Saturday, March 3, 2012

Serial killer cop not arrested in Knox County TN



I want to know if he was also assigned to Blount County, since there have been a LOT of unexplained biker deaths on the Dragon lately... Hundreds if not 1,000s of Trooper Morgan's cases will be dismissed for failure to prosecute, but like the Barbie Cummings blowjob case, defendants must appear in court and agree in writing to dismissal or the charges will result in automatic conviction.

"It looked like a parked car to me. I knew he was dead. I got out and got a fire extinguisher just to make it look good. You gotta do that for the media and everybody else, but I knew he was dead. I was just trying to put on a show."
-Charles Van Morgan, fired Tennessee Highway Patrol trooper, November 2011

Investigators asked District Attorney General Randy Nichols to review the case. 'I find it incredible to believe that Trooper Morgan did not see the wrecked car as he passed it,' Nichols wrote. 'It is also telling that as soon as he could after returning and seeing the vehicle in flames, he makes attempts to contact the Police Benevolent Association. However, as egregious as it is that he failed to stop and render aide, we cannot find a criminal statute that makes his conduct a crime.'"
-WBIR TV, Suspended trooper's personnel file released, Press Release by Randy Nichols PDF

"Tennessee Highway Patrol Colonel Tracy Trott named the agency’s Knoxville District as the 2011 District of the Year at a special awards ceremony held last Thursday in Murfreesboro. This is the first time a District has been recognized for its overall achievements. 'The THP Knoxville District is very deserving of this honor,' Colonel Trott said. 'Their leadership staff is top-notch, and their approach to DUI enforcement and overall traffic safety efforts is among the best in our agency. This marks the start of a new tradition, and I hope that each of our eight districts will challenge themselves to earn the District of the Year award in 2012,' he added. The agency’s Knoxville District arrested 761 impaired drivers in 2011, a 51.6 percent increase over the number (502) arrested in 2010."
-TN.gov Newsroom, THP Announces the District of the Year 2011, Feb 21, 2012

TOP 10 TROOPERS HONORED FOR DUI ENFORCEMENT:
1. Trooper Charles Morgan, Knoxville District – 117 arrests
-TN.gov Newsroom, THP Announces Trooper of the Year 2010, Feb 18, 2011

"While Morgan had a reputation for making large amounts of DUI arrests, Knox County prosecutors say Morgan had a growing reputation for making arrests that could not result in convictions. 'He had an inordinate amount of cases that could not have been successfully prosecuted,' said John Gill, special counsel to the Knox County Attorney General. 'There were a large amount of problems with Morgan's cases that made them impossible for us to get a conviction, long before any of this [the Anito crash and Morgan's termination] happened.'
WBIR TV, Terminated THP trooper Charles Morgan's dropped DUI arrests disturb MADD, Feb 20, 2012

"Strictly speaking, a driver can register a BAC of 0.00% and still be convicted of a DUI. The level of BAC does not clear a driver when it is below the 'presumed level of intoxication.'"
Tennessee Driver Handbook and Driver License Study Guide



Police State death squad member sued, fired, not arrested nor charged with murder of a Pellissippi State college student in Knox County. This was Trooper Morgan's second murder of a motorist in Knox County during a "routine traffic stop" for "speeding". The modus operandi for this serial killer is to watch his victims die in a burning or crashed vehicle, then block medical rescue. One hundred DUI cases dismissed against Trooper Morgan's victims in traffic court.

Note that THP troopers routinely testilie about measuring speed by radar, when in fact they never turn it on (as proven by The Dragonater in Blount County court), to defeat radar detectors and fear of cancer. Only state troopers are allowed by the courts to make traffic stops without probable cause, to check TN driver license internal passports.

If you're gonna run from the cops instead of beat their ass in court, then have a modified high-performance suspension, a high-hosepower engine, and GO TO A PROFESSIONAL PERFORMANCE DRIVING/RIDING SCHOOL. Remember, it's awfully hard to outrun a radio at 186,000 miles per second. Know your escape route and park it in a locked garage, then change vehicles. Or so I've been told. Most people run from cops because they cannot afford a $100 traffic ticket, not because they are career felons.

WBIR TV video: THP Trooper Charles Van Morgan called an attorney minutes after Kyle Anito crashed and died

WBIR TV video: Parents of crash victim sue highway patrol

Fired serial-killing trooper's personnel file released as PDF - 14 internal affairs complaints before his latest murder

Read the $10-million civil lawsuit complaint PDF - Good boilerplate for drafting a complaint against Tennessee Highway Patrol. Beware 1 year statute of limitations, and TN Governmental Tort Liability Act requirement to first file an insurance claim before filing a lawsuit. TXT file

The Police Officer As Psychopath




Did this serial killer attack you on the Dragon at Deals Gap?

Video: Prosecutors drop criminal cases involving fired trooper

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Knox County prosecutors were forced to dismiss cases against 95 people for crimes ranging from felonies to misdemeanors after the state fired a former Tennessee Highway Patrol trooper for failing to stop at a fiery crash.

Prosecutors on Friday dropped the charges in all cases handled by Charles Van Morgan, The Knoxville News Sentinel reported.

About half of the defendants appeared to be first time offenders, but others were on their second and third drunken driving arrests. The cases don't include minor traffic tickets, which still have to be sorted out and dropped as well, prosecutors said.

Morgan was fired this month after investigators found he drove by a fiery car wreck in November that killed a man in Knox County.

The family of a man who was killed in a car crash is suing the Tennessee state trooper who was pursuing the victim before his death.



Family of man who died in crash sues trooper

On behalf of Pryor, Flynn, Priest & Harber posted in fatal motor vehicle accidents on Monday, February 6, 2012

In a bizarre accident in Tennessee last year, a man crashed into a tree after a chase with a Tennessee Highway Patrol trooper. The man died in the auto accident, and now his family is saying the trooper drove right by the man's vehicle without checking on his condition for at least several minutes. The family is suing the THP trooper for $10 million.

The incident happened last November. The man was apparently traveling at about 80 mph in a 40 mph zone and was being pursued by the officer. Volunteer TV's website reports that the trooper's "dash cam" video shows the ensuing events.

The chase didn't last long and ended when the man crashed into the tree. The man's family claims the video shows the trooper driving past the man's car, where he was injured inside. After that he apparently pulled over farther up the road and waited for several minutes while listening to dispatchers.

