Police State Redux

DixieDestroyer

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MSNBC hack Ed Schultz & SPLC s0domite Mark Potok bemoan the DHS rolling back it's "intelligence" reporting on American "right wing terrorists"...calling for a ramp-up of Orwellian activity by the DHS.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1LP-3qB0VIc



Edited by: DixieDestroyer
 

Don Wassall

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An important read:

The New FBI Powers: CointelproonSteroids

by John W. Whitehead

"The trouble with government as it is, is that it doesn't represent the people. It controls them." ~JohnLennon(1966)



"When governments fear the people there is liberty. When the people fear the government there is tyranny." ~ThomasJefferson


Listen closely and what you will hear, beneath the babble of political chatter and other mindless political noises distracting you from what's really going on, are the dying squeals of the Fourth Amendment. It dies a little more with every no-knock raid that is carried out by a SWAT team, every phone call eavesdropped on by FBI agents, and every piece of legislation passed that further undermines the right of every American to be free from governmental intrusions into their private affairs.


Meanwhile, President Obama and John Boehner are exchanging political niceties on the golf course, Congress is doing their utmost to be as ineffective as possible, and the Tea Party â€" once thought to be an alternative to politics as usual â€" is clowning around with candidates who, upon election, have proven to be no better than their predecessors and just as untrustworthy when it comes to protecting our rights and our interests. Yet no matter how hard Americans work to insulate themselves from the harsh realities of life today â€" endless wars, crippling debt, sustained unemployment, a growing homeless population, rising food and gas prices, morally bankrupt and corrupt politicians, plummeting literacy rates, and on and on â€" there can be no ignoring the steady drumbeat of the police state marching in lockstep with our government.


Incredibly, with little outcry from the populace, the lengths to which the government will go in its quest for total control have become more extreme with every passing day. Now comes the news that the FBI intends to grant to its 14,000 agents expansive additional powers that include relaxing restrictions on a low-level category of investigations termed "assessments." This allows FBI agents to investigate individuals using highly intrusive monitoring techniques, including infiltrating suspect organizations with confidential informants and photographing and tailing suspect individuals, without having any factual basis for suspecting them of wrongdoing. (Incredibly, during the four-month period running from December 2008 to March 2009, the FBI initiated close to 12,000 assessments of individuals and organizations, and that was before the rules were further relaxed.)



This latest relaxing of the rules, justified as a way to cut down on cumbersome record-keeping, will allow the FBI significant new powers to search law enforcement and private databases, go through household trash, and deploy surveillance teams, with even fewer checks against abuse. The point, of course, is that if agents aren't required to maintain a paper trail documenting their activities, there can be no way to hold the government accountable for subsequent abuses.


These new powers, detailed in a forthcoming edition of the FBI's operations manual, extend the agency's reach into the lives of average Americans and effectively transform the citizenry into a nation of suspects, reversing the burden of proof so that we are now all guilty until proven innocent. Thus, no longer do agents need evidence of possible criminal or terrorist activity in order to launch an investigation. Now, they can "proactively" look into people and groups, searching databases without making a record about it, conducting lie detector tests and searching people's trash.


Moreover, as FBI general counsel Valerie Caproni revealed, agents want to be able to use the information found in a subject's trash to pressure that person to assist in a government investigation. Under the new guidelines, surveillance squads can also be deployed repeatedly to follow "targets," agents can infiltrate organizations for longer periods of time before certain undisclosed "rules" kick in, and public officials, members of the news media or academic scholars can be investigated without the need for extra supervision.


All of this has been sanctioned by the Obama administration, which, as the New York Times aptly notes, "has long been bumbling along in the footsteps of its predecessor when it comes to sacrificing Americans' basic rights and liberties under the false flag of fighting terrorism" and now "seems ready to lurch even farther down that dismal road than George W. Bush did." In fact, this steady erosion of our rights started long before Bush came into office. Indeed, it has little to do with political affiliation and everything to do with an entrenched bureaucratic mindset â€" call it the "Establishment," if you like â€" that, in its quest to amass and retain power, seeks to function autonomously and independent of the Constitution.


What we are witnessing is a coup d'etat that is aimed at overthrowing our representative government and replacing it with one that outwardly may appear to embrace democratic ideals but inwardly is nothing more than an authoritarian regime. And the Establishment is counting on the fact that Americans will gullibly continue to trust the government and turn a blind eye to its power grabs and abuses.



The relationship between the American people and their government was once defined by a social contract (the U.S. Constitution) that was predicated on a mutual respect for the rule of law and a clear understanding that government exists to serve the people and not the other way around. That is no longer the case. Having ceded to the government all manner of control over our lives, renouncing our claims to such things as privacy in exchange for the phantom promise of security, we now find ourselves in the unenviable position of being trapped in a prison of our own making.


