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Post by Shuftin on Sept 20, 2006 15:27:18 GMT -5
Rape is not about sex, it is about the power over another person. A rape victim is given the option “Spread your legs or no.” In the end, the result will be the same, you will be raped with or without your consent. Heil Hitler to our Judicial system. You will dance the dance of an organ grinders monkey or freedom is not your’s to be had.
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Post by Shuftin on Sept 20, 2006 15:27:18 GMT -5
Rape is not about sex, it is about the power over another person. A rape victim is given the option “Spread your legs or no.” In the end, the result will be the same, you will be raped with or without your consent. Heil Hitler to our Judicial system. You will dance the dance of an organ grinders monkey or freedom is not your’s to be had.
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Post by Shuftin on Nov 21, 2006 0:46:22 GMT -5
If the peace was not being disturbed then why did peace officers even have to get involved in the first place in order to keep the peace? Oh that's right peace officers are not hired to keep peace they are put in place to fuck revenue out of the public and give their gun Jacked lute to their God lord and master, the State. Dammit Jim I'm the Gestapo, not a Doctor
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Post by Shuftin on Nov 21, 2006 0:46:22 GMT -5
If the peace was not being disturbed then why did peace officers even have to get involved in the first place in order to keep the peace? Oh that's right peace officers are not hired to keep peace they are put in place to fuck revenue out of the public and give their gun Jacked lute to their God lord and master, the State. Dammit Jim I'm the Gestapo, not a Doctor
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Post by Shuftin on Jul 28, 2006 1:29:04 GMT -5
I have an e-mail relationship with Krstafer Pinkerton. Is he right or wrong, I don't know, I'm not there. I can honestly say this about him though. He is dead serious and will not budge an inch. He is a religious man who acts solely on principle. He will willingly accept prison time before he caves in to what he believes is judicial falsification, police intimidation or Nazism. Due to his deep passion alone for justice I support him. I would ask all to spend a few minutes looking into this scenario.
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Post by Shuftin on Jul 28, 2006 1:29:04 GMT -5
I have an e-mail relationship with Krstafer Pinkerton. Is he right or wrong, I don't know, I'm not there. I can honestly say this about him though. He is dead serious and will not budge an inch. He is a religious man who acts solely on principle. He will willingly accept prison time before he caves in to what he believes is judicial falsification, police intimidation or Nazism. Due to his deep passion alone for justice I support him. I would ask all to spend a few minutes looking into this scenario.
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Post by Shuftin on Jul 28, 2006 0:11:23 GMT -5
As a child my Grandfather would often tell me “A man who lies to you is the same man who will steal from you”. I was too young to know it then but I realize now that he was talking about a man’s character. Your character dictates your conscience and who you are, what you do, how you act and what you are capable of doing.
In this forum it has been pointed out and argued that some stories are about “Former” police officers and therefore are not legit police crimes. I say the character of a former police officer who commits a crime is the same character the police officer had when he wore a badge. Basically, he always had it in him and it was him.
“A man who lies to you is the same man who will steal from you”. What crimes or misconduct did these “Former” police officers commit, known or unknown, while wearing a badge and in what fashion did they perform their jobs?
The most important question of all is “How did they fit in so well with the other police officers”? Personally I believe that police officers are of like mind and therefore of like kind.
I liken the stories posted about “Former” police officers as KIND CRIMES because, at one time, they ran with the pack along with the current police officers and no one noticed a difference. The difference was not noticed because there was no difference.
Bottom line: The crimes of “Former” police officers are indeed police crimes or, like I said before, kind crimes.
A dog does what a dog does because he's a dog doing what a dog does. With or with-out a badge.
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Post by Shuftin on Jul 28, 2006 0:11:23 GMT -5
As a child my Grandfather would often tell me “A man who lies to you is the same man who will steal from you”. I was too young to know it then but I realize now that he was talking about a man’s character. Your character dictates your conscience and who you are, what you do, how you act and what you are capable of doing.
In this forum it has been pointed out and argued that some stories are about “Former” police officers and therefore are not legit police crimes. I say the character of a former police officer who commits a crime is the same character the police officer had when he wore a badge. Basically, he always had it in him and it was him.
“A man who lies to you is the same man who will steal from you”. What crimes or misconduct did these “Former” police officers commit, known or unknown, while wearing a badge and in what fashion did they perform their jobs?
The most important question of all is “How did they fit in so well with the other police officers”? Personally I believe that police officers are of like mind and therefore of like kind.
I liken the stories posted about “Former” police officers as KIND CRIMES because, at one time, they ran with the pack along with the current police officers and no one noticed a difference. The difference was not noticed because there was no difference.
Bottom line: The crimes of “Former” police officers are indeed police crimes or, like I said before, kind crimes.
