stalking and harassing his ex-girlfriend, fellow Republican politician and QAnon promoter DeAnna Lorraine Tesoriero). Navarro has strategically refrained from mentioning Q since January 6. Here’s an excerpt from Davey Alba’s December 20, 2021 New York Times article entitled “‘Q’ Has Been Quiet, but QAnon Lives On”:
Mr. Navarro said he had stopped posting about QAnon to avoid being barred from the [social media] platforms.
“I’m not dumb,” Mr. Navarro said in an interview. “You have to be politically correct in today’s world to survive on social media.”
He added: “I’m running a campaign for Congress. So I need to focus on issues that matter more, like the economy or business other than” focusing on QAnon.30
Of course, to be more truthful Navarro should have said, "So I need to focus on issues that matter more, like the economy or business or illegally siphoning off campaign funds to myself through my own mother." Navarro's mother, by the way, also pled guilty to embezzlement. Returning to the article...
In a June 27, 2021 Business Insider article entitled “A Trump-loving Insurrectionist and a Convicted Stalker Are Among 36 QAnon Supporters Running for Congress in 2022,” Joshua Zitser and Sophia Ankel write that Navarro still “believes in ‘some things’ that ‘Q’ says, including the human trafficking trope.”31 It’s both distressing and amusing that Navarro talks as if the problem of human trafficking was something no human being had ever acknowledged until Q popped up on 4chan. Q’s followers don’t seem to understand (or don’t wish to understand) that the critics of QAnon aren’t saying that human trafficking doesn’t exist. They’re saying that QAnon’s distorted, politically weaponized fantasies about human trafficking do far more harm than good, particularly when they begin to crowd out genuine information about how human trafficking can actually be combated in the real world as opposed to the ineffectual theorizing that occurs among most “digital soldiers” (a phrase first coined by General Michael Flynn, Trump’s former national security adviser) in the online LARPing world of QAnon.
Back to Omar:
“I do believe that there’s human trafficking going on right now. I do believe that Hollywood has participated in some of this with pedophilia and it’s something obviously we can’t ignore,” [Navarro] said.
Navarro, who has gone viral multiple times on Twitter for his far-right and homophobic views, has previously pushed the debunked Pizzagate theory [from which QAnon is a direct outgrowth]. He told Insider: “I feel like there are certain things going on. There’s something shady in that pizza shop” [i.e., Comet Ping Pong in Washington, D.C.].
The Californian also defended using the popular QAnon slogan WWG1WGA (“Where we go one, we go all”) in a tweet posted on October 3, 2020, saying he ended up deleting it because he didn’t want Twitter to ban him.
“I always have to worry about my free speech and what I say on Twitter,” he said.32
As we can see from the above comments, the social media ban on QAnon content did not prevent people like Navarro from believing in political disinformation; it simply encouraged them to find better and more efficient ways to hide their beliefs while still spreading (and acting on) that disinformation. It made identifying those responsible for spreading the disinformation a thousand times more difficult. Rather than stopping bad ideas, censorship inevitably serves as both a shield and an amplifier for those ideas.
It's interesting to note that, according to THE LOS ANGELES TIMES, Trump confidant Roger Stone served as Navarro's campaign advisor back in 2017, the same year QAnon got its start on 4chan.
If you'd like to read the entirety of "The Silent Civil War," then click HERE.