It is a phenomenon that Abraham Kaplan referred to as the law of the instrument: "Give a small boy a hammer, and he will find that everything he encounters needs pounding." Or to put it another way: to a hammer, everything looks like a nail. Unfortunately, in the scenario that has been playing out in recent years, we have become the nails to the government's hammer. After all, having equipped government agents with an arsenal of tools, weapons and powers with which to vanquish the so-called forces of terror, it was inevitable that that same arsenal would eventually be turned on us. As Michael German, a former FBI agent, recently observed, "You have a bunch of guys and women all over the country sent out to find terrorism. Fortunately, there isn't a lot of terrorism in many communities. So they end up pursuing people who are critical of the government."


One such person is Scott Crow, a relatively obscure political activist who has been the object of intense surveillance by FBI counterterrorism agents. Other targets of bureau surveillance, according to the New York Times, have included antiwar activists in Pittsburgh, animal rights advocates in Virginia and liberal Roman Catholics in Nebraska. "When such investigations produce no criminal charges," notes the Times, "their methods rarely come to light publicly."


In the case of Scott Crow, those methods were revealed as a result of a Freedom of Information Act request to see the FBI file on him. At a massive 440 pages, Crow's file speaks volumes about the way in which the government views the American people as a whole â€" as potential threats to national security, not to mention what it says about the leeway given to the FBI to completely disregard the Fourth Amendment's protections against searches and seizures of our property and persons. Over the course of at least three years, Crow had agents staking out his house, tracking the comings and goings of visitors, monitoring his phone calls, mail and email, sifting through his trash, infiltrating his circle of friends, and even monitoring him round the clock with a video camera attached to a phone pole across the street from his house.


Given that no criminal charges whatsoever were ever levied against Crow, it might appear that the agency went overboard in its efforts to monitor his activities, but as the FBI's new manual reveals, such surveillance â€" even in the absence of credible evidence suggesting wrongdoing â€" is par for the course. For the federal government to go to such expense (taxpayer expense, that is) and trouble over a political activist, in particular, might seem rather paranoid. However, that is exactly what we are dealing with â€" a government that is increasingly paranoid about having its authority challenged and determined to discourage such challenges by inciting fear in people.



Then again, this is nothing new. Between 1956 and 1971, the FBI conducted an intensive domestic intelligence program, termed Cointelpro, intended to neutralize domestic political dissidents. According to the Church Committee, the Senate task force charged with investigating Cointelpro abuses, "Too many people have been spied upon by too many Government agencies and too much information has been collected. The Government has often undertaken the secret surveillance of citizens on the basis of their political beliefs, even when those beliefs posed no threat of violence or illegal acts on behalf of a hostile foreign power. The Government, operating primarily through secret informants, but also using other intrusive techniques such as wiretaps, microphone ‘bugs,' surreptitious mail opening, and break-ins, has swept in vast amounts of information about the personal lives, views, and associations of American citizens." The report continued:
<BLOCKQUOTE>


Groups and individuals have been harassed and disrupted because of their political views and their lifestyles. Investigations have been based upon vague standards whose breadth made excessive collection inevitable. Unsavory and vicious tactics have been employed â€" including anonymous attempts to break up marriages, disrupt meetings, ostracize persons from their professions, and provoke target groups into rivalries that might result in deaths. Intelligence agencies have served the political and personal objectives of presidents and other high officials.</BLOCKQUOTE>
<DIR></DIR>


Commenting on the methods employed by the FBI in the implementation of Cointelpro, the Church Committee noted, "The unexpressed major premise of the programs was that a law enforcement agency has the duty to do whatever is necessary to combat perceived threats to the existing social and political order." The Committee added, "While the declared purposes of these programs were to protect the ‘national security' or prevent violence, Bureau witnesses admit that many of the targets were nonviolent and most had no connections with a foreign power. Indeed, nonviolent organizations and individuals were targeted because the Bureau believed they represented a ‘potential' for violence â€" and nonviolent citizens who were against the war in Vietnam were targeted because they gave ‘aid and comfort' to violent demonstrators by lending respectability to their cause."



Following the Church Committee's report, then-Attorney General Edward Levi implemented a set of guidelines designed to preclude FBI abuse regarding domestic investigations. These guidelines were tweaked by subsequent Attorneys General, substantially relaxed by Attorney General John Ashcroft following the September 11 attacks, further weakened by AG Michael Mukasey in 2008, and now under Eric Holder, any such restrictions are just about nonexistent.


Thus, it would seem we're back to where we started, only this time we're facing Cointelpro on steroids â€" pumped up on the government's self-righteous quest to ferret out peace activists and dissidents and energized by an arsenal of invasive technologies that make the phone tapping equipment of the 1960s look like Tinker Toys. In fact, this modern period of FBI lawlessness resembles Cointelpro operations in a variety of ways. In both instances, the FBI singled out outspoken critics of the Establishment for scrutiny, attempted to assign them terrorist ties (none were found), and continued the investigations long past the point at which they were found not guilty of having committed any crimes. For example, an attorney for those targeted in a September 2011 FBI raid â€" including an activist-minded couple that sells silkscreened baby outfits and other clothes with phrases like "Help Wanted: Revolutionaries" â€" describes his clients as "public non-violent activists with long, distinguished careers in public service, including teachers, union organizers and antiwar and community leaders."


