Jul 25, 2025
Man charged after altercation with police in Richmound
Mar 27, 2025
CultNEWS101 Articles 3/27/2025 (Term Cult, Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Book Review, Fountaingrove, Jehovah's Witnesses, Canada, Legal)
" ... 'The word cult conjures a mental picture: a group of beautiful young people dancing trancelike in the sun, probably aspiring actors in Los Angeles who took a wrong turn at the beach and landed in an orgy.'
But that image couldn't be further from the truth and in "Cults Like Us" Borden charts not just the murky history of cult ideologies in America, but how the country remains a breeding ground for cult-like thinking.
"It informs our suppositions about American identity and our very understanding of the immutable self," she writes. "It undergirds every vote, purchase, prejudice, and social-media post. Like fish that don't know water, we swim through it without recognition."
Ever since the Pilgrim Fathers arrived on the Mayflower in 1620 with almost cultish puritanical beliefs, the nation has been susceptible to cult ideologies.
"But their Puritan doomsday beliefs didn't go away; they became American culture," she says."
"Angela and Cade Johnson were married at a laundromat in 2003 when she was 16 and he was 19.
They exchanged vows not by choice, but because the notorious polygamist cult they grew up in — the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints — forced them to do so.
The cult Angela and Cade were born into made headlines when its infamous "prophet" and leader Warren Jeffs was accused by numerous young victims — including his own children — of molesting them.
Named one of the FBI's Ten Most Wanted after fleeing the cult to avoid arrest, Jeffs, now 69, was finally taken into custody in Las Vegas in 2006. He was convicted five years later of two counts of child sex abuse and sentenced to life in prison.
Because of the tumult in the church at the time, "We didn't have too much to do with him," Angela says. "But if you've ever met him, he's just a creep. Full of arrogance."
She didn't like how girls and teens in the cult were forced to wed men they didn't know. One man she knew had 24 wives."
"Unholy Sensations tells the forgotten but fascinating story of a sex scandal that erupted in the 1890s around a multiracial spiritualist colony called Fountaingrove in northern California. Out of the scandal came a new kind of public menace—what newspapers called the "cult." The Fountaingrove sex scandal helped establish for the first time popular ideas of "cults": groups or movements that violated religious, familial, and sexual norms to such an extent that they seemed dangerous to the dominant moral order. Thomas Lake Harris, the leader of Fountaingrove, became the archetype of the villainous "cult leader," supposedly brainwashing and manipulating his followers through his powerful charisma. The Fountaingrove scandal also established California as a breeding ground for cults, a reputation that remains strong today. Throughout the 1890s, the scandal's twists and turns captivated the public with a volatile mix of sex, religion, and racial exoticism due to the presence of Japanese immigrant men at Fountaingrove. From the Fountaingrove scandal onward, calling a group a cult was to mark it as outside religious, racial, sexual, and gender norms, all at the same time. Unholy Sensations tracks the emergence of the "cult" as a cultural concept while exploring the lived day-to-day realities of the Fountaingrove colonists, their beliefs, and their sexual practices, as well as considering the motives of those who attacked Harris and the colony."
Court rules against Jehovah's Witness appeal to withhold former congregants' personal information.
"An appeal by the Jehovah's Witnesses in Grand Forks over holding the personal information of two former congregation members has been dismissed and is being hailed as a victory for the privacy rights of individuals.
The B.C. Court of Appeal ruled unanimously on March 21, that B.C.'s Personal Information Protection Act (PIPA) did not infringe on the religious freedom rights of two congregations of the Jehovah's Witnesses.
The case started in June 2022, when two former Jehovah's Witnesses requested access to their personal information under the control of the Grand Forks and Coldstream congregations. The congregations and their elders have fought to keep certain information, arguing disclosing these records would violate their Charter right of religious freedom.
An appeal by the Jehovah's Witnesses in Grand Forks over holding the personal information of two former congregation members has been dismissed and is being hailed as a victory for the privacy rights of individuals.
The B.C. Court of Appeal ruled unanimously on March 21, that B.C.'s Personal Information Protection Act (PIPA) did not infringe on the religious freedom rights of two congregations of the Jehovah's Witnesses.
The case started in June 2022, when two former Jehovah's Witnesses requested access to their personal information under the control of the Grand Forks and Coldstream congregations. The congregations and their elders have fought to keep certain information, arguing disclosing these records would violate their Charter right of religious freedom. "
News, Education, Intervention, Recovery
Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.
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CultNEWS101.com news, links, resources about: cults, cultic groups, abusive relationships, movements, religions, political organizations, and related topics.
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Please forward articles that you think we should add to cultintervention@gmail.com.
Thanks,
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Mar 26, 2025
CultNEWS101 Articles: 3/26/2025 (Legal, Canada, Dera Sacha Sauda, Twin Flames)
Legal, Canada, Dera Sacha Sauda, Twin Flames
City News: B.C. court voids 'cult' marriage, finding woman didn't 'truly consent'
"A British Columbia judge has annulled the marriage of a woman to a fellow member of an India-based "cult group," saying she didn't "truly consent" to the 2023 wedding.
The B.C. Supreme Court ruling issued this week says Arshnoor Kaur Jaura claimed she was manipulated and overwhelmed by a "barrage" of overtures from Napinder Singh Jaura and his family that began in October 2022.
The ruling by Justice Ian Caldwell says the woman was an 18-year-old permanent resident in Canada when she was first contacted by the man, who lived in New Zealand and was around 32.
The ruling says she did not wish to marry but the man and his family "persisted," bringing a "sacred food gift" to her workplace and claiming the union was "blessed" by a priest of the Dera Sacha Sauda religious group.
The man's sister warned that refusing the marriage would invite "the wrath" of the religious community.
Caldwell's ruling found the marriage "voidable," saying the man "pursued, harassed, and perhaps even stalked" the teenager who was under duress when the wedding occurred in Abbotsford, B.C.
The ruling says the woman had finally agreed to marry on April 25, 2023, and was picked up from work the next day by Singh Jaura's relative.
She was driven to a home where a Punjabi wedding suit was waiting for her, and the ceremony happened that day without her family present.
Accused cult leaders deny allegations of brainwashing, forced labour and coercing followers to change genders. Special W5 Investigation with Avery Haines.
News, Education, Intervention, Recovery
Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.
CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families make the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.
CultNEWS101.com news, links, resources about: cults, cultic groups, abusive relationships, movements, religions, political organizations, and related topics.
The selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not mean that Patrick Ryan or Joseph Kelly agree with the content. We provide information from many points of view to promote dialogue.
