Sunday, May 27, 2007

Another Victim of the Homeland Security State

Sgt. James Emerick "Jaime" Dean, US Army, (ret.), on his wedding day last August. May he rest in God's peace.







The bullet that ended the life of 29-year-old Army Ranger James Emerick “Jaime” Dean last December 26 was fired by a Maryland State Police sniper named Sergeant Danny Weaver. But the circumstances that brought about the lethal conjunction of Jaime Dean and Danny Weaver were engineered by the architects of Washington's open-ended “war on terror” -- both the foreign military conflicts in which Dean had served, and the domestic militarization of law enforcement that brought about his needless death.


Dean, mentally unbalanced after his tour of duty in Afghanistan, was thrust into a deep depression after receiving notice that the Regime was re-activating him to serve another tour in Iraq. Diagnosed with severe post traumatic stress disorder, Dean was subject to recurring nightmares that would cause him to “wake up soaked in sweat,” his widow Muriel told the New York Times.


He was prescribed medication for his condition, which may or may not have helped. The FedEx letter he received from the Pentagon shortly after Thanksgiving definitely did not help. But the Bush-era Pentagon is not burdened with scruples when it comes to redeploying mentally ill soldiers to Iraq.


By Christmas, Jaime was no longer taking his medication. After hoisting a few at a local bar, he came home, agitated and suicidal. He told Muriel – whom he had married in August – that “the next time you see me I'll be in a body bag.” After shattering a mural on the wall of his home, Jaime grabbed a can of gasoline and threatened to burn the house down; Muriel, somewhat accustomed to Jaime's problems, was able to calm him down. “I told myself in a couple of hours he'll be fine,” Muriel told the local newspaper, the Enterprise.















Reflections on a world-shattering loss: A mirror belonging to Muriel Dean, Jaime's widow, displays a photo captioned by a love note from her husband; below, Muriel is reflected in her husband's tombstone.








Jaime left his home to visit his grandmother, Mary. “He talked about Iraq and some family problems he was having,” she recalled. As he left, Jaime told his grandmother he was going to visit his father, who lived nearby.


At around 9:00 Christmas night, Jaime called his sister and told her “[I] just can't do it any more”; a gun shot was heard in the background, leading Jaime's sister to believe initially that he had killed himself. This impression dissipated after Jaime returned to the telephone, even though he wasn't communicative by that point.


Muriel called the police and asked them to check on Jaime's welfare. Mention was made of the fact that Jaime's father Joseph had several guns in his home, including a black powder gun.



Jaime Dean with his father Joseph, last August (l.); Joseph Dean cleaning his home following Jaime's death in December (below)









Joseph's home, observes an official inquiry conducted by Richard D. Fritz,(.pdf) the Republican County Attorney for St. Mary's County, is “a secluded family farm surrounded by woods and fields” and accessible by “a dead end dirt lane serving only the few houses located thereon.” The home provided “a clear 360 degrees of observation,” meaning that Jaime couldn't leave without being observed.


When the police learned that a suicidal Army Ranger had holed up at the farmhouse, they evacuated the neighboring houses. They also disabled his truck with “stop sticks.” Since the subject was alone, and no crime had been committed, this was not a hostage situation; Jaime Dean was a threat to himself alone. He was isolated and neutralized. The police could easily have outlasted Dean if they had the patience to do so, the vigilance to keep the house under surveillance, and the clarity of mind to get him in touch with his family and loved ones.


After all, the point was “to save lives, not kill somebody,” comments Tony Wheatley, Joseph Dean's neighbor.


But that's now how the paramilitary affiliates of the Homeland Security State operate.

















How the Homeland Security State deals with humanitarian crises: An armored vehicle is deployed during the standoff with Jaime Dean. (Photo courtesy of BayNet.)


Joseph Dean's home was surrounded by Emergency Response Teams – that is, SWAT units – from two local Sheriff's departments and the Maryland State Police. Two “Peacekeeper” armored vehicles (courtesy of the Pentagon's Law Enforcement Support Office, most likely) were dispatched to the site. A 14-hour standoff ensued, during which time “family members were not allow to talk to Dean ... [and] his grandmother was threatened with arrest,” recounted the Washington Post.