When the trooper returned to the man's car, it was on fire. Volunteer TV's story says that the man ran toward the vehicle with a fire extinguisher "just to make it look good" for the media. The autopsy apparently revealed the man died instantly in the crash, but the man's family might argue there was no way the officer could have known that.

No criminal charges were filed relating to the crash. The trooper, however, has faced several unrelated disciplinary actions since joining the THP in 2002.



WBIR TV video: THP Trooper Charles Van Morgan called an attorney minutes after Kyle Anito crashed and died

An interview conducted with Trooper Charles Van Morgan shows investigators were concerned with a phone call he placed minutes after he was involved in a high speed pursuit that ended with the death of a Halls man.

Morgan was trying to stop 20-year-old Kyle Anito for speeding on November 26, 2011. Anito crashed into a tree on Andersonville Pike.

Morgan is the subject of a $10 million lawsuit Anito's parents filed in connection to Morgan's actions that night.

Video recorded on his dashboard mounted camera shows he drove past the crash, waited several minutes, then returned to find Anito's car engulfed in flames.

After discharging a fire extinguisher on the car, Morgan called his wife and asked for a number for the Police Benevolent Association. He then called and spoke to an attorney.

Morgan initially said he did not see the wreck, then later changed his story and said he thought it was a parked car. Morgan also said in a recorded conversation he got out the fire extinguisher to "put on a show".

Those actions, along with the phone call to the attorney, raised numerous questions with members of THP's Internal Investigations unit.

Transcripts of an interview of Morgan conducted December 14, 2011 were provided to 10 News this week, along with his personnel file. During the nearly two hour interview, Morgan was asked numerous times about his reason for contacting an attorney.

"Your actions from the time you clocked the vehicle till the time it crashed, they're, they're fine. You did everything by the book," said Captain Victor Donoho during the interview. "It's the actions that happened after that that's in question."

Donoho questioned Morgan about contacting the attorney.

"...You knew there was a problem somewhere or you wouldn't of called for an attorney," he said.

"...Anytime I'm involved in an incident where there's a, a fatality, then you know, I try to get ahold of the, the PBA," Morgan replied.

However he did not contact the PBA following a previous chase that ended in a fatality.

On March 13, 2010, Morgan attempted to stop 22 year old April Keck for driving the wrong direction on Chapman Highway. A chase ensued, and after several minutes, Morgan lost sight of her car and terminated the pursuit.

Keck was found deceased near her car in a ditch off Chapman highway the following day. A review of the pursuit found Morgan followed THP policy and did not violate any rules or regulations.

When Morgan was informed Keck died, he did not call an attorney.

Investigators used that history to question Morgan's explanation for November 26th phone call.

"Did you request a PBA attorney after that?" Donoho asked, referring to the March 13 chase.

"...I was told that uh, the incident had been investigated and that it was, that it was over, so I had no reason to," Morgan replied.

Later in the interview, Morgan admitted he was concerned about being blamed for Anito's wreck.

"...I knew that that would, that could, if it's construed that I passed up a wreck, that could get me in trouble if it's seen that way," he said.

"You knew that when you called the attorney, didn't you?" Donoho asked.

"Yeah," Morgan answered.

District Attorney General Randy Nichols also questioned Morgan's actions. While Nichols cleared him of criminal responsibility, he called it "egregious" that Morgan failed to stop to help Anito.

"It is also telling that as soon as he could after returning and seeing the vehicle in flames, he makes attempts to contact the Police Benevolent Association," he wrote in a letter to Colonel Tracy Trott with THP.

As a result of the internal investigation, Morgan is recommended for termination. He is scheduled to have a "due process hearing" Thursday morning.



Commissioner upholds dismissal of trooper involved in fatal chase

Charles van Morgan appeared at a due process hearing last week during which he told investigators he did everything he could to save the driver's life.

Feb 14, 2012

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WVLT) -- The decision to terminate the Tennessee Highway Patrol trooper involved in a deadly pursuit has been upheld by the Tennessee Dept. of Safety and Homeland Security (DSHS) Commissioner Bill Gibbons.

An investigation by the Inspectional Services Bureau (ISB) determined Trooper Charles Van Morgan failed to stop and help after the car he was chasing crashed early in the morning in November.

“Trooper Charles Van Morgan's conduct in the early morning hours of November 26, 2011 was a poor representation of the honorable men and women who serve on the Tennessee Highway Patrol," Department of Safety and Homeland Security Commissioner Bill Gibbons said.

Morgan claimed he clocked Kyle Anito going more than 30 miles per hour over the speed limit and tried to pull him over. during the pursuit, Anito's car struck a tree, killing him instantly. When Morgan appeared at a due process hearing last week he told investigators he did everything he could to save the driver's life.

Investigators said in-car video showed Morgan coming upon the wrecked Subaru, slowing down, but not stopping. Morgan continued past the vehicle, stopped the chase and pulled over.

While investigators and department officials did not find fault with the pursuit, ruling it complied with department policy; the department ruled Trooper Morgan's actions afterwards led to his dismissal.

"The Colonel of the Tennessee Highway Patrol and the Deputy Commissioner both went to the scene and drove the same route in similar conditions. Trooper Morgan’s actions after the pursuit resulted in recommending his termination,” said Gibbons

Morgan's dismissal will be effective at the close of business February 20, though he can appeal the department's decision.



Suspended trooper's personnel file released

A newly released personnel file sheds new light on the actions of a Tennessee trooper who was suspended following a fatal crash.

Trooper Charles Van Morgan is subject of a $10 million lawsuit filed by a family who says he failed to do enough to try and save their son's life.

Twenty year old Kyle Anito died on November 26, 2011, after his car ran into a tree on Andersonville Pike. At the time, Morgan was chasing him for speeding.

Dashcam video shows Morgan passed the scene of the crash, waited about five minutes, then returned to the site to see Anito's car engulfed in flames.

Audio recordings and transcripts of interviews conducted following the crash show Morgan gave conflicting accounts of what he saw and when.

"That video camera, it shows stuff that I don't see," Morgan said during a recorded conversation with his superiors.

In a statement given just hours after the wreck, Morgan claims to have missed the call.

"I did not see a wreck," he told Sgt. Joe Walker.

"You did not see a wreck?" Walker asked.

"No," Morgan said.

In an interview conducted a few weeks later, the story changes.

