While the radical left cries crocodile tears and sues for police brutality—winning fat settlements with ease—the right rots in prison cells for defending others against the same tyranny.
Take January 6th: brave souls sentenced to years behind bars, still waiting four years later for a dime from the government for wrongful incarceration that could have, for many, stretched decades without President Trump’s pardons.
Now, meet Visha Singh, a violent Los Angeles Antifa extremist with a rap sheet of terroristic threats, who’s angling for a taxpayer-funded payday from the LAPD and city over alleged injuries from a 2021 Antifa riot.
In a dramatic turn outside a federal courthouse downtown, live streamer Tomas Morales confronted Singh on Tuesday as proceedings wrapped up.
Video footage posted on social media shows Morales trailing Singh and his legal team as they exited the glass-paneled building at 1st and Hill streets.
Singh, identified by his attorney Christian Contreras as the plaintiff in a civil trial against the city, was suing for excessive police force during the 2021 Wi Spa protest.
The encounter, captured on Morales’ X post, turned heated as he peppered Singh with pointed questions.
"Do you still want to burn LAPD to the ground?” Morales demanded.
WATCH:
Violent extremist Los Angeles Antifa member Visha Singh, who has made many terroristic threats, was confronted outside court by @TomasMorales_iv. Singh is trying to get a payday from the LAPD & city for alleged injuries from the 2021 Wi Spa Antifa riot. pic.twitter.com/pvEFzO3MR2 https://t.co/pPG45SoUeF
— Andy Ngo (@MrAndyNgo) August 27, 2025
"Are you a member of Antifa?" he pressed, as the group moved up Hill Street.
Singh, a documentary filmmaker, claims he was filming a confrontation between left-wing and far-right groups outside the Koreatown Wi Spa when an LAPD officer, John Jenal, struck him with a baton, fracturing a joint in his right hand and two fingers.
Jenal argued in court that he mistook Singh’s raised phone for a threat.
The trial’s first day ended abruptly when Singh’s attorneys, rattled by Morales’ confrontation, moved for a mistrial, alleging intimidation.
The judge denied the motion, but the two sides settled for an undisclosed amount—pending City Council approval.
"He was looking forward to taking this case to a full resolution at trial, and this issue came up. It’s unsettling, but he just wants to move forward in his life," said Contreras, Singh’s attorney.
He added, "Even if the case ended in an ‘anticlimactic’ fashion, there has been some accountability” since jurors saw videos of the officers’ actions.
Adam Rose of the Los Angeles Press Club hailed the settlement, stating, “I’m relieved that there’s both compensation and validation for what Vishal has experienced through this settlement,” claiming for years Singh’s has been a "figurative and literal punching bag for far-right extremists."
Singh’s legal win stands in stark contrast to the plight of January 6th defendants, who face prison without compensation, while the left’s lawsuits—like Singh’s—routinely succeed.
The settlement also coincides with pending rulings in lawsuits against the LAPD and U.S. Department of Homeland Security over journalist treatment during pro-immigration protests, highlighting a troubling pattern.
While Antifa agitators like Visha Singh cash in, the real victims of government overreach languish in silence.
Conversation