USA’s Military Empire: A Visual Database. Unlike any other nation, the US maintains a massive network of foreign military installations around the world

The United States of America, unlike any other nation, maintains a massive network of foreign military installations around the world. 

How was this created and how is it continued? Some of these physical installations are on land occupied as spoils of war. Most are maintained through collaborations with governments, many of them brutal and oppressive governments benefiting from the bases’ presence. In many cases, human beings were displaced to make room for these military installations, often depriving people of farmland, adding huge amounts of pollution to local water systems and the air, and existing as an unwelcome presence.

To explore this database go [HERE]

Obedient Free Range Slaves Confuse Love for Their Country with Worship of Their Government: John Mellencamp Sparks Outrage By Sitting, Eating Popcorn During National Anthem

From [HERE] American rock legend John Mellencamp sparked a firestorm of criticism on Sunday after he was photographed sitting down and eating popcorn in his seat while the rest of the stadium stood for the National Anthem at the start of the Indianapolis Colts’ home game against the Philadelphia Eagles.

The picture posted to Twitter during the game at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis on Nov. 20 showed the “Ain’t that America?” singer seated and actively eating popcorn while those around him held their hands to their hearts and sang “The Star-Spangled Banner” before kickoff, FOX News reported.

Mellencamp, 71, has openly expressed admiration for former National Football League (NFL) quarterback Colin Kaepernick, who hasn’t been hired to play professional football since he led players in taking a knee on the field during the National Anthem in the 2016-2017 season. [MORE]

Liberal Mass Prosecutors say They Didn't Need a Warrant To Put a Pole Camera Outside a Black Woman's Home that Took Images of House 24 hrs a day/7 days a week/for 8 Mos to Bust for Drugs. ACLU Appeals

From [HERE] Attorneys are asking the U.S. Supreme Court to take up a case involving the use of police surveillance cameras outside a Massachusetts woman's home.

The American Civil Liberties Union and the ACLU of Massachusetts filed a petition with the Supreme Court on Friday, citing the case of Daphne Moore, whose Springfield home was under police surveillance for eight months. Police placed a camera on a utility pole outside her home in 2017 during a federal investigation of a drug trafficking ring. Moore's daughter was charged with drug trafficking in 2017. A year later, Moore, then an assistant clerk magistrate Hampden Superior Court, was charged with money laundering, narcotics conspiracy and lying to federal authorities.

Her attorneys asked that the surveillance not be admitted as evidence because it was obtained without a warrant.

"This technology allows police to secretly watch, record and ultimately analyze the details of our privates lives," said Jessie Rossman, managing attorney at the ACLU of Massachusetts. "As the price of this technology continues to drop and as its usage continues to increase by law enforcement, the need for clarity from the Supreme Court about the kinds of constitutional protections under the Fourth Amendment are becoming increasingly urgent."

Lower court rulings have been split on the question of whether the footage from outside Moore's home constituted a search and required a warrant. Prosecutors argued that it is no different from other surveillance methods and the cameras only record what takes place outside a home, for which there is no expectation of privacy. An appeals court was deadlocked on the case and where to draw the line on surveillance.

Because the courts have been divided, the ACLU petition argues that the Supreme Court should take up this case and ultimately set guidelines about when the long-term use of surveillance cameras — so-called "pole surveillance" — requires a warrant.

"This Court’s intervention is necessary in light of the significant threat to Americans’ Fourth Amendment rights posed by the police practice in question," the petition reads. "And while it is clear that police use of pole cameras is proliferating, the full scope of the problem is impossible to ascertain. People who are surveilled but never charged, or against whom the government chooses not to use evidence derived from
the surveillance, will have neither notice nor recourse."

The petition cites a 2018 Supreme Court ruling that said people have a reasonable expectation of privacy while out in public and the government needs a warrant to track someone's cell phone location data.

Massachusetts' highest court ruled in 2020 that the long term use of pole surveillance by police violates the state constitution. But the court declined to decide the case on Fourth Amendment grounds, saying that the “status of pole camera surveillance ‘remains an open question’” under the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

Racist PA Republicans Impeach Philly DA Larry Krasner b/c He Tried to Help Black People. However, "Authority" [the Cop's Uncontrollable Right to Attack People and Rule Over Them] is Not Reformable

STUPID CONFLICTED REPUBLICANS LOVE THEIR FREEDUMB AND WORSHIP AUTHORITY AT THE SAME TIME (SO LONG AS AUTHORITY IS USED AGAINST BLACKS TO TREAT THEM CRIMINALLY). In reality, the so-called “right” to attack people is evil regardless of whether it is done lawfully by persons having “authority” or done unlawfully by criminals. Acts that would be considered unjust or morally unacceptable when performed by people are just as unjust or morally unacceptable when performed by government agents. The fact that PERSONS WEARING blue costumeS WHO HAVE BEEN granted “authority” to be police BY another, higher, authority makes no difference - you are rationalizing away your own slavery if you believe otherwise. [MORE]

WITH REGARD TO CRIME THAT HAS ZERO EFFECT ON THE LIVES OF RACIST REPUBLICANS LIVING IN THE SUBURBS FAR FROM THE PEOPLE THEY HATE FUNKTIONARY states:

Black-on-Black Crime – a psycho-political euphemism, unwittingly used and abused by African-Americans and deliberately by Caucasians, describing demographic criminal activity in general, as people overwhelmingly commit violent crimes on people who live in closest proximity to them, and the violence mostly occurs by those and on those who are held hostage under chronic and cyclical economically disadvantaged circumstances and environments. Do you ever hear of the slogan “White-on-White” crime? Most violent crimes (at least by number, if not also by percentage of population) take place by Caucasians against Caucasians. Where’s the associated terminology? The pathological criminality within Black neighborhoods is maintained by the ones “keepin’ it real”—that is, real quick to murder people who look like themselves. (See: Gangbanking, Pan-Africanism & Racism) [MORE]

From [HERE] The Pennsylvania House impeached Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner, as Republican legislators pushed to remove the twice-elected prosecutor whose liberal policies they blame for fueling record levels of violent crime in the city.

The Republican-led chamber impeached Mr. Krasner, a Democrat, on Wednesday by a vote of 107-85, largely along party lines, after more than two hours of emotional debate. The next step will be a trial in the GOP-led state Senate. Conviction and removal from office would require a two-thirds majority. It couldn’t be determined when a trial might be held.

