Cops arrest woman at town meeting while she has the floor

If I were mayor, I would be like "okay council," and then proceed to ironically arrest all 5 of them for inciting violence. Then I would have the woman released from jail, and quietly begin playing the members of the department against each other. In the end I would fire the chief.
 
I heard on the news today that things have gotten worse.......the sheriff has apparently seized full control of the town, "fired" the mayor........
 
3 day old news

The far western Arizona town of Quartzsite was in disarray Monday after the town council ousted the mayor from power and declared a state of emergency, all over an online video that shows a woman being arrested.

Mayor Ed Foster told The Associated Press on Monday that the town council held a last-minute meeting that was closed to the public Sunday night, declaring a state of emergency in the 3,600-person town just east of the California city of Blythe.

The council's declaration put police Chief Jeff Gilbert in charge, making Foster the "deputy chief executive of nothing right now," he said. It also allows the five-member council to meet without public notice and suspend all public comment at the meetings until they declare the state of emergency over.

"I'm going to tell you frankly, this council is out of control," Foster said. "The chief has been out of control for some time and I've asked the state government to help a number of times," to no avail.

Foster described the government and Gilbert as corrupt and abusive of their power, and said all their recent actions are frantic efforts to cover up millions of dollars of money from lining some of their pockets.

Both Gilbert's and the town hall's phone numbers rang busy most of the day Monday, and all five council members and the town manager did not immediately return email requests for comment.

Foster said the council declared the emergency because they claim they've received threats from members of the public who saw a video posted on YouTube.

The video shows a woman identified as Jennifer Jones being arrested and hauled away from a council meeting after she said the council was violating open-meetings laws. Jones was speaking during a public comment period, and Foster is heard on the video telling other council members who ordered her removed that "the lady has the floor."

"She's exercising her First Amendment rights," Foster says in the video before telling officers: "You are in violation of my rules of order."

The officers remove her, anyway, and in the process injure her elbow, which is now in a sling, Foster said.

The video has gotten nearly 32,000 views and has people from across the U.S. and world sending messages of support to Foster and messages of outrage to the council. Foster has a Facebook page of supporters and on it, people have posted messages that include, "Kudos from Mississippi. Keep the rats scurrying" and "You have Colorado's support!"

Foster said a woman from England sent him a note with just one line: "How could America be considered a beacon of democracy in the world when freedom of speech does not exist in Quartzsite, Ariz.?"

Foster was elected in May 2010 on a campaign promise to investigate corruption allegations in the town.

He said since being in office, he has discovered that every pay period, eight to 10 paychecks go to unnamed people and that he has been denied access to financial records to find out where the money goes at every turn.

He said that's been happening since 1991 and amounts to $250,000 every year. "That's literally millions of dollars," he said.

He said he's gone to Gov. Jan Brewer's office, the Attorney General's Office and the FBI with his allegations and pleas for an investigation, and that he's been ignored. He said he was contacting the FBI on Monday with information about Sunday's meeting declaring an emergency, which he said was illegal because it was closed to the public and in violation of open-meetings laws.

Foster also said he has been targeted repeatedly by police Chief Gilbert, arrested or investigated for "bogus" reasons that weren't prosecuted and didn't prove any wrongdoing.

Most recently, he said Gilbert cited and released him on charges of disorderly conduct and interference six weeks ago when he tried to stop him from arresting Jones for the third time because she had sued the town for $2 million on allegations of police harassment.

"She called me and I went to the scene and I told the chief, 'What, are you crazy? Are you trying to give her and her attorney a field day in court?" he said. "And then he arrested me."

He said he also is the target of a recall election, in which 171 signatures were gathered, and that one of the town council members resigned to run against him in hopes of ousting him next month.

"I ran on a campaign promise to look into this money and I've been stymied, stifled, stopped at every turn," Foster said. "Every time you get into a political thing like this, it always goes back to money."
 
The cops were just doing their jobs. The Mayor is the one who's going to get his ass reamed on this.
Just following orders has never been an acceptable defense for doing what one knows - or should know - is wrong.