"I thought it was just a parked car, I mean, that's what I thought at the time," he told Sgt. Terrell Johnson with THP's Internal Investigations unit.

Morgan also claimed to be passing the wreck at 80 miles per hour. That claim is disputed by GPS data recorded by the dashcam, which shows him passing at 40 miles per hour before slowing to 21 miles per hour a few seconds later.

The trooper eventually returned to the wreck, and told dispatchers he did everything he could to save Anito's life.

"I tried to put the fire out with my fire extinguisher, I couldn't get it out, couldn't get to it," he said in an audio recording.

Later, in a separate recording, he admitted that was just "a show".

"I knew he was dead. I got out and got a fire extinguisher just to make it look good," Morgan said. "You gotta do that for the media and everybody else, but I knew he was dead. I was just trying to put on a show."

While still at the crash scene, Morgan called his wife and asked for a number to reach an attorney.

Investigators asked District Attorney General Randy Nichols to review the case.

"I find it incredible to believe that Trooper Morgan did not see the wrecked car as he passed it," Nichols wrote. "It is also telling that as soon as he could after returning and seeing the vehicle in flames, he makes attempts to contact the Police Benevolent Association. However, as egregious as it is that he failed to stop and render aide, we cannot find a criminal statute that makes his conduct a crime."

As a result of the internal investigation, Morgan is recommended for termination. He is scheduled to have a "due process hearing" Thursday morning.







Knoxville Videos »In-cruiser video of THP's pursuit of April Keck

1). Tail lights are still visible at 3:20.

2). Van Morgan calls off the pursuit at 3:24.

3). His patrol car comes to a stop at Meridian Baptist Church, which is less than 1,000 feet from the crash site. At 100 mph, she had already crashed by the time he stopped.

4). While parked in front of the church, the suspect's address is radioed to the trooper, who requests for directions, indicating travelling to this address would be his next course of action.

5). Van Morgan begins to accelerate at 6:35, and stops at 7:20 directly across the highway from the billboard in the field just west of Chapman and Longvale...the accident scene. At this point, he is sitting less than 100 feet away from April Keck.

6). At 7:25, Van Morgan says "Is there a wreck?" to a passing motorist who was either driving very slowly or stopped at the scene of the accident. The response from the motorist is incomprehensible (at least to this viewer) but seems rather animated, as if someone trying to describe what they had seen. Van Morgan then asks the motorist if they had witnessed a car passing them at a high rate of speed. A "No" is almost certainly discernable, and Van Morgan continues on at 7:42 headed south. The dashcam footage ends at 7:50, so it is unknown whether he continued travelling southbound, or turned around and headed to Cape Brittany Way in west Knoxville. (It should be noted that none of this information was made public during the coverage it received in the media).

7). KPD subsequently determines in their detailed investigation that there was no way that Van Morgan could have witnessed the accident, and conclude that the fact that he asked a passing motorist if there was an accident within 100 feet of the accident scene was nothing more than a coincidence. They also conclude that any suspicion from the officer that an accident had occured need not be followed up by actually getting out of his cruiser and checking.

Sarcasm aside, The "official" story has stunk from the beginning, and a lot of readers knew it. It cannot be a coincidence that the man asked someone on the other side of the road if an accident had occured RIGHT IN FRONT OF THE ACCIDENT. He may not have seen it, but this video seems to indicate that someone did, and he either dismissed it or ignored it. I just don't understand why he would ask that question, and then not get out of his car and have a look around.

After sleeping on this, I've considered another really big issue with this video. When Van Morgan calls off the pursuit and pulls over (approx. 1000 feet from the accident), and decides out of nowhere to drive again a couple minutes later, he radios in he is going to look for a possible "45 or 46". In Tennessee, the radio codes for 10-45 and 10-46 are as follows:

10-45 WRECK PROPERTY DAMGE
10-46 WRECK PERSONAL INJURY

Here's what bothers me about that. When he called off the pursuit, he could still see her tail lights (well, at least the camera could, God only knows what this man actually can and cannot see apparently). Why would he even suspect she had wrecked less than a quarter of a mile away? Couple that with his action (or lack of action therof) at the accident scene, and compare it to the Anito chase in November, and something is REALLY rotten here.

I doubt THP or KPD even has an ID on the guy driving the car that was at the accident scene, since Van Morgan didn't seem too concerned with him. It's too bad THP daschams have such poor audio...and video, for that matter.

This officer has now chased 2 people to their deaths, that we know of. While it was both drivers who chose to make the fatal mistake to run from him, at some point his track record should put his ability to be on patrol at risk. In this officers case, his inactions, questionable actions, and lack of actions seem to me to warrant his dismissal from the police community, not just THP.





Records: Fatal crash after chase was second involving trooper

As he watched the flames consume the dead driver's car, Trooper Charles Van Morgan thought back to a crash from the year before.

"I was concerned that night because there was a fatality involved," he told Tennessee Highway Patrol investigators. "I know that's gonna be scrutinized."

Gordon Kyle Anito, 20, and April Lawanna Keck, 22, each died after leading Morgan on an early-morning high-speed chase — Anito on Nov. 26 in North Knox County and Keck on March 13, 2010, in South Knoxville.

The THP moved to fire Morgan last month after his cruiser video showed he drove past Anito's wreck on Andersonville Pike and didn't return until the car was in flames. Preliminary autopsy results indicated Anito died on impact, but Morgan didn't know that then.

He'll make the case for keeping his job today at a hearing in Nashville.

Anito's parents have filed a $10 million federal lawsuit in his death.

Morgan's personnel file, provided this week by the THP in response to a News Sentinel public records request, shows he consistently earned high marks from his bosses. He started his career as a University of Tennessee police officer and joined the state Department of Safety in 2002 as a Commercial Vehicle Enforcement officer. He transferred to the THP in January 2004.

The records reveal previous cases when Morgan came under more than cursory scrutiny.

The most attention came after Morgan's chase with Keck in March 2010. Morgan had pulled Keck's Mitsubishi Eclipse over in the parking lot of the Family Dollar on Chapman Highway after she passed driving the wrong way in the rain around 1:30 a.m.

Keck never stepped out of the car. She sped away, and Morgan followed her, heading south on Chapman.

The chase lasted about 90 seconds and covered about three miles. Morgan called off the pursuit when the speed reached 100 mph.

