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Perfecting the police State: Lasqueti residents terrorised by RCMP.

Aug 26 2004

      LASQUETI ISLAND, B.C. - Residents of Lasqueti Island complain they've
been harassed and intimidated by recent military-style RCMP drug raids.

Police officers using Canadian Forces helicopters swooped down on the
island last weekend in their search for marijuana grow-ops.

More than 100 people packed a town hall meeting Wednesday night to denounce the police tactics - saying they had more to do with harassment
than law enforcement.

They don't deny there are people growing marijuana on Lasqueti, but Chris Burchill says the RCMP tactics were like something out of a war zone.

"A group of your officers rappelled down from a helicopter, came jogging up to my house wielding their machetes, with their uniforms and their loaded guns, with the machine roaring overhead, rattling the windows."

The residents say the raids upset children, frightened disabled people and terrorized livestock. They also accuse the Mounties of entering homes without search warrants.

Sgt. Bill Van Otterloo - one of three RCMP officers at the meeting - promised to look into the complaints.

The residents are also furious that the RCMP put out a news release calling Lasqueti a "marijuana mecca" and suggesting organized crime might be
involved.

Residents demanded an apology from the RCMP. Van Otterloo said he was
sorry if he had unintentionally slandered the people of Lasqueti Island. "

Copyright © CBC 2004

http://vancouver.cbc.ca/regional/servlet/View?filename=bc_20040826

 

See related link below:

Bernard Bastien was killed in his front yard by a SWAT team with the wrong address. They were looking for his suicidal neighbour.

 

Mounties Raid Prominent Canadian Medi-Pot Dispensary And Research Center

June 3, 2004 - Victoria, BC, Canada

Victoria, British Columbia: Royal Canadian Mounted Police raided the Vancouver Island Therapeutic Cannabis Research Center late last week, seizing an estimated 900 medicinal cannabis plants. The operation produced standardized, high quality marijuana for the 390 members of the Vancouver Island Compassion Society (VICS), which had been supplying medical cannabis to qualified patients since 1999.

"This is devastating," VICS founder and Director Philippe Lucas said, adding that he intends to challenge the legality of the raid in court. "With Health Canada bumbling the production and distribution of cannabis, we've strived to ensure the safety and quality of the VICS product by testing it for cannabinoids, heavy metals, and biological impurities; with the execution of a single warrant all of our members have been thrown back into the vagaries and uncertainties of the black market."

Two men were arrested in the raid, one of whom was an authorized caretaker, Lucas said.

In addition to growing and dispensing 35 different strains of medical cannabis, the center was conducting a number of scientific studies on cannabis' ability to treat chronic pain, nausea and symptoms associated with Hepatitis C.

The center had also conducted several scientific analyses on the quality of Health Canada's medicinal cannabis - finding that its potency was approximately half of what the government claimed, and that it contained numerous impurities. In a recent VICS press release, they noted that of the 93 legal federal exemptees who have ordered cannabis through the government, nearly one-third had returned it because of its poor quality.

"Since 90 percent of Canadians support the medical use of cannabis, and with Health Canada clearly unable to meet it's commitments to Canada's medicinal users, why are taxpayer money, and police and court resources still wasted on the arrest and prosecution of medicinal cannabis users and producers?" Lucas asked.

http://www.norml.org/index.cfm?Group_ID=6126

See related link HERE

 

And for the ultimate case of intimidation OR profound incompetence.

Unbelievable...

Fri Nov 5,11:12 AM ET Oddly Enough - Reuters

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A National Guard F-16 fighter plane mistakenly fired off 25 rounds of ammunition at the Little Egg Harbor Intermediate School in South New Jersey on Wednesday night.

The pilot was meant to fire the rounds some 3 1/2 miles away at a military target range, Lt. Col. Roberta Niedt of the New Jersey Department of Military and Veterans Affairs told reporters in the Jersey shore township's police headquarters.

No one was injured as school was out and a lone custodian was inside the building when the bullets hit.