State Rep. Martina White (racist suspect in photo top right), a Philadelphia Republican who was the lead sponsor of the impeachment resolution, exhorted members moments before Wednesday’s vote to support Mr. Krasner’s impeachment.

“His dereliction of duty and despicable behavior is unacceptable and cannot be tolerated,” she said. “The legislature has a duty and the only authority to act when a public official refuses to perform their duties and puts the public in danger.”

Mr. Krasner has said House Republicans mischaracterized his record. When GOP members introduced two articles of impeachment last month, he called the move devastating to democracy, adding, “It shows how far toward fascism the Republican party is creeping.” Lawmakers on the House floor Wednesday added five more articles of impeachment.

The impeachment comes a year after Mr. Krasner overwhelmingly won a second four-year term. He said his office vigorously prosecutes the most serious and violent crimes while adhering to the U.S. and Pennsylvania constitutions.

After the vote Wednesday, Mr. Krasner tweeted: “Philadelphians’ votes, and Philadelphia voters, should not be erased. History will harshly judge this anti-democratic authoritarian effort to erase Philly’s votes—votes by Black, brown, and broke people in Philadelphia. And voters will have the last word.” [MORE]

Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg Dismisses 188 Convictions Following NYPD Officer Misconduct Investigation

From [HERE] Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, Jr. Thursday moved to vacate 188 misdemeanor convictions tied to eight New York City Police Department officers. This request represents part of an ongoing review by the DA Office’s Post-Conviction Justice Unit of more than 1,100 cases connected to a list of 22 former NYPD officers. Bragg noted that the dismissals are “an important step forward, but we know there is a lot more work to do, and our investigation remains ongoing.” The names of the officers under investigation were provided to the DA’s Office in 2021 by public defenders and advocacy groups.

Speaking on the decision, Bragg emphasised:

Trust and confidence are essential to achieving public safety. New Yorkers must know that everyone is acting with the utmost integrity in the pursuit of equal justice under the law. Without that belief, our criminal justice system will never be able to deliver real and lasting safety that every community deserves.

The arrests in question occurred between 2001 and 2016, and more than half of the sentences resulted in fines or incarceration. The officers involved were convicted of various crimes including planting drugs, receiving bribes, lying under oath and official misconduct for releasing an 18-year-old woman from custody in exchange for sexual favors.

Hawaii Plaintiffs join Contaminated Drinking Water Lawsuit Against US Government Prompted by Navy Fuels Leaks

From [HERE] As of Thursday, more than 100 people have joined a lawsuit against the US government concerning water contaminated with jet fuel. The plaintiffs seek legal remedy under the Federal Tort Claims Act, which provides for compensation for personal injury, death, or property loss or damage from a negligent or wrongful act of an employee of the federal government.

The suit was originally brought in August by four plaintiffs living in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii at the time of the contamination. The complaint states that the US Navy negligently released jet fuel and other toxic substances into the Navy water line in May 2021 and in November 2021, resulting in the contamination of the drinking water near the World War II-era naval fuel storage facility in Red Hill, Hawaii. The Navy allegedly did not report the issue until December 2, 2021.

Plaintiffs report symptoms including seizures, gastrointestinal disorders, neurological issues, migraines, rashes, burns and thyroid issues, and some have undergone surgeries to ameliorate health issues caused by the ingestion of the jet fuel. The complaint also stated that at least one adult in each affected family had to halt their employment or military service to deal with the illness their families experienced as a result of ingesting the contaminated water.

Approximately 9,715 households were affected by the spill.

Federal Judge Rules Corpse Biden's Fake Federal Student Debt Relief Plan Unconstitutional

From [HERE] On Thursday, November 11, Judge Mark Pittman of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas released a decision that found the Biden-Harris administration’s Federal Student Debt Relief Plan was unconstitutional.

Judge Pittman ruled that because the issue of student loan forgiveness is of great “economic and political significance,” and the Department of Education is required to show that it has clear authorization from Congress for the program. Pittman found that the Department did not prove that it had this authorization. He said: “no one can plausibly deny that [the program] is either one of the largest delegations of legislative power to the executive branch or one of the largest exercises of legislative power without congressional authority in the history of the United States.”

The ruling is the result of a lawsuit filed by the Job Creators Network Foundation, a conservative advocacy group. The group filed the complaint on behalf of borrowers who were ineligible to receive full or partial relief from the program, arguing that the administration violated federal procedures by denying borrowers the ability to provide public comment before the program was launched. The group also asserted that the administration lacked proper legislative authority over the program.

The Biden-Harris administration maintains that the Student Debt Relief Plan can be implemented under the Higher Education Relief Opportunities for Students Act (HERO Act, H.R. 1412), which allows the Secretary of Education to waive federal student loan repayments during national emergencies. The administration, which recently signaled that it will continue the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency (PHE) declaration, contends that COVID-19 qualifies as a national emergency.

Department of Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said that the Department is “disappointed” in the ruling. He added that “we are not standing down,” revealing that the Department of Justice has appealed the decision. The loan forgiveness program, for which 16 million applications have been approved for and over 26 million borrowers have applied to without approval yet, will remain in limbo until the Northern District of Texas decision and other lawsuits are resolved.

The moratorium on student loan repayments will only be valid until January 1, 2022. The Biden-Harris administration said in August that the most recent extension was their final, meaning that borrowers will likely be expected to start paying their loans at the end of this year unless President Biden takes action. While the administration has not provided any signs that their decision to halt the moratorium has changed, given the pause on the loan forgiveness program due to legal challenges and the extension of the COVID-19 PHE declaration, it would not be surprising if the moratorium was again extended in the near future.

Please visit AG Study Guide to read our previous coverage of the Student Debt Relief Program and moratorium developments.

Black Quisling AG Letitia James Using the Buffalo "Massacre" to Seek Gov Control of "Unverified Livestreams" and Punish Those who Show Video Revealing False Flags like the Bloodless Buffalo Shooting

ACCORDING TO FUNKTIONARY:

Quisling – the name for a traitor, coined in April, 1940, meaning one who is content to accept the yoke of the conqueror for the sake of being given office and trinkets, even against the feeling and expression of the conquered people, and moreover, prepared to use the force continuum against his/her own people to impose the conquerors decrees. (See: SNAGs)

From [HERE] According to the government and its dependent media on May 14, 2022, a gunman traveled to Buffalo, New York, and opened fire in a grocery store while broadcasting on the livestreaming platform Twitch. The shooting, which killed ten people and injured three others, outlasted the broadcast — within two minutes, Twitch detected that the video depicted a shooting in progress, cut the feed, and took it down. 

