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Saturday, June 7, 2014

Released Taliban commander promises to return to fight Americans

 

Released Taliban commander promises to return to fight Americans

Posted on June 7, 2014 by RT.com

Noorullah Noori, one of the five prisoners released from Guantanamo Bay detention center in the exchange for American Bowe Bergdahl. (Image from wikipedia.org)

Noorullah Noori, one of the five prisoners released from Guantanamo Bay detention center in the exchange for American Bowe Bergdahl. (Image from wikipedia.org)

A source close to one of the former Guantanamo Bay prisoners released last week by the United States claim he plans to travel back to Afghanistan to fight against American troops.

The former detainee, Noorullah Noori, is one of five suspected Taliban higher-ups freed by US President Barack Obama last week in exchange for the return of Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, a 28-year-old American soldier who as captured by an Al-Qaeda linked group in 2009 while serving the US Army in Afghanistan.

A fellow militant and relative told NBC News that despite serving nearly 13 years at the infamous US military prison after he was captured shortly after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, Noori reportedly wants to once again fight against the American military.

Noori and four others were released last week in a prisoner swap for Bergdahl, and are reportedly now in Qatar. According to once-secret detainee assessment files authored by Pentagon officials and published by WikiLeaks in 2010, Noori was considered to be a high-risk Gitmo inmate of high intelligence value who ahead of his Dec. 2001 capture was the Taliban governor for the Balkh and Laghman provinces in Afghanistan and “wanted by the United Nations (UN) for possible war crimes.” As the Los Angeles Times reported this week, however, Noori’s name is absent from several war crimes reports conducted by the UN and other agencies.

Nevertheless, a Taliban commander told NBC that Noori “kept insisting he would go to Afghanistan and fight American forces there” after he arrived in Qatar this week.

This still image provided on December 7, 2010 by IntelCenter shows the Taliban associated video production group Manba al-Jihad December 7, 2010 release of US Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl (L), who has been held hostage by the Taliban since his disappearance from his unit on June 30, 2009. (AFP Photo)

This still image provided on December 7, 2010 by IntelCenter shows the Taliban associated videoproduction group Manba al-Jihad December 7, 2010 release of US Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl (L), who has been held hostage by the Taliban since his disappearance from his unit on June 30, 2009. (AFP Photo)

We thought we may not see them again as once you land in the hands of Americans, it’s difficult to come out alive,” the source added, according to an article published on Friday by NBC. “But it was a miracle that Allah Almighty gave us Bergdahl and we got back our heroes.”

RT has reported throughout the week that the prisoner swap between the US and Taliban has infuriated portions of both the American public and political realm who disapprove of President Barack Obama’s decision to release five Gitmo detainees in exchange for asoldier who, according to other servicemen, deserted the Army while on assignment. Awelcome home celebration scheduled in Bergdahl’s hometown upon news of his release has since been cancelled by local officials who say the small Idaho town isn’t equipped to handle the expected turnout of both supporters and protesters.

This combo photo shows (from left) Mohammad Fazl, Mohammed Nabi, Khairullah Khairkhwa and Abdul Haq Wasiq, the Guantanamo detainees released by the Obama administration in exchange for Sgt. Bowe Bergdah. (Images from wikipedia.org)

This combo photo shows (from left) Mohammad Fazl, Mohammed Nabi, Khairullah Khairkhwa and Abdul Haq Wasiq, the Guantanamo detainees released by the Obama administration in exchange for Sgt. Bowe Bergdah. (Images from wikipedia.org)

According to NBC’s source, all five former Gitmo detainees were being treated at a Qatari hospital as of Friday. Noori, who is believed to be in his late-40s, was having health issues as a result of the 12 years of incarceration, the source added.

The White House-brokered deal relinquished Noori, Mohammad Fazl, Mohammed Nabi, Khairullah Khairkhwa and Abdul Haq Wasiq in exchange for Bergdahl.

Released Taliban commander promises to return to fight Americans
RT.com
Sat, 07 Jun 2014 11:48:57 GMT

Nanny State Pushes Sex On Children

NANNY STATE PUSHES SEX ON CHILDREN

by INFOWARS.COM | JUNE 7, 2014


Alex Jones covers the new medical laws in Michigan that says Drs will have a confidential meeting with children privately without parental supervision to turn them into Nanny-State snitches for the system.

