EXCLUSIVE: Riverside Co. Sheriff's Department Lied About Vem Miller's Bail
Last Updated on October 16, 2024
The Riverside County Sheriff’s Department confirmed to National File today that Vem Miller, the man Sheriff Chad Bianco falsely accused of wanting to kill Donald Trump, did not even pay $5,000 in bail before being released on his own recognizance.
National File spoke exclusively with an officer at the John J. Benoit Detention Center in Riverside County who confirmed that Vem Miller did not pay the five thousand dollar bail he was alleged to have paid when reports of his arrest went viral on Sunday, the day after the Trump rally at Coachella.
National File can exclusively confirm that Vem Miller did not pay $5,000 in bail in order to be freed from prison after an exclusive interview with an officer employed at the Benoit Detention Center.
“It only shows as a cite,” the Riverside County officer told National File.
“There was not bail that had to be paid. It was just a ticket. This was only a misdemeanor so there was no bail that had to be paid,” the officer confirmed to this reporter.
National File is not printing the officer’s name in order to maintain his safety and prevent reprisal from Sheriff Chad Bianco, who’s reputation has begun to suffer as a result of the incident.
In an exclusive interview with National File, Vem Miller, the man Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco falsely accused of attempting to assassinate Donald Trump at Coachella over the weekend, also confirmed that he never paid a $5,000 bond or bail in order to be released from custody after the Coachella incident last weekend.
Miller, who wasted no time in suing Chad Bianco, as the LA Times reports, spoke with National File over the telephone from an undisclosed location, due to his family having been SWATed in the wake of the fake claims of intent to do harm to Donald Trump.
After speaking with Miller, National File is awarding every news outlet that reported that Miller paid $5,000 in bail TEN BLOODY O.J. MURDER GLOVES.
“The first time I ever heard about the supposed $5k bail payment was when I was sitting in the hooker-infested roach motel,” Miller said.
“I’m getting breakfast reading news on my phone and I read on the news that I apparently paid five thousand dollars in bail to be release,” he explained. “That’s when I first realized something much bigger than the arrest incident was getting ready to happen.”
High profile Twitter accounts like Congresswoman Anna Paulina Luna and Nick Sortor began regurgitating the false claim as if it were fact in the middle of the afternoon on Sunday.
“We probably stopped another assassination attempt,” Bianco told a California-based press organization.
“Their total incompetence caused all of this. And they’re totally dishonest. If they’re so confident that I gave them $5k, then if they could send it back, that would be great, so I can get my car back from the impound lot, and start to get my life back in order. All my equipment and intellectual property is very important, and at present, I don’t have it, and can barely do the work that I do,” Miller said.
“I have health care supplements that I’m going to have to take, but I’m not even confident that they wouldn’t adulterate them somehow.”
“I don’t have equipment, my life’s been put on hold, i can’t run my business, and I’m not confident I’ll ever get any of it back,” Miller said.
“I’m surveying the damage of what they’ve done to my life, and it’s like they put a nuclear bomb in my life. Now I’m going to the grocery store and there are people looking at me like I’m some kind of psycho, it’s just maddening.”