Twitch’s response was not good enough for New York Attorney General Letitia James, who last month released an investigative report examining the role of social media in the shooting and urging changes to federal and state law to rein in livestreaming and video sharing. Unfortunately, many of those policy recommendations — which include a forced “tape delay” for unverified livestreams, civil penalties for “distribution” of footage of “violent criminal content,” and which rely on expansive definitions of “incitement” and “obscenity” — would violate the First Amendment.

Public officials like Attorney General James claim to be seeking ways to reduce the incidence of unspeakably tragic mass shootings in this country. But they must be careful not to sacrifice Americans’ civil liberties in the process. As ACLU President Anthony Romero said in the wake of 9/11, “Pursuing security at the expense of freedom is a dangerous and self-defeating proposition for a democracy.”

In the case of the Attorney General’s recommendations, it is far from clear that the illiberal policies proposed will purchase any security at all. They rest on the deeply unconvincing premise that the law can deter a mass killer from filming their murderous attack when the law is not enough to deter the attack itself.

A slew of unconstitutional proposals

The attorney general’s report makes a series of recommendations that, if enacted, will threaten the First Amendment rights of internet users and platforms. The report recommends: 

  • Criminalizing the creation of videos or images of a homicide by the person committing it, or by others acting “in concert” with the killer.

  • Imposing civil penalties on individuals who distribute or transmit such content and on platforms that fail to take “reasonable steps to prevent unlawful violent criminal content (and solicitation and incitement thereof) from appearing on the platform.”

  • Reforming Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act to remove platforms’ immunity from liability for user-generated content if they fail to take these “reasonable steps.”

  • Defining “reasonable steps” to include restrictions on livestreaming, including broadcast delays and limiting algorithmic promotion for livestreams by users who are unverified, have few followers, or fail to meet other “trust factors.”

The report attempts — and fails — to justify the constitutionality of these restrictions using two primary rationales.

Broadening incitement and obscenity

Broadly speaking, the First Amendment significantly limits the government’s power to regulate, burden, or prohibit speech unless it falls into an unprotected category such as “true threats,” “child pornography,” or “perjury” — content-based restrictions outside of these categories are subject to, and rarely survive, a strict scrutiny analysis. To justify its proposed speech regulations, New York’s report attempts to stretch two of these unprotected categories — “incitement” and “obscenity” — beyond their strict legal definitions. 

Referring to videos of homicide, like that which was live-streamed by the Buffalo shooter, the report claims: “Such videos are an extension of the original criminal act and serve to incite or solicit additional criminal acts. In addition, these videos are obscene on their face.” 

As legal analysis, both of these contentions miss the mark. 

While “incitement” and “obscenity,” properly defined, are not protected by the First Amendment, those exceptions capture a far narrower range of speech than the report suggests. 

Incitement

“Incitement” is shorthand for the category of unprotected speech the Supreme Court described in Brandenburg v. Ohio, which held that speech provoking unlawful activity loses First Amendment protection only if it is “directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action and is likely to incite or produce such action.” Notably, courts, including the Supreme Court in Brandenburg and Hess v. Indiana, have rejected the idea that general advocacy for violence at some unspecified future time falls outside the First Amendment’s protection. 

Nevertheless, the report claims, “Even a short video of a mass shooting can be used to incite others to engage in copycat crimes and serve the criminal goals of the perpetrator.” But even granting that such a video is intended to incite others to commit a copycat mass shooting, it doesn’t meet the imminence requirement of the incitement standard, as it is extremely unlikely anyone would plan and execute a similar crime immediately after witnessing a mass shooting. Generally speaking, these videos and their accompanying manifestos are not intended to lead to immediate action, but to urge others to begin thinking about doing the same. In this sense, the report’s authors may mean “incite” in a colloquial — rather than legal — sense, akin to “inspire.” But inspiring crime doesn’t render speech unprotected.

Our courts were right to set the bar for incitement so high. The First Amendment protects an enormous amount of political advocacy in all political quarters. It is untenable to hold a speaker legally responsible for the criminal actions of others who might have been inspired by the speaker’s words. This unjust rationale has been used to justify the prosecution of organizers of peaceful protests for the actions of a small number of violent participants. (See: NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware, the Chicago Seven, and, for a more recent civil case, Doe v. Mckesson.) 

Nor should speakers face punishment based on a prediction that their public expression will inspire others to commit violent or unlawful acts at some point in the future. A standard based on such a tenuous and speculative connection between speech and action would inevitably invite abuse by those who seek to silence their political opponents. Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s calls for nonviolent resistance prompted accusations that he was inciting violence, leading the FBI, which infamously surveilled King, to call him “the most dangerous Negro of the future in this Nation.” 

Our national political conversation is filled with impassioned speech on polarizing, high-stakes issues like abortion, policing, gun control, immigration, and climate change. Empowering the government to crack down on speech that might inspire someone, somewhere, at some time to commit violence would be calamitous for free expression, and the government would no doubt repurpose that authority to target disfavored views. As writer Kevin Drum put it, “We can’t allow the limits of our political spirit to be routinely dictated by the worst imaginable consequences.” 

Even advocacy that intentionally urges people to break the law merits protection. In Hess, an anti-war protestor was convicted for saying, “We’ll take the fucking street later,” before the Supreme Court overturned his conviction because his speech “amounted to nothing more than advocacy of illegal action at some indefinite future time.” Encouragement of civil disobedience has had a central role in the evolution of the First Amendment jurisprudence — the incitement standard in Brandenburg replaced the looser “clear and present danger” test announced in Schenck v. United States, a case that upheld a conviction under the Espionage Act for encouraging men to dodge the World War I draft.

Various political philosophies advocate lawbreaking to institute new political systems, including communism, various schools of anarchism, and strains of monarchism. In fact, our First Amendment was written and ratified by men who advocated for overturning a standing government — and did so. Proscribing the general advocacy of lawbreaking would be untenable, ahistorical, and arguably un-American. 

As the Supreme Court has recognized, speech “may indeed best serve its high purpose when it induces a condition of unrest, creates dissatisfaction with conditions as they are, or even stirs people to anger.” Of course, people are free to criticize inflammatory or revolutionary rhetoric and its potential consequences, but the First Amendment properly restrains the government from extinguishing speech it considers too fiery.

