Politics and Religion

Thanks a lot Matt
GaGambler 1717 reads
posted

You had to go and encourage him, didn't you. lol

Welcome to Texas justice: You might beat the rap, but you won't beat the ride. ... DA's overreliance on asset forfeiture violates the law ... Asset forfeiture dependent Sheriff views Hwy 77 as 'piggy bank' ... Like in the Tenaha case, mostly minorites were being effected by this scam


Tenaha becoming poster child for asset-forfeiture abuses

Last night when laying out Sen. John Whitmire's SB 1529 regulating asset forfeiture, House Criminal Jurisprudence Committee Chairman Pete Gallego said he was sending a DVD to committee members with this story from CNN's Anderson Cooper 360 about Tenaha, a small town in East Texas that allegedly decided ripping off drivers passing through town was easier than raising taxes.

Key to ending the practice in Tenaha, the legislation would forbid police or prosecutors from requesting, requiring, or in any manner inducing defendants to waive their property interests until a formal civil foreiture case has been filed in a district court. Hopefully that will at least slow down the highway robbery mentality that appears to have infected some Texas jurisdictions when it comes to asset forfiture.

-- Modified on 5/8/2009 1:11:11 PM

As much as little bitch boys like Anderson Cooper and Xfean want to make this a discrimination issue, there is one very inconvienent detail that escapes the "get whitey" crowd.

One of the officers at the center of the scandal, a guy who was issued a $10,000 check connected to the racket, is himself a part of a minority group, HE IS BLACK.

Try again race baiters.

they targeted  minorities because they believe they are less likely to have the resources to defend themselves  (i.e. a $250/hour lawyer).

BLACK MEN HAD AFRICAN SLAVES DURING THE SLAVERY PERIOD THAT DOES NOT MAKE IT RIGHT OR ABSENT OF RACISM.


racism is used to sort people  but they real motivation is money,power, position ect.

THIS IS TALKED ABOUT IN

TIM WISE ESSAY'S

Tim Wise-institutional racism, labor, prison education AND

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0-VEWJncnsk&NR=1

http://www.redroom.com/video/tim-wise-creation-whiteness-clip


Wise’s commentaries make forceful yet accessible arguments that serve to counter both white denial and complacency— two of the main obstacles to creating a more racially equitable and just society. Considered one of the leading writers on racism, Tim Wise once again challenges his readers to ask, “Where is the outrage?”

http://www.redroom.com/media/tim-wise

LIKE THORGOOD MARSHAL SAID A BLACK SNAKE WILL BITE YOU JUST LIKE A WHITE SNAKE WILL

at about four (4) minutes into this the judge describes where this comes from
SELF HATING NEGRO WHITE GOD: OBAMA OPRAH ISLAM IMUS ATLAH

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pAN1YT4MLA8

More Tickets in .:Cities searching for revenue look to their police departments as a way to cash in.



More Tickets in Hard Times:


Cities searching for revenue look to their police departments as a way to cash in.


Police officer talking to the driver of a Corvette.
Motorists beware: In some communities, police are issuing tickets during these hard times at a rate higher than ever in what critics say is an attempt to raise revenue in order to offset budget shortfalls.

Take, for example, the metropolitan Detroit area, which has been reeling economically much longer than has the rest of the country. The number of moving violations issued has increased by at least 50 percent in 18 communities in the metro area since 2002 — and 11 of those municipalities have seen ticketing increases of 90 percent or more. During that time, Michigan has cut revenue sharing to communities by $3 billion. Officials are scrambling to balance their budgets amid the tumbling economy, and some people say the authorities are turning to traffic cops for help.

The president of a state police union isn't pretending it doesn't happen. James Tignanelli, president of the Police Officers Association of Michigan union, says, "When elected officials say, 'We need more money,' they can't look to the department of public works to raise revenues, so where do they find it? Police departments.

"A lot of police chiefs will tell you the goal is to have nobody speeding through their community, but heaven forbid if it should actually happen — they'd be out of money," Tignanelli says.

Police Chief Michael Reaves of Utica, Michigan, says the role of law enforcement has changed over the years. "When I first started in this job 30 years ago, police work was never about revenue enhancement, but if you're a chief now, you have to look at whether your department produces revenues," he says. "That's just the reality nowadays."

Motorists such as George Hilliard are outraged at the ramped-up traffic enforcement. Hilliard, a 49-year-old warehouse worker who's been laid off, says he got a ticket last year near his home in Dearborn Heights on a section of road where the speed limit drops suddenly from 45 to 35 mph. A few weeks later, his son got a ticket on the same stretch of road. A few weeks after that, according to Hilliard, his other son got a ticket in the same spot.

"The cops sit out there and pick people off, one by one," Hilliard says. "They're catching people left and right. There's a McDonald's right there, and they pull people in there all day. They'll give you a ticket for going five miles over the speed limit. They're making so much money off people, it's ridiculous." Driving 5 mph over the limit is a $90 ticket in Dearborn Heights and tacks two points onto the motorist's driving record.

Garrett TeWinkle of Seal Beach, California, was headed to a wedding in Ohio recently when he was given a speeding ticket in Taylor, a few miles from Detroit Metro Airport.

"I was astounded to get a speeding ticket," TeWinkle says. "Even my wife, who is my harshest critic, says there is no way I was driving as fast as the officer said. I hadn't had a ticket in years.

"I had been under the impression that Michigan was trying to promote tourism," TeWinkle says. "Great way to make a first impression — no wonder the state's economy is in the porcelain."

Kathleen Weckler of Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, feels the same way. Last year, on her 80th birthday, she was on her way to the dentist when a police officer in nearby Birmingham gave her a ticket for running a red light. Weckler insists she didn't run the light — "but you can't fight them. It's their word against yours," she says.

"I told one officer that I used to tell my children that police officers are their friend — but with the [ticket] quotas, they are not any more," Weckler says.

Some police officers, such as Sgt. Richard Lyons of Trenton, Michigan, say they don't like being pressured to write more tickets.

"That's not what I got into law enforcement for — to hand out chintzy tickets," says Lyons, a 21-year veteran. "Things have changed from when I first started in this job. There was a time when you'd come in, do your job, and go home.

But I've never felt pressure to bring revenue to the city like we do now.

"It's a whole different ball game now," Lyons says. "They're trying to use police officers to balance the budget on the backs of drivers, and it's too bad. The people we count on to support us and help us when we're on the road are the ones who end up paying the bills, and they're ticked off about it. We might as well just go door to door and tell people, 'Slide us $100 now since your 16-year-old is going to end up paying us anyway when he starts driving.' You can't blame people for getting upset."

Jack Walker of Flint was given two speeding tickets within a few weeks of each other last year while driving in Orion Township. He says police are more aggressive than ever about stopping motorists.

"It's getting ridiculous: Police are using us as their fundraiser, and it's not right," Walker says. "They have more important things to do."

http://www.dvorak.org/blog/2009/03/03/speed-camera-phobia-the-latest-way-modern-society-makes-us-sick/
Speed Camera Phobia — The Latest Way Modern Society Makes Us Sick

While the cops in his town say, “Prosecution is not our only focus,” too many places in this country see speeding tickets as a source of revenue to be exploited. If I had to drive past one every day, I’d be worried the trigger level was lowered to make some money at my expense. For some, I could see it becoming a gnawing fear.

GaGambler1718 reads

You had to go and encourage him, didn't you. lol

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