Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Justified homicide of cop


Dope-dealing Sheriff Doyle prepares to murder US Marshall Raylon Givens

Watch Season 2 finale of JUSTIFED


US Marshalls shoot Sheriff Doyle

Remind me to stay the hell out of Harlan Kentucky.

Actually, Tennessee leads the nation for sheriffs convicted of drug dealing.

"I'll burn your house down, set your dog on fire and there won't be a member of your family left, do you understand me? I won't hire it done, I will do it myself! Do you understand me?"
-Deals Gap Blount County sheriff James Berrong, United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit, Nuchols v. Berrong, No. 04-5645, July 11, 2005


And lest we forget The Sons of Anarchy, where bikers and politicians killin cops is justified, aided and abeted by pot-smokin police chiefs:


Homicidal BATF Agent Stahl gets justified; excellent rendition of The Psychopathic Cop

SoA is written, directed, produced and acted by real-life coke-tokin outlaw biker Keith Sutter, who was writer, actor, director and producer of The Shield, where the hero was a dirty cop, and naked body cavity searches in view of the public on public highways was seen on prime time TV.


Keith Sutter's SoA blogspot



What does a TV show like The Sons of Anarchy do for Bikers and Motorcyclist? by biker lawyer Norman Fernandez

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Google's Terminator drone cars at Deals Gap



Google looking to make driverless drunk driving legal in Nevada

PhysOrg.com

In an unexpected move, Google, the wily search giant with loads of ambition and enough spare cash to enable it to dabble in technologies that appear to have nothing to do with its core business, has hired lobbyist David Goldwater to represent the company in its push to legalize the running of autonomous vehicles on Nevada roads; this comes less than a year after announcing that it had been running live tests of its self-driving vehicles on California roads.

It was just last March that Google announced to the world that it had been racing autonomous cars around on rooftop parking lots and then just seven months later that it had been testing those cars on California roads; news that both made headlines and bolstered Google’s image as one of the more innovative companies operating today. Now comes news that Google is ready to tackle the sticky problem of allowing such cars to drive legally on roads, an issue no doubt that cropped up in the wake of its earlier announcements.

It’s not exactly clear why Google chose Nevada for its first push at legalizing what it’s been doing already; though there are theories, such as the fact that the giant Consumer Electronics Show (CES) just happens to be held in Las Vegas each year, or maybe it’s because Nevada has a history of allowing things that other states don’t; prostitution being the most infamous example, of course. Or it might be the fact that Nevada has a lot of roads that have very little traffic in very out-of-the-way places and thus could test its vehicles on public roads without much oversight.

In any case, it’s clear that Google is very serious about continuing its research with autonomous vehicles and as a part of that is pushing for legislation to create for themselves a hassle free environment for doing so. As a result, there are now two bills currently being introduced to the Nevada legislature related to autonomous vehicles; one would be an amendment to another bill regarding electric vehicles that would create a means of licensing and testing autonomous vehicles on public roads; the other would provide an exemption for such “drivers” from the current law that disallows texting while behind the wheel.

Google claims that computer controlled vehicles are and will be much safer than conventional human driven vehicles because they are able to respond to road conditions more quickly and don’t fall prey to other human foibles, such as drinking and driving, falling asleep, or simply forgetting to pay attention. If Google’s push to legalize such vehicles succeeds, we might just find out over the next few years, if they’re right.





See also:

Killer Robot Planes and Trains Attack USA

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Dragonater Radio Show on TV



Pirate News Radio Show broadcast in April 2011, broadcast on Pirate News TN in May 2011.

Discussion of the court case that proved the speed limit on the Dragon is 65 MPH, not the illegally posted 30 MPH. Case dismissed without a single word of testimony in court. This same legal defense can be used to win almost all traffic ticket cases.

The Tennessee Attorney General is putting tremendous pressure on The Dragonater's defense attorney in the Blount County Public Defenders Office, to pressure The Dragonater to censor THE LAW and THE LAWYER'S NAME from this blog.

Perhaps the TAG should just pay The Dragonater the $450 the Loser owes for court costs, instead of scaring the PDs office... Then the TAG can indict the Blount County court clerks for refusing to issue subpoenas, and indict Trooper Randall Huckeby for his high crimes and misdemeanors.

