But Marc and Claire Headley keep finding new ones.
Their latest?
The pair recently announced their membership in Anonymous, the notorious gang of international cyberthugs who terrorize companies, communities and individuals under the motto: “We ruin the lives of other people simply because we can.”
“I was going to all the Anonymous protests.”
Cesspools of bigotry, Anonymous message boards proudly display slogans like “Around blacks never relax” and “With Jews you lose.” Anonymous members have posted instructions on how to commit suicide on their message boards, including pictures of where exactly you should slit your wrists. Meanwhile, the Headleys’ peers have been convicted of terrorist threats, vandalism, stalking, computer hacking and cybercrimes—with law enforcement agencies from the Department of Homeland Security to Interpol launching criminal investigations into the group.

They’re “some of the nicest people,” Claire Headley gushed.
In a July 6 YouTube video, she bragged that she and her husband were dubbed “Mr. and Mrs. Anonymous,” with Marc explaining that he earned the moniker because he would never miss a single harassment event. “I was going to all the Anonymous protests,” he said, describing how he would don the group’s signature Guy Fawkes mask because he was “trying to fit into the Anonymous crowd.”
On November 7, 2007, 18-year-old Anonymous member Pekka-Eric Auvinen, holding a gun and wearing a shirt that read “HUMANITY IS OVERRATED,” posted to an Anonymous forum: “I’m going to kill people at Jokela high school today.”
“DO IT F-GG-T,” replied one of the Headleys’ peers. Hours later, Auvinen killed six students, a teacher and a nurse before turning the gun on himself and taking his own life “in the name of Anonymous.”
Anonymous celebrated the murderer as a hero.
Prior to the massacre, Auvinen had posted: “Not all human lives are important or worth saving. Only superior (intelligent, self-aware, strong-minded) individuals should survive while inferior (stupid, retarded, weak-minded masses) should perish.”
“Rock on, Anonymous,” Marc Headley raved. “You guys are awesome.”
In 2008, Anonymous announced a campaign of “annihilation” against members of the Scientology religion for its “own enjoyment,” including:
- 41 death threats, including against the President of the Church of Scientology International;
- 56 bomb and arson threats, including one to simultaneously detonate bombs in every Church in the United States;
- Envelopes with powder resembling anthrax mailed to 19 Southern California Churches;
- 103 threats of other violence;
- 40 incidents of vandalism, including attempting to set fire to the Los Angeles Church;
- 3.6 million harassing emails; and
- 141 million malicious hits against Church websites, in an attempt to bring down those sites.
Between 2008 and 2011, law enforcement arrested seven Anonymous perpetrators of attacks against the Church. Four were convicted, with the ringleaders sentenced to prison.
In October 2009, the Las Vegas PD Anti-Terrorist Unit arrested an Anonymous member on charges of “bomb/explosives threat” and “act of terrorism” after he threatened to assassinate the leader of the Scientology religion. Two AK-47s and other firearms were confiscated during the arrest.
The danger metastasized.
In 2010, the Church received an anonymous email threatening a “vehicle-borne IED” en route to a Church property—specifically naming the facility that Marc Headley knew had once housed the religion’s leader. It also targeted a school Headley had written about, attended by many children of Scientologists.
Investigators traced the source to a US serviceman stationed in Virginia, who revealed that Marc Headley’s incendiary claims had fueled his violent threats.
“Some of the nicest people,” Claire gushes.
Are these two for real?
Who would not only admit to being part of an international crime syndicate with blood on its hands, but brag about it?
And who would crow, in the same YouTube video: Yes, that’s us, who proudly bilked Amazon customers with fake reviews for anyone willing to pay—even proclaiming to the world they own a company offering “services” that violate Federal Trade Commission regulations?
The Headleys, that’s who.
There is a word to describe someone so devoid of scruples that if decency were a country, they would be denied a visa.
That word is not “immoral,” although it certainly applies, nor is it “twisted,” although the shoe certainly fits, nor is it “deranged,” although the evidence supports it.
The word is “sick.”