With all of the so-called threats coming from outside the country, why is the government expending so much energy on a relatively small group of peace and anti-war activists whose First Amendment activities comprise the totality of their "suspicious" behavior? It's the hammer and nail analogy again. Having acquired all of these new tools and powers post-9/11, of course the government wants to hold onto them and what better way to do so than by using them to ferret out "potential" threats. A prime example occurred in 2002, when the FBI dispatched a special agent, armed with a camera, to a peace rally to search for terrorism suspects who might happen to be there, just to "see what they are doing." The protest was sponsored by the Thomas Merton Center, an organization dedicated to advocating peaceful solutions to international conflicts, and composed primarily of individuals distributing leaflets. The Office of Inspector General, in its report on FBI surveillance of domestic organizations, characterized the task provided to the special agent assigned to the Merton protest as a "make-work" project.



Mark my words: we're going to find, as time goes on and we come under greater and greater surveillance, that we have all become part of the government's "make-work" project. What this means is that in order to justify their existence and earn their pay, they'll be investigating perfectly harmless, innocent citizens.


So what's to be done?


First, the American people need to get their heads out of the sand and their butts off the couches and act like real Americans for a change. And by that I mean taking to the streets and truly protesting this deplorable state of our nation. March on Washington, march on your town hall â€" but whatever you do, make your voices heard. If they can do it in Europe and China and the Middle East, there's absolutely no reason we can't do it here.


Second, once we've gotten Congress' attention, we need to push for a legislative response to these FBI abuses. It can be done, but it will take Americans coming together across party lines and calling for Congress to pass legislation restoring the Fourth Amendment and restricting what government agents can do, especially without a court order. Congress may be largely corrupt and incompetent, but with the right kind of citizen pressure, changes can be had. Whatever you do, however, beware of promises made on the campaign trail. As we have seen repeatedly, they never stick.


Third, act now before it's too late. That dying squeal, the sound of the Fourth Amendment having been gutted and bleeding to death, is getting fainter and fainter. Once it goes silent, there'll be no turning back.
http://lewrockwell.com/whitehead/whitehead33.1.html
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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finally some good news!
smiley32.gif


from Pennsylvania: Deadly force expansion passes Pennsylvania Senate.

edited to add: i forgot to add the poignant quote.
smiley9.gif


In Pennsylvania, as in most states, your home is your castle and you have a right to defend it.


Soon, you will be able to add your car. Or the sidewalk. Or anywhere you "have the legal right to be."


The state Senate, in a 45-5 vote, gave final approval Monday to the so-called castle doctrine bill to expand the right of people to use deadly force against attackers in places outside their homes ...



"Law-abiding gun owners should not have to fear prosecution for acting to prevent a violent crime," said Sen. Richard Alloway (R., Franklin). "I am thankful that the General Assembly has taken action to protect responsible gun owners who respond when facing a serious threat from a criminal."
Edited by: Jimmy Chitwood
 

Highlander

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Jimmy Chitwood said:
finally some good news!
smiley32.gif

<div></div>
<div>from Pennsylvania: Deadly force expansion passes Pennsylvania Senate. </div>
<div></div>
<div>edited to add: i forgot to add the poignant quote.
smiley9.gif
</div>
<div></div>
<div>
In Pennsylvania, as in most states, your home is your castle and you have a right to defend it.


Soon, you will be able to add your car. Or the sidewalk. Or anywhere you "have the legal right to be."


The state Senate, in a 45-5 vote, gave final approval Monday to the so-called castle doctrine bill to expand the right of people to use deadly force against attackers in places outside their homes ...
<div>


"Law-abiding gun owners should not have to fear prosecution for acting to prevent a violent crime," said Sen. Richard Alloway (R., Franklin). "I am thankful that the General Assembly has taken action to protect responsible gun owners who respond when facing a serious threat from a criminal."
</div></div>
Yes, this is great news (finally). It's hard to come by anymore. You kind of beat me to the punch, because I was going to post this from the Washington Examiner from today:

Right-to-carry States Add to Their Numbers</font>
...
Wisconsin's
Assembly passed a bill on Tuesday allowing citizens to carry a concealed
weapon.
If Republican Governor Scott Walker signs the bill, which is
expected, it will leave Illinois as the only state not to have some form
of a concealed-carry law.
</span>

...
Now that
Wisconsin seems to be on its way to becoming a right-to-carry state, the
pressure will be on Illinois to review its policy.
</span>

...
(And, just like I was hoping and expecting (more and more people (Whites) are (finally) waking up because of all of the flash mobs...it's starting to look like it might finally happen in Illinois.)


Illinois State Rifle Association's Executive Director Richard
Pearson believes that a concealed-carry law in Illinois would help
counter the rising violence in Chicago, using the flash mobs as an
example.