Pirate News TV
Friday nights at 1am (Sat)
Knox County TN
Charter Channel 6
Knology Channel 6
Comcast Channel 12
ATT U-verse Channel 99

WBCR 1470 am
2nd Tuesdays at 5pm
Blount County TN
http://piratenews.org
http://piratenews-tv.blogspot.com
http://dragonaters.blogspot.com
http://myspace.com/piratenewsctv
http://myspace.com/countercoup
http://ctvknox.org
http://truthradio.tv

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Yellow submarine at Deals Gap


One of them damn sportbikers musta run him off the US129

Went up there this evening, met Myk at the overlook. On the way home, it was already night and just after tabcat running along the lake, there was some dude just standing in the middle of the northbound lane. Didn't move when we came through, just stood right in the middle of our lane. We had to swerve to miss him. It was weird. I didn't see any cars or bikes around, just the dude standing in the road.

That was the ghost of Hogpen Pete. He shows up every year on Mother's Day, waiting for someone to give him a lift. If you would have stopped, he would have ripped the skin right off your skull. Or it may have been some dude.

It was Josh, and there's a reason you didn't see his Bimmer, he desperately needed help. Thanks for stopping, DOUCHES!

It didn't look like distress. It just looked like someone walking down the middle of the road. No waving arms, no movements of 'help', just someone out for a stroll in the middle of the road. It did not look, in any way, like distress... I'm sorry for not stopping but hey, I'm not armed, there was no vehicle anywhere around there, etc. Trip was a good distance ahead of me and I am not sure I have met Battle Cattle to know if it was him or not. I will admit my mind was a bit gone from being out on the bike all day. Maybe I should have stopped, but maybe's don't change that I didn't.

I can understand somewhat, after "helping" a car thief in the process of stealing a car one winter. (unknowingly of course) Josh was pretty much in shock though, which is why he didn't use the universal sign for help.

I didn't even expect a response back already. I was just thinking "I know I was brain dead, I know I was following another rider... but how many times have I looked over the side and been the first to find a wreck? how many times have I heard or read about someone going off the road and not being found?" I can not say why I didn't stop other than just being so brain dead and literally following the red taillight in front of me.

All I can say is that I KNOW better than NOT to stop on that road, especially after dark. I'm usually a lot more cautious if I don't know the person but damnit I know better.

I guess I can say it here as long as it doesn't reach facebook before I call my dad in the am. I ended up getting forced off the road near tabcat while passing a car in my BMW car. Needless to say I ended up going off the road and down into the water. Talk about scary water flooding your car and up over our face in about.... What felt like seconds. I ended up going out my open drivers window swimming to the bank and crawling up to the road to find..... Nothing. No car, no person, nothing, just me on the side of the road soaking wet. I flagged a truck down by yelling something along the lines of help. They stopped and made sure I was ok and I agreed to stay there and they would call 911. After that I was really in shock I kept standing in the road, even after the cops and firetruck showed up they were always telling me to stay out of the road. I am just glad I am ok, a little shaken up about the water but otherwise doing fine...

Forgot to mention you can't swim.


Killboy swimmin wit da fishes


Harley Davidson unveils SuperMaxBoatGlide at Deals Gap

Murdered biker and cops severed head ends in Mexican Mafia Massacre

Indian Motorcycles
Widow Tiffany at David Hartley's funeral. 13 MS13 gangbangers massacred by Mexican police on Falcon Lake in Texas

Local Texas sheriffs and ACLU issued a joint statement, "this mass shooting of drug dealers by Mexican police in Texas will have a chilling effect upon American law enforcement tasked with delivering narcotics for the Obama White House, or upon their own initiative."


Severed head of officer hunting for U.S. man lost to Mexican pirates on Falcon Lake is 'delivered to military in suitcase'

The lead Mexican investigator hunting for an American man who disappeared after he and his wife were ambushed on Falcon Lake has been beheaded, a Texas lawmaker claimed today.

The severed head of Rolando Armando Flores Villegas was delivered to the Mexican military in a suitcase, Aaron Pena said today.

Flores was leading the Mexican side of the investigation into the disappearance of David Hartley.

His wife Tiffany has told police she and her husband were ambushed by pirates while jet-skiing on the popular lake on September 30.

They shot her husband in the head, she claimed. She tried to rescue him but was forced to abandon his body when the pirates opened fire at her.
His body still has not been found.

