How Officials, Police, and Media Colluded to Bury the Truth:
UPDATED: Mayor’s Confession to Sabotage! See end…
Introduction: When Narrative Replaces Reality
Headlines matter. When Canadians scroll through MSN or their local news feeds and see “Health officials declare ‘Queen of Canada’s’ compound a threat to public safety,” they are being primed to believe one thing: that a dangerous fringe group has been neutralized for the good of all.
But look closer. Beneath the confident framing, the official story collapses under scrutiny. What the media calls a “threat” was in fact manufactured by township officials, amplified by the RCMP through a theatrical raid, and cemented into the public imagination by a press corps that long ago abandoned skepticism for stenography.
The Richmound affair is not just about Queen Romana Didulo and her supporters. It is about how governments can weaponize infrastructure, health policy, and law enforcement to crush dissent — and how mainstream outlets, instead of exposing these abuses, provide the cover that makes them possible.
The Township Sabotage
The Saskatchewan Health Authority (SHA) claims the Richmound school — where Queen Romana and her supporters resided — was unfit for habitation because it lacked a municipal sewer connection. On September 5, they issued an order under Section 22 of the Public Health Act, demanding immediate evacuation.
What they left out: the school had not depended on township water since 2010. It operated on its own rainwater-fed well system. Far from being a neglected facility, the property had been adapted for self-sufficiency long before Didulo’s arrival.
So why did the sewer suddenly become an issue in 2025?
Because township officials deliberately cut the connection.
On July 18, 2025, video evidence shows Mayor Brad Miller overseeing actions that disabled the property’s sewer system. That same day, the township issued a Precautionary Drinking Water Advisory (PDWA) citing a “curbstop leak” and “intermittent pressure issues.” For two weeks, residents of Richmound were warned that their water supply might be unsafe. By July 30, the advisory was cancelled.
In plain terms: the township created the hazard, declared it a public risk, and then quietly walked it back. Yet the advisory served its purpose — it planted fear in the community and built a pretext for later eviction orders.
This is governance by sabotage. It is also reckless. Cutting sewer access risks contamination of soil and groundwater, potentially affecting the entire village. The fact that officials weaponized utilities to advance a political goal is not just unethical — it’s dangerous.
The RCMP Raid: Theater Over Truth
The township’s sabotage laid the groundwork. The RCMP provided the spectacle.
On September 3, 2025, at 4:30 a.m., more than 30 police vehicles, including tactical units, descended on the property in a full-scale raid. Officers claimed they were acting on a tip that someone on the site had a firearm.
By the end of the search, they had seized four replica handguns. No real firearms. No live threat.
But within 24 hours, the number changed. Suddenly there were “13 imitation semi-automatic handguns” and “ammunition” — even though RCMP had already told reporters the search was complete. How do numbers triple after a completed search? Why does the definition of “ammunition” remain vague? These contradictions remain unchallenged by the media.
Meanwhile, officers left behind thousands of dollars in property damage: 10–20 vehicles with slashed tires, smashed RV windows, and vandalized property. For a force claiming to uphold law and order, this looked more like an intimidation campaign than a legitimate search.
And yet the press dutifully repeated RCMP talking points, framing the raid as a “safety operation” that spared Richmound from a potential Waco-style standoff.
The Media Smear Machine
Every step of this process has been lubricated by a compliant press.
Instead of asking obvious questions — Who cut the sewer? Why was a water advisory issued? Why did RCMP destroy property? Why did evidence figures change? — outlets like CBC, CTV, and the Canadian Press fell back on the easiest narrative: “cult,” “conspiracy theorists,” “sovereign citizens.”
They rely on “experts” like Dr. Christine Sarteschi, an American academic who has made a career out of painting grassroots dissent as dangerous extremism. Her commentary, recycled endlessly, provides the veneer of authority while erasing the real story: state abuse of power.
Adding fuel are so-called “independent journalists” like Tommy Forgure, who has a history of trespassing on the property, mocking security in self-shot videos, and even sparking fights with supporters. Yet there he was at the courthouse, snapping photos of handcuffed residents for the national “perp walk” cycle. His images, stripped of context, became propaganda tools for the very media outlets that portray themselves as neutral observers.
Natural Law Courts: Truth or “Intimidation”?
Central to the charges against Queen Romana and property owner Rick Manz is the accusation of “intimidation of a justice system participant.” What this really refers to are the natural law court hearings held by supporters to document township corruption.
Here’s the irony: when citizens try to hold officials accountable through alternative systems, it is branded “intimidation.” But when officials cut sewer lines, issue false advisories, raid homes at gunpoint, and smear residents in the press, it is called “public safety.”