Please forward articles that you think we should add to cultintervention@gmail.com.
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Jan 28, 2024
Robert Corfield, ex-minister of secretive sect, admits to child sex abuse
BBC News
January 28, 2024
Robert Corfield, a man who abused a boy in Canada in a secretive Christian Church in the 1980s, has spoken publicly about what happened for the first time.
He was confronted by the BBC as part of a wider look into claims of child sexual abuse spanning decades within the Church, known as The Truth.
His name is one of more than 700 given by people to a hotline set up to report sexual abuse within the Church.
The sect says it addresses all abuse allegations.
The Church, which has no official name but is often referred to as The Truth or The Way, is believed to have up to 100,000 members worldwide, with the majority in North America.
The potential scale of the abuse has been captured through a hotline - set-up last year by two women who say they were also sexually abused by a Church leader when they were children. People have phoned in claiming they too were abused, with testimonies stretching back decades through to present day.
The highly secretive and insular nature of the Church has helped abuse to thrive, say former and current insiders who spoke to the BBC. It has many unwritten rules, including that followers must marry within the group and keep mixing with outsiders to a minimum.
The Church was founded in Ireland by a Scottish evangelist in 1897 and is built around ministers spreading New Testament teachings through word-of-mouth.
One of its hallmarks is that ministers give up their possessions and must be taken in by Church members as they travel around, spreading the gospel. This makes children living in the homes they visit vulnerable to abuse, the insiders said.
Warning: This article contains details some readers may find upsetting
Former Church member Michael Havet, 54, told the BBC he was abused by Robert Corfield in the 1980s, from the age of 12.
"People called me 'Bob's little companion' - I just felt dirty and still do," says Mr Havet, speaking from his home in Ottawa.
After abusing him, Mr Havet says Mr Corfield would force him to kneel beside him and pray.
"I had to work hard to get past that and find my prayer life again," he says.
When confronted about the child abuse allegations by the BBC, Mr Corfield admitted that they had taken place for about six years in the 1980s.
"I have to acknowledge that's true," he said.
Mr Corfield was a minister - known within the sect as a "worker" - in Saskatchewan, Canada, at the time of the abuse.
This is the first time he has publicly admitted to child abuse, though he has previously been confronted by church members and wrote two private letters to Mr Havet in 2004 and 2005 which asked for forgiveness and said he was seeing a therapist. In one letter, Mr Corfield said he was "making a list of victims".
"We don't want to miss anyone who has been a victim of my actions," he wrote.
However, when asked about this by the BBC, Mr Corfield said that there were no other victims "in the same sense that Michael was", and that he had given two or three other teenagers massages.
Abuser given 'fresh start'
Mr Havet is among a dozen people who have told the BBC that widespread abuse has been ignored or covered up in The Truth for decades - with some of the accused remaining in powerful positions for years.
The way his own case was dealt with by the Church is a prime example, believes Mr Havet.
He reported his abuse in 1993 to Dale Shultz, Saskatchewan's most senior church leader - known as an "overseer". Overseers are the most senior members of the church and there is one for each US state and Canadian province where there is an active following.
But Mr Shultz didn't go to the police - and, says Mr Havet, violently assaulted him a few weeks later because he thought he had told others of the abuse claims.
"He grabbed my shoulders yelling at me, slamming my head against a concrete pillar," says Mr Havet, "splitting it open and causing it to bleed."
Mr Havet says Mr Shultz then "encouraged" him to leave the church - while his childhood abuser, Robert Corfield, was just moved to be a minister across the border, in the US state of Montana.
Mr Corfield told the BBC that he believed it was Mr Shultz's decision to send him to Montana, where he remained in post for 25 years.
"It was suggested it would give me a fresh beginning and probably also put space between me and the victim," he said.
Mr Corfield was removed as minister last year after being confronted about Michael's abuse by another congregation member, according to internal Church emails seen by the BBC. One email also suggested "it is possible there may be additional victims".
The ex-minister told the BBC that he "voluntarily stepped down when the accusations of Michael were presented" against him, and that he had "not been informed of any allegations beyond that."
When contacted by the BBC, Dale Shultz said via email that "much of the information that you have received concerning me is distorted and inaccurate". However he declined to go into any further detail.
A global crisis
Mr Havet is one of more than 1,000 current and former members of the sect to have contacted a hotline set up by campaign group, Advocates for The Truth.
The group was founded last year by Americans Cynthia Liles, Lauren Rohs and Sheri Autrey.
They say they have been given the names of more than 700 alleged perpetrators in 21 countries, including the UK, Ireland, Australia and Russia. They plan to build cases against those on the list and take them to the police.
All the women used to belong to The Truth and Lauren Rohs and Sheri Autrey say they were abused by the same man.
That man was Ms Rohs' father, a senior minister called Steve Rohs.
Lauren Rohs traced Ms Autrey after reading her anonymous online account of childhood sexual abuse, in 2019.
In the post, Ms Autrey described how her abuser would sing Maneater by 80s pop duo Hall & Oates to her when she was in his bedroom at night.
Ms Rohs knew immediately that the man being described as the perpetrator was her own father, as it was the same song she remembers him singing to her as a child.
"I sat there stunned," says the 35 year-old. "It disoriented me beyond belief."
She says that her father subjected her to years of sexual, physical and emotional abuse from as early as she can remember.
Meanwhile, Ms Autrey says Steve Rohs stayed at her family home in Tulare County, California, for two months in 1982 - when she was turning 14 - and molested her daily.
He would sing Maneater because "a part of his manipulation was that I was this wild seductress", the 54-year-old says.
There is a 20-year age gap between the two women. By the time his daughter was born, Mr Rohs had given up his role as a worker and started a family in San Diego, California. They later moved to Washington state, Idaho and Colorado.
Lauren Rohs says her father gave various reasons for their constant moving, including that "God needs us in a new place".
The BBC put all the allegations to Mr Rohs in emails and social media messages, but he did not respond.
Abuse culture persists
Ms Rohs says during her time in the Church in the 1990s and 2000s, workers were like "demigods" and never questioned, and that callers to the abuse hotline confirm that this culture persists today.
Like Mr Havet, Ms Autrey says she spoke out about her abuser - and he was protected.
In 1986, she confided in her mother about being abused by Steve Rohs.
"I felt scared, dirty, ashamed, embarrassed, and guilty," says Ms Autrey, who was 17 at the time and believed she would be in "big trouble".
But her mother believed her right away and reported the man to the California state overseer, who has since died.