Video from Morgan's cruiser shows he pulled over and later drove down Chapman, looking for a wreck. He drove past the spot in the 6000 block where Keck ran off the road, and her body wasn't found until the next day.

Knoxville police determined Keck's car sailed through a curve, off an embankment and about 200 feet through the air before it hit a billboard post and tumbled to the ground, where it landed on its top. The impact hurled Keck, who didn't wear a seatbelt, out the window and past the sign.

A test placed her blood-alcohol level at nearly .25, about three times the legal limit. Police found no skid marks or other sign she hit the brakes.

The video shows Morgan couldn't have seen that wreck. That didn't stop the trooper from recalling that night when he saw Anito's burning car.

"That's the same thing," Morgan told investigators. "I went to go down the road and look for the wreck and couldn't find it. It's all on video, and unfortunately, you know, the person was found a few days later. I know how it looks (with Anito's crash) but I, I haven't done anything wrong."

Test results on Anito for drugs and alcohol aren't complete yet.

THP officials ruled Morgan followed procedure in both those chases — and in nearly every chase listed in his file. Out of half a dozen chases, Morgan was disciplined once when he served a two-day suspension for shooting at a motorcycle driver who crashed and ran in Jefferson County in 2004.

His only other punishment was a warning given in 2009 when a burglar broke into Morgan's truck and stole his service pistol. Morgan notified his sergeant after calling Knoxville police, but supervisors said he should have called sooner.

Trooper Charles Van Morgan's disciplinary record

* June 20, 2004: Shot at a fleeing suspect; suspended for two days

* Nov. 16, 2008: High-speed chase; no violations found

* May 2, 2009: High-speed chase; no violations found

* June 3, 2009: Accused of harassment; ruled unfounded

* July 24, 2009: High-speed chase; no violations found

* Jan. 23, 2010: High-speed chase; no violations found

* Jan. 23, 2010: Failed to promptly notify supervisor when service pistol stolen; warning given

* March 13, 2010: High-speed chase with April Lawanna Keck; no violations found

* July 14, 2010: High-speed chase; no violations found

* Nov. 27, 2010: High-speed chase; no violations found

* April 23, 2011: Accused of harassment by Knox County Sheriff's Office corrections officer; ruled unfounded

* Nov. 26, 2011: High-speed chase with Gordon Kyle Anito; recommended for dismissal





Police review THP video in South Knoxville fatality probe

March 16, 2010

Knoxville police have reviewed the in-cruiser video of a traffic stop that apparently occurred just minutes before a 22-year-old woman died in a crash along Chapman Highway.

"We received it yesterday," Knoxville Police Department spokesman Darrell DeBusk said this morning.

The video from the cruiser of Tennessee Highway Patrol Trooper Charles Van Morgan was recorded during a 1:30 a.m. Saturday traffic stop on Chapman Highway. On Sunday morning, a passerby alerted authorities of a wreck off Chapman Highway that killed April Lawanna Keck, of Cape Brittany Way in West Knoxville.

Van Morgan stopped Keck's black 2003 Mitsubishi Eclipse because it was traveling south in the northbound lane of Chapman Highway, according to THP spokesman Mike Browning.

DeBusk said police requested the THP video to determine Keck's demeanor during the traffic stop. The video, however, shed little light on that aspect.

Browning said this morning that neither Keck nor the trooper exited their vehicles during the stop in the parking lot of the Family Dollar Store, 4022 Chapman Highway.

"The trooper was preparing to get out when she sped off," Browning said.

The video shows a chase along Chapman Highway that exceeded 100 mph. Browning said Van Morgan opted to terminate the pursuit because of the speed and rain-soaked roadway.

Browning and DeBusk declined to say how long the chase lasted or how far Van Morgan pursued Keck's car before ending the chase.

"It was not long," DeBusk said. The car crashed about three miles from the initial traffic stop.

DeBusk said the video shows "the officer could not have seen the crash."

The investigation into the fatal crash continues with officers interviewing people who last had contact with Keck on the night of the wreck. DeBusk said officers also are awaiting an autopsy report and toxicology results.

The toxicology results, DeBusk said, "will take a few weeks to get back from the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation laboratory."

Keck's mother had reported on Sunday that her daughter was missing.

According to the report, Keck was last spotted leaving Barley's Taproom & Pizzeria in the Old City shortly after midnight Friday.

Her death has left her friends and employer in shock.

Keck worked as a hair stylist at the Modern Salon, 105 Center Park Drive, said owner Kim Troendle. She had been working there about three months.

"She was a very talented hair dresser," said Troendle. "A sweet, very sweet, girl. I'm just so surprised. She had so much talent. … I'm just devastated."

According to the missing person report filed by Gail Davis, Keck's ex-boyfriend had contacted her about retrieving some personal items. Friends saw Keck get into her ex-boyfriend's car early Saturday in the Old City before she went missing, according to records.

Davis, who shared an address with her daughter, could not be reached Monday for comment.

A passing motorist spotted the overturned Mitsubishi at 9:43 a.m. Sunday. The car lay at the foot of an overgrown embankment off the northbound lanes of the highway, said KPD Sgt. Tom Fox, who identified Keck as the driver.

According to Fox, the driver lost control, crossed both northbound lanes and struck the support beams of a billboard along a sharp curve between Deva and Longvale drives.

Keck had been ejected, he said.

"It's very hard to see the car from the road," Fox said.

On Aug. 23, Keck was arrested at the residence of an ex-boyfriend and charged with public intoxication, according to a Knox County General Sessions Court affidavit.

The ex-boyfriend told police that Keck had shown up at his home drunk and that she was beating on his doors, the affidavit states.

Comments

Will this be enough for those insinuating that Tennessee Highway Patrol Trooper Charles Van Morgan bumped her off the road & left?

I bet the tape was doctored to protect the trooper. A full investigation needs to be done.

I'm equally skeptical. A review from the outside in rather than the inside out needs to be conducted somehow. Van Morgan is well known for bending the truth (to put it nicely) on his police reports regularly. I don't believe his account due to lies I've seen this man spin, and internal investigation carries too much bias.

Hmmm accelarate from 0 mph to over 100 mph on a rain slick road, carry on a chase for "a few" minutes then decide to break off the chase but somehow fail to see the wreck that occured "3 miles from the traffic stop". I smell a cover up....

