BREAKING: Mathematics Guru Killed In Shootout Linked to Notorious Group

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A young woman who is  identified as Bauckholt, was shot and killed in a gunfight with U.S. Border Patrol agents in northern Vermont on January 20.

Dockaysworld gathered that the shootout happened during a traffic stop when a woman in the car with her, Teresa Youngblut, pulled out a gun and fired at an agent.

The agents shot back, killing Bauckholt and also fatally wounding Border Patrol agent David “Chris” Maland.

Youngblut was injured in the exchange.

Authorities later revealed that Bauckholt had ties to a mysterious and dangerous group led by Jack Amadeus LaSota, also known as “Ziz.”

The group has been connected to six killings, an attempted murder, and at least one faked death, according to court records.

LaSota, an Alaska native who identifies as a woman, is known for wearing dark robes and calling herself “Sith,” a reference to villains in Star Wars.

Bauckholt, originally from Germany, was a brilliant mathematician who worked at a New York City trading firm.

At 26, she was earning more than half a million dollars a year and had an active social life.

Her apartment in Jersey City was a gathering place for her close-knit group of highly educated transgender women. Friends described her as kind, generous, and the “glue” of their group.

However, in the months before her disappearance in November 2023, Bauckholt’s behavior changed.

She withdrew from her friends, spent hours on secretive phone calls, and took frequent trips to unknown locations.

Then, one day, she boarded a flight out of Newark Liberty International Airport and cut off all contact.

Her friends had no idea where she had gone—until the news of her death.

Several people connected to LaSota’s group are under investigation for violent crimes.

One is a suspect in the murder of a Pennsylvania couple.

Two others were charged with attacking an elderly man in California, leaving him blind in one eye.

Later, another member was accused of killing the same man to stop him from testifying.

“There are many young people who could have had good lives, but they got involved with LaSota’s group,” said Anna Salamon, co-founder of the Center for Applied Rationality, who had met LaSota and some of her followers.

Bauckholt’s death has left her friends in shock, struggling to understand how someone so intelligent and full of life got caught up in such a dangerous network.