Damage was minimal as the non-exploding, 20 millimeter bullets left only puncture marks in the school's roof and the asphalt outside the building.

The fighter jet was part of the 113th Wing, District of Columbia Air National Guard assigned to Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland.

An investigation is being conducted into how the pilot mistook the school, located on Frog Pond Road, for a target range.


http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=573&ncid=573&e=8&u=/nm/20041105/od_nm/security_school_dc

 

 

US Troops setting up police state RIGHT NOW!

http://www.infowars.com/martiallawphotos.html

Little camera shy, eh boys? Police and military doing dry runs for martial law crackdown.

Police and military personnel check luggage of innocent motorists in Texas.

The Posse Commitatus Act (18USC1385) prohibits military personnel from executing

local, state, or federal laws except as the Constitution or act of Congress authorizes.

 

Police Begin Fingerprinting on Traffic Stops

WBAY | January 11 2005

If you're ticketed by Green Bay police, you'll get more than a fine. You'll get fingerprinted, too. It's a new way police are cracking down on crime.

If you're caught speeding or playing your music too loud, or other crimes for which you might receive a citation, Green Bay police officers will ask for your drivers license and your finger. You'll be fingerprinted right there on the spot. The fingerprint appears right next to the amount of the fine.

Police say it's meant to protect you -- in case the person they're citing isn't who they claim to be. But not everyone is sold on that explanation.

"What we've seen happen for the last couple of years [is] increasing use of false or fraudulent identification documents," Captain Greg Urban said.

Police say they want to prevent the identity theft problem that Milwaukee has, where 13 percent of all violators give a false name.

But in Green Bay, where police say they only average about five cases in a year, drivers we talked with think the new policy is extreme.

"That's going too far," Ken Scherer from Oconto said. "You look at the ID, that's what they're there for. Either it's you or it's not. I don't think that's a valid excuse."

"I would feel uncomfortable but I would do it," Carol Pilgrim of Green Bay said.

Citizens do have the right to say no. "They could say no and not have to worry about getting arrested," defense attorney Jackson Main said. "On the other hand, I'm like everybody else. When a police officer tells me to do something, I'm going to do it whether I have the right to say no or not."

That's exactly why many drivers are uneasy about the fine print in this fingerprinting policy.

Police stress that the prints are just to make sure you are who you claim to be and do not go into any kind of database; they simply stay on the ticket for future reference if the identity is challenged.
 

 

Police use of Taser on child riles Miami

Inquiry widens in beating by Fresno police officer - Friday, Feb. 13, 2009
DA, state AG's offices to launch investigations into brutality allegations.

The investigation into allegations of brutality by two Fresno police officers widened Thursday, with Police Chief Jerry Dyer saying that the District Attorney's Office has launched an independent probe, and that the Attorney General's Office is set to review the case as well.

At issue is the videotaped arrest Monday of Glen Beaty, 52, by two uniformed police officers. The video, which aired nationally after it was turned over to KSEE (Channel 24) on Tuesday, shows one officer repeatedly punching Beaty in the head while the other struggles to handcuff him. [Video of beating]

The Empire Turns Its Guns on the Citizenry

PAUL CRAIG ROBERTS
Counterpunch
Wednesday, January 24, 2007

In recent years American police forces have called out SWAT teams 40,000 or more times annually. Last year did you read in your newspaper or hear on TV news of 110 hostage or terrorist events each day? No. What then were the SWAT teams doing? They were serving routine warrants to people who posed no danger to the police or to the public.

Occasionally Washington think tanks produce reports that are not special pleading for donors. One such report is Radley Balko's "Overkill: The Rise of Paramilitary Police Raids in America" (Cato Institute, 2006).

This 100-page report is extremely important and should have been published as a book. SWAT teams (Special Weapons and Tactics) were once rare and used only for very dangerous situations, often involving hostages held by armed criminals. Today SWAT teams are deployed for routine police duties. In the US today, 75-80% of SWAT deployments are for warrant service.

