Will Greenlee

will.greenlee@tcpalm.com

SEBASTIAN — A woman who reported belonging to the Illuminati got arrested after emerging from under a blanket and telling a deputy he would burn, affidavits state.

Also arrested after emerging from a blanket was a man who yelled with the woman “about Freemasons and their impending music record deal.”

The case of Kristen Morrow, 37, and 25-year-old George Davis began March 25 on Indian River Drive in Sebastian when an Indian River County Sheriff’s Deputy went to a “suspicious person” report involving a male under a blanket.

The deputy arrived and saw a blanket.

A woman, later identified as Morrow, came out from under the blanket.

“I am part of the Illuminati and Freemasons,” she is quoted as yelling. “You have no authority and I don’t have to leave.”

In a 2016 BuzzFeed article under the headline, “Here's A Breakdown Of WTF The Illuminati Is,” a professor is sourced as saying the Illuminati has been part of a variety of conspiracy theories in past years.

“First, Fascists believed they were Jews, and then, after World War II, extremist anti-Communists believed the Illuminati were Communists,” the article states. “Most recently, Illuminati conspiracy theorists believe the Illuminati seek to create a New World Order with a dominant totalitarian government.”

Opinions differ on whether the Illuminati exists, but it apparently has a website.

The website states the Illuminati is “an elite organization of world leaders, business authorities, innovators, artists, and other influential members of this planet.”

Meanwhile, the deputy reported a man, later identified as Davis, came out from under the blanket.

Morrow kept yelling, and the deputy told her to lower her voice.

“She continued to yell and rant that she was a famous music talent and she knew judges and her family would have my job,” an affidavit states.

Davis began questioning why he was being detained.

Davis and Morrow kept yelling “about Freemasons and their impending music record deal and the celebrities, judges, and power their family had.”

“I was advised I would lose my job and would burn,” an affidavit states.

Instead of burning, the deputy arrested Morrow and Davis, each on a disorderly conduct charge. Morrow also was arrested on a resist arrest without violence charge.

Details of “their impending music record deal and the celebrities, judges, and power their family had” were not listed.