RELATED: NEW MEDICAL LAW MANDATES “PRIVATE” CONVERSATION WITH CHILD BEFORE EVERY DOCTOR VISIT

Nanny State Pushes Sex On Children
yihan
Sat, 07 Jun 2014 10:51:38 GMT

Ah Palestine: a non-existing land without people for a non-existing people

 

http://revolutionaryfrontlines.files.wordpress.com/2010/11/palestine-apartheid-wall.jpgBeatnik Malcontent

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Ah Palestine: a non-existing land without people for a non-existing people

The Israeli Supreme court has recently ruled that there is no such thing as an "Israeli" recognized by the legal system of the State of Israel. You can be classified as a Jew, an Arab, a Druze, a foreign visitor, but nobody is "Israeli." Just a short while ago the Knesset created a new status, "Christian." So now a Palestinian Christian, who had previously been classified as merely an "Arab," can now not be an Arab but a Christian and be accorded some rights that are currently denied to regular Palestinians, who are classified as Arabs. Israel has never wanted to give any credence to the fact that there ever was a place called Palestine that had people in it.
(see http://mondoweiss.net/2014/06/discrimination-decisions-nationality.html
article by Ofra Yeshua Lyth, from June 3, 2014 Mondoweiss.org)
But now it has definitely been ruled that there is no common ground, no catch-all status of "Israeli." Therefore, Israeli citizenship is an empty category. It does not resemble any idea of "citizenship" that we as citizens of the USA, or Canadian, or Mexican citizens can recognize. In Israel citizenship is meaningless and "Nationality" is everything (if you can get past the idea that a religion is also a nationality...I wonder if someone presenting a Unitarian Church passport would get through customs.)
This all makes sense if you are running a caste system in which the Nationality/Religion "Jewish" gets full rights and others get less, or no rights at all. This is what Israel is. It is not a modern Western style democracy that just happens to have a "discrimination" problem, or to have by accident acquired extra territory with some undesirable people on it.
In the news media when someone quotes an "Israeli" source, or a government representative they always mean "Jewish," but they never say "a Jewish government source has said..." But according to the Supreme Court of the State of Israel (I don't want to say "Jewish Supreme Court") Israelis don't exist. The leaders of the State of Israel are always thumping their chests proclaiming "we are the Jews!" "We are the only Jewish state in the world and we represent all the Jews of the world."
But if some critic were to say, " I don't like what the Jews are doing in the West Bank." The reaction would be, "Anti-Semite!!! Jew hater." Well...maybe this isn't an important point. After all, whenever someone says, "I don't like what the Israelis are doing in the West Bank," the response is "Anti-Semite! Jew hater!"
Many of us who support human rights for Palestinians have encountered retorts from defenders of Israeli Apartheid who say, "there are no Palestinians, they don't exist." This is a popular line. A lot of people who think they are clever, worldly and liberal like to say this (like ex-Mayor Michael Bloomberg). Think about it though. There are over 5 million Palestinians living between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River (about the same as the number of Jews living there). they are Arabs (native speakers of Arabic) whose ancestors have lived in a place known as Palestine at least since the 5th century BC (as attested to by Herodotus, who started the genre of History writing) and certainly longer than that.
For the Zionists to deny their nationality is to deny their right to exist..or to exist within the lands that the Jews of Israel claim as their exclusive property. This is an eliminationist, ethnic cleansing, rabid xenophobic point of view. There is no left, right or center here, just push them out. Get rid of them.
So now Israelis don't exist and Palestinians don't exist. Leaders of the state of Israel are always wailing about an "existential threat" to Israel presented by...everyone and everything. BDS, halting settlement construction, protest marches, African refugees (officially called "infiltrators"), you name it.
But how can there be an existential threat to non-existing Israelis from Palestinians who also don't exist? Jean Paul Sartre seemed to corner the nothingness market with his tome "Being and Nothingness." But now he's been outdone.