Flores was working on the investigation with a team of officers on Monday, Lesley Lopez, the press secretary for U.S. Representative Henry Cuellar of Texas told CNN.

The investigators had an informal meeting last night, she said, before going home for the evening.

But this morning Flores' wife apparently arrived at the station in desperation. She said her husband had not arrived home last night and asked if officers there had heard from him.

'Shortly after,' Lopez said, 'they found his head in the suitcase'.
The suitcase had been left in front of the military base in Miguel Aleman, Mexico - across the border from Roma, Texas, and near Falcon Lake, she said.

Details were fuzzy, she said, because shaken Mexican authorities were not answering their phones.

David Hartley's father Dennis expressed his shock and regret at the killing.

'I just, I'm in shock about this right now,' he told the Associated Press. 'I really don't have any hope that David will be found. 'I really hate other people putting their lives at stake,' he added from his Colorado home. 'We don't need more sons lost. If this is true, I'm just really heart-broken that this happened.'

Tamaulipas state prosecutor's office spokesman Ruben Rios confirmed that Flores, the head of state investigators in the border city of Ciudad Miguel Aleman, was killed.
Rios did not say how Flores was killed.

But he claimed his slaying was unrelated to the investigation into David Hartley.
However, U.S. authorities say threats from drug gangs who control much of the area have hampered the search for Hartley's body.

Flores' death came a day after authorities in the attorney general's office gave confusing information out over suspects in the Hartley case.

Initial reports claimed that police were investigating two brothers who were 'well known to the area'.

But a spokesman for the attorney general said they had nothing official on the suspects.

Yesterday Mrs Hartley and her mother-in-law, Pam Hartley, appeared on television talk shows begging for help.

'Until we have him back, it's not final,' Mrs Hartley said on NBC's The Today Show.










13 killed in clash on Mexico-U.S. border lake

Twelve suspected members of the Zetas drug gang and a member of Mexico's Navy were killed in a shootout on an island in a lake that straddles the U.S.-Mexico border, authorities said Monday.

The Mexican Navy said the shootout occurred Sunday on Falcon Lake, located between Texas and the Mexican state of Tamaulipas, after troops patrolling the area spotted a camping area on an island.

The suspected drug traffickers used the island for storing marijuana to be transported by boat to the United States, the Navy said in a statement.

After the shootout, the Navy said it seized guns, ammunition and bullet-proof vests from the island.

Falcon Lake drew the attention of law enforcement authorities on both side of the border last September after an American man on a personal watercraft was reportedly ambushed by attackers and shot in the head.

2010: 'He took a bullet for me,' Falcon Lake victim's wife says.

Tiffany Hartley told police that she and her husband were riding water scooters on the lake on September 30 when they were attacked.

Her husband's body has not been found, and the case has remained unsolved.

"It didn't happen in the United States," said Zapata County, Texas, Sheriff Sigifredo Gonzalez.

Suspects in Falcon Lake killing identified.

And Mexican authorities, he told CNN last month, have "somewhat of a zero solvency rate, and a zero conviction rate."

"So unfortunately, this case may remain open forever, even though the information and the evidence may be there," according to Gonzalez.





Mexican cops lose their heads

Severed heads of 6 police found in Mexican plaza

Four Severed Heads Sent to Mexican Police Station in Drug-Related Violence

Police find eight severed heads in northern Mexico

Texas House restricts Sanctuary Cities aiding and abetting illegal alien criminals

Arizona Commie Libtards seek seccession from USA to form Atzlan Mecha Mexican Sactuary for illegal alien hoards with TB

KeepAZSafe.com - Donate to the official Arizona Govt website to build the border fence the Fed Govt refuses to do

38 redlight scamera execs and govt officials on trial for bribery and fraud



Italy: Prosecution Advances in Red Light Camera Fraud Scandal

Thirty-eight public officials and corporate officers face charges in Italian red light camera scandal.

The investigation into the fraudulent use of red light cameras in Italy last week concluded with prosecutors preparing charges against thirty-eight public officials and photo enforcement company executives. Prosecutors claim that three photo enforcement companies formed a cartel that operated in collusion with public officials for the purpose of generating revenue. The officials accepted bribes in return for approving lucrative contracts and shortening the duration of yellow lights at intersections equipped with red light cameras.

