(Source: Getty Images)Police State USA

HENDERSON, NV — Police forcibly commandeered homes from two innocent families because they wanted to use the properties to surveil a neighbor. After their plan was denied by phone request, police conspired and executed a plan to break into the homes and arrest the innocent homeowners, a lawsuit reveals.

The incident took place on July 10th, 2011.  The Henderson Police Department (HPD) was issued a complaint about suspected domestic violence.  Police decided that they wanted use two neighboring houses to observe the suspect. In conjunction with the North Las Vegas Police Department (NLVPD), officers devised a plan to commandeer the home of Anthony Mitchell, as well as the home of his parents, Michael and Linda Mitchell — both living adjacent to the suspect.  Each of them were innocent and uninvolved in the suspected crime.   Continue reading “Two homes forcibly commandeered by police, innocent homeowners arrested”

KOB 4 News – by Ryan Luby

New Mexico’s largest police department, mired in controversy over the use of excessive force, is about to supply military-style weapons to officers using taxpayer money.

The investigative team at KOB Eyewitness News 4 learned that Albuquerque Police awarded a bid to a local vendor for the purchase of AR-15 rifles — the type of gun used to kill James Boyd in the foothills in March.   Continue reading “Arizona Police Department to buy 350-plus AR-15 rifles”

cop_entrapmentPhilosopher’s Stone

Mack Worley was unlawfully arrested on June 29, 2013 in Vancouver, WA and has been battling this ever since this arrest occurred.

Mack Worley is a Veteran of the United States Air Force. He honorably served his country for almost 6 years before being medically retired.

In this video, you will be witness as to how entrapment works. This has more to do with entrapment, in my humble opinion, than anything else.   Continue reading “Want To See Police Entrapment In Action?”

BLACKWATER PAUL BREMERHuffington Post – by David McCabe

The State Department awarded more than a billion dollars in funding to the security firm Blackwater and its later incarnations even after one of the company’s top officials allegedly threatened a government investigator’s life, a review by The Huffington Post has shown.

The New York Times revealed last week that the State Department’s chief investigator reported being threatened by a Blackwater official in Iraq in August 2007. The investigator said project manager Daniel Carroll told him “that he could kill me at that very moment and no one could or would do anything about it as we were in Iraq.”    Continue reading “State Department Awarded Blackwater More Than $1 Billion After Threat On Investigator’s Life”

The Heritage Foundation – by Evan Bernick and Paul Larkin

Brandy Berning spent the night in a Florida jail because she used a cell phone to film a traffic stop on I-95.[1] George Thompson of Fall River, Massachusetts, claimed that he was verbally abused, arrested, and locked up overnight for filming a profane police officer with a cell phone from his front porch. The officer was across the street in full view and within earshot of anyone who happened to be passing by his home.[2]Most recently, Florida police arrested and charged Lazaro Estrada with obstruction of justice for peacefully filming an arrest with his cell phone on a public street.[3]   Continue reading “Filming the Watchmen: Why the First Amendment Protects Your Right to Film the Police in Public Places”

My Fox DFW

Three Cedar Hill police officers were burned Wednesday in a confrontation with a man who reportedly doused himself with gasoline and caught fire.

The man was then shot by police.

Police responded to a call around 2:45 p.m. Wednesday about a burglary in progress at an apartment near a strip mall at the corner of southeast Hwy. 67 and W. Belt Line Road.   Continue reading “Cedar Hill officers burned, suspect shot in confrontation”

mcso-deputy-car-crash-suitAZ Central – by Megan Cassidy

A Phoenix man is suing a Maricopa County Sheriff’s deputy after he says the deputy collided with his truck and then handcuffed the plaintiff when he tried to write down the deputy’s license-plate number.

Detective Steve Chervenak denies the allegations of assault, false imprisonment and civil-rights violations, and instead claims the driver was combative, forcing Chervenak to detain him for safety concerns. The case is making its way through federal court.   Continue reading “Suit: Deputy caused crash, handcuffed other driver”

Breitbart – by DANIEL NUSSBAUM

FONTANA, CA — Breitbart News has learned that 46 illegal aliens, mostly women and children originally destined for the U.S. Border Patrol station in Murrieta, CA, were bused instead Thursday to the St. Joseph’s Catholic Church in Fontana, roughly 45 miles north. The 46 are among several hundred Central Americans who were caught crossing the U.S.-Mexico border in Texas and have been transferred to California since.   Continue reading “46 Illegal Aliens Bused to Church in Fontana for Release”

Tom Dispatch – by Rebecca Gordon

Once upon a time, if a character on TV or in a movie tortured someone, it was a sure sign that he was a bad guy. Now, the torturers are the all-American heroes. From 24 to Zero Dark Thirty, it’s been the good guys who wielded the pliers and the waterboards. We’re not only living in a post-9/11 world, we’re stuck with Jack Bauer in the 25th hour.