Those LEOs should be fired and permanently barred from any future position in law enforcement, the city council should be removed from office and run out of town, and the chief of police should be arrested and jailed for the rest of his miserable totalitarian life.
 
If I were mayor, I would be like "okay council," and then proceed to ironically arrest all 5 of them for inciting violence. Then I would have the woman released from jail, and quietly begin playing the members of the department against each other. In the end I would fire the chief.

And then proceed to take over the world.

May the force be with you. :D

HanSolo.jpg
 
You all should watch some of the other videos shot by bystanders witnessing the police abuse their authority. Funny how all the time now the police try to use threats of arrest and force to keep you from video recording their actions. In the public domain we should be able to record whatever we wish, including the police doing their jobs.
 
as well as some of the other states use of the judicial system as a weapon against those that don't immediately bow down and say 'yes, sir' on command.

In florida, for example, In more than 25-percent of the 4000-plus cases Eyewitness News tracked, resisting was the only charge. That begs the question: if there’s no arrest for something else how could they be resisting arrest?

Soc, where the hell you been?
 
The wonderful world of "Police Brutality" I don't know whether or not those cops were outisde their authority, but the cries that the citizen's should have "Stopped them" might consider something, "stopping them" would have been assault on a three police officers and possibly the beginings of a riot, how many thousands of dollars in destruction and broken bones are you willing to accept to prevent one person from being arrested, and if they suceeded? More cops, more citizens, more violence more destruction, that sort of thing spirals out of anyone's control far too quickly, read your history, look up "Bloody Sunday" "Boston Massacre" hey don't even bother looking back that far, look at the Riots in Egypt. There is a reason for courts, its to take the violence out of deciding cases, let the lawyers and the judges do their jobs, find your jury and avoid seeing "25 dead in Riots after failed Arrest" in the 9 o'clock news.
 
The wonderful world of "Police Brutality" I don't know whether or not those cops were outisde their authority, but the cries that the citizen's should have "Stopped them" might consider something, "stopping them" would have been assault on a three police officers and possibly the beginings of a riot, how many thousands of dollars in destruction and broken bones are you willing to accept to prevent one person from being arrested, and if they suceeded? More cops, more citizens, more violence more destruction, that sort of thing spirals out of anyone's control far too quickly, read your history, look up "Bloody Sunday" "Boston Massacre" hey don't even bother looking back that far, look at the Riots in Egypt. There is a reason for courts, its to take the violence out of deciding cases, let the lawyers and the judges do their jobs, find your jury and avoid seeing "25 dead in Riots after failed Arrest" in the 9 o'clock news.

(Excerpt) According to the Indiana Supreme court, residents DO NOT have the right to resist unlawful police entry of their home. — For now, this only applies to the state of Indiana!! Why is that? Well they claim “that allowing resistance unnecessarily escalates the level of violence and therefore the risk of injuries to all parties involved without preventing the arrest.” OR MAYBE IN REAL LIFE… it allows police to go inside ANY and EVERYBODY’S home to search whatever they’d like while people just have to sit back and let it happen! If this is not blatant disregard for the 4th amendment, which guards against unreasonable searches and seizures” I don’t know what is!…….

“The breath of the decision would absolutely allow a police officer to enter a home for no reason, whether there’s a warrant or not, whether there’s extenuating circumstances or not,” Berger told WBEZ Wednesday. “Citizens no longer have the right to even tell the officer ‘No,’ and close the door against the officer’s hand.” (End) http://www.uaff.info/indiana_police_state.htm

Then there’s things like the Casey Anthony case where, when charged with felony child neglect, her bail was set at an outrageous $500,000. (http://www.wesh.com/news/17113783/detail.html)

(Excerpt) Prosecutors say the law sets a high bar for proving felony child abuse and neglect. If there is a conviction , sentencing guidelines call for probation for someone without a criminal record.

