VENTING his frustration, Bradley “Doggy” Sampson, a key organiser in the US-sanctioned businessman Azruddin Mohamed’s We Invest in Nationhood (WIN) political party, has exited the party.
“I’m leaving the f@#king WIN party, officially, I am f@#king tired,” the man who served as key organiser for WIN, said in a video on Wednesday that has since gone viral.
He had claimed during a Facebook Live that he was a key founding member of the party, contributing to the creation of its name and helping to secure supporters.
“I am going to join a party that got me, real people, I’m f@#king tired of Mohamed I’m tired of everything,” Sampson added.
Multiple reports indicate that people have been leaving the party in large numbers.
The police had issued a wanted bulletin for Sampson, a controversial social media personality after chaos broke out at the Square of the Revolution, where scores of persons showed up to receive payment after participating in a nomination day march.
In videos that were widely circulated on Facebook, disgruntled persons could be heard saying, “The scrapes want their money.”
Most troubling in one of the videos was an altercation between Sampson and a woman, which ended with him engaging in violent behaviour.
The police, on Tuesday evening, issued a wanted bulletin for Sampson in relation to the following offences: Threatening Behaviour, contrary to Section 141(a) of the Summary Jurisdiction (Offences) Act, Chapter 8:02.; Threatening Language, contrary to Section 141(a) of the Summary Jurisdiction (Offences) Act, Chapter 8:02.; Obscene Language, contrary to Section 141(a) of the
Summary Jurisdiction (Offences) Act, Chapter 8:02.; Disorderly Behaviour, contrary to Section 136(a) of the Summary Jurisdiction (Offences) Act, Chapter 8:02.; Assault, contrary to Section 21 of the Summary Jurisdiction (Offences) Act, Chapter 8:02.; Possession of Firearm, without a license, contrary to Section 16(2)(a) of the Firearm Act, Chapter 16:05.; and Possession of Ammunition, without a license, contrary to Section 16(2)(a) of the Firearm Act, Chapter 16:05.
The party’s leader distanced himself and the party from Doggy’s actions, noting: “I want to make it clear that the actions of Mr. Sampson are not in line with the values held by me or the WIN party. I wish to emphasise in the strongest terms that neither I nor the WIN party condone any form of violence, especially against women.”
Sampson, on Tuesday, had posted on his Facebook page that persons who worked on the water trucks should turn up at the Square of the Revolution for payments.
While he claimed that the payment was for “work,” persons, a large number of whom were women, turned up, in some cases with WIN-branded outfits, to collect what was owed to them.
Sampson, in a live broadcast prior to Nomination Day, had said that they would have had a truckload of money on Monday.