One universitiy made close to $14 million off of ‘No-Refusal’ checkpoints


MassPrivateI

Over the New Year’s weekend Texas police arrested 127 people and Tennessee police arrested 11 people at no-refusal checkpoints

Police, will arrest any motorist who refuses to take a breathalyzer and will FORCIBLY extract their blood.

“This year, (Tennessee) troopers will patrol various checkpoints and bars, checking to ensure drivers are buckled up and sober. Officers will be allowed to seek search warrants, and any suspected impaired driver could be subject to blood sampling.”

Police departments are using DUI checkpoints as a cover to check a person’s immigration status:

As recently as this past July, Chicago police had been using DUI checkpoints to target black and Hispanics and check their immigration status:

DHS admits DUI checkpoints are REALLY about checking a person’s immigration status.

According to a 2014 memo published by DHS, a DUI is considered a “significant misdemeanor” and is classified as the second highest priority for a immigrants “apprehension and removal.

Priority 2 (misdemeanants and new immigration violators)

Aliens described in this priority , who are also not described in Priority 1, represent the second-highest priority for apprehension and removal. Resources should be dedicated accordingly to the removal of the following:

(a) aliens convicted of three or more misdemeanor offenses, other than minor traffic offenses or state or local offenses for which an essential element was the alien’s immigration status, provided the offenses arise out of three separate incidents;

(b) aliens convicted of a “significant misdemeanor,” which for these purposes is an offense of domestic violence;1 sexual abuse or exploitation; burglary; unlawful possession or use of a firearm; drug distribution or trafficking; or driving under the influence; or if not an offense listed above, one for which the individual was sentenced to time in custody of 90 days or more (the sentence must involve time to be served in custody, and does not include a suspended sentence.

A week-long operation by Immigration and Customs Enforcement in March of 2015 resulted in 2,000 arrests of “criminal immigrants.” Nearly half of those picked up had been convicted of misdemeanors, many of which were DUI’s. In many of the cases, the individuals had already fulfilled their sentences.

An independent study by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse showed ICE deported more than 62,000 immigrants for DUI’s in 2012 and 2013.

In 2012 the ACLU called DUI checkpoints de facto immigration checkpoints.

Back in 2013, I warned everyone that police are using DUI checkpoints to photograph drivers and passengers.

“At a San Juan checkpoint in Texas, most cars attempting to pass through are stopped. Passengers are questioned and, in certain instances, individuals are asked by investigators to voluntarily submit to having photographs taken of their gang-affiliated tattoos. The information is then vetted for inclusion in a state database.”

DUI checkpoints are a HUGE moneymaker for state and local budgets.

Since 2005 Albuquerque, New Mexico has been making $1 million a year from it’s drunk driving program. It appears nothing, not even a state ban on seizing an alleged drunk motorists vehicle will stop police.

“Each year, the city seizes approximately 1,000 vehicles and brings in roughly $1 million in forfeiture proceeds, which are used primarily to pay the salaries of the police and prosecutors who run the program.”

Often the ONLY way to discover how much a city or town profits from DUI arrests is by looking at their towing revenues.

In 2012 the ACLU exposed how grants from state transportation departments or DHS pay for DUI checkpoints.

For the period of October 1, 2010 to September 30, 2011, the Office of Traffic Safety (OTS) awarded the Police $268,564 for DUI/driver’s license checkpoints and DUI saturation patrols. In addition to OTS funding, Escondido also receives an average of $70,000 from the Safe Transportation and Research Center for DUI checkpoints. The revenue generated from tow fees, state grant programs and tow contracts are over $800,000 a year.

The Calif. Dept. of Public Safety and Homeland Security graph, leaves no doubt as to who’s really behind DUI checkpoints:

In May of 2015, I reported how DHS is paying police to set up DUI checkpoints.

DHS has partnered with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and they’re  providing police across the country with ‘No-Refusal DUI’ toolkits!

And in another article I warned everyone, that they’ll be interrogated for driving within 100 miles of the border.

Universities are running and profiting from sobriety checkpoints!

Amazingly the University of Berkley received close to $14 million in grants from DHS to run California’s Sobriety Checkpoint program. (It’s really a national sobriety program)

“The California Office of Traffic Safety (OTS) has awarded UC Berkeley’s Safe Transportation Research & Education Center (SafeTREC) $13,930,555 to run its 2012-2013 Sobriety Checkpoint program.”

In addition to coordinating the sobriety checkpoint grant program, SafeTREC seeks and conducts applied research for government and private funders, provides education courses, develops and delivers community-based training programs, and coordinates transportation safety programs for the State of California for the OTS, through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration  and Caltrans.”

What is SafeTRAC?