According to state law, to prove felony child abuse or neglect, prosecutors have to show that it was a "willful act or omission" that led to serious injury or that had the potential to lead to serious injury……

Aadam Morgan's lawyer had cited a state Court of Appeals decision that overturned a mother's conviction on felony child neglect and child cruelty. The mother had left home to visit a neighbor while her children slept. A gas stove was left on, and both children suffered serious smoke inhalation in a fire that ensued. The appeals court said the mother's actions had not been a "willful act" or done with "bad purpose." (End) http://findarticles.com/p/news-arti...rison-rare-felony-child-neglect/ai_n41458660/

Whether or not one agrees with the “not guilty” Anthony verdict the point is when sentenced for lying to the Police she was given the maximum for each count (4 in total) in order to justify the time she already spent in prison.

Why do they lock up people such as Casey? Was she a threat to society? Going only on circumstantial evidence was she likely to murder another member of society? She didn’t have a previous history of violence so does a missing child warrant charging someone with murder and taking away their freedom while authorities try to build a case? What harm could have come to society if she had been free while the investigation continued and the case built?

Or how about this one. (Excerpt) Not even two years after American taxpayers’ money was illegitimately used to bail out a handful of behemoth banks, JPMorgan Chase, one such bailout recipients, is responsible for getting an innocent man arrested and jailed, and also causing him to lose his job and his car — and it has been more than a year since the incident and Chase has yet to properly resolve the incident by at least reimbursing the victim.

The incident began after a teller at a Chase bank branch in Auburn, Wash., falsely accused 28-year-old Ikenna Njoku of trying to deposit a check that the bank itself had issued him as part of the first-time home buyer rebate plan. For some reason the teller became suspicious that the check was false, and proceeded to confiscate Njoku’s driver license and credit card.

When he returned the next day at the instruction of Chase customer service, he was greeted by Auburnpolicewho took him into custody on charges of forgery. And no properinvestigationinto the allegations prior to the arrest had taken place as they should have, which makes the Auburn Police Department (APD) equally as responsible for the error.

“They just threw me in jail; they called the police and said this guy has a fraudulent check,” said Njoku to reporters. “I was like ‘you’re making a mistake, you’re making a mistake, don’t take me to jail, I got work tomorrow. I can’t afford to miss work."

But the officers refused to listen, and instead left Njoku in a jail cell for five days after failing to check a message that was left the day after the arrest by Chase Special Investigations, notifying APD about the error. During this time Njoku was fired from his construction job for not showing up, and his car was towed from the Chase parking lot and subsequently sold at an auction.

“It’s one thing to make a mistake,” said Felix Luna, Njoku’s lawyer. “It’s one thing to make multiple errors of judgment like Chase has made and then, once you realize that your error has caused such harm to somebody else, to just ignore it for a year.”

Chase has since apologized to Njoku, but there is no indication that he will be reimbursed by the bank for losing his job and his car. It is also unclear whether or not APD will be held responsible for failing to follow protocol by arresting Njoku without first investigating the situation. (End)

Lost his job and car and spent time in jail all because of a false arrest. Who pays for that? The man even owned his own home. Where was he going to go? What possible threat to society would there have been if he were simply allowed to go home with a date for a court appearance?

:rant: :cuss: :rant: :cuss: :rant: :cuss: :rant: :cuss: :rant: :cuss:

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Sorry :chesh: From reading too many posts about militias and insurrection along with having blown the head gasket on my MG Thursday afternoon while motoring down the highway :fuckthatshit: ......... Perhaps an hour or two in the back yard with a cold beer while I commune with nature and the pond fish will improve my outlook on life. :dunno:
 
The wonderful world of "Police Brutality" I don't know whether or not those cops were outisde their authority, but the cries that the citizen's should have "Stopped them" might consider something, "stopping them" would have been assault on a three police officers and possibly the beginings of a riot, how many thousands of dollars in destruction and broken bones are you willing to accept to prevent one person from being arrested, and if they suceeded? More cops, more citizens, more violence more destruction, that sort of thing spirals out of anyone's control far too quickly, read your history, look up "Bloody Sunday" "Boston Massacre" hey don't even bother looking back that far, look at the Riots in Egypt. There is a reason for courts, its to take the violence out of deciding cases, let the lawyers and the judges do their jobs, find your jury and avoid seeing "25 dead in Riots after failed Arrest" in the 9 o'clock news.

unlawful arrests. if there's nothing to stop law enforcement from committing them, they will continue. you've fallen in to the judicial/legal machine of letting the courts sort it out. The problem comes in the cost of the court proceedings. An unlawful arrest is one of the most egregious assaults on a persons freedom and shouldn't be tolerated. lethal force, if necessary.
 
unlawful arrests. if there's nothing to stop law enforcement from committing them, they will continue. you've fallen in to the judicial/legal machine of letting the courts sort it out. The problem comes in the cost of the court proceedings. An unlawful arrest is one of the most egregious assaults on a persons freedom and shouldn't be tolerated. lethal force, if necessary.