"Like many of you, I feel that flash-mob violence is a perfect
example of why Illinois needs to pass concealed carry.
There is
absolutely no excuse for the legislature to deny honest citizens the
means of protecting themselves and their families from these roving
gangs of thugs."

...

</span>"Let us not forget
that criminals such as those populating flash-mobs are essentially
cowards.
Again, the objectives of flash-mobs are to terrorize and rob
helpless victims.

...

"I think it is a safe bet to say that, as soon as the victim
drew a firearm, the mob would scurry away like the vermin they are.

These people are not going to fight to the last man.</span>
"

Other states that have passed recent laws expanding firearm freedoms include Florida</span></span>, which just passed a law protecting those who accidentally show their concealed weapon, and Texas</span></span>,
which passed a law that allows workers to bring their guns to work if
they leave them in the car, which will take effect September 1.</span> Pennsylvania also voted to expand its law to allow citizens to use deadly force against attackers in places outside their homes</span></span></span>
.
smiley32.gif

</span>


</span><blockquote><div></span></span></span>
</span></span></span>
</div>
</blockquote> </span>

Edited by: Highlander
 

DixieDestroyer

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Good stuff JC & HL. However, if the "law" doesn't honor the (true) law of the land (2nd Amendment), then go "outlaw" style & pack heat when/where needed. Along those lines, if someone comes anywhere close to breaking into my home...they'll be the recipient of a "hot lead injunction" right quick like. I don't give a rat's @$$ about any pantywaist, cultmarx, BS "law" when it comes to protecting my family & land.
smiley44.gif



Edited by: DixieDestroyer
 

DixieDestroyer

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Arlington PD Testing Unmanned Aircraft

Department hopes to use drones in emergency situations by January

By Susy Solis | Thursday, Jun 30, 2011 | Updated 2:27 PM CDTView
| Email| Print Susy Solis, NBCDFW.com

Arlington took another step forward in its plan to protect the city from above using unmanned drones.

advertisement The Arlington Police Department is in the first part of its experiment in using unmanned aircraft to assist in law enforcement.

The department has been testing and evaluating two battery-operated, remote-controlled aircraft over a small, restricted airspace near Lake Arlington Dam, away from populated areas.

The aircraft are flown only for daylight operations and within a small, restricted airspace. The aircraft have to remain within the pilot's line of sight and fly 400 feet above the ground level.

Pilots obtain the same license as a commercial aircraft pilot.

Arlington hopes to demonstrate the aircraft's potential law enforcement uses. All flight data is recorded and sent to the Federal Aviation Administration for evaluation.

Multimedia Arlington May Use Unmanned Drones
WATCH
Arlington May
Use Unmanned Drones Weird News Photos
LOOK
PHOTOS
Weird News Photos More Multimedia "All of the U.S. and the FAA is depending on our testing and experiment, our experimentation to create a model for law enforcement usage of these vehicles," Police Chief Theron Bowman said.

Arlington was the first agency in a densely populated urban area approved by the FAA to fly unmanned aircraft.

The drones look like nothing more than model helicopters. But at 11 pounds and 20 inches long, the unmanned aircraft would be a powerful asset to the city, Bowman said.

In a City Council briefing Tuesday, Bowman said the aircraft are capable of carrying cameras that shoot high-quality still pictures and video and have night-vision capability. The aircraft also have heat-sensing technology the fire department can use.

"Obviously, Texas is prone to a lot of dry weather and large fires," said Deputy Chief Lauretta Hill, who oversees homeland security and special events for the department. "Being able to send a vehicle up and sense the origin of the fire will give them the the tools in order to determine where they'll deploy their resources."

Bowman said police hope to move into Phase 1A by September, which, with FAA approval, would expand the airspace in which the unmanned aircraft can fly.

Bowman said he hopes the department can get into Phase 2, the mission-ready phase, by January. With FAA approval, police could use the unmanned aircraft in emergency situations.

He said the unmanned aircraft could be useful for accident reconstruction, to identify hot spots in a fire and could have been used to evaluate the Cowboys Stadium's ice-covered roof during Super Bowl week.

But not everyone is happy to see the new eyes in the sky.

"Personally, I'm opposed, here in Arlington, to the drones," Kimberly Frankland said. "There is definitely an invasion of privacy factor with drones flying over and filming or recording whatever is going on down below."

Police say they would operate the aircraft using standard operating procedure for any law-enforcement mission. The unmanned aircraft would not do anything more than a regular helicopter would, they say.

"We are just looking at a vehicle that is a fraction of the cost, that is smaller, that will allow us -- in an urban area, where we can't use the bigger helicopter -- to assist with better, more efficient police operations," Hill said.

The aircraft come in various sizes and can be worth $2,500 to $300,000.


http://www.nbcdfw.com/news/local/Arlington-PD-Testing-Unmanned-Aircraft-124680969.html

Edited by: DixieDestroyer
 

FootballDad

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Perhaps the drones are there to film the invading hordes as they descent on Arlington, making what used to be a nice middle-class white city between Fort Worth and Dallas into another third-world hell-hole. I imagine that the above-ground picture would look similar to the ocean of Orcs invading Middle Earth in "Lord of the Rings".
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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Why Do the Police Have Tanks? The Strange and Dangerous Militarization of the US Police Force.

here's just the intro to a lengthy, but very disturbing, article ...