Don't think that wrongful death suits haven't been filed over similar circumstances. Especially misdemeanor things where the argument will be "you should have just gotten the plate and backed off". This can really be effective if a third party winds up injured or dead, i.e. had the cop not chased, the accident wouldn't have occured. Threat of liability is what has led to these procedures barring chase when the conditions do not favor it. Once that cop ends pursuit whatever happens after that is on the suspect. That is the idea anyways, I think it's a catch 22 because if the suspect does wind up killing someone down the line, the argument will be the cops should have apprehended them and not let them go. Either way, cops wind up the bad guys.

On Chapman Highway at 75 mph on wet road i would have broke off the chase for my own safety. Since after running tag no wants or warents. Just my 2 cents.

I do have specific examples of Van Morgan's lying behavior, including watching the man argue with a judge (to everyone's amazement in the courtroom) over a ruling in a DUI case he didn't like. His over-zealous nature has lost some cases that could have been won. I'll give him one thing, he lives and breathes to help convict accused DUI offenders, guilty or not. Not that I need to prove that to you by naming those examples and putting people's names out there. Van Morgan's reputation precedes him and if you don't already know that it's not my job to enlighten you.



Terminated THP trooper Charles Morgan's dropped DUI arrests disturb MADD

WBIR TV
Feb 20, 2012

Tennessee Highway Patrol Trooper Charles Van Morgan's employment officially ended late Monday afternoon. Last week Morgan was notified that his appeal was denied and he would be terminated by THP effective at the end of the business day Monday.

THP cut ties with Morgan after an internal investigation found he slowed down but failed to stop for a fatal crash that killed 20-year-old Kyle Anito on November 26, 2011. Anito's vehicle ran off Andersonville Pike while trying to outrun trooper Morgan. Morgan was attempting to pull Anito over on suspicion of DUI. Morgan returned to the scene five minutes after he initially drove past the fiery wreckage.

The damage to Morgan's credibility has destroyed dozens of DUI cases in Knox County. The Knox County District Attorney General has already dropped 95 cases where Morgan was the arresting officer.

"He was very good at what he did in that he made a lot of DUI arrests," said Julie Strike, coordinator of Mothers Against Drunk Driving in Northeast Tennessee. "I met Trooper Morgan a couple of times because he was given awards for making the most DUI arrests in the state. He was recommended for the award by his captain."

Strike said the dropped cases are disturbing and she fears there will be ramifications for public safety down the road.

"It's just sickening because you have that many people with DUIs that will just get away with it. Especially for the repeat-offenders where there is no punishment," said Strike.

Strike said first-time offenders will avoid more than court.

"Even for people who have drunk driving charges reduced, any first-time offender can usually be required to attend a victim impact panel that MADD organizes. It is a very emotional presentation where they talk to parents and relatives of people killed by drunk drivers, see videos of the victims, and get a real feeling of what can happen when you get behind the wheel under the influence. We feel like that has a big impact and can deter people from driving drunk again."

While Morgan had a reputation for making large amounts of DUI arrests, Knox County prosecutors say Morgan had a growing reputation for making arrests that could not result in convictions.

"He had an inordinate amount of cases that could not have been successfully prosecuted," said John Gill, special counsel to the Knox County Attorney General. "There were a large amount of problems with Morgan's cases that made them impossible for us to get a conviction, long before any of this [the Anito crash and Morgan's termination] happened."

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Secret History of Spring City


Free TN HD Wallpapers, courtesy of The Dragonater.






































Piney Falls State Natural Area - Beware the Rangers in full battle dress...

Copyright John Lee 2012

motorcycle tours, trains, railroad, caboose, boxcar, American, graffiti, waterfall, hiking, tennessee, trail, Honda Civic, Photoshop, antique tutorial, grunge tutorial, lightning brush, macro, photography, shamrock, 4 leaf clover, tornado, storm chasers, Dayton, Scopes Monkey Trial, Planet of the Apes, Charles Darwin,

Monday, February 13, 2012

Obama orders 1,000% increase in quota for arrests of bikers on the Dragon



Are State, Feds Tying Police Grant Money to DUI Arrest Quotas?

Chicago, IL. Feb. 11 – One DUI arrest every 10 hours.

Police call it an “objective.” Or a “guideline.”

Former Will County State’s Attorney Jeff Tomczak calls it a “quota.” And he said the language — found in the fine print of grants funding some suburban police patrols — could undermine drunken-driving cases when they reach a courtroom.

“I haven’t seen anything like this before,” said Tomczak, now a criminal defense attorney.

Local law enforcement officials say Tomczak’s wrong. Under a real quota system, officers get punished when the numbers don’t add up. That’s not the case here, they said, and there must be some way to find out if federal money has been spent wisely.

“There is no quota system in the Will County Sheriff’s Office,” Deputy Chief Ken Kaupas said.

But Tomczak’s not alone. The Governors Highway Safety Association also said the grant language should be changed, but not for fear of a legal challenge.

Executive director Barbara Harsha said the public simply might not like it if officers are told how often to make an arrest, and that could make the job harder for police.

The grants in question are funded federally but distributed by the Illinois Department of Transportation, which wrote the “performance objectives” in the documents to offer some accountability to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

The grants are designed to help police cut down on alcohol-related crashes and curb drivers’ dangerous behaviors.

A Will County IDOT grant from 2009 to 2010 said deputies were expected to write one ticket or warning each hour they were on patrol and make one drunken-driving arrest every 10 hours.

Similar language can be found in grants given to Shorewood and Minooka around the same time.

But Kaupas said his agency didn’t quite meet that mark last year.

He said Will County made three DUI arrests in 157.5 officer hours during alcohol-enforcement details funded by IDOT in May, August and September. To meet the grant’s “performance objectives,” that number should have been more like 15 or 16…

Tomczak said defense attorneys could use the grant to suggest officers are being compelled to make arrests. He’s even made the argument, putting Will County Sgt. Steve Byland on the stand during a DUI case last month to talk about the traffic division Byland leads.

Byland told a judge his department has no quota system, but he said it would have to answer to a grant representative if the numbers fail to add up.

“If he does not make a certain rate per se,” Byland said, “then we would have to explain to him what happened that month.”

Kaupas said IDOT-funded details are always summarized in a report to the agency.

Tomczak’s client eventually was found not guilty. But Harsha said she hasn’t heard of a DUI arrest being thrown out of court for such language.

She did say IDOT should consider asking officers to make a certain number of traffic stops or “interactions” with the public — not arrests. She said most states steer away from the language used by Illinois.