Ah Palestine: a non-existing land without people for a non-existing people
TFAdmin
Sat, 07 Jun 2014 07:50:05 GMT

Friday, June 6, 2014

The Name Game: Labeling Tricks That Hide Aspartame and its Hidden Dangers | Healthy Holistic LivingHealthy Holistic Living

The Name Game: Labeling Tricks That Hide Aspartame and its Hidden Dangers | Healthy Holistic LivingHealthy Holistic Living

Aminosweet2

“What’s in a name? That which we call a rose By any other name would smell as sweet.” — Romeo and Juliet, William Shakespeare
The rose Juliet refers to is the Montague name, which Romeo symbolically rejects in defiance of his father. Setting poetic license aside, there is less to feel rosy about when it comes to playing on words to disguise the presence of food additives. Take artificial sweeteners, for instance. Aspartame by any other name may be just as sweet, but potentially just as toxic — whether you call it NutraSweet®, Equal® or the manufacturer’s latest moniker: AminoSweet.
As the name “AminoSweet” suggests, aspartame is a non-saccharide sweetener derived from amino acids. Specifically, it is the methyl ester of aspartic acid and the dipeptide of phenylalanine, a molecule consisting of two amino acids coupled by a single peptide bond. Phenylalanine is an essential amino acid and a precursor to tyrosine, a signaling molecule that stimulates the synthesis of the skin pigment melanin and certain neurotransmitters, such as dopamine. Introduced in Europe more than 25 years ago where it is known as E951, aspartame was approved for use in the U.S. by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 1981. Not long after, researchers began to find evidence that aspartame was a possible carcinogen. Ergo, the controversy surrounding the safety of this substance arose and has persisted to this day.
The Bitter-Sweet Story
In July 2005, the European Ramazzini Foundation of Oncology and Environmental Sciences (ERF) published a carcinogenicity study in which the researchers concluded that aspartame causes cancer, namely lymphomas and leukemias in male and female rats. (1) In April 2007, the FDA released a statement announcing that the agency did not find sufficient evidence to support the ERF’s conclusion. Further, the FDA maintained its position that the use of aspartame is safe. (2)
The National Cancer Institute (NCI) notes that a 1996 report showing an increase in the incidence ofbrain tumors between 1975 and 1992 correlated these statistics with the introduction of aspartame in the U.S. Later, the results of a 2005 laboratory study in which rats were fed high doses of diet soda sweetened with aspartame once again suggested a link to an increase in lymphomas and leukemias. However, NCI also points out problems with study design and inconsistencies in extrapolating statistical results. For instance, the rats in the 2005 study were exposed to impossible amounts of the sweet stuff, in some cases the equivalent of drinking more than 2,000 cans of soda a day. And, according to NCI, although the 1996 report was correct that the rate of brain cancers did increase during the period in question, the rise actually started eight years before aspartame became FDA-approved and occurred most frequently in people in their 70s, who typically have a lower exposure level to this agent. (3)
Sweeten, Stir, Repeat
What does all of this scientific hullabaloo really mean for you? First, it means that no one really knows if aspartame – or other artificial sweeteners, for that matter – causes cancer or not. However, there is one position that can’t escape common sense: If the question of toxicity exists, why use the stuff at all?
We do know for certain that some people have a sensitivity to aspartame (including this writer). Even the FDA concedes that excess levels of free aspartic acid in the body can trigger migrainesasthma attacks, anxiety, depression and other reactions. In addition, because this amino acid impairs glucose uptake in the brain, it may cause fatigue and memory loss. According to Joseph M. Mercola, DO, the manufacturer of aspartame was warned by scientists at Washington University’s School of Medicine in 1971 that aspartic acid produces holes in the brains of mice. In response, the manufacturer, G.D. Searle, started looking for a pharmaceutical drug to counter memory loss due to amino acid damage, albeit more than a decade later. (4)
Aspartame is also known to be dangerous to people with phenylketonuria (PKU), a rare congenital disorder in which the body cannot metabolize phenylalanine, the co-amino acid that makes up the composition of aspartame. According to the American Cancer Society, the buildup of phenylalanine in the bloodstream blocks other important chemicals from entering the brain. In children, this can lead to impaired brain development. This may also explain the persistent association with aspartame and memory loss, seizures, Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease in adults. (5)
Stick to the Bottom Line, Sweetie
Sugar, obtained from natural sources like sugar beets and cane, is the real deal. Sugar in its most natural state is turbinado, commonly recognized as Sugar in the Raw®. Honey is another all-natural sweetener, although it shouldn’t be given to children under the age of 1 year because Botulinum spores may be present, which increases the risk of infant botulism.
If diabetes is a concern, Mother Nature produces a plant called stevia, the leaf of which yields a natural sugar-like substance that is 150 to 300 times sweeter than cane sugar, but has no affect insulin levels. As an added bonus, stevia has zero calories.
References
Committee On Carcinogenicity Of Chemicals In Food, Consumer Products And The Environment: Statement On A Carcinogenicity Study Of Aspartame By The European Ramazzini Foundation; Dec. 2006 http://www.advisorybodies.doh.gov.uk/pdfs/aspart.pdf
FDA Statement on European Aspartame Study: CFSAN/Office of Food Additive Safety April 2007 http://www.fda.gov/Food/FoodIngredientsPackaging/FoodAdditives/ucm208580.htm
National Cancer Institute: Artificial Sweeteners and Cancer http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/factsheet/Risk/artificial-sweeteners
Mercola.com: Aspartame Dangers and Side Effects http://aspartame.mercola.com/
American Cancer Society: Aspartame http://www.cancer.org/Cancer/CancerCauses/OtherCarcinogens/AtHome/aspartame