This inversion of reality reveals the heart of the matter: dissent is criminalized, while abuse of power is normalized.
The Manufactured Consent of Fear
Why did so many residents cheer the raid? Because they had been conditioned by months of fear campaigns.
Sewer sabotage → water advisories → “health risks.”
Anonymous firearm tip → RCMP raid → “public safety.”
Replica weapons → inflated evidence → “arsenal uncovered.”
Natural law hearings → charges of intimidation → “threat to justice system.”
Each step built on the last, creating the illusion of a growing menace. Residents, misled by media headlines, believed they were being protected. In reality, they were witnessing a staged operation to crush dissent.
This is what propaganda looks like in practice: create the problem, amplify the panic, provide the solution.
The Real Conspiracy
The Canadian Press wants readers to believe the conspiracy lies with Romana Didulo and her followers. But the real conspiracy is plain:
Township officials sabotaged infrastructure and issued fear-based advisories.
RCMP staged a raid that produced replicas, not real weapons.
Media repeated talking points and smeared dissenters as cultists.
Health authorities rubber-stamped the township’s sabotage as a “public health order.”
That is not governance. It is collusion.
Why This Matters Beyond Richmound
Some will dismiss this as a fringe story about a small-town standoff. That is a mistake.
If municipal officials can tamper with infrastructure to drive out residents, if police can raid homes on flimsy pretexts, if media can smear anyone outside the mainstream as a threat — then no Canadian is safe.
Today it is Romana Didulo’s supporters. Tomorrow it could be farmers resisting land seizures, parents challenging school boards, or any citizen who refuses to conform.
The tactics on display in Richmound — sabotage, fear campaigns, theatrical policing, narrative control — are not unique. They are part of a broader pattern of governance by coercion.
Conclusion: Who Holds Them Accountable?
The Richmound affair forces a simple but urgent question: when officials weaponize trust, who holds them accountable?
The answer, for now, is no one. Municipal councils hide behind bureaucracy. Police hide behind “public safety.” Media hide behind editorial framing. Each actor shields the others in a closed loop of impunity.
But accountability does not vanish simply because institutions refuse it. It shifts to the people themselves. That is why supporters of Queen Romana turned to Natural Law trials: not as harassment, but as a last resort to document truth when every official channel had been corrupted.
The state calls these efforts “intimidation.” In reality, they are the seeds of justice.
History shows us that when governments sabotage, deceive, and repress their citizens, the reckoning eventually comes. The question is not whether accountability will arrive — but whether Canadians will recognize, before it’s too late, that the real threat to public safety in Richmound was never the schoolhouse residents. It was the officials sworn to protect them.
When people fall into what is called derangement symptoms — whether it’s “Trump Derangement Syndrome,” the blind hatred toward Queen Romana, or any reflexive hostility shaped by propaganda — it’s not just a matter of opinion. It’s a psychological state, reinforced by fear campaigns, repetition, and social conformity.
That kind of conditioning rewires how people process reality. They stop weighing facts and start reacting emotionally, almost automatically, to the cues given by media or authority figures. In the long run, that creates real harm:
Mental strain: living in a constant state of outrage or fear erodes emotional stability.
Social division: communities fracture because neighbors can no longer speak to each other without hostility.
Loss of autonomy: people give up their critical thinking and adopt whatever narrative they’re fed.
And yes — many will need help to recover. Not necessarily “help” in a clinical sense only, but also social and spiritual healing. They will need spaces where truth can be spoken without mockery, where critical thinking is encouraged, and where they can safely admit they were misled without being humiliated.
The sad reality is that mass propaganda doesn’t just end when the lies are exposed. It leaves scars. People will need guidance to relearn how to think independently and reconnect with one another as human beings, rather than as enemies.
Timeline (Key Checkpoints)
- July 18, 2025 — A Precautionary Drinking Water Advisory (PDWA) is issued for Richmound citing a “curbstop leak” and “intermittent pressure” (see Sources).
- Sept 3, 2025 — Saskatchewan RCMP enter the Richmound school site; initial update cites four replica handguns seized (see Sources).
- Sept 4, 2025 — Later RCMP update lists 13 imitation semi-automatic handguns plus ammunition (see Sources).
- Sept 6, 2025 — Media report that SHA has ordered the building vacated under Section 22 of the Public Health Act due to lack of municipal sewer connection (see Sources).
- Sept 8, 2025 — Court coverage indicates Romana Didulo is granted release on conditions/bail (see Sources).