“There’s no rule that says you can’t have an objective that has a certain number of arrests per hour,” Harsha said.

“But it does give the appearance of having a quota.”





Dictator Obama's Secretary of War Vinnie Da Chin Panetta and the Pentagram Joints Chief Of Operation Northwoods testified to Congress yesterday that Obama takes his orders to invade from United Nations and NATO, not Congress.

This is the equivalent ot Caesar crossing the Rubicon with his military to invade Rome under martial law, resulting in civil war, and 5 years later every member of the Roman Senate stabbing Caesar in the back...literally on the Ides Of March (next week...).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius_Caesar
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crossing_the_rubicon



ATICLES OF IMPEACHMENT RESOLUTION 2012


H.CON.RES.107 -- Expressing the sense of Congress that the use of offensive military force by a President without prior and clear authorization of an Act of Congress constitutes an impeachable high... (Introduced in House - IH)

HCON 107 IH

112th CONGRESS

2d Session
H. CON. RES. 107

Expressing the sense of Congress that the use of offensive military force by a President without prior and clear authorization of an Act of Congress constitutes an impeachable high crime and misdemeanor under article II, section 4 of the Constitution.

IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

March 7, 2012

Mr. JONES submitted the following concurrent resolution; which was referred to the Committee on the Judiciary

CONCURRENT RESOLUTION

Expressing the sense of Congress that the use of offensive military force by a President without prior and clear authorization of an Act of Congress constitutes an impeachable high crime and misdemeanor under article II, section 4 of the Constitution.

Whereas the cornerstone of the Republic is honoring Congress's exclusive power to declare war under article I, section 8, clause 11 of the Constitution: Now, therefore, be it

Resolved by the House of Representatives (the Senate concurring), That it is the sense of Congress that, except in response to an actual or imminent attack against the territory of the United States, the use of offensive military force by a President without prior and clear authorization of an Act of Congress violates Congress's exclusive power to declare war under article I, section 8, clause 11 of the Constitution and therefore constitutes an impeachable high crime and misdemeanor under article II, section 4 of the Constitution.



Coup D’etat: Pentagon & Obama Declare Congress Ceremonial

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta’s testimony asserting that the United Nations and NATO have supreme authority over the actions of the United States military, words which effectively declare Congress a ceremonial relic, have prompted Congressman Walter Jones to introduce a resolution that re-affirms such behavior as an “impeachable high crime and misdemeanor” under the Constitution.

During a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing yesterday, Panetta and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey brazenly admitted that their authority comes not from the U.S. Constitution, but that the United States is subservient to and takes its marching orders from the United Nations and NATO, international bodies over which the American people have no democratic influence.

Panetta was asked by Senator Jeff Sessions, “We spend our time worrying about the U.N., the Arab League, NATO and too little time, in my opinion, worrying about the elected representatives of the United States. As you go forward, will you consult with the United States Congress?”

The Defense Secretary responded “You know, our goal would be to seek international permission. And we would come to the Congress and inform you and determine how best to approach this, whether or not we would want to get permission from the Congress.”

Despite Sessions’ repeated efforts to get Panetta to acknowledge that the United States Congress is supreme to the likes of NATO and the UN, Panetta exalted the power of international bodies over the US legislative branch.

“I’m really baffled by the idea that somehow an international assembly provides a legal basis for the United States military to be deployed in combat,” Sessions said. “I don’t believe it’s close to being correct. They provide no legal authority. The only legal authority that’s required to deploy the United States military is of the Congress and the president and the law and the Constitution.”

In an effort to re-affirm the fact that “the use of offensive military force by a President without prior and clear authorization of an Act of Congress constitutes an impeachable high crime and misdemeanor under article II, section 4 of the Constitution,” Republican Congressman Walter Jones has introduced a resolution in the House of Representatives.



Pentagon Launches Desperate Damage Control Over Shocking Panetta Testimony

The Pentagon is engaging in damage control after shocking testimony yesterday by Defense Secretary Leon Panetta at a Senate Armed Services Committee congressional hearing during which it was confirmed that the U.S. government is now completely beholden to international power structures and that the legislative branch is a worthless relic.

During the hearing yesterday Panetta and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey brazenly admitted that their authority comes not from the U.S. Constitution, but that the United States is subservient to and takes its marching orders from the United Nations and NATO, international bodies over which the American people have no democratic influence.

Panetta was asked by Senator Jeff Sessions, “We spend our time worrying about the U.N., the Arab League, NATO and too little time, in my opinion, worrying about the elected representatives of the United States. As you go forward, will you consult with the United States Congress?”

The Defense Secretary responded “You know, our goal would be to seek international permission. And we would come to the Congress and inform you and determine how best to approach this, whether or not we would want to get permission from the Congress.”

Despite Sessions’ repeated efforts to get Panetta to acknowledge that the United States Congress is supreme to the likes of NATO and the UN, Panetta exalted the power of international bodies over the US legislative branch.

“I’m really baffled by the idea that somehow an international assembly provides a legal basis for the United States military to be deployed in combat,” Sessions said. “I don’t believe it’s close to being correct. They provide no legal authority. The only legal authority that’s required to deploy the United States military is of the Congress and the president and the law and the Constitution.”

Panetta’s assertion that he would seek “international permission” before ‘informing’ Congress about the actions of the US military provoked a firestorm of controversy, prompting the Pentagon to engage in damage control by claiming Panetta’s comments were misinterpreted.

“He was re-emphasizing the need for an international mandate. We are not ceding U.S. decision-making authority to some foreign body,” a defense official told CNN.

However, this is not the first time that the authority of international bodies has been framed as being superior to the US Congress and the Constitution.

In June last year, President Obama arrogantly expressed his hostility to the rule of law when he dismissed the need to get congressional authorization to commit the United States to a military intervention in Libya, churlishly dismissing criticism and remarking, “I don’t even have to get to the Constitutional question.”

Obama tried to legitimize his failure to obtain Congressional approval for military involvement by sending a letter to Speaker of the House John Boehner in which he said the military assault was “authorized by the United Nations (U.N.) Security Council.”

Panetta’s testimony that the US looks to obtain “international permission” before it acts, allied with Obama citing the UN as the supreme authority while trashing the power of Congress, prove that the United States has ceded control over its own affairs to unelected international bureaucrats, just as the countries of the European Union have done likewise.