At about 1:30 am, the police disabled Dean's cell phone and rerouted the residential land line phone so that it could only communicate with the police negotiator. This may have made sense if Dean had been a criminal suspect, but, once again, he wasn't: He was a suicidal, agitated man who most likely would have benefited from contact with his family, rather than with a spokesman for the paramilitary forces surrounding him.


After a bizarre and unnecessary effort to insert a “throw phone” into the house, the assault with “chemical munitions” began: “Somewhere between forty and sixty rounds were shot at the house,” reports St. Mary's County Attorney Fritz in his investigation.


Let's pause for a moment and recap:


Jaime Dean was a combat veteran suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. He was prone to violent dreams generated by his combat experience. He was in the middle of an emotional breakdown, cut off from his family and looking down the barrels of a large paramilitary force. And then he comes under attack with non-lethal, but disorienting, chemical weapons.


The eminently predictable product of these factors was Dean's action, shortly after the unwarranted and useless gas attack, was to fire his shotgun in the general direction of the police. That was the first time in this entire episode that Dean had directed gunfire at anybody (including himself). And it “would have been viewed as ... a first degree felony assault, which is punishable by a term of incarceration of 25 years,” observes Fritz.


Dean would fire his shotgun two other times during the siege, once after a drowsy sniper carelessly let his rifle discharge (remember: only police and soldiers are responsible enough to be trusted with firearms), and once at a second “throw phone” placed in the window at around 11:30 am.


Do they look like Peace Officers to you? Tactical operators outside Joseph Dean's home during the 14-hour siege. (BayNet photo)









By that time, the police had devised an “overall plan of operation”:


*A police officer named Trossbach, a childhood friend of Jaime's, was brought to the scene to try to “talk him out.”


*If this failed, the SWAT operators would bracket the home with the armored “Peacekeepers.” “Peacekeeper 1” would plant an explosive charge on the right side of the house; “Peacekeeper 2” would be deployed to the front.


If the actions of Trossbach, in attempting to talk Dean out did not work, chemical munitions would be redeployed by both Peacekeepers, from the front, and the back of the residence,” reports Fritz. “If the chemical munitions did not work, the explosive charge would be detonated in order to blow a hole in the side of the house so as to remove the security provided by this windowless wall, and to serve as a possible point of entry.”


The first question that occurs to me is this: If an effort was going to be made to “talk him out,” why didn't the police allow Jaime's wife, father, grandmother, and sister to talk to him? A second question: Fritz points out that only five minutes were allotted for Officer Trossbach to make the attempt to talk Jaime out – why? What was the rush?


At 12:45, according to the chronology assembled by Fritz, “power is cut to the house. Telephone to the residence is dead, negotiator continues to attempt contact but cannot because phone is dead. State Police Peace Keeper is deploying chemical munitions in front, Calvert County armored vehicle is deploying chemical munitions to the rear of the residence.”


Once again, I have to ask: What was the rush? And how was Jaime supposed to react to this assault?


Two minutes later, Jaime opened the door and appeared to be pointing his gun at the armored Peacekeeper. That's when Sgt. Weaver, fearing for the safety of the officers therein, fired the shot that killed Jaime Dean.


The officer [Sgt. Weaver] had to take that action to protect the exposed officers,” insisted Maryland State Police Col. Thomas Hutchins shortly after the incident. “It's a tragedy that was not of our doing. It was Mr. Dean who decided.”


What, exactly, did the victim “decide” here? Dozens, perhaps scores, of perverse decisions were made by police officials that created circumstances perfectly calibrated to result in the death of Jaime Dean, of which I'll highlight just a few:


*The first perverse decision was to treat the matter as a hostage situation, rather than a humanitarian emergency.


*The second was to militarize the encounter, which made escalation, rather than de-escalation, the predictable course of action.


*The third was to cut off Jaime from his family, rather than to try desperately to reconnect him with them. Since bloody when is it proper to prevent communication between a suicidal person and his family?