Obscenity

The report’s claim that images or video of a homicide are “obscene on their face” is similarly unsupported by legal precedent. As a threshold matter, the Supreme Court in Miller v. California made clear that for something to be legally obscene, it must be sexual in nature. 

Graphic violence is not what the obscenity exception contemplates. As the Supreme Court bluntly put it in striking down a law barring the sale of certain violent video games to minors, “speech about violence is not obscene.”

None of the attorney general’s proposed restrictions on the creation or dissemination of images and videos can be justified under the incitement or obscenity exceptions to the First Amendment. And, as described below, such restrictions will have the unfortunate effect of restricting significant amounts of valuable speech.

From questionably constitutional to blatantly unconstitutional

The report recommends establishing a criminal penalty to punish the creation of videos or images of a homicide by the person committing it, or by others acting “in concert” with the killer. (Notably, the report recommends that those drafting the law be careful not to penalize bystanders or police with body cameras.)

First and foremost, this penalty seems extraordinarily unlikely to deter a killer from filming or photographing a murder and trying to disseminate it. If the law against murder won’t deter the killer from killing, why would a law deter them from filming that murder, especially when they often don’t plan on surviving their crime? Legally, it’s at-best unclear whether the government can impose criminal liability for a perpetrator’s act of filming his crime, as distinct from their commission of the crime itself. The act of filming a crime is generally a protected exercise of First Amendment rights, and the report’s authors do not provide a persuasive justification for why it would be constitutional to prohibit filming in this circumstance.

The report shifts from recommending questionably constitutional speech-related penalties for the shooter to certainly unconstitutional civil penalties on people who simply share a video of a homicide. Neither the person who shares the video nor the online platform that carries it can be liable for those acts. Again, speech does not lose First Amendment protection merely because it depicts violence. 

Troublingly, the report’s authors apparently fail to see or care about why someone might share such images besides trying to glorify a killer or encourage violence. Some of these other purposes are squarely in the public interest — for example, to highlight police or policy failures during the shooting, to engage in the academic study of violence or murder, or to train police and members of the public in how to respond to such situations. 

Images of violence and death have carried profound social and political significance: Think of the video of George Floyd’s murder, the Zapruder film, video of the 9/11 attacks, the photo of Emmett Till’s dead body, Kim Phuc Phan Thi (“Napalm Girl”), and various photos and videos of war crimes. These images shock the conscience and may invoke feelings of sympathy or disgust that can be extremely powerful tools when advocating for political changes intended to stop such acts in the future. And that holds true whether the image was captured by the perpetrator or a bystander.

The report’s authors, in arguing those uninvolved in the underlying crime should face legal penalties for video distribution, rely on court decisions involving child sexual abuse material:

The distribution of CSAM material has been upheld as speech integral to illegal conduct — without a market for CSAM material, there would be no motivation to create such material.

But the operative logic of child pornography jurisprudence falls apart when you substitute one situation for the other:

The distribution of [videos of murder] has been upheld as speech integral to illegal conduct — without a market for [videos of murder], there would be no motivation to [make videos of murder].

There is no evidence that prohibiting distribution of videos of murder would deter those who make the videos — who, again, may not plan to survive — from murdering in the first place. Nor is there any reason to think they would be deterred from filming the crime should they possess the knowledge that it will be illegal for others to share. Mass murderers are not known for their regard for others’ well-being. 

As UCLA Law professor and First Amendment scholar Eugene Volokh points out

Some of the mass killers may be motivated by the desire for fame, but that will generally come entirely apart from the images of the killings themselves (as we’ve often seen with regard to [past] mass killings). It’s hard to imagine someone who’s committing the killing simply to have other people see the images that he or his coconspirators have taken, and who would be deterred by the prospect that those images would no longer be legally available.

A killer’s desire for notoriety or fame isn’t solely reliant on a film they themselves produce. Given that the report’s recommendations would exempt bystander or police footage, there’s no reason to think the killer couldn’t achieve similar notoriety without livestreaming or otherwise filming themselves, casting further doubt that this restriction on speech would have any deterrent effect. 

If the purpose is to shut down avenues by which a killer could achieve notoriety, the same logic can be used to argue that journalists should not be allowed to cover mass murders — a similarly unconstitutional result. 

“There is No Climate Emergency:” Hundreds More Sign the World Climate Declaration, Including 20 University Professors

From [HERE] Scientists continue to flock to sign the World Climate Declaration that states there is no climate emergency. Over 200 people have signed the World Climate Declaration (WCD) over the last few weeks, including 20 university professors. A number of the professors and other academics signing the declaration are experts in pure science fields such as chemistry and physics. Over 300 scientists and professionals have signed the WCD since August 18th, when the Daily Sceptic highlighted the project and interest soared across social media. The total signatories, led by the Norwegian physics Nobel Prize winner Professor Ivar Giaever, now number over 1,400.

It would not be an exaggeration to note that the recent publicity given to the WCD has struck terror into the ranks of the established and largely pseudoscientific climate community, whose gravy train of ‘settled’ science is fuelled by almost unlimited amounts of money and provides the political narrative for the command-and-control Net Zero agenda. Fact checks and social media personal attacks have been launched, but the scale of scientific scepticism is becoming increasingly difficult to deny. Nearly 300 professors alone have now signed the declaration.

The WCD states that climate science has degenerated into a discussion based on beliefs, not on sound self-critical science. It continues: “We should free ourselves from the naïve belief in immature climate models. In future, climate research must give significantly more emphasis to empirical science.” Climate models are said to have many shortcomings, “and are not remotely plausible as global policy tools”. They are said to exaggerate or “blow up” the effect of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and “ignore the fact that enriching the atmosphere with CO2 is beneficial”. There is no statistical evidence that global warming is intensifying natural disasters and there is no climate emergency. Therefore, notes the WCD, there is no cause for panic and alarm. [MORE]

6th Circuit Court of Appeals finds Deputies who Searched a Nervous Man for 'Shaking' and Refusing to Share His Travel Plans Not Immune from Lawsuit

From [HERE] It is clearly established that a driver's nervousness and reluctance to describe his travel plans does not give rise to the reasonable suspicion necessary for police to prolong a traffic stop beyond the time it takes to issue a warning or write a traffic ticket, says the Sixth Circuit(link is external)(unpublished). So this gentleman who was pulled over for tinted windows and declined to share that his shaking was due to muscular dystrophy can indeed sue a pair of Hamilton County, Tenn. officers. A jury might think they prolonged the stop to allow for a drug dog sniff (and, after a false alert, search of his car). Suspects geenrally have no duty to cooperate. No qualified immunity.