Just after midnight on May 16, 2010, a SWAT team threw a flash-bang grenade through the window of a25-year-old man while his 7-year-old daughterslept on the couch as her grandmother watched television. The grenade landed so close to the child that it burned her blanket. The SWAT team leader then burst into the house and fired a single shot which struck the child in the throat, killing her. The police were there to apprehend a man suspected of murdering a teenage boy days earlier. The man they were after lived in the unit above the girl's family.
 

DixieDestroyer

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Police to begin iPhone iris scans amid privacy concerns

By Zach Howard

CONWAY, Mass | Wed Jul 20, 2011 2:59pm EDT


CONWAY, Mass (Reuters) - Dozens of police departments nationwide are gearing up to use a tech company's already controversial iris- and facial-scanning device that slides over an iPhone and helps identify a person or track criminal suspects.
The so-called "biometric" technology, which seems to take a page from TV shows like "MI-5" or "CSI," could improve speed and accuracy in some routine police work in the field. However, its use has set off alarms with some who are concerned about possible civil liberties and privacy issues.
The smartphone-based scanner, named Mobile Offender Recognition and Information System, or MORIS, is made by BI2 Technologies in Plymouth, Massachusetts, and can be deployed by officers out on the beat or back at the station.

An iris scan, which detects unique patterns in a person's eyes, can reduce to seconds the time it takes to identify a suspect in custody. This technique also is significantly more accurate than results from other fingerprinting technology long in use by police, BI2 says.

When attached to an iPhone, MORIS can photograph a person's face and run the image through software that hunts for a match in a BI2-managed database of U.S. criminal records. Each unit costs about $3,000.
Some experts fret police may be randomly scanning the population, using potentially intrusive techniques to search for criminals, sex offenders, and illegal aliens, but the manufacturer says that would be a difficult task for officers to carry out.
Sean Mullin, BI2's CEO, says it is difficult, if not impossible, to covertly photograph someone and obtain a clear, usable image without that person knowing about it, because the MORIS should be used close up.

"It requires a level of cooperation that makes it very overt -- a person knows that you're taking a picture for this purpose," Mullin said.
CONCERNS
But constitutional rights advocates are concerned, in part because the device can accurately scan an individual's face from up to four feet away, potentially without a person's being aware of it.
Experts also say that before police administer an iris scan, they should have probable cause a crime has been committed.

"What we don't want is for them to become a general surveillance tool, where the police start using them routinely on the general public, collecting biometric information on innocent people," said Jay Stanley, senior policy analyst with the national ACLU in Washington, D.C.

Meanwhile, advocates see the MORIS as a way to make tools already in use on police cruiser terminals more mobile for cops on the job.
"This is (the technology) stepping out of the cruiser and riding on the officer's belt, along with his flashlight, his handcuffs, his sidearm or the other myriad tools," said John Birtwell, spokesman for the Plymouth County Sheriff's Department in southeastern Massachusetts, one of the first departments to use the devices.
The technology is also employed to maintain security at Plymouth's 1,650 inmate jail, where it is used to prevent the wrong prisoner from being released.
"There, we have everybody in orange jumpsuits, so everyone looks the same. So, quite literally, the last thing we do before you leave our facility is we compare your iris to our database," said Birtwell.

One of the technology's earliest uses at BI2, starting in 2005, was to help various agencies identify missing children or at-risk adults, like Alzheimer's patients.
Since then, it has been used to combat identity fraud, and could potentially be used in traffic stops when a driver is without a license, or when people are stopped for questioning at U.S. borders.

Facial recognition technology is not without its problems, however. For example, some U.S. individuals mistakenly have had their driver's license revoked as a potential fraud. The problem, it turns out, is that they look like another driver and so the technology mistakenly flags them as having fake identification.
Roughly 40 law enforcement units nationwide will soon be using the MORIS, including Arizona's Pinal County Sheriff's Office, as well as officers in Hampton City in Virginia and Calhoun County in Alabama.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/07/20/us-crime-identification-iris-idUSTRE76J4A120110720
 

DixieDestroyer

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Police inquiry reveals violations in arrest, beating of videographer

By Mike Blasky
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Posted: Jul. 29, 2011 | 8:08 p.m.
Updated: Jul. 30, 2011 | 7:18 a.m.