Last month, Milan prosecutor Alfredo Robledo last month ordered the last raid in the case’s investigatory phase. The Guardia di Finanza, a law enforcement arm of the Ministry of Economy and Finance, searched the home of Unione Terre police commander Claudio Malavasi and the home of Andrea Lamoretti, CEO of the technology firm ASCAA Spa. Lamoretti and Raul Cairoli, head of the firm Ci.Ti.Esse, met Malavasi secretly to hand over GPS devices, cell phones, watches and envelopes stuffed with thousands of euros in cash. Malavasi has since been suspended from his official duties.

The town of Segrate, near Milan, has also been at the center of the investigation, with prosecutors receiving complaints from motorists as early as 2006 about abusive practices. Mayor Adriano Alessandrini is now accused of shortening the duration of yellow lights to boost the profits of the red light camera program. The move paid off, with 2,425,801.60 euros (US $3,206,078.01) in revenue generated from motorists who did not have adequate time to stop, according to prosecution documents. The yellow in this case was set at 4.0 seconds with a “grace period” set to the bare minimum of 0.1 seconds — settings that are extremely common in the US.

Fresagrandinaria Mayor Giovanni Di Stefano, 50, is accused of renting photo enforcement equipment from the firm Euro Service Srl, even though the city already maintained its own automated ticketing machines. Di Stefano’s son, Nicola, 34, is the co-owner of Euro Service. Prosecutors also accused the mayor of embezzlement after he gave his son a pair of city-owned computers to use for the preparation of traffic ticket reports. The son issued tickets from his own home using the city’s password to the motor vehicle registration database, in violation of laws restricting such access to law enforcement personnel.

The consumer watchdog group ADOC has announced it will launch a class action civil lawsuit against the thirty-five municipalities involved in the scandal.

“T-Red cameras are often used in a non-transparent way, inconsistent with their purpose,” ADOC President Carlo Pileri said in a statement. “In many cases, photo ticketing has been adopted as a way of imposing new, and sometimes absurd, local taxes, solely to swell the municipal coffers.”

In Knoxville TN, cops just shoot the redlight scameras. Seems cops don't appreciate robots muscling in on their turf. Australian Redflex was fired for suspected bribery and contract fraud during the trial of Clifford Clark for allegedly shooting a redlight scamera. All charges were eventually dismissed against Mr. Clark, after a Knox County deputy confessed to the crime.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

$2-million Bug on the Dragon


photo by TOTD?

DEALS GAP, N.C. - Two 30 MPH V-16 Bugatti Veyrons at the Tail of the Dragon. These 1000 HP touring cars with top speeds of 250 MPH plus are the most overpriced modern cars in the world at over $2,000,000, each.

The driver of the Super Sport is the CEO of Bugatti, one of the others is the pro race car driver, The Stig, who's not quite as fast as The Dragonater, who was often faster than The Stig's fav Ferarri F1 driver Reubens Barrachello. The Stig has been described by Top Gear's Clarkson as having a very small spotted dick, worthless opinions, and a disorder called Mansell Syndrome. The RAC once mailed Mansell's F1 Superlicense to The Dragonater, having "mistaken" The Dragonater's superior driving skill while racing against World Champs and Indy 500 winners in UK. It's a small world, after all.

Spy photos of The Stig at Deals Gap - Profile 1 - Profile 2

The 30 MPH Million Dollar Ferrari belongs to "restauranteur" Alan Jones of Cleveland TN (not the Ozzy F1 driver).








The Dragonater Flat Out and Flat Broke in the British Empire

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Police gang signs



L.A. County Sheriff's Department fosters 'gang-like activity' among jail deputies, cops' suit alleges

By Robert Faturechi and Andrew Blankstein
Los Angeles Times
May 5, 2011

Video: Gang Behind the Badge

COP.
2. to steal; filch. 3. to buy (narcotics). 4. cop out, a. to avoid one's responsibility, the fulfillment of a promise, etc.; renege; back out. 5. cop a plea, a. to plead guilty or confess in return for receiving a lighter sentence. b. to plead guilty to a lesser charge; plea-bargain.
-Random House Unabridged Dictionary


Two Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies who were allegedly attacked by other deputies at a Christmas party last year have accused the department of encouraging an atmosphere of lawlessness and violence among its jail employees, according to a lawsuit filed Wednesday.