The case is Klaver v. Hamilton Cnty., Tenn.(link is external), No. 22-05084 (6th Cir.  Nov. 3, 2022).

Feds Charge Black Philadelphia Deputy with Selling Guns, including 2 used in Shooting Near a High School [Contrary to liberal propaganda few criminals lawfully purchase guns]

From [HERE] A deputy with the Philadelphia Sheriff's Office has been arrested and charged with trafficking and selling guns, according to the United States Attorney's office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.

Samir Ahmad, 29, of Philadelphia, was taken into custody on October 19 by federal agents.

Court documents say two of the firearms Ahmad sold on Oct. 13 were traced by law enforcement as being used in a deadly ambush shooting after a football scrimmage at Roxborough High School two weeks earlier.

The Sept. 27 shooting killed 14-year-old Nicolas Elizalde of Havertown, Pa. and left four other teenagers wounded.

Officials said Ahmad was employed with the Philadelphia Sheriff's Office beginning in Feb. 2018. He was terminated on Oct. 19 and is in custody.

The FBI said the case began back on April 27.

One of their informants was able to purchase a revolver from Ahmad. The transaction was allegedly recorded on an audio device.

According to court documents, the same informant met again with Ahmad on Oct. 13. The FBI said Ahmad sold him the two semi-automatic pistols used in the Roxborough shooting and ammunition.

During the exchange, the informant said that he was "illegal" and would "get deported" if he was caught in possession of a BB gun.

Officials said Ahmad replied, "You don't got to worry about none of that."

Images were provided from a video recording device planted on the informant.

We also see Ahmad receiving payment for the transaction as well. Ahmad made $3,000 from the sale of the firearms, according to investigators. [MORE]

Lack of Training and Discipline [not the right to attack people] Caused White Sonoma Cops to Fatally Shoot David Peláez-Chavez After He Surrendered, was Hunched Over and Not a Threat. Suit Filed

From [HERE] Sonoma County’s poor supervision, training and disciplining of sheriff’s deputies and a “code of silence” around their use of force contributed to the fatal shooting of David Peláez-Chavez by Deputy Michael Dietrick, a federal lawsuit alleges.

Family members of Peláez-Chavez, who was killed on July 29 after a 45-minute chase through rough terrain, allege his civil rights were violated in the shooting.

The 15-page lawsuit, filed Monday in U.S. District Court Northern District of California, seeks unspecified damages from Sonoma County and Dietrick.

“What’s in doubt and what we alleged is whether there was any possible justification for the killing,” civil rights attorney Izaak Schwaiger, who represents the plaintiffs, said Monday.

A spokesperson for the Sheriff’s Office said officials would not comment on the lawsuit and would respond to its allegations in court. Sonoma County’s chief spokesperson, Paul Gullixson, did not respond to voicemails seeking comment.

The lawsuit also accuses Sonoma County of encouraging excessive force, inadequately training deputies, hiring staff with problematic histories and maintaining poor procedures to report and investigate deputies who misbehave.

“Despite us raising this issue again and again in litigation, pressing little has been done to address it,” Schwaiger said.

Peláez-Chavez was shot three times by Dietrick, who, along with Deputy Anthony Powers chased the 36-year-old farmworker for 45 minutes over rugged terrain near Geyserville on July 29.

Authorities said a barefoot Peláez-Chavez fled into the woods after he tried to break into a home and then stole two vehicles in Knights Valley.

Powers is not named in the lawsuit. Schwaiger noted that Powers attempted to deescalate the situation by trying to communicate with Peláez-Chavez in Spanish.

“I think he was practicing proper police tactics,” Schwaiger said of Powers.

Peláez-Chavez was holding a hammer and a garden tiller when the deputies caught up to him and he appeared to be hunched over when Dietrick shot him, according to video footage captured on the deputies’ body cameras.

According to the lawsuit, one of Dietrick’s bullets struck Peláez-Chavez in the head.

Officials have said Peláez-Chavez did not obey the deputies’ orders to drop what he carried and in his final moments he picked up a rock and made a motion to throw it at the deputies. Still, others who have viewed the footage dispute that claim and say the video is not definitive.

“David’s death was unnecessary,” his family’s lawsuit states. “While his behavior was strange and erratic, he posed no more than a hypothetical threat to anyone. Despite his bizarre behavior, at no time did he try to hurt a soul. He was plainly in an altered mental state — whether because of drugs or because of a mental health crisis is unknown at this time. He was barefoot, exhausted, and had nowhere to go. Time and distance were on the deputies’ side. Deadly force simply was not an option.”

The complaint alleges that Sonoma County policy makers encouraged “a code of silence among deputies, employees, and supervisors” around use of force cases. The complaint goes on to allege that no sheriff deputy has ever reported a colleague for using excessive force and no deputy has been disciplined for using excessive force.

Schwaiger, who has sued Sonoma County over most of deputy’s most harmful or deadly actions against citizens in recent years, said in an interview that the statements were backed by information he’d learned during discovery processes in prior lawsuits.

He provided The Press Democrat with discovery documents from a separate lawsuit he is conducting on behalf of Jason Anglero-Wyrick, a Graton man badly injured by a sheriff K-9 unit in April 2020.

In those documents, the county reported 1,513 uses of force by sheriff’s deputies from December 2016 to April 2022. While all those incidents underwent an administrative review, sheriff’s officials claimed they were unable to identify how many were found to be in violation of departmental policy.

In another set of discovery responses, the county conceded it had not found any deputies in violation of use of force policies from December 2016 to April 4, 2020, the date of the Angelo-Wyrick incident. During the same time frame, officials stated no deputies had reported unreasonable use of force by their colleagues.

“Putting it all together paints a really gnarly picture,” Schwaiger said. “You have (more than a thousand) uses of force and no discipline for it.”

Schwaiger contends a sheriff’s deputy has never been disciplined over a use of force violation.

In two high-profile cases, Sheriff Mark Essick, who today is beginning his last two months in office, has called for officers to be fired following controversial uses of force, but it’s not clear if discipline was ever imposed.