In a letter dated 11 May 1986, written by Mr Rohs and seen by the BBC, he admits to the overseer that he and the teenager "did kiss and touch each other intimately" and that he had "begged for forgiveness" ever since.
Mr Rohs was later brought to Ms Autrey's home by workers where he verbally apologised to her.
"I responded that he was not sorry for what he had done or he would have apologised long before," Ms Autrey recalls.
Despite admitting to child abuse, Mr Rohs remained a respected and influential member of the Church. His daughter says he was even promoted in 1994 to being a church elder - a person of seniority who holds meetings in their own home.
The BBC understands he now lives in Minnesota with Ms Rohs' mother - their daughter is estranged from them both. He works as an insurance agent and was an active member of The Truth until April last year, after his daughter and Ms Autrey brought their allegations to the state's overseer and he was removed from meetings.
The floodgates open
The catalyst for the hotline was the death of Oregon's overseer, Dean Bruer, in 2022.
He was one of The Truth's most respected leaders and had worked for the group for 46 years, across six US states.
An internal letter was written by his successor which stated Mr Bruer had a history of abuse including "rape and abuse of underage victims".
It is not clear what the motivation behind writing the letter was but it leaked and soon found its way onto Facebook and TikTok.
Then more people started coming forward to tell their own stories of abuse.
"I think we thought the hotline was solely for Dean Bruer victims but what the hotline did was just open the floodgates," Ms Rohs says.
The friends say they now want the kind of justice they didn't manage to get for themselves.
"When I found Sheri it was a really rather rare and massive healing," says Ms Rohs.
"It has been distressing as survivors to go back and hear the amount of filth and evil," Ms Autrey says.
"Ours was bad enough but to see other people in such terrible situations - it's beyond angering. It's been ugly but also very rewarding."
Ms Autrey stepped down from the Advocates in December.
Because The Truth has no official leader, the BBC instead put the allegations to more than 20 overseers in North America, via email.
The only one to respond was Rob Newman, the overseer for California.
"We actively address all abuse allegations involving participants in our fellowship," he wrote in an email, before Mr Corfield's confession.
"Our paramount concern is that victims receive the professional help that they need. We take all allegations of abuse seriously, strongly recommend mandated reporter training to all, and encourage everyone to report issues to the proper legal authorities."
Ms Autrey believes change will not happen before any culpable overseers are jailed.
"It's an extremely well-oiled machine for criminals," she says.
"It's a perfected system that has gone on for 12 decades."
https://www-bbc-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-66449988.amp
Sep 27, 2023
Convoy targets Sask. cult compound
A criminologist who studies anti-government movements says communities and authorities need to take greater notice and action against conspiracy-fuelled groups like one setting up in a Saskatchewan village near Medicine Hat.
About 50 residents of Richmound, Sask. took part in a protest on Sunday, parading vehicles, farm equipment and honking horns around a former school where followers of “Queen Romana Didulo” have set up housing.
They told Alberta Newspaper reporters that they want her out of the village of about 150 residents, but as the group is on private property and since authorities don’t believe any crime has been committed there are few legal avenues to force them out.
The woman, who has tens of thousand online followers, claims to be the rightful monarch of Canada. For several years she has travelled across the country in an RV telling supporters she has forgiven their taxes and debts, will punish health workers for the COVID-19 response and is now the rightful ruler of Canada. Christine Sarteschi is a professor at Chatham University in Pittsburgh who has written about the rise of anti-society groups and has followed Didulo’s rise in particular.
She said that community actions like Sunday’s in Richmound and a similar event in Kamsack, Sask., last week — where 200 townspeople and members of nearby First nation ushered Didulo supporters out of town under police escort — show community action can have an effect, but tensions can arise.
“Look at how we deal with potential fraud issues — governments could warn people about these people are this type of behaviour,” said Sarteschi in a phone interview with the News on Monday.
“Too often people will laugh at people like her, or tell jokes and think it’s funny, and I understand that to the degree. But it takes away from the potential seriousness of it, and the real people who are being harmed by believing in these false ideas.”
Some current residents and former residents who now live in Medicine Hat say they are concerned the village may have too low of a population to stage a proper opposition.
The RCMP or Saskatchewan government have not issued any formal statement.
Sarteschi believes the group has been welcomed to the village by some existing residents, but only has a core group of perhaps ten individuals who are likely looking to create a base for the winter.
They typically travel in an RV to meet up with other supporters while the leader issues statements about controlling the military, promising relief payments and assuring followers that actions current government and health officials are imminent.
“They think they’re above the law,” said Sarteschi. “She does dabble in some sovereign citizen beliefs, but she’s across the board, with some QAnon, believing in a number of conspiracy theories.”
“Sovereign citizens” is used to describe those who argue against the legitimacy of courts or police authority using convoluted legal arguments and unrelated documents like the Magna Carta, Maritime Law or the Geneva Convention, among others
“QAnon” came to the forefront in Untied States prior to the 2020 U.S. presidential election when online movement argued that a second, secret government was actually control of that nation. (“Romana Didulo” is an anagram of “I am our Donald”).
Sarteschi says anti-government sentiment grew during the COVID pandemic and is now capitalizing on economic worries. That is finding a receptive audience among some people, she said.
The City of Red Deer reported in 2022 that six residents were in arrears on property taxes after arguing that as Didulo followers, their assessment were bogus.
At about the same time, several supporters were themselves arrested in Peterborough, Ont. when they attempted to enact citizen’s arrests on members of that city’s police force.
Just this weekend, Didulo declared that all MNRA technology — used to develop the COVID-19 vaccines — had been outlawed by her decree, and that all practitioners could be liable to face the death penalty.
“The attraction… is that she’s selling something to people that they want,” said Sarteschi. “If you follow her (Didulo says) you have no taxes, no mortgage, no utility bills, you’ll come into a great amount of wealth, she’s closing schools and replacing them, and curing homelessness…”
“It never occurs to some people to think that to stop paying my mortgage would be wrong. They think it’s government tyranny to have them pay a mortgage, partly because she’s telling them the government is stealing from them.”
“They’re convoluted ideas that people want to be true, so people start to hate the government or the utility company… It always surprises me, that people believe she is the new government, that she’s taken over and is the queen and the commander in chief. Things have changed.
“When the bailiff comes to the door to take their house, they are shocked by that.”
“It shows you the level of belief.”
https://medicinehatnews.com/news/local-news/2023/09/26/convoy-targets-sask-cult-compound/
Jun 13, 2023
What Happens When a QAnon Cult Leader Moves Into Town
After being chased off an island in eastern Canada, the so-called "QAnon Queen" hunkered down for winter in rural Nova Scotia with her followers. We tried to visit the property. It did not go well.