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Surprise! Obama benefits corporate cronies via new greenhouse gas regulations

 

Supporters of President Obama claim that businesses that oppose his new “greenhouse gas” regulations (a.k.a. the return of cap-and-tax) are greedy capitalists who care more about profits than people. In contrasts, those who support the regulations are farsighted humanitarians willing to compromise with the administration for the greater good.  Writing in the Washington Examiner, the indispensable Tim Carney explains that the truth is more complex than that. As is usually the case with government regulations, some corporations benefit while others are losers. (Linked here with excerpts below):

Corporate lobbyists are divided on Obama’s current climate push, for a perfectly sensible reason: Obama’s rules benefit some companies while hurting others. This isn’t new. The history of climate policy is a story of some businesses seeing profit in regulation, and thus lobbying for regulation, and others seeing only costs, and thus lobbying against regulation.

Al Gore made the first serious push to curb greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S. The-then Vice President endorsed the Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change. The Clinton White House, however, soon realized Congress would never ratify the treaty. This didn’t stop the Treaty’s biggest boosters from trying, though.

“This agreement will be good for Enron stock!!” That was the bottom line of a 1997 memo by John Palmisano, an environmental policy executive at the notorious energy giant. Throughout the memo, Palmisano referred to various Enron “victories,” such as a slush fund for renewable energy, the creation of a trading scheme in emissions credits and rules that would favor natural gas over its competitors coal and oil.

So Enron liked a policy that helped it get government money for reducing U.S. emissions. Environmentalists applaud that. But that same Enron memo also defended Kyoto’s exemption for the developing world: Poor countries wouldn’t be covered by the same emissions rules affecting the U.S. Guess what Enron was doing in Africa, Asia, and South America at the time? Building coal-fired power plants.

If Enron was burning coal in Africa, it would benefit from the U.S. shutting down coal-fired plants, because that would lower the global coal price. Making it more profitable for Enron to burn coal in Nigeria is an odd feature of a climate policy.

When Enron died, its heir in climate policy was the U.S. Climate Action Partnership. USCAP brought together the same environmental groups that used to applaud Enron with companies like General Electric and DuPont.

USCAP lobbied for a federal “cap-and-trade” scheme in emissions credits, similar to that required by Kyoto and currently proposed by Obama’s EPA. One USCAP member, AES, was pulling an Enron — lobbying to limit coal use in the U.S., while opening coal-fired plants in the developing world…

ack in 2007, when the Supreme Court first ruled that carbon dioxide is a pollutant (and thus covered by the Clean Air Act), energy giants Calpine and Entergy filed an amicus curiae brief with the court supporting federal regulation of CO2.

In an April Supreme Court case on emissions where the EPA beat a power company, Calpine filed another pro-regulation amicus brief, along with energy giant Exelon.

Most industry lobbyists will oppose Obama’s current rules, but many will see profit in them. One lobby, called “Advanced Energy Economy,” is applauding Obama. “We see this as a real opportunity,” said Malcolm Woolf, an Obama donor and AEE’s top lobbyist. AEE represents companies like First Solar and Johns Mansville, a manufacturer owned by billionaire Obama lobbyist Warren Buffett.

