EXCLUSIVE: The woman leading the Melbourne army of 'Bunnings Karens': How an ordained pagan minister and exorcist is figurehead of a campaign harassing shop staff and coordinating action against masks
- 'Bunnings Karens' appeared to have struck in co-ordination at warehouses
- The women lecture staff, saying they don't have authority to force masks
- Exorcist Elizabeth 'Lizzy' Rose is leading an 'army' of protesters in Melbourne
- Ms Rose says she started The Illuminating Army to combat COVID 19 lockdown
- Victorian Premier and health authorities have slammed mask dodgers as 'selfish'
- Ms Rose filmed herself taking on Bunnings workers who asked her to mask up
An ordained pagan exorcist is leading an army of 'Bunnings Karens' who are filming themselves arguing with vexed shop keepers across COVID-plagued Melbourne.
Psychic Elizabeth 'Lizzy' Rose is a self proclaimed high priestess witch who performs exorcisms for a living when not disrupting shopping aisles.
Ms Rose has emerged as one of the leaders of a group of Melburnians that have come to police attention since mandatory mask wearing laws were implemented last Thursday.

Exorcist Lizzie Rose has a medical certificate that exempts her from wearing a mask. She has filmed herself shopping at Bunnings

Lizzy Rose hams it up while dressed as a Viking Queen. She had been trying to get items for a Viking fire pit when she ran into trouble at her local Bunnings

Lizzy Rose is a pagan witch and hates wearing masks. She has filmed herself burning them in a fire pit
The revelations come as figures on Monday declared Victorians had suffered a record 532 new cases of coronavirus.
Six more Victorians have died overnight, including five residents in aged care and a man in his 50s.
Some 245 people are in hospital with 44 in intensive care.
The group of troublemakers are all believed to be members of 'The Illuminating Army' - a group of like-minded conspiracy theorists that believe COVID-19 is a scam and 5G networks are the work of the devil.
Ms Rose, who has been contacted by Daily Mail Australia, claims to be the leader of the army.
In videos of the exorcist posted on both her own Facebook page and that of the 'army', Ms Rose declares she will continue to travel through up to five Melbourne suburbs a day without wearing a mask.
Other videos show her burning face masks in a fire pit.
'I will be walking the streets with no mask,' she brags. 'And I will be telling anyone who is interested to not consent. To not comply. To not put your life and your health at risk.'
In a long winded rant posted on the day the bans kicked in, Ms Rose filmed herself walking down a street in Tullamarine - northwest of Melbourne - while not wearing a mask.
In it, she claims the government actually hopes to kill Victorians by forcing them to wear masks.
'This is about control, this is about submission, this is about compliance, this is about you doing what you're told not about a killer virus,' she said.
'Don't walk around with a mask on your face, it's really, really quite dangerous for you ... you'll see a whole heap of people die now. That's the agenda - depopulation. And it'll be through wearing a mask.'
The witch goes onto explain that she does not need to obey the draconian laws.
Ms Rose signed off from the video with a smile.

Ordained pagan minister Lizzy Rose (left) has been getting about Melbourne without a mask and proudly filming it

Lizzy Rose sent a message of praise to health workers in April while wearing a mask. She now films herself getting about town without one

Lizzy Rose has started an 'army' of like-minded people opposed to COVID-19 restrictions and laws

'That's not a Mask This is a Mask': a post from Lizzy Rose on her Facebook page
'See you in another suburb really, really soon. No mask,' she said.
Days later, Ms Rose is seen taking her cause into a Bunnings Warehouse in Maribyrnong - just west of Melbourne - where she planned to buy plant pots and items for her 'viking fire pit'.
Armed with a medical certificate exempting her from wearing the mandatory masks, she fronted confused staff members.
'I went shopping in my local Bunnings where I've spent thousands of dollars over nearly 18 years and was rudely illegally denied customer service due to not wearing a facial mask, despite the fact that I produced a legal medical certificate of exemption,' she posted after the stunt.
'Management called the police, stating to police that my exemption was 'bogus' which is completely untrue.
'This is absolutely disgusting treatment of a customer and a direct contradiction to Mr Daniel Andrews, the premier of Victoria's, instructions stating that no person with a medical exemption is to be refused service, goods or products.'
The video showed Ms Rose referring to masked customers as 'zombies' as she walked without a mask through the aisles.
'People are so very silly,' she said. 'And they're so silly and it's so very sad that they're not evolved enough to see.'
Ms Rose was seen arguing with a checkout operator before she turned the video off.

Lizzy Rose has been travelling about Melbourne filming herself shopping without wearing a mask

A post on social media by Lizzy Rose. In it, she encourages people not to wear masks

This graph shows how the state's second wave has not been kept under control even with lockdown
She later stated that she did not get to purchase the items and had complained directly with Bunnings.
On Monday, Ms Rose said she had plans to conduct the 'Ritual of Justice' on the 'Australian Government Freemason De Molay associates, who run this country and implement draconian inhumane laws upon its people.'
Ms Rose's stance came amid similar protests by another 'Bunnings Karen' who filmed herself in a store in the Melbourne suburb of Narre Warren on Friday.
In a viral video, the woman accused staff at the store of abusing her human rights by politely asking her to wear a mask, and was briefly arrested after clashing with police outside.
New footage emerged on Sunday of the same woman ranting at a mask-wearing Australia Post worker.
'I do not need a mask. If you could stamp that, it would be wonderful,' the woman says as she approaches the Australia Post counter, her mobile phone camera already recording the startled employee.

The anti-mask 'Karen' berated the Australia Post worker (pictured) as he quietly served her
The woman then berates the staff member, telling him he has no authority to ask her to wear a face mask while he quietly serves her.
'I suggest you update yourself on what the Department of Human Services have put on with regards to masks and who needs to wear them,' she says sternly.
'And who also has the authorisation to actually ask for that evidence? Because it's not you. Thank you.'
Video of the woman's extraordinary rant inside a Bunnings store was posted to Facebook on Sunday as Victoria recorded 459 new coronavirus cases and ten deaths.
'It's a breach of the charter of human rights,' she said as she aggressively filmed the staff on her mobile phone and threatened to sue them for discrimination.
The woman filmed staff during the dispute and refused to stop despite the calm requests of a male employee.
Other videos posted on Facebook show the woman later being arrested by two police officers outside in the Lauderdale Road car park.
She eventually revealed she had a medical exemption for not wearing a mask after a drawn-out standoff with police.
When more officers arrived at the scene, the woman had her handcuffs taken off but launched into a debate with officers as to why her arrest was unlawful.


Australia Post Karen is believed to be the same woman who berated Bunnings Narre Warren staff (pictured) after being asked to wear a face mask

Until June (when this advice was pictured), Australia's Health Department only recommended face mask use for people who knew they were sick or had symptoms