Mack Lamoureux
VICE
June 13, 2023
TATAMAGOUCHE, Nova Scotia – The QAnon Queen of Canada leans so close to the windshield of her motorhome her face is almost pressed against the glass when she screams into her walkie-talkie.
“Ignore them!” her voice crackles over the radio. “Ignore them!”
The small collection of Romana’s Didulo’s ragtag group of cult followers-turned-servants who populate a rural Nova Scotia property look at me with a mix of horror and apology. One man, wearing a security hat straight out of a dollar store costume section, tries to take control and meekly tells me I need to leave the area. Another follower, a bit bolder than the security guy, coldly says “absolutely not” when I ask if we can speak to their so-called “queen.”
There are three motorhomes strewn across the front lawn of the property and our conversation has to be loud in order to hear over the cacophony of the dozen or so dogs barking and fighting. Here is where Didulo and her followers, who have been proselytizing her unique brand of QAnon conspiracy-cum-alien stuff-cum-soverign citizenship beliefs across Canada for the better part of a year, stayed over the winter. Here is where Didulo made her most loyal followers sleep on the floor of RVs so her dogs could sleep on the bed, and made people sit in their filth for weeks, eat expired food, and face torrents of abuse.
Marching from the motorhome housing their spiritual leader, Didulo’s second-in-command comes storming towards us. Pointing her phone at us she begins to take control of the situation.
“No comment,” she screams repeatedly. “No comment!”
That night, after spending months on this property, becoming the talk of the little town just a few kilometers to the north, many of whose residents were worried about scams and possible violence from a quasi cult, Didulo decided to pack up and once again hit the road.
The Queen and her subjects
For reasons only known to my editor and therapist, I’ve been reporting on Didulo and her QAnon following for over two years now.
The story has led me to get the worst sunburn of my adult life on a B.C. beach as I heard former followers tell me about how they were locked in a motorhome as she played Boney M’s disco hit “Rasputin” for nine straight hours; dive deep into legal documents of a woman who lost her home because the Queen of Canada said she didn’t have to pay her bank; and waste hours upon hours of my life watching the cult’s bizarre live streams.
It has now led me to the village of Tatamagouche, Nova Scotia, home to about 700 souls according to the latest census, although it swells in the summer months due to its proximity to water and parks. I had long known that Didulo had set down somewhere for the winter in Canada’s Ocean Playground, but didn’t know exactly where until a concerned local tossed me an email. Armed with this knowledge and knowing the flights would be cheap in the offseason, I convinced my boss to let me expense a ticket to once again try to meet the QAnon Queen of Canada.
Despite writing over 20 stories about her, breaking almost all of the news about her cult, and speaking to former victims, this Albertan hidalgo has only managed to speak to the person at the heart of the story once. It was on the cold streets of Victoria in January 2022 when she left to start her cross country tour. As she marched towards her RV I matched her pace and tried to ask her questions but was quickly shut down. Since then I’ve done my best—my due diligence as I would tell the company lawyers—to make contact. I’ve emailed every spokesperson she’s had and tried to talk to her through multiple channels but with no luck. Once again I was packing my bags and making a long journey to prove to myself that this is something worth covering and I’m not just tilting at windmills.
It would be a journey that would take me across Nova Scotia, make me question journalistic ethics, visit a town devastated by a hurricane to meet a “demon of a man,” cause a minor bit of drama in a lovely small town, hear stories from people who escaped an abusive cult compound, and share beers with many a friendly Maritimer. All to answer the a variety of questions—like is this a real cult, a scam, a mental health issue, or a mix of all of this, and why did they pick Nova Scotia?—that at its heart boils down simply to: what the fuck is going on here?
For those who don’t have similar, life-damaging brain worms as me, Didulo is best described as a QAnon cult leader and is truly one of the most bizarre conspiracy figures to come out of the pandemic. She’s somehow convinced a not-insignificantly sized group of people that she’s not just the “Queen of Canada” but she’s also a being from another dimension in touch with an “intergalactic alliance.” Her “lore” is deeply confusing and ever-changing but the starting point is that Didulo, alongside former U.S. President Donald Trump, is waging an international war against a global cabal of pedophiles. She squeezes as much money out of her followers as she can in an effort to keep the cult leader party going and, for now at least, it’s working.
Romana doesn’t cut the most imposing figure. She’s a tiny Filipino-Canadian woman with a slight accent and short gray hair. She’s not young, likely in her 50s or 60s, but it’s hard to know as there is shockingly little background information known about her. However, what she lacks in stature she makes up for in grandiose statements—some of my favorites being she has an armada of spacecraft watching her at all times, and that she and Vladimir Putin talk on the regular—and an absolute unwavering dedication to keeping up the notion she’s Canada’s true leader.
It’s important to note that while the entire Didulo situation is bizarre and at times can be the source of laughs, the damage she does to her followers is very real and in some cases, extreme. She’s threatened to kill health care workers and just recently told her followers to “shoot to kill” anyone they think is starting a forest fire or sabotaging the power grid—taking in mind her follower’s paranoid worldview and seemingly tenuous grip on reality, the command could have serious consequences.
People have lost homes and gone into financial ruin because they believed Didulo’s “royal decrees” that utilities and mortgages don’t need to be paid. Others have completely ostracized themselves from their families because they essentially live in a different reality from their loved ones. One sad group of Didulo disciples deluded themselves into thinking the dumbest plot of all time could work and attempted a citizen’s arrest of an entire police force with the backing from “Didulo’s military.” But in turn they were arrested, rather violently, themselves.
So while, yes, it’s a somewhat outlandish subject, at least as far as extremism goes, it’s also one that causes great pain that needs to be taken seriously. Didulo may be giving us a dark glimpse into the future. The media ecosystem has melted many a brain over the past few years and nothing is more emblematic of that than this woman building an audience willing to destroy themselves because they believe she’s the true Queen of Canada. Didulo and her merry band of followers are a harbinger for a future reality where misinformation becomes so normalized that many can’t tell fact from even the wildest fiction.
At least that’s what I convinced myself as I boarded the plane to Nova Scotia.
So with a backpack full of notes on the “Queen,” and a gutless rental car acquired, I set off from the Halifax airport. Driving a few hours to the north side of the peninsula I soon arrived in the area where I would be spending most of my time—I couldn’t help but go and do a drive by where I was told Didulo was staying. My source wasn’t wrong. Just hours after touching down in Nova Scotia, I got my first glimpse of the QAnon Queen of Canada. It was just a glimpse of a RV with her face on it, and it was a perfect set up for what would become a bizarre journey into the world of what happens when a QAnon conspiracy camp sets up outside a cute little town.