In a 2016 use of force against Sonoma Valley resident Fernando Del Valle, Essick, then a captain, investigated and found then-deputy Scott Thorne violated department policy. He moved for his dismissal from the department and later testified against him in a criminal trial.

The Press Democrat reported Thorne was fired, but department officials declined to confirm his termination at the time. The deputy was on a probationary period when he shocked a man in his bed with a stun gun and later hit him with a baton.

On Nov. 27, 2019, Bloomfield resident David Ward died when Deputy Charles Blount pulled him from his own car using a now-banned choke hold and another officer shot him with a stun gun. Essick quickly called publicly for Blount to be fired, but the deputy retired with his pension before being dismissed. [MORE]

A Store Owner said Andres Guardado 'Got Down on His Knees and Surrendered w/his Hands Behind his Head but Cops Shot him 5X in the Back. Then Cops Removed Video.' LA County to Pay Teen’s Family $8M

AFTER THE SHOOTING COPS REMOVED CAMERAS AND SNATCHED VIDEOS AND THEN CAME BACK WITH A WARRANT. NATURALLY, NOW THEY CLAIM NOTHING WAS ON THE VIDEO AND EXPECT PEOPLE TO BELIEVE THEM. THIS IS THE OPPOSITE OF DUE PROCESS, NO PROCESS BEFORE DEPRIVATION OF RIGHTS AND PROPERTY. [MORE] AND [MORE]

From [HERE] Los Angeles County has agreed to pay an $8 million settlement to the family of Andrés Guardado for the wrongful death of their son.

"While the settlement reached with the County of Los Angeles brings closure to more than two years of the civil lawsuit, it does not bring with it peace to our family or justice for our son, Andrés," said Cristobal Guardado. "Peace and justice will only come when the current investigations are completed, and Deputy Miguel Vega is held criminally responsible for Andrés' death."

Andrés Guardado was an 18-year-old Latino man shot in the back and was killed by a Deputy Sheriff from the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department near Gardena and West Compton on June 18, 2020. Guardado ran from two uniformed police officers into an alley, where he died after being shot by deputies. Seven shots were fired and Guardado was hit in the upper torso. Store-owner Andrew Heney reported that several cameras at the scene, including a digital video recorder that stored surveillance footage, were taken and destroyed by police.

Guardado’s death prompted an immediate uproar and mass protests. The victim’s family demanded an investigation and the release of all information on the case. At first, the authorities refused to reveal the results of the official autopsy. Guardado’s parents responded by requesting an independent examination of the body. After those results were made public following days of protests, the local coroner relented and, against the wishes of the Sheriff’s Department, shared its conclusions and it confirmed what the family’s autopsy had already found: five chillingly precise gunshot wounds on Guardado’s back.

What followed paints a grim picture of the opacity that still surrounds the use of force in Los Angeles, a city with a long history of police brutality. After the results of both autopsies confirmed the killing of a young man who was clearly running for his life, Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva went on the defensive. “These things take time, they are not done overnight,” Villanueva said. He then blamed accounts of potential witnesses from social media for slowing down the process, and insisted that “everyone who says that means that’s another potential witness that we have to interview.”

Guardado’s family would have none of it and demanded answers. Andrés, they said, did not own a gun. “My son wanted to be a doctor,” Elisa Guardado said. “He wanted to take care of me. Who’s going to take care of me now?”

Police were reportedly out on patrol when they saw Guardado talking to someone in a car blocking a driveway, so they stopped their vehicle.Police say that Guardado ran away and allegedly produced a firearm at some point in the chase, although this is disputed by his family and employer. The chase was taken southbound on Redondo Beach Blvd. and through a nearby alleyway.

At around 5:53 p.m., Guardado was shot at six times by one or multiple sheriff's deputies and hit in the upper body. Guardado died on scene. Store-owner Andrew Heney stated that Guardado "got down on his knees and surrendered with his hands behind his head but was still shot seven times in the back." The shooting occurred near a business located in the 400 block of Redondo Beach Boulevard near S. Figueroa Street. A gun was reportedly recovered on the scene. The gun recovered at the scene was a "ghost gun" (a term used to describe an illegal firearm with no serial numbers imprinted on the gun) with a standard capacity magazine. Both of those are felonies in the state of California. It was unclear what "prompted the use of force" and what Guardado was "suspected of" to initially prompt the chase.

Heney stated, "the police came up, and they pulled their guns on him and he ran because he was scared, and they shot and killed him. He’s got a clean background and everything. There’s no reason." A witness on the scene stated, "I turned around and saw two male white officers running up into the body shop where not even less than a second later I heard rapid gunshots, [I heard] about four to five shots fired [and] never heard them say ‘freeze’. I never once heard them say 'stop.' Nothing like that."

The deputies reportedly were not wearing body cameras. Lt. Charles Calderaro stated that deputies "are hoping to find surveillance video from nearby businesses."[8] The sheriff's officers are accused of destroying several cameras at the scene and taking possession of the DVR that stored footage filmed by the surveillance cameras. In an interview, Heney is quoted as saying that the deputies "illegally got into everything, then they had the place locked down and then they got the warrant.". [MORE]

According to the family's attorneys, Guardado proceeded to walk away from the deputy and his partner before opening fire. The attorneys said they shot him multiple times in the back.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Los Angeles County District Attorney's office are still investigating the fatal shooting.

No Right to Resist When Public Masters Attack: 3 White Toledo Cops Punch a Black Man Over and Over While Holding Him Down. Claim He Resisted by Avoiding Blows and Trying to Get His Face Off the Ground

From [HERE] Quantrell Thomas was pulled over by Toledo Police for traffic violations last Monday. When officers ran a record check, they discovered verified warrants and asked him to put his hands behind his back.

Thomas said he stepped away, and the officer proceeded to take him to the ground.

“Yeah, I resisted a little , but nothing to get beat down by a cop. Who is supposed to be my friend, supposed to help me out? But instead, they just beat me,” said Thomas.

Thomas said although he was not completely in the right, the officer’s actions were excessive.

One officer punched Thomas in the face and torso multiple times, leaving scars and a black eye.

“I was telling them like please, man, stop. Everything is going good right now, man. Just talk to me. Then while he was holding me down, this other officer came and punch me in the face twice. And then I was like, dang, you really just socked me, you punch me in my face, and he hit me several more times in my face,” said Thomas.

Thomas said he recognizes that he should not have resisted initially. However, he believes the punching should have never continued.