*The fourth was to unleash “chemical munitions” against Jaime, which predictably provoked him to return fire; I'm cynical enough – as a result of studying many episodes of this kind – to believe that this might have been the desired outcome.


*Who was the tactical genius who authorized the use of explosives? What was to happen after the wall had been breached? Was there any option here that would not have resulted in Jaime Dean suffering a violent death?


*And who decided to cut power to the home while Jaime was on the phone with a police negotiator?


County Attorney Fritz, who concludes – incomprehensibly – that Jaime's “killing may well be justifiable under the law,” excoriates the police for creating a set of circumstances in which that killing became inevitable.


Since “the police had both time and location in their favor,” Fritz points out, “there was absolutely no need to push an extraction of Mr. Dean. This was not a hostage situation, where an innocent civilian was being threatened... to the contrary, it was a barricade by a single individual, who was demanding to be left alone.”


Time after time, Mr. Dean informed officers that they should not attempt to approach his house, and for them to back off, or they would get hurt,” continues Fritz. Legitimate Peace Officers would have cooperated, while being ready to help if necessary. But Dean was dealing with paramilitary operators whose mission was to make the subject submit, or be destroyed – even when that target was a mentally ill man who had not committed a crime.


Fritz points out that “there was absolutely no need to take on such an aggressive stance.” And the operational plan to end the standoff “needlessly created a situation that if Mr. Dean exposed himself as he did, the Counter Sniper, Sgt. Weaver, would have no option but to utilize lethal force, as he did.”


Which is to say, Col. Hutchins, that it was you – your department, and the tactical units deployed on-site, who “decided” to end Jaime Dean's life. It was your choices that resulted in the shot being fired that killed Jaime in the doorway of his father's home, leaving his blood smeared five feet into the entryway of a house that had already been perforated with scores of chemical munitions.



Jaime Dean while deployed in Afghanistan.


In a larger sense, however, these circumstances were devised by those who preside over the Warfare/Homeland Security State. Such people regarded Jaime Dean not as a wounded but affable young husband and father (to his newly acquired stepson), a generous neighbor, an exemplary employee – but only as someone to fill a uniform, and perhaps a coffin, in a pointless and immoral war in which needless tragedies like the one that killed Jaime are commonplace.


(Thanks to Trevor Bothwell of the Free State Project for his capable reporting on this tragedy. Thanks as well to Lew Rockwell for tipping us to the New York Times essay about Jaime and his needless death. It should also be pointed out that Jamie's widow Muriel has established an In Memoriam website for her husband.)

Please be sure to visit
The Right Source.







9 comments:

  1. I just came to visit your blog after posting something on my alternate blog on the same thing. Since my alternate blog is simple static HTML, there's no trackback feature.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Another Victim of the Homeland Security State

    http://freedominourtime.blogspot.com/2007/05/another-victim-of-warfarehomeland.html

    (Visit the website for many pictures and informative embedded links within the article that are not available by reposting. The site is the Pro Libertate Blog by William N. Grigg. - (I love Latin) - He writes a thorough informative article with excellent perspective. An older article of Mr. William Grigg was very similar in nature to an older article of mine, Massive Terrorist Cells Identified in US http://www.thepriceofliberty.org/06/09/11/ward.htm - Congratulations! You May Already Be A Terrorist http://freedominourtime.blogspot.com/search/label/homeland%20security probably assisted with my enthusiasm for his Blog and the feeling of finding a brother patriot. Take just a little time to read a few of his articles. They are worth the time. The Right Source is worth a check also - http://www.rightsourceonline.com/welch/home.cfm )

    Another Victim of the Homeland Security State

    The bullet that ended the life of 29-year-old Army Ranger James Emerick “Jaime” Dean last December 26 was fired by a Maryland State Police sniper named Sergeant Danny Weaver. But the circumstances that brought about the lethal conjunction of Jaime Dean and Danny Weaver were engineered by the architects of Washington's open-ended “war on terror” -- both the foreign military conflicts in which Dean had served, and the domestic militarization of law enforcement that brought about his needless death.