I slowly drove by and took a quick video on my phone which I excitedly sent to my boss.
“There she be, the white whale,” I say in the video for some reason. The frigid waters of the North Atlantic are out there unseen, miles and miles away.
On the property
Didulo’s followers aren’t one size fits all.
In my time covering her, I’ve seen large handymen fall for her rhetoric and older women who have fallen down a hippie coloured conspiratorial rabbit hole. I've seen truckers, businessmen, former cops, and even some folks who formerly worked in media.
Owing to the secretive nature of the cult, and how strictly they control the narrative they put out to their audience, it's very difficult to ascertain what actually goes on inside it. I’ve been granted a bit of insight from a few former members who were willing to share stories of their time with Didulo with me both on the record and off.
Do you have information or tips about “QAnon Queen” Romana Didulo or her followers? You can contact Mack Lamoureux by email at mack.lamoureux@vice.com, or DM him on Twitter at @MackLamourex for a Signal number.
Kim Churchill, an Ontario woman, used to work at a radio station but that was many years ago. She first learned of Didulo from a mutual acquaintance in 2021 while the crew were on their nonstop Canadian road trip. Churchill came to believe in Didulo rather quickly and eventually reached out to offer her aid. To gain access to the queen she had to do a video call with two of Didulo’s most diehard followers— “Kaven,” a young man from Quebec who is Didulo’s driver, security guard, and French translator, and “Darlene,” a woman from B.C. who has become her “chief of staff” and is essentially Didulo’s personal assistant, to be generous.
Upon hearing that Churchill was willing to bring them goods and a trailer—and used to work in media—Kaven and Darlene gave her the OK to come on up and she traveled to Nova Scotia to join the group full time.
I first came across Churchill when she was presented on one of Didulo’s live streams as a media whistleblower who came to stay with the cult. A few months later she would once again come across my radar when she began speaking out about her time with the cult in chat rooms dedicated to former members who are fighting back against Didulo.
“It was very cultish,” Churchill told VICE News with an embarrassed laugh as we talked over the phone some weeks after she left the group. “I’ve never been in a cult, but that’s a cult. It’s definitely a cult.”
When Churchill first showed up in Nova Scotia she was taken aback. She was expecting a cute little conspiratorial community, led by a benevolent but powerful leader. What she found was a kingdom covered in trash and dog shit, ruled by a tiny dictator making her closest followers’ lives a living hell. Nevertheless they quickly put Churchill on a livestream to talk about how the media “lies,” and further poison Didulo’s followers against news outlets and other mainstream sources of information.
Didulo, while primarily an online figure with roughly 40,000 followers on Telegram, has surrounded herself with a small contingent of her most loyal subjects who have given up their lives to serve her every whim—often “working” up to 16 hours a day. This group is extremely protective of their queen, and exceedingly paranoid; they live with Didulo in an RV and typically wear lanyards marking their loyalty or, in some cases, all white outfits with QR emblazoned over the heart. It’s not just me and Churchill who clearly identify this as a cult: Several experts described Didulo’s following similarly and upon viewing this group in particular, it’s hard to argue.
The group fluctuates in size as people are constantly coming and going, but typically sits between six and 12 die-hard Didulo-heads. For months they lived on the front yard of a local Didulo fan—a woman who runs a holistic health store in Tatamagouche—in a collection of RVs and trailers that appear to be barely winter-proofed. They didn’t have enough food, and much of what they did have was rotten because of lack of proper storage.
What Churchill found only reinforced how shitty life is for a roving Didulo acolyte. Multiple former members of the cult have told VICE News those who stay with Didulo face neverending abuse and threats, poor sleeping arrangements, limited and unhealthy diets, and have their lives micromanaged by Didulo. Churchill was no different.
While she said the leader seems personable and nice initially, she’s quick to snap and scream at her followers. She’s incredibly paranoid, worried about infiltrators and ex-followers out to get her, and set up several security cameras on the property that two of her crew needed to watch at all times—and those living there were expected to stay within the camera’s sights.
“Everyone has to say their whereabouts if they had to go off camera. Like if someone was going to the shed to get a shovel they had to announce ‘they’re going to the shed,’ then ‘they’re in the shed’ then ‘they’re getting the shovel,’ then ‘they’re leaving the shed.’ Now ‘they’re on their way back to the trailer.’ Like it was step by step, like micromanaging, like on a level I’ve never seen before,” Churchill said.
“If she said you have 15 minutes, you have 15 minutes,” she added. “If you take 16 minutes, you’re hearing about it. She’s yelling at you.”
A typical day at the Nova Scotia campground starts with the group getting up around 7 a.m. and clearing out the blinding security lights they set up the night before. Then there’s a “safety check of all the vehicles,” once everything is copacetic they pile into Didulo’s RV, AKA the “command center.” When Didulo is finally ready to address her audience they all stand, some craning their heads so as not to hit the roof of the trailer, as she exits the RVs bedroom area into the kitchen. She then launches into her daily speech and the day’s tasks are assigned.
For the most part the group would always be busy with Kafkaesque projects such as switching out batteries that don’t need to be switched out, doing work on a vehicle no one is qualified to do, sorting Didulo’s fake currency, researching and producing a daily livestream exalting Didulo, and so on. She would keep her followers busily unproductive all day. This is another common refrain from those who traveled with Didulo, that she keeps her crew so busy they have no time for themselves—or to fight back.
Like with many hierarchical communities, the abuse trickles downwards. Didulo will lose it on her second-in-command, who will scapegoat another person, and so on.
The group wasn’t just dealing with abuse from a controlling cult leader who they believe is a royal alien. They’re also living in filth. The trailers are occasionally full of rotting food and tracked in mud and dog shit. Even though they lived only steps away from a sizable ranch-style home, Didulo forced her followers to go days and even weeks without showers or doing laundry. Didulo, meanwhile, had a private bathroom on her RV, and when it broke, she kicked followers off the second RV and turned it into her own private toilet.
There’s a feeling of paranoia among those staying with Didulo. They routinely rat each other out for forbidden behavior and get others in trouble with their queen. They were told to keep secrets from the other people who lived on the property and were constantly at each other's throats. The worst job of all was that of Didulo’s personal assistant, which is currently held by Darlene.