Each time one of these corporate-green collaborations occur, Democrats or the mainstream liberal media declare some sort of great breakthrough and a sign of consensus. This climate policy is so necessary and reasonable that even Corporate America is on board!!!

The post Surprise! Obama benefits corporate cronies via new greenhouse gas regulations appeared first on Campaign for Liberty.

Surprise! Obama benefits corporate cronies via new greenhouse gas regulations
Norm Singleton
Fri, 06 Jun 2014 18:34:06 GMT

Civil Forfeiture Scam: Cops In Texas Seize Millions By ‘Policing for Profit’

Cops In Texas Seize Millions By 'Policing for Profit'

Nick SibillaNick Sibilla , Contributor

Policing for Profit

Texas law enforcement are continuing to enrich themselves using a little-known legal doctrine known as civil forfeiture, according to a new series of investigative reports. Under civil forfeiture, property can be forfeited even if its owner has never been charged with a crime. In these proceedings, accused criminals have more rights than innocent owners and the government sues the property, not its owner. These cases can be so baffling, one Texas Supreme Court Justice recently compared civil forfeiture to Alice in Wonderland and the works of Franz Kafka. But civil forfeiture isn’t just a quirky curiosity—it’s a powerful incentive for law enforcement to take millions.

Last month, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram reported that the District Attorney’s Office in Tarrant County, Texas seized $3.5 million, plus almost 250 cars and 440 computers in fiscal year 2013, roughly equal to about 10 percent of its budget. Of the property seized, almost $845,000 was spent on salaries for 16 employees at the office. By comparison, only $53,000 went to “six nonprofits that benefit victims or prosecution efforts.” The county’s narcotics unit spent an even greater proportion of forfeiture funds on salaries. Last year, the unit seized $666,427 in cash and used $426,058 to pay salaries.

 

Policing for profit

Even more property was forfeited by participating in a federal program known as “equitable sharing.” By partnering with a federal agency, local andstate law enforcement can keep up to 80 percent of the proceeds from a forfeited property. Incredibly, police can collaborate even if doing so would circumvent their own states’ protections for property owners.

Equitable sharing doled out almost $60,000 to the Arlington Police Department and nearly $400,000 to the Dallas/Fort Worth Airport Department of Public Safety in 2013. A joint task force composed of the Tarrant County DA’s Office and the DEA received almost $2.9 million, one of the highest bounties in the state.

In Texas, law enforcement can keep up to 90 percent of the proceeds from forfeited property. That clearly affects police priorities and provides an incentive to pursue cases rich in assets. In another article, the Star-Telegram delved into the forfeiture battlethat ensued after law enforcement busted a low-level drug ring atTexas Christian University (TCU). Police arrested twenty-three people for selling marijuana, pills and other controlled substances. Most of those arrested were TCU students, including four members of the football team. No one went to prison; they got probation, deferred adjudication or the charges were dismissed. Others received punishments as low as $300 in court costs.

Yet by using civil forfeiture, police seized over $300,000 worth of property from the students, including 15 cars, trucks and SUVs valued at more than $250,000; over $46,000 in cash; and over $17,000 from laptops, iPads, iPhones and the like. As the paper noted, “The items were seized before formal charges were filed and months before any convictions.” But according to an after-action report issued by theFort Worth Police Department, the drugs seized in the investigation only had an estimated street value of $29,000. So the property seized was worth far more than the drugs that were actually taken off the streets.

Civil forfeiture creates a “perverse incentive” and “skews law enforcement priorities,” noted Allen St. Pierre, the executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML). “It’s one of the worst stepchildren of the war on some drugs.”

Among the TCU cases, cash and electronic devices were typically forfeited to the state. As for the cars, some students were able to retrieve them, but only after months of waiting and negotiations. One student paid $7,500 in an “economic agreement” with Tarrant County to retrieve his Cadillac Escalade. Another person sent $17,500 to the county’s narcotics unit to get back his Ford F-150.

Across the state, pursuing forfeiture cases related to cannabis has generated millions for Texas police. Between 2002 and 2012, the federal government processed $64.3 million in cash and other valuables in civil and criminal marijuana forfeitures in Texas. According to the Wall Street Journal, that amount is the fourth highest in the nation.