A dog does what a dog does because he's a dog doing what a dog does. With or with-out a badge.
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Post by Shuftin on Nov 1, 2006 16:48:25 GMT -5
Police officers are not deserving of respect. I would no more give respect to a police officer than I would to a terrorist. Like the terrorist, police officers the hired guns for their masters. Police officers sole purpose in life is to convict and to incarcerate the enemy of their masters which is "We the people". A rose by any other name is still a rose. Police officers are traitors and Benedict Arnold's to the citizens of the United States of America and not worthy of respect.
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Post by Shuftin on Nov 1, 2006 16:48:25 GMT -5
Police officers are not deserving of respect. I would no more give respect to a police officer than I would to a terrorist. Like the terrorist, police officers the hired guns for their masters. Police officers sole purpose in life is to convict and to incarcerate the enemy of their masters which is "We the people". A rose by any other name is still a rose. Police officers are traitors and Benedict Arnold's to the citizens of the United States of America and not worthy of respect.
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Post by Shuftin on Sept 2, 2006 9:19:09 GMT -5
Officers have their paychecks taxed just like every one else. Most officers live in the same city where they work. This means that they pay property tax to that city. Some officers believe that they pay themselves to work
Officers serve their masters, the Government, against the will of the people. They protect their masters, the Government, from the will of the people. Officers think that they deserve respect for being the gun toting pawns of their masters, the Government, and the enemy of a defenseless people
We need a police force that serves and protects the people to protect us from the police who serve and protect the Government.
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Post by Shuftin on Sept 2, 2006 9:19:09 GMT -5
Officers have their paychecks taxed just like every one else. Most officers live in the same city where they work. This means that they pay property tax to that city. Some officers believe that they pay themselves to work
Officers serve their masters, the Government, against the will of the people. They protect their masters, the Government, from the will of the people. Officers think that they deserve respect for being the gun toting pawns of their masters, the Government, and the enemy of a defenseless people
We need a police force that serves and protects the people to protect us from the police who serve and protect the Government.
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Post by Shuftin on Nov 2, 2006 4:13:18 GMT -5
These kinds of incidents are becomeing all too common by our cowardly, vicious police officers. A number of things could have been done rather than gun down a drunken, suicidal boy in front of his parents’ house, but those actions would require courage, judgment, and respect for the public. Was Hope Glenn “naive?” Yes, as are most Americans until they have their own encounter within our Police State.
By the way where the tasers? Or are these only for women and small children?
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Post by Shuftin on Nov 2, 2006 4:13:18 GMT -5
These kinds of incidents are becomeing all too common by our cowardly, vicious police officers. A number of things could have been done rather than gun down a drunken, suicidal boy in front of his parents’ house, but those actions would require courage, judgment, and respect for the public. Was Hope Glenn “naive?” Yes, as are most Americans until they have their own encounter within our Police State.
By the way where the tasers? Or are these only for women and small children?
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Post by Shuftin on Nov 2, 2006 4:05:19 GMT -5
Garden Home - The Glenn family says deputies who shot and killed an 18-year-old also endangered his grandmother September 18, 2006 Hope Glenn was frustrated because she, her husband and her son's friends couldn't seem to calm her drunken, agitated 18-year-old son early Saturday. So she called 9-1-1 at 3:05 a.m. for help. She told a dispatcher her teenage son, Lukus, was suicidal, standing outside their house in the Garden Home area of unincorporated Washington County with a knife to his throat. "When I called 9-1-1, I called to save my son, to get some professional help," she said in an interview Sunday. "Maybe I'm naive." Minutes after Washington County sheriff's deputies and a Tigard police officer arrived and Glenn's son, Lukus, refused to drop his knife, officers fired bean-bag rounds at him. When Glenn turned toward the house, two deputies fired several gunshots. Relatives said the teenager collapsed by a doorstep. He died at the scene. The sheriff's office did not say how many times or where Glenn was shot, but said the deputies fired because they were concerned he might harm family inside. The teenager's parents and relatives Sunday said in interviews the deputies' gunfire ripped through the house and into the teenager's 72-year-old grandmother's room, barely missing her. "I could have lost my son and my mom," Hope Glenn said. She pointed out two bullet holes in the front door and two inside the grandmother's room as she numbly recounted Saturday's events. Rest of the story here: www.oregonlive.com/news/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/news/1158548128320770.xml&coll=7#continue
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Post by Shuftin on Nov 2, 2006 4:05:19 GMT -5
Garden Home - The Glenn family says deputies who shot and killed an 18-year-old also endangered his grandmother September 18, 2006 Hope Glenn was frustrated because she, her husband and her son's friends couldn't seem to calm her drunken, agitated 18-year-old son early Saturday. So she called 9-1-1 at 3:05 a.m. for help. She told a dispatcher her teenage son, Lukus, was suicidal, standing outside their house in the Garden Home area of unincorporated Washington County with a knife to his throat. "When I called 9-1-1, I called to save my son, to get some professional help," she said in an interview Sunday. "Maybe I'm naive." Minutes after Washington County sheriff's deputies and a Tigard police officer arrived and Glenn's son, Lukus, refused to drop his knife, officers fired bean-bag rounds at him. When Glenn turned toward the house, two deputies fired several gunshots. Relatives said the teenager collapsed by a doorstep. He died at the scene. The sheriff's office did not say how many times or where Glenn was shot, but said the deputies fired because they were concerned he might harm family inside. The teenager's parents and relatives Sunday said in interviews the deputies' gunfire ripped through the house and into the teenager's 72-year-old grandmother's room, barely missing her. "I could have lost my son and my mom," Hope Glenn said. She pointed out two bullet holes in the front door and two inside the grandmother's room as she numbly recounted Saturday's events. Rest of the story here: www.oregonlive.com/news/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/news/1158548128320770.xml&coll=7#continue
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Post by Shuftin on Sept 25, 2006 5:14:14 GMT -5
What were your findings? Share with the rest of us.