SafeTREC is part of the University of California, Berkeley and they’re affiliated with the School of Public Health and the Institute of Transportation Studies, Department of City and Regional Planning, Public Policy, and Transportation Engineering. 15 full-time staff and researchers and 10 student researchers received $14 million to play with!

But don’t worry, some of the $14 million went into developing a SafeTREC app that charges people $9.99 a month! SafeTREC claims you can use the app to summon help from your friends, family members, and neighbors they claim they’re your Personal Safety Network! Ironically SafeTREC claims, “this app is ideal for parents, teachers, grandparents, coaches, kids and car-poolers.”

Here’s an idea, why don’t car-poolers, grandparents, teachers etc., use the app to notify friends, family and neighbors about being FORCED to give blood at DUI checkpoints?

Numerous universities are conducting (profiting) from DUI checkpoints on campuses! Since April 2014 the Univ. of  South Florida has conducted THIRTY-FOUR DUI checkpoints!

Here are a few more examples of University Police sobriety checkpoints:

Cornell University PoliceUniversity of Santa Barbara Police and the Connecticut State University’s Police all conduct sobriety checkpoints.

DUI arrests cost motorists thousands…

A typical DUI costs anywhere from $10K – $20K by the time a person pays bail, fines, fees, increased auto insurance premiums, court-ordered alcohol education programs and more.

DUI convictions also mean increased life insurance premiums and lost wages. If you’re a doctor, stockbroker, airline pilot, lawyer or nurse, a DUI conviction could affect the status of your professional license. A DUI criminal conviction also affects a persons job prospects, since you have to disclose any criminal convictions on job applications.

Potential expenses from a DUI — first offense

You don’t even have to get convicted to start running up expenses on a DUI charge.

Fines. Court costs.
Attorney fees. Bail.
Loss of job. DUI “school.”
Temporary loss of income. Car towing, impounding.
Alternate transportation costs. Car ignition interlock device.
Periodic blood testing. Monthly monitoring fees.
Cost of incarceration. Increased auto insurance premiums.

To avoid DUI checkpoints go to  DUI block which posts their locations.

Presently 38 states, the District of Columbia, the Northern Mariana Islands and the Virgin Islands conduct sobriety checkpoints.

Only 12 states, don’t conduct sobriety checkpoints. Some states prohibit them by state law or Constitution (or their interpretation of state law or Constitution).  Shouldn’t that mean that the other state checkpoints are ILLEGAL?

Click here to find out if  DUI checkpoints are legal in your state.

http://massprivatei.blogspot.com/2016/01/one-universitiy-made-close-to-14.html

5 thoughts on “One universitiy made close to $14 million off of ‘No-Refusal’ checkpoints

    1. I have been listening to Steven Anderson’s preaching for a few months now. When I first posted his “Marching to Zion” video here, I stated at that time that I could not vouch for his theology, because just a cursory review of a person’s claims does not ensure they’re not a nutjob or devil in disguise. I have listened to probably 90-100 hours of his sermons, and can say at this time that I can think of no living man from whom I have heard such thorough exposition of Biblical truth, and so little of that which I would characterize as erroneous.
      He shuns the “ejection seat” pretribulation rapture hoax in favor of the Post Tribulation/Prewrath view (as I have for 20 years), and presents sound teaching that confronts the lies perpetated upon Christianity via the Scofield Reference Bible and other indoctrinated heretical ideas that have caused much of Christianity to apostatize the simple truth of the Gospel of Jesus Christ and of God’s Word.
      I have always thought the “King James only” crowd were narrow-minded yokels, until I listened to a few sermons where he relates how much of the Bible is not just mistranslated in the newer versions, but how much actual scripture has been deliberately removed and altered to chip away at very critical proof texts and supportive parallels to other portions of Scripture.
      As someone who was born-again at age 23, I fell prey to a lot of very popular “Judeo-Christian Evangelical” preachers, most of whom were very well respected in theological circles. I have spent the last 25 of my 28 years as a disciple of Jesus attempting to repudiate all the heresy I was fed during my first 3 years of study, and I constantly seek to hold fast to only the truth.
      I can say I recommend Anderson over any other person I have heard in recent years, with the understanding that he is not perfect, and there are some issues I am not (or maybe just not yet) in line with. I have been convicted of my own faults many times during his preaching – to my own benefit – and nothing I have heard him preach is anything I would break fellowship with him over.
      If you want to check out his sermons, there are a bunch on Youtube, and he has the last 10 years of sermons available on the church website in MP3 audio and the more recent ones also as MP4 video. If you like expository, Biblical truth delivered in a “hard preaching” fashion, you’ll be blessed.
      The url is: http://www.faithfulwordbaptist.org/

  1. funny how it can be “constitutionally illegal” in one sate yet not in another

    so much for the “United States”, and our constitution

Join the Conversation

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


*