A Las Vegas police officer under investigation for the videotaped beating of a man in March violated several Metropolitan Police Department policies, an internal investigation found.
Mitchell Crooks' complaint about officer Derek Colling's excessive force was sustained, Deputy Chief Gary Schofield said Friday.
The specific policy violations will not be released until the case is finalized.
Crooks, 36, received a letter from the Internal Affairs Bureau notifying him of the findings earlier this week.
He said he was pleasantly surprised.
"It seems like they're saying he was guilty, which is what I've been saying," Crooks said. "I really hope he gets fired."
Colling has been on paid suspension since April 1.
Multiple supervisors in Colling's chain of command will review the internal affairs report and decide his punishment, if any, Schofield said.
That review could take several weeks.
If Colling's supervisors recommend his firing, he will go before a pre-termination board for a final appeal. The harshest punishment short of firing is a 40-hour unpaid suspension.
Crooks' lawyer, David Otto, intends to sue Colling and the Police Department.
Otto wrote a letter in April to Sheriff Douglas Gillespie demanding $500,000 to cover Crooks' medical care, pain and suffering. The Police Department has not paid anything, he said.
He intends to send another letter to Gillespie.
"Mr. Sheriff, show us the difference between what the officers did to Mitchell Crooks that night and kidnapping, beating and robbery," Otto said.
On the night of March 20, Crooks, 36, was in his driveway, near East Desert Inn Road and South Maryland Parkway, videotaping police as they investigated a burglary report across the street. Crooks said that when he refused to stop filming, Colling arrested and beat him, with much of the altercation recorded by the camera.
The video went viral on the Internet, and local activists and national "cop watch" blogs scrutiznized Colling's actions.
Local American Civil Liberties Union lawyer Allen Lichtenstein reviewed the video and found clear policy violations.
"It raises serious questions about whether the officer used good judgment and whether he was properly trained," Lichtenstein said. "Those questions require answers."
Rank-and-file officers who spoke to the Review-Journal after the incident were as demoralized as the public was incensed.
"The majority of us think Colling made a mistake," one patrol officer said. "All the officers I talked to understand that citizens will see this video, and yeah, we know it looks bad."
Neither Crooks nor Colling was a stranger to controversy.
Colling has been involved in two fatal shootings in his 5½ years as a Las Vegas police officer.
In 2006, he and four other officers shot Shawn Jacob Collins after the 43-year-old man pulled a gun at an east valley gas station.
In 2009, Colling shot and killed Tanner Chamberlain, a mentally ill 15-year-old who was holding a knife at his mother's neck and waving it at officers.
Both shootings were ruled justified by Clark County coroner's juries.
Chamberlain's mother, Evie Oquendo, sued Colling and the Police Department in May.
When the lawsuit was filed, Oquendo's lawyer asked why Colling was still working as an officer.
"He's killed two people in 5½ years and beaten one guy up that we know of," Brent Bryson said.
Crooks made headlines in 2002 when he videotaped two Inglewood, Calif., police officers beating a 16-year-old boy.

Crooks first tried to sell that tape and refused to give it to prosecutors. He then was jailed on old warrants from drunken driving and petty theft charges. Civil rights advocates decried the jailing as retribution.


He has lived in Las Vegas since 2003 and worked as a freelance videographer.

Crooks, who still carries his camera, said he was stopped last month by a Las Vegas officer who recognized him .
He was issued a ticket for no proof of insurance that was later dismissed, Crooks said.

001-0429112038-Mitchell-Crooks.jpg




http://www.lvrj.com/news/police-inq...arrest-beating-of-videographer-126438953.html
 

DixieDestroyer

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DixieDestroyer

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Jimmy Chitwood

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Memphis teacher ordered to remove his backyard garden/school enrichment program, as it has been ruled to be a neighborhood nuisance.

an excerpt:
Guerrero's home is certainly unique: eggplant, tomato, and pepper plants grow in the front yard; the backyard is lined with rows of wooden worm bins; barrels for collecting and storing rainwater are stationed next to his backdoor; his garage is stocked with equipment for making biodiesel and soap; and behind his garage are beehives quietly humming with industry. Elsewhere, passionflowers, butterflies, elderberry bushes, and sunflowers fill out the garden.
But with no visible trash or garbage and plants kept off the sidewalk and driveway, Guerrero doesn't understand why a judge would bring his operation to a halt.

"These are direct applications to math, biology, engineering," says Guerrero, who uses his garden as a sort of continuing education for Jovantae, Jarvis, and Shaquielle, the latter of whom is a former student of Guerrero's at Kingsbury High School. Jovantae and Jarvis attend the Memphis Academy of Science and Engineering (MASE). "I'm proud to know that the students I work with are probably the only students in Memphis City Schools who know how to make their own biodiesel," Guerrero says.

With the glycerin by-product from the biodiesel, the kids have learned to make soap. They suit up in beekeeping gear and harvest honey. They fill worm bins with kitchen scraps from Central BBQ and Huey's — a contract they have with Project Greenfork — and watch as it turns into nutrient-rich soil. Guerrero and the boys have also installed solar panels at the Midtown North Community Garden.

yep, we don't want these young negroes doing something productive in Memphis. that teacher should be punished, without a doubt ... :icon_rolleyes:
 

Riddlewire

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'Rogue websites' bill introduced in US House

US lawmakers introduced a bill on Wednesday that would give US authorities more tools to crack down on websites accused of piracy of movies, television shows and music and the sale of counterfeit goods.