Supporting Media (Unedited)
MSM Coverage (for Comparison)
Sources & Reader Verification
Below are third-party reports and official releases readers can consult to verify timeline details,
health orders, and RCMP updates. Presence on this list does not imply endorsement of their framing.
- Saskatchewan RCMP update (4 replica handguns) – Sept 3, 2025
- Saskatchewan RCMP update (13 imitation semi-automatic handguns) – Sept 4, 2025
- Global News (CP): SHA cites Section 22 & lack of municipal sewer – Sept 6, 2025
- WaterToday: Richmound PDWA (curbstop leak; intermittent pressure) – Issued July 18, 2025
- CKOM: Didulo to be released on conditions – Sept 8, 2025
- BattlefordsNow: Didulo freed on bail – Sept 8, 2025
- CJWW: Mayor says town blocked sewer & water; alleges sewage pumping – Sept 3, 2025
- https://www.msn.com/en-ca/news/canada/health-officials-declare-queen-of-canada-s-compound-a-threat-to-public-safety/ar-AA1M1NvX?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=68bd7cfe9e514f4b8df0bfd8226c1851
- https://todayheadline.co/sask-officials-declare-compound-a-health-threat/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=jetpack_social&fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAAR5W_U8rlDvIheM1a9IyhhZT4wyccoerzGZDqweEBbqx9n1oqiUYGDrv3i9Krg_aem_CUrfsbDF_lmpMvBKW4yrHQ
Mayor’s Confession to Sabotage!
In a recent report (below), Mayor Brad Miller openly admitted what many already suspected: the township deliberately cut off utilities to force residents out. His own words are damning:
Council sought legal advice on how to remove Queen Romana’s community, including “cutting off electricity and water.”
Shutting off water would have cost $14,000, but instead Miller authorized cutting the sewage line for $2,200.
Miller described this act as “our saviour,” even though it created sanitation hazards.
This is not speculation — it is a confession. Miller admitted he was “running out of ideas” when he made the decision. The motive was eviction, not safety or finance.
By cutting sewage, the township itself manufactured the exact conditions later cited by SHA to declare the building unsafe. The “public health hazard” was created by officials, then weaponized against the very people they targeted.
The property had relied on its own well and rainwater system since 2010, meaning the sewage cut was not about unpaid bills but about political punishment.
To make matters worse, on July 18 — the same day as a major altercation — the township issued a Precautionary Drinking Water Advisory citing a curbstop leak. That advisory was lifted by July 30. The timing is too precise to ignore: tampering with infrastructure paired with a fear-inducing advisory, laying the groundwork for eviction.
This is governance by sabotage.
The Breach of Public Trust
Municipal leaders are entrusted to manage infrastructure for the good of all residents. When Mayor Miller’s council deliberately cut sewer access to the school, they did more than target one group. They tampered with public systems, risking wider contamination and placing political goals above community safety.
Issuing a water advisory to cover the sabotage only deepened the betrayal. By weaponizing utilities and public health fears, officials manufactured both the problem and the panic.
Who Protects the Public from Its Protectors?
The Richmound affair should alarm every Canadian. If a township can sabotage infrastructure, partner with police, issue false water scares, and enlist media to brand residents as extremists — all while endangering public health — then no community is safe.
The real conspiracy here is not a fringe group living in a school. It is the collusion of municipal officials, law enforcement, and national media to manufacture a crisis, violate rights, and then congratulate themselves for “protecting” the community they themselves endangered.
The question that remains: when officials weaponize trust, who holds them accountable?
The answer is emerging in real time: accountability comes when citizens refuse to accept engineered narratives and turn to systems that document truth. The Natural Law trials held by Queen Romana and her supporters were not “intimidation,” as painted by media, but an attempt to hold corrupt actors to account when conventional institutions refuse to. They recognized what many now see: tampering with infrastructure, weaponizing health advisories, and colluding with media are not politics — they are crimes.
When officials betray their people, accountability must come from the people themselves. In Richmound, that accountability was already underway.
Miller said he felt he was “running out of ideas” when he decided to cut off the sewage connected to the former schools for $2,200 last October.
“The $2,200 hurt, but in the end, I think that was our saviour,” he said.
multiple outlets attribute the details to an SHA email. Where facts are contested (e.g., infrastructure
modifications, counts of items seized), readers should compare initial vs. later official updates.
Verify It Yourself: Practical Steps
- Compare first, then conclude: Seek primary videos and documents before reading commentary.
- Track edits: Make a list of concepts present in original footage but absent in edited packages.
- Archive locally: Save source files; links and embeds can change.
- Share side-by-side: When posting, include both the raw and MSM links so others can judge.
- Document timeline: Note when numbers or claims change across official updates.