“If Romana wants coffee, [Darlene] makes coffee. If Romana wants lunch she makes lunch,” said Churchill. “Darlene is doing everything. She can’t take a shower and she has no time to herself. She can’t even go for a walk if she wants to de-stress or leave Romana’s side. She even does her laundry, makes the bed, like everything.There was one time on the radio where Darlene said ‘Queen Ramona, I’m requesting 10 more minutes for my shower time. And Ramona said ‘10 minutes granted.’”
Disorganization and wasted energy proliferates the group, multiple members told VICE News. For example, they would invite people to stay with them but not plan where they would sleep. When one man arrived, Didulo told Churchill she “hadn’t received a download for that yet” and just forced everyone to cram together in one trailer, meaning three women were holded up in a small trailer with a man who no one knew. The man eventually ended up sharing a single bed with one of the women.
In many ways, the dogs on the property—and there were many—were treated better than Didulo’s people. The Queen certainly seemed to care about the two dogs she adopted—they were dubbed the “royal puppies”—although she also recently said she fed them ivermectin, the veterinary dewormer drug that became the COVID-denier drug de jour during the pandemic. At one point Darlene told her followers that Didulo exorcized a demon from one of the puppies who was being lethargic. In one case Churchill said she was told Didulo made Kaven—who is, remember, one of her most important followers—sleep on the floor of an RV while the puppies slept on the bed.
Over the course of ten days with the group, Churchill just couldn’t keep the cognitive dissonance going and began to sour. She could see that Didulo was creating a “digital fantasy” for her online audience and bullying those who live with her. That what was presented didn’t match reality.
When Churchill told the group she was planning on leaving, Didulo gave the order that she had an hour to vacate the area. As a result, everyone who was staying in Churchill’s trailer had to unload all their stuff onto a tarp on the ground in a mad rush.
Didulo immediately attacked Churchill as a traitor and spy and turned her audience on her. All of Churchill’s former friends in the group have blocked her and excommunicated her from the community.
As she was leaving several members were crying. One actually decided to go with her to escape the abuse. But there is one friend Churchill still thinks about, a woman she knew as “Joanna.” This woman was on the bottom of the hierarchy and was taking a lot of abuse from the group. As Churchill was leaving she offered her a lifeline.
“Joanna was crying when I was leaving and I said, ‘Joanna, I’m going to stay in Truro overnight because you are on the line. I really don’t want to leave you here,’” she said. “‘So if you change your mind, just text me and ‘'ll come and get you.’”
She never received that text.
A cute town with a weird neighbor
Almost everyone and their grandmother in Tatamagouche, the village just a few minutes drive away from the QAnon campsite, knew of the little compound. But few, if any, knew what was really going on there.
On my first night in the area I made my way to a local BBQ spot to tuck into some dinner. Saddled up to the bar I was quickly set upon by a kind local who had obviously partaken in some libations. With a broad grin, the man, asked what my name was and what my business was in town. When I told my whole deal, the smile didn’t leave his face but some confusion did enter his eyes.
“You came all this way to write about her? Really?”
The incredulous man had a point, there is an argument to be made that by covering her I’m doing more harm than good. In all honesty, it’s a constant refrain that has long echoed inside of my head: why am I doing this?
“God, I hope this is the last time I write about her,” I thought more than once on this trip.
I’ve been an extremism reporter for several years and in that stretch of time I’ve broken a few stories I’m rather proud of about dangerous fringe groups which have ultimately helped expose them and protect people. My entire journalistic philosophy can be boiled down to a line from the Bruce Cockburn classic Lovers in a Dangerous Time: “(you’ve) got to kick at the darkness ‘til it bleeds daylight.” So I have a lot of questions I want answers to: Where is this all headed? What happens when she runs out of money? Does she really believe this? Does she feel bad about the lives she ruined? Can the information I gather help family members who have people sucked into this group?
“Well, it’s dumb, for sure, but she’s legitimately hurting her followers,” I explained, as much to the drunk man as to myself. “Anyways, it’s interesting to see what it’s like in a small town when a cult leader sets up shop just outside.”
My man, seemingly happy with this answer, then went around the BBQ joint and asked other patrons for their thoughts of “their new queen.”
“You mean that woman in the fucked-up RV,” his friend, an older man with a big white mustache and leather vest, chimed in.
When Didulo first arrived in the town late last summer she set up camp at a local motel. Few people saw her “fucked-up RV” before Claire Fralick, the motel’s cleaner. Like many Canadians who first see the vehicle, which features a massive picture of Didulo on the side and the words “mobile government,” Fralick was confused and a tad concerned at the mental well being of those who resided inside.
Fralick was warned not to interact with the group but nevertheless saw lots of them. They were hard to miss. She watched the group serve Didulo “hand and foot” going “from the camper to the room with trays of food and her coffee” and “doing everything for her.”
“They guarded this place like Fort Knox,” she told me. “They would pace up and down the driveway.”
If anyone dared approach the RV holding their queen they would spring into action and intercept them. They used the motel as something of a home base, Fralick said. ”They’d be gone for a while and then they come back again for a couple of days and then they would go.”
Soon enough the locals noticed their presence and realized they weren’t your usual tourists. Photos of the motel were posted on local Facebook groups—a few of the posts even had to be moderated because the comments were so rude to Didulo. An individual who helps with one of these pages, and wanted to remain anonymous so as to not become the topic of gossip themselves, told VICE News it was “a big topic and it’s quite controversial in our community.”
“Everybody knows everybody’s business,” Fralick said. “So if you have anything private, you don’t want anyone to know about it, don’t say anything.”
The town gossiped among themselves about Didulo while she was there and worried she was going to give the town—whose economy relies partially on tourism—a bad name. One resident shook his head when I told him what I was there for and told me “we’re all going to look like a bunch of yokels.” So they all sighed with relief when Didulo left in the fall.
But like a conspiratorial cat in the hat, Didulo came back.
Fralick, in particular, couldn’t shake the queen. When the group left the motel she was relieved—they never did any harm but she didn’t like being around them. Then one day, a month or two later, she was heading home when she crested a hill two minutes from her place and was blinded by security lights. When the spots cleared from her eyes, she saw a big RV with a familiar face parked on a neighbor’s property.
“They gave me the heebie jeebies,” she said. “They made me uneasy and they were only two minutes away from my house all winter. I didn’t go there because I wanted nothing to do with them at all, because they gave me the creeps. They made me nervous.”
Despite staying there all winter, it appears Didulo and her followers were mostly left alone. Being nice to outsiders is a bit of a cliche across the Maritimes, especially as wealthy Americans, Europeans, and *shudders* people from Ontario have bought summer properties, bringing in desperately needed dollars (a recent report found Nova Scotia to be the Canadian province with the most out-of-province land investors). But Didulo would find out the hard way that not everyone in Nova Scotia was going to be chill with her.