“All they had to do was come help detain me, just grab me and put my hands behind my back instead of physically punch me in my face,” said Thomas.

OBSERVE HOW THE STUPID WHITE REPORTER THINKS IT’S LAWFUL FOR COPS TO SEARCH THE BLACK MAN’S CAR AFTER A BROKEN TAIL LIGHT STOP. WERE THE PUBLIC MASTERS SEARCHING FOR EVIDENCE PERTAINING TO THE BROKEN LIGHT? ENJOY YOUR SLAVERY

The Toledo Police Department said the officer’s actions were justified. TPD said Thomas was attempting to reach for the officer’s belt, but Thomas said that is not true. TPD told 13abc the officers acted within department policy. Thomas said he’s called the department multiple times to get information on the investigation into the use of excessive force. He’s yet to hear back.

” He was trying to get my hands, but I was already punched several times in the face, and I was beaten. It was wrong, and I don’t think that should’ve happened,” said Thomas.

Real Trial for a False Flag? GOINTELBRO Guilty in "Waukehsa Attack" After Uncontested Trial With No Attorney, No Cross Examination, No Objections, No Investigation, No Witnesses, No Motions or Defense

According to FUNKTIONARY:

AFRO-INTELPRO - an FBI created, CIA and NSA backed, black-on-black infiltration and snitch network. AFRO is the acronym for Africans For Revolution Only. The intelligence operatives infiltrate revolutionary organizations to disrupt and foment confusion, terror and distrust within the ranks of those organizations not unlike COINTELPRO. (See: SNigger)

GOINTELBRO – Government Operative Incognegro Notifying The Enforcers Liberating Blackamerica’s Racist Oppressors. A Gointel-bro is a sorry-ass sophisticated hanky-head, coin-operated, Sam-Bohican, Snigger on the payrolls of the F.B.I. (or any other alphabet threat agency) as an undercover informant to foment divisiveness in Blackamerica’s ongoing centuries-long struggle for socioeconomic advancement as a people. Sniggers are equal in intent, and bound by the same flaw—covertly soul-selling out the potential self-determination of his people for the sake of his Massa’s overtly racist, statist or fascist law. (See: Snigger, COINTELPRO, Sambo, Black Flask Brigade, BOHICAN & Coin-Operated)

Hoax - a mirage that appears as believable, popular (and marketable) as Jesus, as tempting as sin, and as captivating as a sweet taboo---without its consequences and side-effects too. The illusion of truth seems real--the "reality" of the reel (the Passing Show)--the surreal. The two most pervasive hoaxes we put over on ourselves is ego and money--neither have any existence. (See: Passing Show, Mirage, Rolling Mirror, Objectivity, Ego, Money, Utopia, Kansas & Alice in Wonderland)

From [HERE] A jury found Darrell Brooks guilty of six counts of homicide for driving into a Christmas parade in Waukesha, Wis., last year.

The verdict, reached Wednesday, comes less than a year after Brooks allegedly plowed through police barricades and drove a red SUV along the local holiday parade route in November 2021, killing six people and injuring dozens of others. 

Prosecutors charged Brooks, a 40-year-old Milwaukee resident, with six counts of first-degree intentional homicide, as well as dozens of other charges related to recklessly endangering safety, in relation to the attack. The 12-member Waukesha County jury found Brooks guilty on all 76 counts Wednesday.

First-degree homicide in Wisconsin is classified as a Class A felony, which carries a penalty of life in prison. [MORE]

The Dependent Media left out the fact that he had no attorney for his trial.

There is a clear pattern here with some false flags; Dylann Roof had an uncontested trial (no attorney during his criminal trial), the Parkland shooter had no actual trial because he pled guilty and then had a sentencing hearing (mischaracterized by media as a criminal trial) and Alex Jones’ multiple cases all concerned default judgements and damages hearings- not actual contested trials on the merits where the underlying event (the false flag) was established with findings of fact in an adversarial setting by a jury.

Here, without an attorney, “Darrell Brooks'’” (or whoever he is) murder trial was an uncontested mock trial. That is, no real pre-trial investigation or discovery by “the defense” took place. No meaningful jury selection occurred. No pre-trial motions were filed to exclude evidence or statements. His identification was not properly contested. During trial no meaningful skilled cross examination took place, no meaningful objections to hundreds of government requests and questions took place, there were no meaningful challenges to hundreds of government exhibits, no foundations for evidence were laid, no authentication of evidence was necessary, any and all hearsay and double hearsay was admissible, no actual defenses were asserted, no witnesses testified on his behalf, no legitimate criminal defense or theory of the case was set forth and more - just like on a TV show. Thus, a real trial for this false flag didn’t take place. Nevertheless, the media carries on otherwise with its theater for your mind – intended to make you believe that the underlying event occurred without ever having to actually prove it.

Allegations are allegations and the proof in totalitarian systems - ‘who needs to actually prove a set of facts during an adversarial trial when you have “beliefs” and dogma? Almost like faith based COVID vaccines: they’re safe because the media said so and they know because the government told them. The media simply parrots the police version of events. Anyone who questions the police or government narrative or seeks actual details is a conspiracy theorist. Lawyers call this burden shifting in court. And this is with all things, not just false flags - for instance, just ask the liberals who claim to sincerely and genuinely believe the veracity of Herschel Walker’s anonymous accuser despite the fact that they’ve never seen or heard “her” and have no rational reason to find “her” credible. How does one acquire such a jesusized belief in an anonymous person or invisible and unheard person ?

Due to the contrived nature of the evidence and weird timing of the incident, Waukesha feels synthetic and should be suspected as a false flag operation conducted by the government until proven otherwise. If Crimethinc and The Pathocracy would create deadly COVID injections for the purpose of genthanasia and and collude with The Dependent Media to promote biocide with lies, then surely It would have no problem executing 6 white people at a X-Mas parade.

During the week of Thanksgiving and after the conclusion of multiple race related criminal trials involving white male defendants, we were presented with Mr. “Darrel Brooks” or “Darrell Brooks” and his conduct in a 90% white city of Waukesha. At the time of the incident observe the common name and generic look in which he can be easily confused with many other middle-aged light skinned Black males with long dreadlocks covering much of his head and a beard concealing much of his face. Dood looks and sounds like police or an actor not a rapper. Is the driver on the grainy video actually “Darrel Brooks?” No one will ever know.