Attorney General Eric Holder, the top “legal” voice of the US regime, argued to Northwestern University law students that the US Constitution is no limit to the regime dictatorially assassinating Americans. This follows regime arguments to seize and “disappear” any person in opposition to regime dictates as “terrorist supporters,” and extracting their confessions with controlled drowning (euphemistically “waterboarding”), found by all US and international courts as torture. The regime’s followers in Congress voted for legislation (2006 Military Commissions Act, 2012 NDAA) that these dictates are consistent with the US Constitution.
http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2012/03/attorney-general-holder-degrades-us-to-fascist-assassination-nation-99-response.html

SCOTUS says cops can't testilie about scamera tickets

unconstitutional demotivational poster
What would the Founding Fathers do?

California Court of Appeal Throws Out Red Light Camera Ticket

TheNewspaper.com
2/13/2012

California Court of Appeal overturns red light camera ticket evidence as hearsay.



Red light cameras are coming under increasing legal fire in the Golden State. On Friday, California's second-highest court published a ruling that struck down red light camera evidence as insufficient to convict a motorist. On June 3, 2009, a camera belonging to the Australian firm Redflex Traffic Systems accused Annette Borzakian of entering the Beverly Hills intersection of Beverly Drive and Wilshire Boulevard 0.28 seconds after the light hand turned red.

Borzakian, a former deputy public defender, decided to fight the citation. During her January 2010 trial, Officer Mike Butkus provided the standard testimony that introduces Redflex evidence in all jurisdictions. Commissioner Carol J. Hallowitz ignored Borzakian's objections, admitted the evidence and found Borzakian guilty, imposing a $435 fine plus a twelve-hour traffic school. Borzakian immediately appealed, citing the US Supreme Court case Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts, which the traffic camera industry has feared since it was decided in 2009.

That case clarified that the Constitution's Confrontation Clause gave defendants the right to question the actual technicians responsible for analyzing forensic evidence. Here, Officer Butkus played no role in the operation or maintenance of the red light camera system. He merely read the sheet of paper that Redflex handed him. Borzakian argued that this made the photo ticketing evidence inadmissible hearsay. The superior court's appellate division insisted Melendez-Diaz did not apply.

"The people have never been required to have Redflex employees such as the custodian of records or the field service technicians present in court in order for the people's exhibits to be admissible," the three-judge appellate panel found. "Officer Butkus is perfectly capable of authenticating the documents and laying the necessary foundation for their admissibility and in the court's opinion had done both in this matter. It was explained to [Borzakian] that she could have filed a discovery motion or issued her own subpoenas, as many motorists do, had she cared to do so."

The three-judge Court of Appeal panel did not agree. Instead, it sided with the Orange County Superior Court's Khaled decision (view case). State law allows the use of red light camera evidence, but it does so only if certain standards are met. Among these is that the prosecution must establish the yellow light duration at the intersection meets the minimum state standards. Here, Officer Butkus concluded the light had been yellow for 3.15 seconds and that this was sufficient.

"Even assuming a 3.15 second interval meets the mandatory minimum yellow light interval as mandated by the legislature, according to Officer Butkus's testimony then, he relied upon text typed across the top of two photos, stating 'Amber: 3.15,'" Justice Fred Woods wrote for the Court of Appeal. "Accordingly, where the evidence was being presented to show the duration of the yellow traffic signal met the minimum interval mandated by the legislature -- measured to the hundredth of a second -- the record does not support the conclusion Officer Butkus was otherwise qualified to state that the representation was accurate."

The three-judge panel did not find credible the argument that the red light camera photographs and maintenance logs were merely routine governmental business records that did not require authentication. The court noted that the records were created by Redflex, not the government.

"Without the proper testimony, the maintenance logs (and therefore the photographs with text typed across the top) were not properly admitted," Justice Woods concluded. "Without these documents, as in Khaled, there is a total lack of evidence to support the Vehicle Code violation in question."

The Court of Appeal reversed Borzakian's conviction in a decision originally handed down on January 26. The three-judge panel on Friday decided that the decision should hold precedential value and ordered it to be published. A copy of the decision is available in a 175k PDF file at the source link below.

Source: California v. Borzakian (Court of Appeal, State of California, 1/26/2012)




All charges dismissed against accused redlight camera shooter in Knoxville TN after a Knox County deputy sheriff confessed to the crime

US Supreme Court Upsets Speed Camera Industry

TheNewspaper.com
7/31/2009

Red light camera makers fear high court Confrontation Clause ruling will create legal challenges.

Red light camera and speed camera manufacturers fear that last month's US Supreme Court ruling in the case Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts could create legal turmoil for the industry. The National Campaign to Stop Red Light Running issued a statement yesterday warning that the ruling has armed motorists with a greater ability to challenge the basis of automated traffic citations. Speed cameras, for example, depend heavily on legal faith in a certificate that claims to confirm the total reliability of a machine's speed reading. In the Melendez-Diaz case, the high court ruled that merely producing such a certificate in court is insufficient. Defendants have the right to cross-examine any individual who claims to have certified evidence.

"Violators often object that they cannot challenge their accuser if it is a camera," Leslie Blakey, executive director of the National Campaign to Stop Red Light Running said. "This new ruling may spur more court cases and lawsuits on the basis of the right to challenge the human elements of the evidentiary chain."

Blakey is principal of the Blakey and Agnew public relations firm that five of the top photo enforcement companies -- Affiliated Computer Services (ACS), CMA Consulting, Gatso of the Netherlands, Lasercraft of the UK and Redflex of Australia -- paid to create the National Campaign to lobby on their behalf. Each of these firms could face a tremendous challenge if their methods are brought into closer scrutiny, although Blakey believes that this constitutional protections may not apply in states where photo tickets have been made "civil" violations.

Justice Antonin Scalia wrote the majority opinion in Melendez-Diaz, a 5-4 case that dealt with a laboratory analysis of drug evidence. The defendant argued that he had a right to question the lab worker who signed a piece of paper that certified the substance he had been carrying was cocaine. The majority agreed that despite the possible hassle involved in confirming each fact at trial, it is essential to the integrity of the court system that questioning of the evidence be allowed.

"The 'certificates' are functionally identical to live, in-court testimony, doing precisely what a witness does on direct examination," Scalia wrote. "Respondent and the dissent may be right that there are other ways -- and in some cases better ways -- to challenge or verify the results of a forensic test. But the Constitution guarantees one way: confrontation. We do not have license to suspend the Confrontation Clause when a preferable trial strategy is available."