Hurricane, what Hurricane?
While I was in Tatamagouche talking to the locals I continuously heard one story about how Didulo was chased off an island.
“This isn’t a town that is going to chase somebody off,” one local, who like many others who spoke to me preferred to be anonymous to protect their reputation among their neighbors, barely hiding the jealousy on her breath, told me. “I guess Cape Breton did that, and I was kind of thinking, well, maybe that might happen here, but it didn't.”
So, to learn more about the subtle differences in Nova Scotian hospitality I loaded up in my rental car and made the three-and- a-half-hour drive north to Cape Breton, a large island attached to the Nova Scotia mainland by the nearly mile-long Canso Causeway. Home to more than 100,000 people, the island is arguably one of the most stunning places in eastern Canada, with its highlands in particular being the sort of thing you plan an entire vacation around.
While known for the hospitality associated with its ceilidhs, golf courses, and the Rankin Family, Cape Breton was not in the most welcoming of moods with Didulo’s convoy rolled in last fall—just weeks after a devastating hurricane made landfall.
As I made the journey northeast in my incredibly underpowered rental car, it was easy to see the ravages of Hurricane Fiona—the costliest hurricane to ever smash into Canada— passing by my car window. Six months later, trees remained downed, some homes had their sidings stripped off, and I spotted others with no roof to speak of.
Despite the obvious devastation, Didulo arrived in Cape Breton on a mission to “prove” the hurricane wasn’t real and that local news and the government were misleading the people. Her journey took her to Glace Bay, a town on the northernmost tip of the island that was smashed by Fiona. Many of the homes were severely damaged, some quite literally having their roofs torn off by the 105 miles per hour winds.
It was an area still reeling from the pain, with pent up emotion she would soon try to take advantage of—and then feel the consequences from.
Didulo pulled into the hurricane-ravaged town planning to convince people that the hurricane was fake, but she soon found a new mark, a man she found sitting on the stoop outside a dilapidated building with his head quite literally in his hands. The man, who neighbors told me suffered from mental health issues, was set upon by Didulo and her followers, who halted their RV, got out, put him on camera and used him to fundraise.
Raising money to keep the party going is, essentially, the group’s little mission. Kaven and Darlene—the two most public facing members—host the group’s daily livestreams, Darlene in English and Kaven in French, and after ranting about various conspiracies for 25 or so minutes they without fail ask for cash. Didulo, who according to several former followers doesn’t like to use her own bank account, uses Kaven’s as the repository for her followers’ electronic money transfers. Churchill added that followers are also expected to give Didulo money, pay for everything, and max out their credit cards. Recently Darlene said that everyone living with Didulo owes their leader in excess of $10,000.
Since emerging as a QAnon figure, Didulo has raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for her exploits. Before becoming that, Didulo lived in a boarding home in Victoria and, by all accounts, had limited financial resources. Having her followers keep her afloat is the only way forward. They had now found yet another way to gin up some money from her audience, the sad man sitting outside a dilapidated home in Glace Bay.
Folks didn’t take kindly to this.
The “Demon” of the North
Enter Robert North, a large, jovial man with an easy laugh. This Nova Scotian trucker would become, to quote Didulo herself, an absolute “demon” to the mobile cult.
I set off from my hotel in the nearby town of Sydney, which months after Fiona was still full of displaced residents. When I pulled up on the gravel road, just a row of houses away from a steep cliff leading into the North Atlantic, I saw a large man with a still-steaming cup of Tim Hortons coffee chatting to another man riding a quad.
With my long hair and camera hanging over a West Coast Brazilian jiu-jitsu hoodie, I stand out, and North quickly spotted me. With a smile and a call he ushered me over and with the cadence of a well-practiced tour guide showed me the damage done to the nearby properties—mainly which roof flew off what home and where it landed. As we walk up to one empty lot—next to it stands a garage and a trailer—but where a house would exist only dirt. North points to a line in the ground and for the first time I see his face fall.
“We’‘re standing where my home was,” he told me. “You’re actually in my downstairs bathroom now.”
The hurricane ripped the roof off his home while he and his wife were hunkered down inside. North told me they could feel “the pressure” in the home change and water flooded in. In the end, despite trying to save the home they raised their kids in, they were forced to demolish it. So when Didulo and her staff pulled in, not two weeks removed from the storm, he was not in the best of moods.
North knew who Didulo was—her statements about putting health care workers to death were well-covered in Canada—so when he first saw her, he pulled up in his semi-truck and emptied the air horn on them during a live stream.
“I never thought about pulling in the driveway and laying on my horn, but it just happened,” North told me. “It was spontaneous. I knew who she was. And I knew what she said about health care workers. I knew she was here to prove that Fiona wasn’t real. That’s a hard slap in the face when you lose everything. It’s somebody coming here to make a fool out of us."
Didulo and her crew, always desperate to raise money, persisted with their, as North put it, grift. Via livestreams on the location, they told their followers to donate money to repair the old man’s home (he never would see a dime.)
The Queen of Canada wasn’t prepared for the pushback they were going to receive. While it wasn’t exactly the gunpowder plot, it was a neighborhood affair.
North honked his horn from his big rig, and made them move their vehicles if they were parked on his property or in front of his driveway. At one point Didulo’s convoy drove up the street to have a private conversation so North launched his drone and flew it above them. North said he turned himself into the “town crier” and encouraged people driving by to share their thoughts about the convoy leader he called “Queen Dildo.”
“I couldn’t help what they were saying out of their window,” North said with a sly grin. “A lot of it wasn’t nice.”
In an inverse of Didulo torturing people with her non-stop playing of “Rasputin,” North’s neighbor Pat, who lives across the street, blasted Slayer and death metal whenever he saw them filming.
“I was just trying to get on their nerves,” Pat, who did not want his last name used in this story because he feared it would impact his employment, told me outside of his home, near a massive divot in the ground made from when a roof smashed into it during the hurricane. “Like playing Slayer’s ‘Raining Blood.’ I just backed my car up, pop the sunroof, every window, pop the back hatch, and let ‘er rip.”
The group got extremely agitated and Didulo herself would hide away in her RV. At times, though, North did try to help the cult members, in the passive aggressive way you can only find in Canada (and perhaps the Midwest, so I hear). At one point he offered to pay for Kaven’s way out of the cult, offering to buy him a ticket home to Quebec. North said that he would have happily followed through on the offer and even showed the man the cash he would have used to pay for it.