In a high percentage of the cases, the SWAT teams forcefully enter the wrong address, resulting in death, injury, and trauma to perfectly innocent people. Occasionally, highly keyed-up police kill one another in the confusion caused by their stun grenades.

Mr. Balko reports that the use of paramilitary police units began in Los Angeles in the 1960s. The militarization of local police forces got a big boost from Attorney General Ed Meese's "war on drugs" during the Reagan administration. A National Security Decision Directive was issued that declared drugs to be a threat to US national security. In 1988 Congress ordered the National Guard into the domestic drug war. In 1994 the Department of Defense issued a memorandum authorizing the transfer of military equipment and technology to state and local police, and Congress created a program "to facilitate handing military gear over to civilian police agencies."

Today 17,000 local police forces are equipped with such military equipment as Blackhawk helicopters, machine guns, grenade launchers, battering rams, explosives, chemical sprays, body armor, night vision, rappelling gear and armored vehicles. Some have tanks. In 1999, the New York Times reported that a retired police chief in New Haven, Connecticut, told the newspaper, "I was offered tanks, bazookas, anything I wanted." Balklo reports that in 1997, for example, police departments received 1.2 million pieces of military equipment.

With local police forces now armed beyond the standard of US heavy infantry, police forces have been retrained "to vaporize, not Mirandize," to use a phrase from Reagan administration defense official Lawrence Korb. This leaves the public at the mercy of brutal actions based on bad police information from paid informers.

SWAT team deployments received a huge boost from the Byrne Justice Assistance Grant program, which gave states federal money for drug enforcement. Balko explains that "the states then disbursed the money to local police departments on the basis of each department's number of drug arrests."

With financial incentives to maximize drug arrests and with idle SWAT teams due to a paucity of hostage or other dangerous situations, local police chiefs threw their SWAT teams into drug enforcement. In practice, this has meant using SWAT teams to serve warrants on drug users.

SWAT teams serve warrants by breaking into homes and apartments at night while people are sleeping, often using stun grenades and other devices to disorient the occupants. As much of the police's drug information comes from professional informers known as "snitches" who tip off police for cash rewards, dropped charges, and reduced sentences, names and addresses are often pulled out of a hat. Balko provides details for 135 tragic cases of mistaken addresses.

SWAT teams are not held accountable for their tragic mistakes and gratuitous brutality. Police killings got so bad in Albuquerque, New Mexico, for example, that the city hired criminologist Sam Walker to conduct an investigation of police tactics. Killings by police were "off the charts," Walker found, because the SWAT team "had an organizational culture that led them to escalate situations upward rather then de-escalating."

The mind-set of militarized SWAT teams is geared to "taking out" or killing the suspect-- thus, the many deaths from SWAT team utilization. Many innocent people are killed in night time SWAT team entries, because they don't realize that it is the police who have broken into their homes. They believe they are confronted by dangerous criminals, and when they try to defend themselves they are shot down by the police.

As Lawrence Stratton and I have reported, one of many corrupting influences on the criminal justice (sic) system is the practice of paying "snitches" to generate suspects. In 1995 the Boston Globe profiled people who lived entirely off the fees that they were paid as police informants. Snitches create suspects by selling a small amount of marijuana to a person who they then report to the police as being in possession of drugs. Balko reports that "an overwhelming number of mistaken raids take place because police relied on information from confidential informants." In Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina, 87% of drug raids originated in tips from snitches.

Many police informers are themselves drug dealers who avoid arrest and knock off competitors by serving as police snitches.

Surveying the deplorable situation, the National Law Journal concluded: "Criminals have been turned into instruments of law enforcement, while law enforcement officers have become criminal co-conspirators."

Balko believes the problem could be reduced if judges scrutinized unreliable information before issuing warrants. If judges would actually do their jobs, there would be fewer innocent victims of SWAT brutality. However, as long as the war on drugs persists and as long as it produces financial rewards to police departments, local police forces, saturated with military weapons and war imagery, will continue to terrorize American citizens.

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See also: Stealing your guns... and Ready for Police State..

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