Friday, September 2, 2011

Suing cops as American as the American Revolution



"Suing police is as American as the American Revolution."
-Ralph Nader, attorney at law and presidential nominee chauffeured by The Dragonater

Officers Michael Jose Urbina, Sharnice Gartrell and Naima Reed beat up a woman at Reagan National Airport. For the last 2 years since they brutally attacked her, the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority Police have pressed a barrage of fake charges against her to somehow justify the beating. She has permanent brain damage as a result of the concussion blow Officer Michael Urbina gave her when he slammed her head into a metal table with his forearm.

“I just felt myself flying across the room. I thought I was going to die,” Robin remembers. “I was flying from D.C. back home to New York. I got to the [Transportation Security Administration] TSA screening and they X-rayed my bag, and they said, ‘Oh, she’s got a bottle.’ I said, ‘Oh, that’s just my contact lens solution. Feel free to throw it out,’ and then they took me to the secondary screening area. The officer came from behind, picked me up and threw me across the room, into another passenger and into a metal chair. And then he took my arm, and he started twisting it around until I felt it breaking. And I go, ‘Oh, my God, you’re breaking my arm.’ Then he picked me up, threw me against a metal table. There were three officers beating me up. There were two holding me down while he smashed my head into a table. I didn’t know who was beating me up or why. I just kept saying, ‘Get off of me, get off of me, get off of me.’ He gave me a concussion from hitting my head against the table. It’s a permanent traumatic brain injury.

“I used to be pretty intelligent. I used to pride myself on my ability to write. Now, I don’t remember, and it’s embarrassing,” Robin says. “Going to the airport now, I’m afraid of being beat up by security again. It scares me to death.”

“This just seems crazy to me. You had a bottle of contact solution?” Dr. Phil asks Robin.
“Yes,” she says.

“What did you say? Did you make a threat?” Dr. Phil asks.

“No. I said, ‘Oh, that’s my contact lens solution. Feel free to throw it out.’”

“Come on, that doesn’t make sense. What happened? Did you get frustrated? Did you get irritated? Were they rude to you?” Dr. Phil asks.

As the security footage plays, Dr. Phil says, “Something that bothers me about this is if you look at this whole tape, before he throws you to the ground, it looks to me like he’s getting agitated. He’s back behind you, he’s not even talking to you, but he’s throwing his hands up in the air, he’s doing air quotes to the police, he starts to get into an agitated posture, but he wasn’t even talking to you. Why is that? Do you have any sense of why that happened?”

“I have no idea,” Robin says.

Dr. Phil replays a portion of the footage where Robin was thrown into another woman and hit the floor. “What were they saying to you at the time?” he asks.

“They weren’t saying anything while they were beating me. I didn’t even know I was being beat up at first. I kind of felt myself flying across the room and then all of a sudden I’m on the floor, and I’m looking up, and I’m like, ‘Oh, my God, I’m getting beaten up!’” Robin says. “I didn’t see it coming.”

Dr. Phil takes a closer look at where Robin says the officers smashed her head into the table.

Meanwhile TSA employs 1,000s of illegal aliens as airport "security" screeners, and refuses to deport 50-million illegal aliens. This is what happens when you put a lesbian dyke in charge.





Woman sues Police State death squad over airport beating, kidnapping and gaterape

NEW YORK (WABC) -- Police in Washington threw a New York woman to the ground and then arrested her at an airport security checkpoint. Was the force justified? She says absolutely not, and has filed a $10 million lawsuit against the officers involved.

Robin Kassner says she blacked out and doesn't remember much about her February 2007 encounter with airport police, but security cameras captured the whole incident.

What is still not clear is how did a routine bag search escalate into what looks like a bar brawl?

"I realize, oh my God, I'm being beat up," Kassner said, narrating the surveillance video.

Kassner, a marketing executive, says she was pulled out of the security line at Reagan National Airport when screeners told her her contact lens solution didn't meet the liquid ban requirement.
As a TSA employee searched Kassner's bag, Washington D.C. airport police arrived and appeared to motion to her to step away from the bag. She turns her back, and that's when things get ugly.

Two officers are seen dragging Kassner away from her suitcase before they throw her to the ground.

"I was begging them over and over to get off me, and they wouldn't stop," she said.

Fifteen seconds later, police lifted Kassner to her feet and shoved her into a nearby table. It is unclear what she said next, but there were three officers involved at that point. One man can be seen taking his elbow and slamming her head onto the table.

"I suffered a concussion as a result of that, and I've had memory problems," she said.

Kassner says it felt like her arm was breaking as the three officers put her in handcuffs. And then, two minutes after it all began, she is led away.

A spokesman from the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority says that Kassner, "was interfering with the screening process and refusing to follow security procedures."

Kassner was arrested, taken to a Virginia jail and charged with obstruction of justice.

"As some of you may know, I had a ticket to go to the adjoining auditorium on closed circuit TV at the University of Massachusettes to watch the first debate which is in another auditorium on the same campus in early October [2000]. And I got off the bus and there waiting for me, and me only, was the security representative of the debate commission with the guru who prompted him into this role in the shadows [crowd laughs]. Flanked by a state trooper and two police of the University of Massachusettes. And the gentleman who is the security consultant refused at first to identify himself when I asked him to, and he finally did. He said, 'Whether or not you have a ticket I have bad news, prompted by the Debate Commission, to ask you to leave.' To which I said, in my own mind, Archi Bunker style, 'Well, la-de-da!' [crowd laughs]. So, this utter expression of disbelief that I was in the cradle of American Revolution, this state trooper steps forward, and he says, 'Mr. Nader, if you do not leave, I'm going to have to arrest you!' [crowd hollers]. To which I said, in my mind, 'What the hell is going on?!' [crowd laughs] 'I'll see you guys in court!' And since I always prefer to be a plaintiff rather than a defendant [crowd laughs] I went back on the bus, and a week later, hauled him into federal court in Boston. Including the Debate Commission, which we're going to take apart in the next two years. [loud cheers and clapping] Which is a private corporation created by the two parties in 1988 to throw off the League of Women Voters from sponsoring presidential debate, and they decide the rules and the number of debates for the two parties, who asks them the questions, and they fund it with Ford, ATT, Anhauser Busch money. Someone said, 'Are you going to go to the St. Louis Anhauser Busch Ford Debate?' [crowd laughs] So, we also sued the security consultant, and then we sued the state trooper. And I was asked in the deposition, 'Why did you sue the state trooper? He was only doing his job?' I said, "Because I told the state trooper at the time, 'Sergeant, you are being given an unlawful political order by a private corporation, utilizing public property.'" And he refused to listen. State troopers are not automatons. They've got minds of their own. They've got to be able to decide that they are not going to execute an illegal order. I was not charged with being disruptive, with throwing rocks, with anything. There was no evidence of that. They wanted to exclude me for one reason only: 'They didn't like me.' So now we are teaching him a civics lesson, he's got to hire his lawyer. [crowd laughs] I'm sure other state troopers will become a little more 'independent minded' in the future. I can't say I didn't warn him." [loud cheers]
—Ralph Nader, Arab-American attorney at law, nominee for US president by Green Party in 2000, Independant candidate for Reform Party in 2004, University of Tennessee at Knoxville, 12 November 2001 (The Dragonater then handed Nader VHS tapes of "9/11 The Road To Tyranny" and "Dark Secrets Inside Bohemian Grove")


Vote for President Ron Paul if you want freedom

No comments:

Post a Comment