    Dean, mentally unbalanced after his tour of duty in Afghanistan, was thrust into a deep depression after receiving notice that the Regime was re-activating him to serve another tour in Iraq. Diagnosed with severe post traumatic stress disorder, Dean was subject to recurring nightmares that would cause him to “wake up soaked in sweat,” his widow Muriel told the New York Times.

    He was prescribed medication for his condition, which may or may not have helped. The FedEx letter he received from the Pentagon shortly after Thanksgiving definitely did not help. But the Bush-era Pentagon is not burdened with scruples when it comes to redeploying mentally ill soldiers to Iraq.

    By Christmas, Jaime was no longer taking his medication. After hoisting a few at a local bar, he came home, agitated and suicidal. He told Muriel – whom he had married in August – that “the next time you see me I'll be in a body bag.” After shattering a mural on the wall of his home, Jaime grabbed a can of gasoline and threatened to burn the house down; Muriel, somewhat accustomed to Jaime's problems, was able to calm him down. “I told myself in a couple of hours he'll be fine,” Muriel told the local newspaper, the Enterprise.

    Jaime left his home to visit his grandmother, Mary. “He talked about Iraq and some family problems he was having,” she recalled. As he left, Jaime told his grandmother he was going to visit his father, who lived nearby.

    At around 9:00 Christmas night, Jaime called his sister and told her “[I] just can't do it any more”; a gun shot was heard in the background, leading Jaime's sister to believe initially that he had killed himself. This impression dissipated after Jaime returned to the telephone, even though he wasn't communicative by that point.

    Muriel called the police and asked them to check on Jaime's welfare. Mention was made of the fact that Jaime's father Joseph had several guns in his home, including a black powder gun.
    Joseph's home, observes an official inquiry conducted by Richard D. Fritz,(.pdf) the Republican County Attorney for St. Mary's County, is “a secluded family farm surrounded by woods and fields” and accessible by “a dead end dirt lane serving only the few houses located thereon.” The home provided “a clear 360 degrees of observation,” meaning that Jaime couldn't leave without being observed.

    When the police learned that a suicidal Army Ranger had holed up at the farmhouse, they evacuated the neighboring houses. They also disabled his truck with “stop sticks.” Since the subject was alone, and no crime had been committed, this was not a hostage situation; Jaime Dean was a threat to himself alone. He was isolated and neutralized. The police could easily have outlasted Dean if they had the patience to do so, the vigilance to keep the house under surveillance, and the clarity of mind to get him in touch with his family and loved ones.
    After all, the point was “to save lives, not kill somebody,” comments Tony Wheatley, Joseph Dean's neighbor.

    But that's now how the paramilitary affiliates of the Homeland Security State operate.
    Joseph Dean's home was surrounded by Emergency Response Teams – that is, SWAT units – from two local Sheriff's departments and the Maryland State Police. Two “Peacekeeper” armored vehicles (courtesy of the Pentagon's Law Enforcement Support Office, most likely) were dispatched to the site. A 14-hour standoff ensued, during which time “family members were not allow to talk to Dean ... [and] his grandmother was threatened with arrest,” recounted the Washington Post.

    At about 1:30 am, the police disabled Dean's cell phone and rerouted the residential land line phone so that it could only communicate with the police negotiator. This may have made sense if Dean had been a criminal suspect, but, once again, he wasn't: He was a suicidal, agitated man who most likely would have benefited from contact with his family, rather than with a spokesman for the paramilitary forces surrounding him.

    After a bizarre and unnecessary effort to insert a “throw phone” into the house, the assault with “chemical munitions” began: “Somewhere between forty and sixty rounds were shot at the house,” reports St. Mary's County Attorney Fritz in his investigation.

    Let's pause for a moment and recap:

    Jaime Dean was a combat veteran suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. He was prone to violent dreams generated by his combat experience. He was in the middle of an emotional breakdown, cut off from his family and looking down the barrels of a large paramilitary force. And then he comes under attack with non-lethal, but disorienting, chemical weapons.
    The eminently predictable product of these factors was Dean's action, shortly after the unwarranted and useless gas attack, was to fire his shotgun in the general direction of the police. That was the first time in this entire episode that Dean had directed gunfire at anybody (including himself). And it “would have been viewed as ... a first degree felony assault, which is punishable by a term of incarceration of 25 years,” observes Fritz.