Who would have thought a lady, while talking rationally at a Council Meeting and with the Mayor's approval to have the floor, would be arrested?

If people can not understand the courageousness of such an act one has to wonder if the time for action has already passed.
 
Here in New Mexico we have the right to resist unlawful arrests, with deadly force if necessary. I think I have told some of you that an elderly man who was having an argument in a parking lot with another guy, while wearing a pistol on his hip, was approached by a police officer who attempted to take his weapon from him. He had not drawn the pistol in the course of the argument nor had he made any threat to pull it. The cop just decided that because he and the other guy were arguing he could take the gun. When his order to turn over the gun was rebuked, the cop tried to take it by force, resulting is a bullet being fired into his face. Lucky for him it was only a .22. The old man was arrested for ag battery on a police officer with a deadly weapon. Took the jury less than 5 minutes to acquit him. The problem in america is that too many cops think their authority trumps our rights. They think they are warriors rather than public servants. They have all the trappings of warriors, assault weapons in their cars, body armor that soldiers would envy, etc. They are told they are fighting a war. A war on drugs, a war on crime. When you are fighting a war you MUST have an enemy and we are the enemy. The "bad guys" don't wear special uniforms that distinguish them from the rest of us, so the cops assume we are all the enemy and only by complete and utter submission to their every request proves that you are not. Asking them questions about what statute or code they are trying to enforce gets you arrested and charged with resisting arrest or interfereing with law enforcement. The majority of us have agreed to this arrangement and so we have the police force we deserve.
 
From PrisonPlanet.com
Foster was elected in May 2010 on a campaign promise to investigate allegations of corruption in the La Paz County town.

He said since being in office, he has discovered that every pay period, eight to 10 paychecks go to unnamed people and that he has been denied access to financial records to find out where the money actually goes. He said that’s been happening since 1991 and amounts to $250,000 every year. “That’s literally millions of dollars,” Foster said.
 
http://www.parkerpioneer.net/articles/2011/07/22/news/doc4e29a9c985f0e718791132.txt

Ten Quartzsite Police Department employees, including nine officers and an evidence technician, have been placed on administrative leave pending an investigation of allegations they violated town personnel policies.

The actions came two days after the release of results of an internal investigation of Chief Jeff Gilbert. Town Manager Alex Taft said the investigation showed Gilbert properly followed town procedures and policies, and found no evidence of wrongdoing.

The ten employees placed on leave all signed a letter in May to the Arizona Police Officers Standards & Training board stating they had no confidence in Gilbert, alleging abuse of power and failure to follow proper procedures, and requesting a state investigation.

Quartzsite currently has 14 officers, including Gilbert.

In a press release issued July 21, Gilbert said: “The Town of Quartzsite has placed select police officers on paid administrative leave while an internal investigation is being conducted into policy and rule violations. We can assure the community that the police department has adequate officers to provide the services necessary for public safety, and response to calls for service."

Assistant Town Manager Al Johnson is conducting the investigation.

In a “Notice of Investigation and Intent to Interview” obtained by the Pioneer, Johnson told the employees they were allegedly in violation of Quartzsite Personnel Policy Section 1502(O): engaging in any conduct, on or off the job, that might bring discredit to the town.

The notice alleges the employees made allegations of misconduct to AZ POST even though they knew Gilbert had been cleared of these charges in an investigation by the Arizona Department of Public Safety in 2010.

The notice stated further the employees could face disciplinary action up to and including termination.
 
She was about to expose the union corruption in the government. It's everywhere and it stinks to high heaven.
 
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