The Stop Online Piracy Act has received bipartisan support in the House of Representatives and is the House version of a bill introduced in the Senate in May known as the Theft of Intellectual Property Act or Protect IP Act.

The legislation has received the backing of Hollywood, the music industry, the Business Software Alliance, the National Association of Manufacturers, the US Chamber of Commerce and other groups.

...

The Washington-based Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT) said the House bill "raises serious red flags.

"It includes the most controversial parts of the Senate's Protect IP Act, but radically expands the scope," the CDT said in a statement. "Any website that features user-generated content or that enables cloud-based data storage could end up in its crosshairs.

"Internet Service Providers would face new and open-ended obligations to monitor and police user behavior," the CDT said. "Payment processors and ad networks would be required to cut off business with any website that rightsholders allege hasn't done enough to police infringement.

This should also be posted in the NFL and College Football forums.
This is why we can't post media links in the forum. Do not endanger this website.
Also, be wary of new users who show up on gameday with 1 post asking for someone to give them a link (or offering to give links to anyone). Don't do it. They're not friends. They're trying to lure you into a potentially punishable act.
 

Tom Iron

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Riddlewire,

Thanks for the tip, but for the most part, I don't have to worry about anything like that. I'm not adept enough to get into any trouble like that. But I will say this, I've found a(castefootball.us)way of advertizing this site. What I do is insert it in a staement in perenthesis, unspaced. In the past, when I've done it just out in the open, it get's erased by the censors, but for now, it's working. As you can see, I've done it in this post.

Tom Iron...
 

Riddlewire

Master
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Messages
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I'll be honest, Tom. I can't figure out what the heck you're talking about.

My post was meant as a warning to the members not to post links to live streams of football games in the forum. Otherwise we risk ICE shutting this website down, as they have done to dozens of websites in the past couple of years.
 

Tom Iron

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Joined
Oct 25, 2006
Messages
1,597
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New Jersey
Riddlewire,

Yeah, I don't make myself clear at times. But look at what I said. I'm just talking about trying to advertise for castefootball, by burying the word, castefootball.us in the middle of a comment. I've been a bit successful doing it lately. In the past, I've been thrown right off websites when I used it openly.

I'm always baffled myself. I don't know what a "live stream" is and even if I did, and ICE came after me, I could easily baffle them with my ignorance.

Tom Iron...
 

Highlander

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I spent the afternoon at a state high school football game. Every 20 minutes a police man walked in front of our section, visually scanned the section with an angry look on his face, and then walked to another section doing the same thing. One time he even walked up into the bleachers. The police were not looking for someone, there was no trouble, no drinking and no history of belligerence at these games. The sole purpose was intimidation. This is what kids are growing up and seeing as normal. In my high school years ago, the people would have asked the police man if he was looking for somebody. If he wasn't they would have told him to hit the road..... Not today, we must worship those who wear the state issued costume. USA!!!USA!!!USA!!!USA!!!:usa::usa::usa::usa::usa::usa::usa:USA!!USA!!!USA!!!:usa::usa::usa:
 

Colonel_Reb

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I spent the afternoon at a state high school football game. Every 20 minutes a police man walked in front of our section, visually scanned the section with an angry look on his face, and then walked to another section doing the same thing. One time he even walked up into the bleachers. The police were not looking for someone, there was no trouble, no drinking and no history of belligerence at these games. The sole purpose was intimidation. This is what kids are growing up and seeing as normal. In my high school years ago, the people would have asked the police man if he was looking for somebody. If he wasn't they would have told him to hit the road..... Not today, we must worship those who wear the state issued costume. USA!!!USA!!!USA!!!USA!!!:usa::usa::usa::usa::usa::usa::usa:USA!!USA!!!USA!!!:usa::usa::usa:

Interesting story, bearclaw500. No doubt the conditioning is more and more effective. My students have mentioned immediately slowing down when they see a cop car, even if they are traveling under the speed limit. We can't even have the "privilege" of driving our vehicles without wearing a seat belt, even though we pay for the roads and the salaries of the cops. We have sacrificed so much personal freedom at the expense of "increased safety" from the local level on up for generations now. It is truly sickening!
 

DixieDestroyer

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Michael

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An article entitled "Senate votes 60-38 in favor of military detention of US citizens."

The Senate voted 60-38 to reject an amendment that would have stripped provisions allowing the military to detain US citizens on US soil. The provisions were added to the Defense Spending crafted by Carl Levin and John McCain.

cofcc.org/2011/11/rand-paul-and-john-mccain-clash-over-using-military-against-us-citizens/

An article entitled "Audit of Federal Reserve Reveals that $16 Trillion Bail Out Went to Banks and Big Corporations"

The Federal Reserve cranked out an incredible $16 trillion dollars to bail out banks and major corporations between 2007 and 2010 in the aftermath of the subprime mortgage crisis. Bear in mind if any of us lost our jobs and were about to default on our mortgage payments, the US government and/or the Fed would do nothing for us so why is our currency being wildly inflated to save privately-owned banks and Wall Street corporations?