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Post by Shuftin on Sept 25, 2006 5:14:14 GMT -5
What were your findings? Share with the rest of us.
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Post by Shuftin on Aug 30, 2006 1:32:20 GMT -5
2006-08-29 Victim At Center Of Fresno California Police Excessive Force Investigation, Deported to Mexico, Police Officers Mike Manfredi, Sean Plymale, Paul Van Dalen and Chris Coleman Still Suspended And Being FiredFRESNO, CALIFORNIA – The man at the center of an excessive force investigation against four Fresno police officers has been deported. His attorney thinks it's payback. Rolando Celdon agreed not to sue the city of Fresno for what he said was excessive force during his arrest, in exchange for a six-figure settlement. Now, Action News has learned Celdon has been deported to Mexico. Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer says his department doesn't get involved in immigration issues. But Rolando Celdon's attorney believes someone got angry that the officers are losing their jobs and contacted immigrations. Celdon rocked the Fresno Police Department last October when he filed a complaint against four officers, saying they used excessive force during an arrest. The police report says Celdon was bitten by a dog, shot with a bean bag gun, kicked in the stomach, punched in the face and tasered. Mike Manfredi, Sean Plymale, Paul Van Dalen and Chris Coleman are all on paid administrative leave, but are in the lengthy process of being fired by the department. Kevin Little represented Celdon. He admits his client did enter the country illegally, but believes someone in law enforcement alerted immigrations about Celdon. Police Chief Jerry Dyer said he couldn't comment on the case, but hopes to have it resolved within a few weeks. Even though the officers are being fired, Kevin Little says they may end up with golden parachutes — most likely in the form of a medical retirement, in which they still get a pension and benefits, or a workers compensation settlement. This is becoming a new trend Little says he recently talked with Celdon, who is trying to move on with his life and do positive things with the settlement he got from the city.
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Post by Shuftin on Aug 30, 2006 1:32:20 GMT -5
2006-08-29 Victim At Center Of Fresno California Police Excessive Force Investigation, Deported to Mexico, Police Officers Mike Manfredi, Sean Plymale, Paul Van Dalen and Chris Coleman Still Suspended And Being FiredFRESNO, CALIFORNIA – The man at the center of an excessive force investigation against four Fresno police officers has been deported. His attorney thinks it's payback. Rolando Celdon agreed not to sue the city of Fresno for what he said was excessive force during his arrest, in exchange for a six-figure settlement. Now, Action News has learned Celdon has been deported to Mexico. Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer says his department doesn't get involved in immigration issues. But Rolando Celdon's attorney believes someone got angry that the officers are losing their jobs and contacted immigrations. Celdon rocked the Fresno Police Department last October when he filed a complaint against four officers, saying they used excessive force during an arrest. The police report says Celdon was bitten by a dog, shot with a bean bag gun, kicked in the stomach, punched in the face and tasered. Mike Manfredi, Sean Plymale, Paul Van Dalen and Chris Coleman are all on paid administrative leave, but are in the lengthy process of being fired by the department. Kevin Little represented Celdon. He admits his client did enter the country illegally, but believes someone in law enforcement alerted immigrations about Celdon. Police Chief Jerry Dyer said he couldn't comment on the case, but hopes to have it resolved within a few weeks. Even though the officers are being fired, Kevin Little says they may end up with golden parachutes — most likely in the form of a medical retirement, in which they still get a pension and benefits, or a workers compensation settlement. This is becoming a new trend Little says he recently talked with Celdon, who is trying to move on with his life and do positive things with the settlement he got from the city.
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