But the rest of the neighborhood made it their business to make sure Didulo wasn’t welcome. Some even came from nearby Sydney to help out. Mike Thomey told VICE News that he learned she was in Glace Bay via social media and went to help shut down her efforts to raise money off the man. He knew of her from the group’s previous visits to Sydney in the past.
“These are friends. These are our neighbors. This is our community. These are our seniors. You don’t come into a place as hard as Cape Breton and try to rip off our friends,” said Thomey. “People weren’t having it. Fiona just hit. Everybody was suffering.”
“I hope that people can learn from how we handle it here in Cape Breton and they can apply that in their own areas,” he said, adding that he doesn’t think that people should engage Didulo and her cult if they don’t need to, but should certainly stand up if they’re targeting someone in your community.
The neighborhood fighting back led to some tense moments and Didulo and her crew called the cops several times. Needless to say, no arrests were made.
“She said I was a demon and my eyes turned red or some foolishness like that. She said that it was a corrupt neighborhood with police corruption. I have no doubt in my mind that if I was doing anything wrong, Trevor (the local cop) would have hauled me away,” North said.
This went on for days until Didulo and her crew just gave up. They were able to raise $10,000 from North’s neighbor—money North believes was used to pay for them to take a ferry to Newfoundland—and hit the road shortly after they convinced the man to say he didn’t want the money. All he was left with by Didulo and her team was a broken TV.
North isn’t shy to let people know what he thinks of the “scam artist.”
“I think she’s a parasite. I think maybe they might have scraped everything that was sticky, smelly, bad up off the floor and made her out of that,” said North. “Because you can’t spend your life duping people, stealing from people. These are the things that break up families. They break up relationships. There’s no good that can come of it.”
While North doesn’t like to admit it, he and his neighbors chased Didulo out of Cape Breton. In a livestream Darlene was livid about the pushback they received and Cape Breton’s lack of respect for her queen.
“These individuals were very disruptive and intimidating,” she said. "They were gathering a gang from the neighborhood and they were non-stop, incessantly harassing, bullying, and intimidating.”
So southwest Didulo went, eventually finding her way back to her safe haven outside of Tatamagouche. And that’s where she would stay all winter and where I would find her on a cloudy afternoon in late April.
“Can I speak to the queen, please?”
Kim Churchill, the former member of the Tatamagouche compound, had long left the group by the time I arrived to check out the scene. While she doesn’t think Didulo’s group was likely to get violent, she’s unsure of what they’re capable of and said the queen would often say violent things, like that thieves should have their hands cut off and people who speak poorly of her should be imprisoned.
"They told me not to come back and they threatened saying ‘don’t come back, it’s a bad idea,,’” said Churchill. “They made it sound like there's going to be consequences, like they’re going to shoot me or something. I didn't know what I was dealing with so I didn’t go back.”
I talked to Churchill after my trip so I was blissfully unaware of all of this as I planned my introduction to the queen. My entire trip to Nova Scotia was based around going up and seeing if Didulo would talk to me. The VICE News security team didn’t want me going alone in case Didulo used her alien powers on me— there might have been more earthly concerns too—so I was with a coworker at the time, a large man originally from the Maritimes. After getting a nice lunch at a local establishment called Big Al’s, we loaded up the rental and drove down the rust-colored rural road that led to the property.
We had to make contact that day. I had heard the group mention on livestreams that they were hoping to possibly get back on the road ASAP, so we knew our window to speak to them was small. In fact, just days prior the group made a test run of the RV (it quickly broke down and had to be towed back to their home base).
As we did a flyby of the property we were greeted with a view of the monarch atop her RV duct taping security cameras to the roof. “She’s on the roof!” I exclaimed in a vertical video that you’ll never see, and we parked a few hundred feet down the road. As we pregamed our approach, we watched a neighbor walk a few hundred feet down his driveway to come speak with us, as he thought we might have broken down.
After reassuring the neighbor that we were fine, we trudged over to the property, and I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t a bit anxious. I had flown across a continent for this—what if she, or her followers, didn’t talk to me? I wanted the kind of answers you can only get from speaking face-to-face, did she really believe she was a member of an intergalactic alliance? Did her followers really believe that? Could we even have a civil, normal conversation about the last two years of QAnon-inspired madness?
When we got there we discovered the Queen had removed herself from the roof of the RV. What we did find was two older women loading up a vehicle. They were curt, not wanting to speak to us.
“Can we speak with the Queen?” I asked the one who was giving off “clearly in charge” energy, after introducing myself.
“Absolutely not!” she snapped back. I pressed back politely, hoping they’d eventually just start talking to us, because it’s kind of hard not to talk to a person who is right in front of you.
But they didn’t, and we schlepped back towards our underpowered rental.
Disappointed with the anti-climatic ending to our trip,I began to plan how I could somehow sell this as the climax of my story. As my co-worker and I discussed our next plan of action outside our vehicle, we saw Kaven, who had put on his little security hat, peering at us from the property. I waved. He did not wave back but continued to stare.
That was a good enough invitation for me! So once more we walked back to the property’s driveway, fingers crossed Didulo would talk to us.
This time, we came across not only the two women loading the vehicle, but the faux-security guard, the woman who owned the property, and about a dozen or so dogs running about, barking, and fighting with each other. (It didn’t help that my co-worker had repeatedly said that poorly-trained dogs were the biggest security threat on this deployment.) We told them we just wanted to talk and this wasn’t an ambush, but they were having none of it.
We made a little bit of small talk and it actually seemed the woman who owned the property might speak to us—she had a quibble with a previous story I had written—but then we heard the telltale sound of a motorhome door slamming shut.
Turning towards the sound, we could see a serious-looking woman with her shoulders set like a boxer storming at us, phone out to film us, and screaming “no comment!” She spoke loudly over everyone, but she wasn’t what I noticed. Above the shoulder of this rapidly approaching cult follower was the RV, and there she was—my white whale and the scourge of the Cape Breton—Romana Didulo, leaning so far over her dashboard her face was almost touching the windshield, staring at us intensely and barking orders, which we could clearly hear emanating from the walkie talkie her driver/security guard kept on his belt.
This moment of recognition only lasted a brief second as Darlene, her assistant, quickly swooped in and no-commented us till we left. Anything we said was either shouted over or ignored, so with at least the knowledge that Didulo had seen us we admitted defeat.
For whatever reason, Didulo and her crew decided to hit the road that very evening, to once more begin her never-ending tour of Canada.
They broke down almost immediately.
https://www.vice.com/en/article/k7zzn9/qanon-queen-canada-nova-scotia-moves-in