In 2002, Cofer Black, the former Director of the CIA’s Counterterrorism Center, told a Senate committee, “All I want to say is that there was ‘before’ 9/11 and ‘after’ 9/11. After 9/11 the gloves come off.” He wanted them to understand that Americans now live in a changed world, where, from the point of view of the national security state, anything goes. It was, as he and various top officials in the Bush administration saw it, a dangerous place in which terrorists might be lurking in any airport security line and who knew where else.   Continue reading “The 25th Hour – Still Living With Jack Bauer in a Terrified New American World”

Lew Rockwell – by Hans-Hermann Hoppe

The classical argument in favor of free immigration runs as follows: Other things being equal, businesses go to low-wage areas, and labor moves to high-wage areas, thus affecting a tendency toward the equalization of wage rates (for the same kind of labor) as well as the optimal localization of capital. An influx of migrants into a given-sized high-wage area will lower nominal wage rates. However, it will not lower real wage rates if the population is below its optimum size. To the contrary, if this is the case, the produced output will increase over-proportionally, and real incomes will actually rise. Thus, restrictions on immigration will harm the protected domestic workers qua consumers more than they gain qua producers. Moreover, immigration restrictions will increase the “flight” of capital abroad (the export of capital which otherwise might have stayed), still causing an equalization of wage rates (although somewhat more slowly), but leading to a less than optimal allocation of capital, thereby harming world living standards all-around.   Continue reading “On Free Immigration and Forced Integration”

38201298e97d831a590f6a7067000b06Yahoo News – by Steve Holland

AUSTIN Texas (Reuters) – President Barack Obama may look back on this week as the time when he dropped all pretense of political decorum and let all his frustrations with Washington gridlock spill forth.

Obama’s public speeches on a three-day trip, like the one he delivered at the Paramount Theater in Austin, Texas, on Thursday, covered many of the same talking points he delivers at Democratic fund-raising events.   Continue reading “Obama lets rip on trip out of Washington”

Study: Habitual Marijuana Smoking Not Associated With Increased Risk Of Lung CancerNORML

Toronto, Canada: Subjects who regularly inhale cannabis smoke possess no greater risk of contracting lung cancer than do those who consume it occasionally or not at all, according to data published online ahead of print in the International Journal of Cancer.

An international team of investigators from Canada, New Zealand, Great Britian, and the United States analyzed data from six case-control studies involving over 5,000 subjects (2,159 cases and 2,985 controls) from around the world.   Continue reading “Study: Habitual Marijuana Smoking Not Associated With Increased Risk Of Lung Cancer”

Detroit activists concerned about the massive water shutoffs across the economically devastated city blocked entrances into the yard of Homrich, a firm given a nearly $6 million contract to terminate services for hundreds of thousands of people. – Photo: Abayomi Azikiwe, Pan-African News WireSan Francisco Bay View – by Abayomi Azikiwe

Detroit activists concerned about the massive water shutoffs across the economically devastated city blocked entrances into the yard of Homrich, a firm given a nearly $6 million contract to terminate services for hundreds of thousands of people. The firm was hired by emergency manager Kevyn Orr, who was appointed by right-wing Gov. Rick Snyder in March 2013, who later forced the city into the largest municipal bankruptcy in United States history a year ago.

Protesters were taken into custody and charged with disturbing the peace. A hearing was set for July 21.A picket line set up before 7:00 a.m. on July 10 blocked the entrance to Homrich for over an hour. Eventually police arrived and attempted to force demonstrators out of the driveway, prompting resistance leading to 10 arrests.   Continue reading “10 arrested blocking trucks sent to shutoff water services in Detroit”

Moonrise on July 11 seen from 30 degrees N. latitude (image: Stellarium)Planet Save – by Sandy Dechert

Look up this weekend, just as we advised you to for the blood moon and total lunar eclipse in April!  A “Supermoon,” one of the largest moons of the year, will come visiting. Both Friday and Saturday nights should provide good viewing, though the phenomenon actually occurs at 7:25 am EDT Saturday.

This July moon is also known as a Full Buck Moon, because it appears at the time male deer (bucks) begin to sprout antlers; or as a Thunder Moon. Those familiar with July in the States can figure out where Thunder Moon gets its name.    Continue reading “Three Summer Supermoons Of 2014 Start Saturday”

640 AM Toronto – by Jessica Gray

The Special Investigations Unit has laid several charges against a former Toronto Police Officer in the alleged sexual assault of two men.

The SIU says the agency was notified of a complaint against the officer. The incident is alleged to have taken place between January 1, 1970 and December 31, 1971.   Continue reading “Former Toronto Police Officer Charged by SIU”

Bloomberg – by Patricia Hurtado, July 4, 2014

The U.S. House Ways and Means Committee and a top staff member say the panel and its employees are “absolutely immune” from having to comply with subpoenas from a federal regulator in an insider-trading probe.

The committee yesterday responded to U.S. District Court Judge Paul Gardephe’s order to explain why it hadn’t complied with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s requests for documents, phone records and testimony of aide Brian Sutter for more than a year. Gardephe gave the House until yesterday to answer. Continue reading “U.S. House Panel Says It Can Ignore SEC Subpoenas in Insider-Trading Probe”