The allegations stem from an altercation at a Montebello banquet hall last December when about half a dozen deputies allegedly assaulted two others and punched a female deputy who tried to intervene in the face. The deputies who were described as the aggressors worked on the third floor of Men's Central Jail, where they were believed to have formed an aggressive clique known to flash gang-like hand signs.

In March, the department moved to fire six deputies in what was called one of the largest terminations in connection with a single incident in Sheriff's Department history. Prosecutors are still considering whether to file criminal charges.

According to an attorney for the two deputies, the exchange began when Deputy Chris Vasquez, who was outside the banquet hall smoking a cigarette, told a deputy from the third floor that employees there were too slow in moving inmates down to the jail's visiting area and said they should work faster.

Authorities have characterized that comment as a taunt, but attorney Greg Yates, who represents the two deputies, described it as a friendly suggestion.

A short time later, Vasquez was waved over by the other deputy and his colleagues. When Vasquez approached, one told him, "Hey, tell the rest of these guys what you told me," according to Yates' account of the incident.

"You know you disrespected us by talking like that," replied another in the group, Yates said.

At that point, one of Vasquez's friends, Deputy Elizario Perez, approached and tried to pull Vasquez away, Yates said. But within moments Perez was pulled around and assaulted while Vasquez was jumped by the rest of the group, the attorney said.

"This was not mutual combat, this was not one-on-one," Yates said. "This was a beat down."

The two deputies are alleging the Sheriff's Department fosters "gang-like activity" among its jail deputies that has led to violence between inmates, against inmates and, in this case, against fellow deputies. The allegations come amid other recent accusations of brutality inside county jails. Last February, an ACLU representative spurred an internal criminal investigation after she said she saw two deputies, unaware of her presence, beating an unconscious inmate for at least two minutes.

Public records obtained by The Times show that deputies assigned to the third floor of Men's Central Jail, where the gang-like clique is believed to have been formed, had a higher number of use-of-force incidents against inmates during a recent four-year period than those assigned to any other floor at the downtown L.A. facility.

In response to allegations that a gang-like clique had formed inside its jails, department officials say they have implemented regular staff rotations that might prevent deputies from forming such groups.

The lawsuit filed in federal court alleges the department is "grossly inadequate" in "disciplining and controlling … deputies, particularly with respect to illegal acts and acts of excessive force."

Gregory Smith, who is also representing the injured deputies, blamed sloppy hiring, saying the department needed to improve background checks so deputies "don't adopt the culture of the inmates they are charged by the public to guard."

Sheriff's officials have refused to name the deputies involved. The lawsuit identifies seven deputies: Alfonso Andrade, Hernan Delgado, Joseph Gonzalez, Juan Navarro, Jeffrey Rivera, Mauricio Rodriguez and Jason Snyder. The deputies could not be reached for comment.

Sheriff's officials would not confirm whether those names include the six whom the department has moved to fire. Attorney Richard A. Shinee, whose firm is representing the deputies on behalf of the deputies union, has said the men plan to fight the department's efforts to fire them.

Yates said his clients have lasting injuries, including back problems and deteriorated vision. One suffered a concussion, he said.

Sheriff's spokesman Steve Whitmore denied the allegations that the Sheriff's Department fosters "lawlessness" among jail employees, saying the department has taken swift action in response to the incident. "The whole story will be told, and we look forward to the opportunity to tell it."





KPD gang tag at crime scene of The Dragonater's car theft

Knoxville Police Department gang tags in Tennessee PROVE KPD stole The Dragonater's two cars from private parking downtown, resulting in three class action lawsuits in three courts against KPD's cartheft rackets, and the firing of over 100 KPD towing contractors. But nobody was ever arrested nor prosecuted nor convicted. The Dragonater never got his cars back...something to do with his lawyer getting two guns put to his head and told They would "blow his brains out if he didn't do what he was told". The lawyer "voluntarily" dimissed his "slam dunk" lawsuits one month later. The "mugging" was never "solved" by KPD.

But The Dragonater did win dismissal of the KPD "reckless driving" ticket for safely riding at 50 mph in a 55 zone on I40. The KPD cop's personnel file proved he crashed his patrol car into innocent bystanders 4 times in 5 years. Now he's a Knox County commissioner.


KPD gang tag mocking The Dragonater's bike helmet


KPD gang tag at crime scene of The Dragonater's car theft