The Independent

Has the founder of QAnon finally been unmasked?

It’s one of the most dangerous and unhinged conspiraci­es to have gained popularity in recent years. Josh Marcus finds out if the movement’s mastermind­s have been revealed

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Ron Watkins is remembered by an old classmate as being a shy student, who seemed like he needed a friend. Words like “quiet” and “easily forgotten” were used to describe the teenager who, despite being active in jazz choir and drama, could barely be recalled by his old drama teacher.

Since high school, his name has attracted rather more attention. Not only is he responsibl­e for running the infamous message boards 8chan and 8kun, along with his father James Watkins, but there is also speculatio­n

that he goes by another name: Q. By now, the impact of the QAnon mass conspiracy is clear, but details are still emerging about the origins of the men believed to be the mastermind­s behind the movement.

Former associates of James and Ron Watkins, along with journalist­s and researcher­s, believe the pair are responsibl­e for creating QAnon – despite both denying any direct involvemen­t in the conspiracy beyond hosting its creator on their online message boards.

The father and son are responsibl­e for the message boards where the Q conspiracy spread widely. Followers of the internet-based conspiracy movement believe that a highly placed intelligen­ce official, with a so-called “Q” security clearance, supplies cryptic messages about Donald Trump battling a conspiracy of paedophili­c government and business elites who run the world.

The movement has divided family members and helped spread misinforma­tion about the 2020 presidenti­al election. Its members were among those who stormed the Capitol on 6 January, while Trump once praised them as “people that love our country”. In HBO’s recent docu-series Q: Into The Storm, while discussing his recent time spreading debunked claims about the 2020 election online, the younger Watkins seems to all but admit he was in fact Q.

“It was basically three years of intelligen­ce training, teaching normies how to do intelligen­ce work,” he tells filmmaker Cullen Hoback. “It was basically what I was doing anonymousl­y before,” before busting out laughing.

But when pressed by The Independen­t on whether he had unmasked himself as the movement’s eponymous “Q”, he seemed to backtrack. “I’m not Q. I have never coordinate­d with Q,” Ron writes. Still, given their massive alleged impact on US politics over the last few years, less is known about the background of the Watkins family.

According to new informatio­n uncovered by The Independen­t, it appears that before moving to the Philippine­s in the early 2000s to run a series of internet businesses, the Watkins family lived in Mukilteo, Washington, a wealthy mid-size town 25 miles north of Seattle.

Andrew Stiteler, an engineer who lives in nearby Everett, says he knew Ron in high school and shared images where they both appear in the same yearbook for the years in question. At the time though, according to Stiteler, Ron was a shy student who seemed like he needed a friend. The two would hang out at each other’s houses and play the “Dance Dance Revolution” video game.

Eventually, they drifted apart, but years later, Stiteler started seeing headlines about his old friend as the Q movement spread. He was astounded to see his shy high school friend in the news and began asking old schoolmate­s whether they remembered him. Few did.

Somebody let this guy down during his upbringing. You get caught in your own abyss, and you feed your anger with more anger and you eventually get surrounded by others who perpetuate these ideals

“He seems like he was one of those guys that’s easily forgotten and nobody seemed to really remember him,” Stiteler says. “He was the guy who used to come over and hang out with me every day, and he was a quiet guy. I kind of got the impression that he needed some friends, and it was cool hanging out with him.”

According to yearbook images, Ron was active in performing arts groups like jazz choir and drama. Laurie Levine, who teaches drama at Kamiak High, says she barely had any memory of Ron. (Kamiak High School confirmed to The Independen­t that a student named Ronald Watkins attended between 2001 and his graduation year in the spring of 2005).

Property records uncovered by The Independen­t show that James Watkins and his wife Liziel owned a home in Mukilteo between 2001 and May 2004, when it was sold. Splinter News previously reported James Watkins, who goes by “Jim”, grew up on a family farm in Mukilteo.

After serving in the US army as a helicopter repairman and recruit, Jim moved to the Philippine­s in 2004, where a cached issue of the Manila Times shows that he eventually sought Philippine­s citizenshi­p with his wife in 2019, even though a newly uncovered 2007 court record from San Francisco shows that a James and Liziel Watkins got divorced, with James filing for custody of an unnamed child.

Ron Watkins, when reached for comment by The Independen­t, reiterated that he was not behind the QAnon movement. When presented with photograph­s of someone bearing his likeness named Ron Watkins at Kamiak High School, Mr Watkins did not respond.

“I am not friends with anybody named Andrew Stiteler and cannot remember anybody named Andrew Stiteler,” he says. Jim, Ron’s father, also alleged to be behind the Q movement, declined a request for comment, but has previously said he is not behind the QAnon phenomenon beyond hosting it on his websites.

Stiteler says he reached out to the media because he speculated that somewhere along the line, Ron was allowed to slip through the cracks, and hopes his story could serve as an example: “Somebody let this guy down during his upbringing. You get caught in your own abyss, and you feed your anger with more anger, and whatever else, whatever other negative feelings there might be, and you eventually get surrounded by others who perpetuate these ideals.”

Ron declined a request for a phone interview and did not answer a set of detailed questions over email about his life story.

Details about the Wakins family becomes clearer after they left Mukilteo. James and Ron arrived in the Philippine­s and ran a series of successful internet businesses, including 8chan, the message board where Q took off.

Former associates allege the two used Q’s presence on the site as a way to empower their favoured brand of right-wing politics in the US, as internet message boards had allowed the right to gain more influence in Japan in previous years. Ron denied holding right-wing views in his email: “I’m not a racist. I don’t have any opinion on eugenics. I’m not sexist. I’m not a fascist.”

New biological informatio­n about the Watkins family could be relevant for two main reasons. First, it could chip away at the veneer of mystery and legitimacy surroundin­g the Q movement, some of whose followers have remained faithful even as the conspiracy’s promised “storm”, a moment when Donald Trump would return to power and purge a cabal of evildoers, hasn’t come to pass.

Second, a number of authoritie­s are taking an interest in the family for their ties to such controvers­ial political developmen­ts.

The Philippine­s National Bureau of Investigat­ion and National Police launched investigat­ions after a number of mass shooters used the Watkins’ message boards to announce their killings, WIRED magazine reported in 2019. That same year, Congress called Jim to the Capitol for private testimony, where he defended his work.

“Our company has built and maintained a digital forum that is the place where opposing viewpoints and those of minorities such as the LGBTQ may express themselves free from the fear of their life,” he said in a public version of his remarks. Then, in early 2020, the Philippine­s Bureau of Immigratio­n’s Investigat­ions Division labelled Jim an “undesirabl­e alien”, ABC News reported, meaning he was a risk to the public interest.

A charging sheet from the bureau describes Jim as “the owner and operator of 8chan, a hate-filled forum/website which hosts trolling and serves as a go-to resource for violent extremists and white supremacis­ts”. He was given permission to travel back to the US between August of 2020 and January of 2021, and he has returned to the US, although he is expected to head back to the Philippine­s to challenge the immigratio­n ruling.

From there, what the Watkins family and Q do next is anyone’s guess.

 ?? (All images Andrew Stiteler) ?? Ron Watkins, and his father, are believed to have started QAnon
(All images Andrew Stiteler) Ron Watkins, and his father, are believed to have started QAnon
 ?? (Getty) ?? QAnon member Jake Angeli during the storming of the Capitol in January
(Getty) QAnon member Jake Angeli during the storming of the Capitol in January
 ??  ?? A yearbook photo of Ron Watkins, the alleged QAnon mastermind, singing with a classmate
A yearbook photo of Ron Watkins, the alleged QAnon mastermind, singing with a classmate

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