A lot more corporations and banks must have been on the brink of bankruptcy as a result of the subprime mortgage crisis than anyone thought and a stock market free fall collapse may have been narrowly averted. You don’t throw out 16 trillion dollars unless you’re terrified that the economy is about to collapse. This raises the question whether it would have been better to let the poorly-run banks and corporations go under without burdening the rest of society to prop them up. The creation out of thin air of 16 trillion dollars has badly inflated our currency, badly undermined respect for the dollar internationally and put us much further down the road toward Zimbabwe.

http://www.davidduke.com/general/fe...resses-were-on-our-way-to-zimbabwe_24957.html

The two above articles are tied together in a roundabout way. The "elite" are becoming desperate. They are destroying the White countries and economies that their power is based on. In their greed and lust for world conquest the "elite" have destroyed their power base--the White Nations.

Nonwhite hordes have been welcomed in to the White lands where they were give superior legal "rights" and privileges to the native born Whites. The "elite" believed that these nonwhites will help them maintain their power against the common Whites. Of course, the nonwhites are forming fifth columns to help their own people takeover but the "elites" are to dumb to comprehend that the nonwhites hate them. The nonwhites are used to drive down labor cost but many work for half the price but the quality of their work isn't worth what they are paid. The government pays tribute (welfare, affirmative action, etc.) to keep nonwhites from rioting but they are starting to anyway as the nonwhite hordes dream of taking over. The "elite" will send more White peoples' money to the nonwhites which will just give the nonwhite bigger dilutions of grandeur.

The "elite" raided businesses including large corporations owned by many stockholders sold off the assets and gave themselves the money in salaries and bonuses. Bankers give loans (tribute) to nonwhites that will never be repaid and give themselves huge salaries and bonuses and in many cases large loans to themselves, their families and friends that won't be repaid. Then when theses businesses get in trouble instead of prosecuting the criminals the government gives them trillions so they can keep the lifestyle to which they have become accustom. Then one gets into the pork barreling that is too often today just a way to transfer public funds into the "elites'" personnel bank accounts. Of course, the money printing scam of the central banks. We could go on for pages with how the "elite" take money from the people and put it into their own pockets, but that merely stating the obvious.

Now, the "elite" are in trouble so what are their plans--to use the military against the people. . Much like Sulla's (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucius_Cornelius_Sulla) march on Rome it did not save the "elite" but was the beginning of their end. When Augustus tried to bring the old senatorial families which there had been hundreds of family only members from a small handful of families could be found.

The "elite" and their lackeys (or lesser "elites") are trapped. They have destroyed the economy, the military is over-stretched trying to conquer the world and OWS is threatening from the left and the Tea Party from the right, and the minorities are getting restless. The "elite" are terrified but to dumb, pathetic and weak to fix the country, so like a wounded animal they strike out in fear and anger but does nothing to help themselves.

Both greater and lesser "elites" have broken so many laws that if the New World Order falls, they face lost of not only their power and money but their freedom and some of their crimes may merit the death penalty. Much of the problems seem to have started around the time of the so called "Civil Rights Movement" when the politicians could either let the nonwhites get away with crimes or be removed from office. Instead of ruling according to law, they gave nonwhites special privileges and persecute Whites who complained. Woman in divorce and child custody battles were given special treatment. As more and more rulings became the rule of man more laws were broken especially for personnel gain of the "elite." If the lesser "elite" wannabes want to get and keep a position they must do what the other "elite" want even if it breaks the law and is morally reprehensible. But once they have cross the line, there is no going back the must do more and more in order to keep their power and if the system fails, they will face punishment for all their crimes. It is a trap, and if they get exposed the other "elite" will turn on them. Ironic, no honor amongst thieves.

Now, they want to use troops against civilians like they did in the 1860's and 70's and 1950's and 60's. Don't forget they had no qualms using troops against the south in the "Civil Rights Movement." In the 1860's the U.S. Army gun down draft protesters on the Streets of New York City. Of course, what happened in the 1860's and 70's was why they stopped allowing troops to enforce laws.

Using the military seems like a easy solution for the political class to maintain control but what happen when Sulla march on Rome set a precedent and other Roman generals followed his example. What happens when a General decides he wants to march on Washington D.C. arrest the politician and install himself in power. The "elite" haven't thought of the consequences of their actions.

Using troops against the people also has other problems what if blacks or Mestizos refuse to fire on their fellow race rioters and join them in rebellion. Troops will need to be brought to the USA in order to keep control but those troops are needed to protect the Zionist empire. Problem!

Basically, the "elite" will keep printing money to keep themselves rich until create hyperinflation, then as the economy collapses and massive protest begin they plan to call in the troops to suppress the people. Then the rebellion grows, chaos spreads. What now? Will the military remain loyal to the "elite" or fall apart? Will they march on Washington? The current course the imperial government is on leads to chaos and disorder and very interesting times.
 
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