Featured Image: Marijuana leaf. (Public Domain)
From youtube uploaded by MOXNEWSd0tC0M
Published on Apr 11, 2013
April 11, 2013 CNN
http://MOXNews.com
Featured Image: Marijuana leaf. (Public Domain)
From youtube uploaded by MOXNEWSd0tC0M
Published on Apr 11, 2013
April 11, 2013 CNN
http://MOXNews.com
From The Huffington Post By Ron Dicker Posted: 03/06/2013 1:31 pm EST | Updated: 03/06/2013 11:41 pm EST
Robert Schiavelli in court after neighbor complains he laughs too loudly
A Long Island man was issued court summonses for laughing too loudly in his own home, CBS New York wrote in a report with the Associated Press.
According to the article, a neighbor issued complaints against 42-year-old Robert Schiavelli of Rockville Centre, N.Y., on Feb. 12 and Feb. 13. . . . Read Complete Report
Of course my all time favorite report of someone getting busted for laughing has to be the following. . . . EDITOR
From The Toke of the Town
Photo: Christopher Jordan Dorner. Cop Gone Wild. SOURCE Scoop.it (Fair Use)
From Godfather Politics
posted on byTad Cronn
As the police in Southern California spread out a multi-county dragnet for a former cop seeking revenge on the people he blamed for his firing, the mainstream media were suspiciously silent on some key points.
Usually when some crazy goes on a shooting spree, the media leftists look for any scrap of information that can be used to make the case that the killer is somehow a political conservative and that gun control laws must be tightened. That might be harder to do this time.
Former Los Angeles Police Department officer Christopher Jordan Dorner was being sought Thursday in connection with five shootings, including those of three police officers in Riverside County. . . . Read Complete Report
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We should take note of the fact that the two trucks the cops opened fire on are not the same make or even the same color. . . there is no excuse that they mistook BOTH trucks as being the one they were looking for. . . EDITOR
From youtube uploaded by mamaknock
Police Careless Shooting of Innocent While On Manhunt For Rouge Ex-Cop
Published on Feb 9, 2013
Two cases of careless mistaken identity shootings by LAPD and Torrance police in same neighborhood by gun happy cops. Shoot first ask questions later.
From BrasscheckTV
Uploaded by CopsSayLegalizeDrugs
Uploaded on Nov 7, 2010
LEAP speakers, Carol Ruth Silver, Nate Bradley, and Terry Nelson talk confront concerns about children and drug policy
This is a must see video in preparation for the coming future. Whether you carry or not this “don’t talk to cops” reasoning is a must in every situation. Guilty or innocent. Learn why. . EDITOR
This video explains it all. . . . EDITOR
from youtube
Uploaded by gunitup234 on Oct 30, 2011
open carry a gun channel don’t talk to the cops-
from youtube
Uploaded by rurkoe on Jul 11, 2011
Originally posted on Liveleak:
Know your right folks….
from Ars Technica
Court says sending texts using a seized iPhone doesn’t violate privacy rights.
by Timothy B. Lee – Jul 19, 2012 3:03 pm UTC
In November 2009, police officers in the state of Washington seized an iPhone belonging to suspected drug dealer Daniel Lee. While the phone was in police custody, a man named Shawn Hinton sent a text message to the device, reading, “Hey whats up dogg can you call me i need to talk to you.” Suspecting that Hinton was looking to buy drugs from Lee, Detective Kevin Sawyer replied to the message, posing as Lee. With a series of text messages, he arranged to meet Hinton in the parking lot of a local grocery store—where Hinton was arrested and charged with attempted possession of heroin.
Hinton wasn’t Sawyer’s only target. According to a court decision summing up the facts, “Sawyer spent about 5 or 10 minutes looking at some of the text messages on the iPhone; he also looked to see who had been calling. Many of the text messages that Lee’s iPhone had received and stored were from individuals who were seeking drugs from Lee.”
So Sawyer texted one of the individuals on the list and asked him if he “needed more.” The individual, Jonathan Roden, replied, “Yeah, that would be cool. I still gotta sum, but I could use some more. I prefer to just get a ball, so I’m only payin’ one eighty for it, instead of two Ts for two hundred, that way.” (The court helpfully explained that a “ball” is “a drug weight equivalent to approximately 3.5 grams.”)
But can cops legally do this with seized cell phones? When their cases went to trial, Hinton and Roden both argued that Sawyer had violated their privacy rights by intercepting, without a warrant, private communications intended for Lee.
But in a pair of decisions, one of which was recently covered by Forbes, a Washington state appeals court disagreed. If the decisions, penned by Judge Joel Penoyar and supported by one of his colleagues, are upheld on appeal, they could have far-reaching implications for cell phone privacy.
“No longer private or deserving of constitutional protection” . . . Read Complete Report
“Police Gone Wild” is starting to become common on the streets of the good ‘ol U.S.A..
On the 4th of June, as we reported, In Chicago police tell newsmen that the “1st Amendment can be Terminated” (http://thehollowearthinsider.com/archives/5149)…
Now cops grab and handcuff everyone in sight after a bank robbery. It’s time someone reminds police around the country this isn’t NAZI Germany… or is it? . . . EDITOR
From youtube
Published on Jun 5, 2012 by TheAwakenedMedia
“The end justifies the means” says Chief of Police.