“Police power cannot go unpoliced”

Texas law enforcement has a long history of policing for profit. The Institute for Justice found that the average law enforcement agency in Texas took in forfeiture proceeds equal to about 14 percent of its budget in 2007. Among the 10 agencies that obtained the most forfeiture proceeds, that figure soared to one-third. Between 2001 and 2007, law enforcement agencies seized and kept over 35,000 cars, homes and electronics, forfeiting more than $280 million. District attorneys have used these forfeiture fundson ridiculous purchases, including visiting casinos, a vacation to Hawaii and a margarita machine, as seen in the video below.

Most infamously, police in Tenaha seized over $3 million from hundreds of drivers and even made “cash-for-freedom deals” with drivers. As The New Yorker reported last August, drivers “would go to jail and their children would be handed over to foster care. Or they could sign over their cash to the city of Tenaha, and get back on the road.”

“The Texas criminal justice system wages war on the politically powerless and the poor are just grist for the mill,” remarked Robert Guest, a former prosecutor in Texas and now a member of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP).

Despite enacting some modest reforms in 2011, the Lone Star State still has an appalling lack of safeguards for property owners. To forfeit property, the government needs only to show by a “preponderance of the evidence” that someone’s property is related to a crime. But in criminal convictions, the government must prove someone is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, a much higher standard.

Unfortunately, Texas isn’t an outlier. According to the Institute for Justice’s report, “Policing for Profit,” 19 other states use the preponderance-of-the-evidence standard in civil forfeiture cases. Another 14 states require even less evidence to forfeit property.

The cost to defend oneself in court further stacks the deck against property owners. “Unlike a criminal charge, you do not have the right to court-appointed counsel when the government wants to take your property,” explained Guest. “So the state usually wins their case by default judgment.”

Tarrant County is no exception. Last year, the District Attorney’s office filed 431 cases, but almost half of them were never contested. Less than 10 percent of cases actually went to trial. One attorney in Fort Worth noted that litigating complicated civil forfeiture cases can cost anywhere from $25,000 to over $100,000.

The odds of an owner winning a forfeiture case are further lowered by the reverse burden of proof in Texas. Incredibly, innocent owners actually bear the burden of proof in civil forfeiture proceedings. In other words, they are guilty until proven innocent.

Zaher El-Ali lost his car to the government because someone else got a DWI with his car. Back in 2004, Ali sold a 2004 Chevrolet Silverado to a man who paid $500 and agreed to pay the rest on credit. In 2009, the buyer was arrested for a DWI and sentenced to prison. Police in Harris County also seized the Silverado for civil forfeiture. But since Ali still held on to the car’s title and the Silverado was registered in his name, he partnered with the Institute for Justice and sued to get his car back. Ali petitioned the Texas Supreme Court to hear the case.

Zaher Eli-Ali

Zaher Eli-Ali

In March, the court declined, meaning Texas gets to keep one more Chevy. In a scathing dissent, Justice Don Willett, joined by two other justices, lambasted the court for deciding not to hear Ali’s case. Justice Willett also criticized the profit incentive (“When agency budgets grow dependent on asset forfeiture…constitutional liberties are unavoidably imperiled”) and the reverse burden of proof (“owners trying to retrieve their homes and other possessions bear a heavier burden than the government that confiscated them”).

To that end, the Texas legislature should enact a series of common-sense reforms. First, take away the incentive to police for profit. Instead of allowing law enforcement to keep up to 90 percent of the proceeds, mandate that those funds be deposited in either the general fund or in a specific neutral fund, like feeding the homeless.

Second, forfeiture should require a criminal conviction. Last month, Minnesota lawmakers overwhelmingly approved such a measure. Third, the government must bear the burden of proof when it comes to innocent owners. This would better protect the property rights of Texans like Ali.

Finally, to prevent cops from collaborating with federal agents and doing an end-run around these reforms, legislators should greatly restrict local and state law enforcement agencies from participating in equitable sharing. Utah once had a very effective ban that essentially killed equitable sharing in the state, until lawmakers defied the will of the voters and overturned it.

These reforms would go far in restoring constitutional protections to Texans. As Justice Willett succinctly put it, “police power cannot go unpoliced.”

Civil Forfeiture Scam: Cops In Texas Seize Millions By ‘Policing for Profit’
Kevin
Fri, 06 Jun 2014 16:47:52 GMT