What’s missing is cell phone video evidence of the actual incident – although there were probably hundreds of people present with their cell phones recording the parade, there appear to be only a few videos [HERE] and [HERE] of the incident – which is not normal but very common in false flags. Like other false flags, Brooks’ alleged “intentional murder planning” is undermined by having no getaway plan, which we deduce due to the existence of a silly pre-arrest video from “a neighbor” – apparently “Darrel Brooks” planned to run people over during a holiday parade, crash the car, flee on foot and either catch an Uber to escape or outrun the police. Just days after the incident, the government completed its investigation and concluded he intentionally ran people over – probably based on his rap lyrics or an unproduced manifesto or diary perhaps to be released during the trial. Like other false flags, less than 7 days after the incident we had an open and shut case - no need for a trial anyway, allegations are the evidence to tyrants and their slaves.

Less than a week after it happened the media supplied us a ready made bio for “Darrell Brooks” containing info (faster than court pre-trial services) about childhood upbringing (not dissimilar to the readily found unauthenticated manifestos or diaries found in other false flag episodes), how his ex-girlfriend feels and a slick headshot photo (like ISIS press releases). The media has stated he is a rapist, depicted him as a serial criminal who is unreformable (because Blacks are inherently criminal) [MORE] and said he is a welfare recipient. We are told he is an auto-coon rapper (an unsigned artist of course “promoted” on a YouTube channel (formed days after the incident, probably by the government). In his video he apparently showcased the same Ford Escape he used to kill as a prop in a music video (an auto-coon rapper with a Ford Escape? Silly, only police think like this. Reminds BW of the “Black rapper” from SD allegedly found on the battlefield in Syria fighting for ISIS, confirmed of course by “his tweets”). The media also explained he hates Trump and white people (hate white folks? Although his conduct has been objectionable, there is no hate on display in court in hours of footage where he is clearly seeking approval from and trying to please the white judge and white courtroom staff, like a puppy, child or servant– this is beggar conduct, racists find it flattering). According to the media and the police, Brooks had a history of social media posts advocating for violence against white people, he rapped about being a "terrorist" and a "killer,” he was a "black nationalist” (when white people say that what does it mean? If it means living separate and apart from whites then could he do that in 90% white Waukesha?), a member of the Black Hebrew Israelites (is there a branch in Waukesha, which is 3% Black?), and believes in black supremacy (right, like a prisoner believing he is the warden) and so on [MORE]. Based on the generic profile he probably also loves fried chicken, watermelon, collards, white woman, rims, cereal etc. All this leads the believer to believe that he ran people over because they were white. Racists are presupposed to believe that Waukesha occurred in the same way that Black folks are presupposed to believe Dylann Roof killed people in a Black church with little to no non-testimonial and objective evidence.

Atlanta Enacts Law to Protect People with Criminal Records from Employment Discrimination

From [HERE] The city of Atlanta has designated formerly incarcerated people a protected class, granting them legal protection from discrimination.

The city council unanimously voted in favor of the measure on Oct. 17. Advocates and those impacted said it could remove economic barriers for thousands of people, many of who are Black, and decrease recidivism.

“With this vote, the City of Atlanta is taking the first step in recognizing that we all are human beings,” Bridgette Simpson of Barred Business said in a statement. “Formerly incarcerated people have the right to move on from the sentences we served and should be able to access things like housing, employment and other basic needs that are essential for all people to live safely in this society.”

Atlanta Councilman Matt Westmoreland, one of the measure’s sponsors, said it was a request of residents who say they have been unfairly treated because of their criminal history.

The adopted ordinance bars businesses within Atlanta from denying formerly incarcerated people jobs or housing solely because of their criminal record.

The ordinance says: “any adverse hiring decisions based on criminal history must be based on how the criminal history relates to the position’s responsibilities in accordance with the following considerations: 1) whether the applicant committed the offense; 2) the nature and gravity of the offense; 3) the time since the offense; and 4) the nature of the job for which the applicant has applied.” [MORE]

ProPublica Report Finds Child Protective Services Agencies Routinely Fail to Comply with Warrant Requirements to Enter Homes

From [HERE] Governments set up rules governing how they govern. Then they ignore them. So, what’s the point? Is it a nod to decorum before the proverbial government party guest throws up in the bathtub and hits on your mom? 

If the law says an entry order or warrant is needed to enter people’s homes to investigate alleged crimes against children and you choose to ignore that law, that should make you a lawbreaker. Instead, it just makes you a child protective services investigator.

An investigation by ProPublica has found that these orders are almost never obtained. Instead, investigators simply exploit the ignorance of those targeted, bullying their way past their thresholds to perform warrantless searches of people’s homes.

By law, ACS [Administration for Children’s Services] caseworkers are not allowed to enter and search a home without either permission to enter or an entry order, which is the legal equivalent of a search warrant, unless a child is in imminent danger. But many parents don’t know that they have the right to deny these government agents or don’t push back for fear of losing their children, according to parents and their advocates. And caseworkers frequently say things that are coercive and manipulative in order to get inside homes without going to a judge, according to interviews with more than three dozen former ACS workers, New York City Family Court judges, parents, children and attorneys.

How often is this requirement ignored? Pretty much all the time. ProPublica found that in New York, ACS engaged in more than 56,000 cases a year over the last decade. In the average year over the same time span, it only obtained 94 warrants/entry orders: less than 0.2% of the total cases.

While it’s certainly true not all open cases result in home searches, home entries are extremely common. Home visits are a requirement in most states when a case is opened, which means investigators will make an appearance at people’s homes at least once, if not multiple times, before the investigation concludes.

The data obtained by ProPublica says investigators almost never obtain these orders. The statements made by agencies contacted by ProPublica back up these findings: warrants are the exception, even if they’re supposed to be the rule.

[I]n a ProPublica and NBC News survey that drew detailed responses from 40 state child welfare agencies, all said they would only obtain a warrant or court order to search a home — or call the police for help — in rare cases when they are denied entry. None said they keep any data on how often they get an entry order.

This adds up to millions of warrantless entries to homes every year, performed by agencies that rely on coercion and ignorance to gain entry. When a cop tries to enter a home, most people know they need a warrant to do it. That information has long been mainstream, thanks to decades of TV cop shows. But when a child protective services investigator shows up, people aren’t aware they are government employees performing criminal investigations and need to have the same paperwork to gain entry. [MORE]