Scalia further argued that the ability to confront witnesses is essential to ensuring that the potential for bias or error in scientific testing is uncovered.

"Nor is it evident that what respondent calls 'neutral scientific testing' is as neutral or as reliable as respondent suggests," Scalia wrote. "Forensic evidence is not uniquely immune from the risk of manipulation.... And because forensic scientists often are driven in their work by a need to answer a particular question related to the issues of a particular case, they sometimes face pressure to sacrifice appropriate methodology for the sake of expediency. A forensic analyst responding to a request from a law enforcement official may feel pressure -- or have an incentive -- to alter the evidence in a manner favorable to the prosecution... the prospect of confrontation will deter fraudulent analysis in the first place."

These concerns are especially apt with respect to the photo enforcement industry. In April, for example, lawmakers in France began to raise questions after learning that the private, for-profit company that operates the speed cameras, Sagem, is solely responsible for calibrating the units and certifying their accuracy. The situation is the same in the US, where companies that are in most cases paid on a per-ticket basis, are solely responsible for determining the accuracy of their own machines.

Under the ruling, it becomes the burden of the state or local authority to ensure photo enforcement company employees show up to testify in court. Failure to testify would result in the evidence being excluded and a likely acquittal.

"We're concerned about the potential impact of this ruling on photo enforcement programs across the country," Blakey said. "We don't want to see anything jeopardize the public safety benefit of automated enforcement."

A copy of the supreme court decision is available in a 350k PDF file at the source link below.

Source: Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts (The K-Mart Cocaine Cartel Case, Supreme Court of the United States, 6/25/2009)

Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36 (2004)



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

"Lasercraft is a member of the Public Safety Equipment PSE group of companies. Public Safety Equipment (Intl) Ltd, Registered Office, Yeadon, Leeds, England. Beijing Mag Science & Technology Development Corp, Beijing, China."
http://www.lasercraftinc.com
http://www.pse-intl.com
http://www.maggroup.org

"Redflex Group is based in South Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Redflex Holdings Limited was listed on the Australian Stock Exchange in January 1997. Redflex Traffic Systems Inc has contracts with more then 130 USA cities, and is the largest provider of digital red light and speed enforcement services in North America."
—Redflex.com

$500,000 Redflex invoice paid to National Australia Bank by City of Knoxville Tennessee
http://piratenews.org//redflex-invoice-bank-of-australia.jpg

"You've got all these speed cameras here. In L.A. people would say, 'Why don't you just shoot them out?'"
-Jay Leno, BBC Top Gear (crowd cheers wildly)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y0XtNGuijqc

Secret History of The Dragonater





















So how well would you compete against world royalty, with 1% to 5% of their budget? Would you beat them across the finish line in driving consistency and mechanical reliability? When you got your only set of new tires and deciphered the chassis engineering, would you qualify second in the rain at Donnington Park, before the rain stopped? Would you set yourself on fire from the waist up, twice? Would you volunteer to detonate nukes for controlled demolitions, just to live in England and race?

Ghosts in the Machine
Pirate Hollywood
Pirate News on History Channel
Pirate Mutiny
Pirates of the 9/11


Antique reproduction of the stained glass memorial All Saints church near Snetterton racing circuit

Sunday, February 12, 2012

How to plead in traffic court



Trusting Lawyers Loses Lawsuits!

by Dr. Frederick D. Graves JD, attorney at law

If you're like most people, you don't trust lawyers.

You're smart! I don't either ... and I've been one since 1986!

YOU DARE NOT TRUST LAWYERS!

You MUST go into every lawsuit doubting the honesty of all the lawyers, including your own!
Be on guard against the shady ethics of the lawyer on the other side and, if you can afford one, keep a close watch on your own lawyer, too!

The multitude of lawyer jokes is a clue!

Question: What's 5,000 lawyers at the bottom of the ocean?

Answer: A good start!

There are more lawyer jokes than jokes about all the other professions put together ... so there must be a reason!

Protect yourself !

Court battles are an axe-fight! Knowledge is your axe.

The other side's lawyer is going to play every dirty trick the judge allows. Count on it. Plan ahead for it. Be prepared to PROTECT YOURSELF!

But!

Dare you trust your own lawyer without first learning what it takes to win in court?
Will your lawyer do what must be done to win?

If you cannot pay your lawyer for all the hours needed to get evidence, prepare for hearings, research the law, draft effective motions, etcetera, who is going to get the job done?

Will your lawyer even tell you what could have been done, what should have been done ... once you lose?

What if your lawyer gets up on the wrong side of the bed?

What if your lawyer is afraid to stand up to the judge and threaten appeal by objecting to the judge's rulings? You'd be amazed how many are afraid of judges!

Where does this leave YOU?

Legal malpractice and courtroom corruption are on the rise, yet most people have no idea how to fight back and protect themselves. Most people have no idea what it takes to win ... or how easy it is to learn.

When your own lawyer (if you have one) bails at the last minute when crunch time comes or wimps out when it's necessary to hold the judge accountable to the rules, if YOU don't know what to do, YOU LOSE!

Most disturbing of all, if you lose for these reasons YOU CANNOT APPEAL YOUR LOSS!

The only way to protect yourself is to learn!

Jurisdictionary shows you what needs to be done. You'll know how pleadings and motions should be drafted. You'll know what must be done to force the other side to produce evidence. You'll know the objections that must be made when the opposition tries to trick you with legalese or smoke-and-mirrors tactics. You'll know how to keep the judge in line!

Without the easy-to-learn official Jurisdictionary self-help course, you're at the mercy of the lawyer on the other side, at the mercy of the judge and, if you have a lawyer. you're at the mercy of your very own lawyer!

( From "How to Win in Court" Course )
Click or Call 866-LAW-EASY Toll Free!

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Cops kick diabetic in head, taxslaves get $150,000 tax increase


'Stop resisting, mother fucker!!!!' cops scream while kicking diabetic in head

Sin City cops stop banging hookers, brutally kick motorist suffering from diabetic shock in $158,000 tax increase, Comments 77




BTW the legal limit for blood alcohol is 0.00% for all drivers in every state. The death penalty or life in prison is required for all drivers and passengers, since DUI accidents are classified as first degree murder.