    Dean would fire his shotgun two other times during the siege, once after a drowsy sniper carelessly let his rifle discharge (remember: only police and soldiers are responsible enough to be trusted with firearms), and once at a second “throw phone” placed in the window at around 11:30 am.

    By that time, the police had devised an “overall plan of operation”:

    *A police officer named Trossbach, a childhood friend of Jaime's, was brought to the scene to try to “talk him out.”

    *If this failed, the SWAT operators would bracket the home with the armored “Peacekeepers.” “Peacekeeper 1” would plant an explosive charge on the right side of the house; “Peacekeeper 2” would be deployed to the front.

    “If the actions of Trossbach, in attempting to talk Dean out did not work, chemical munitions would be redeployed by both Peacekeepers, from the front, and the back of the residence,” reports Fritz. “If the chemical munitions did not work, the explosive charge would be detonated in order to blow a hole in the side of the house so as to remove the security provided by this windowless wall, and to serve as a possible point of entry.”

    The first question that occurs to me is this: If an effort was going to be made to “talk him out,” why didn't the police allow Jaime's wife, father, grandmother, and sister to talk to him? A second question: Fritz points out that only five minutes were allotted for Officer Trossbach to make the attempt to talk Jaime out – why? What was the rush?

    At 12:45, according to the chronology assembled by Fritz, “power is cut to the house. Telephone to the residence is dead, negotiator continues to attempt contact but cannot because phone is dead. State Police Peace Keeper is deploying chemical munitions in front, Calvert County armored vehicle is deploying chemical munitions to the rear of the residence.”
    Once again, I have to ask: What was the rush? And how was Jaime supposed to react to this assault?

    Two minutes later, Jaime opened the door and appeared to be pointing his gun at the armored Peacekeeper. That's when Sgt. Weaver, fearing for the safety of the officers therein, fired the shot that killed Jaime Dean.

    “The officer [Sgt. Weaver] had to take that action to protect the exposed officers,” insisted Maryland State Police Col. Thomas Hutchins shortly after the incident. “It's a tragedy that was not of our doing. It was Mr. Dean who decided.”

    What, exactly, did the victim “decide” here? Dozens, perhaps scores, of perverse decisions were made by police officials that created circumstances perfectly calibrated to result in the death of Jaime Dean, of which I'll highlight just a few:

    *The first perverse decision was to treat the matter as a hostage situation, rather than a humanitarian emergency.

    *The second was to militarize the encounter, which made escalation, rather than de-escalation, the predictable course of action.

    *The third was to cut off Jaime from his family, rather than to try desperately to reconnect him with them. Since bloody when is it proper to prevent communication between a suicidal person and his family?

    *The fourth was to unleash “chemical munitions” against Jaime, which predictably provoked him to return fire; I'm cynical enough – as a result of studying many episodes of this kind – to believe that this might have been the desired outcome.

    *Who was the tactical genius who authorized the use of explosives? What was to happen after the wall had been breached? Was there any option here that would not have resulted in Jaime Dean suffering a violent death?

    *And who decided to cut power to the home while Jaime was on the phone with a police negotiator?

    County Attorney Fritz, who concludes – incomprehensibly – that Jaime's “killing may well be justifiable under the law,” excoriates the police for creating a set of circumstances in which that killing became inevitable.

    Since “the police had both time and location in their favor,” Fritz points out, “there was absolutely no need to push an extraction of Mr. Dean. This was not a hostage situation, where an innocent civilian was being threatened... to the contrary, it was a barricade by a single individual, who was demanding to be left alone.”

    “Time after time, Mr. Dean informed officers that they should not attempt to approach his house, and for them to back off, or they would get hurt,” continues Fritz. Legitimate Peace Officers would have cooperated, while being ready to help if necessary. But Dean was dealing with paramilitary operators whose mission was to make the subject submit, or be destroyed – even when that target was a mentally ill man who had not committed a crime.

    Fritz points out that “there was absolutely no need to take on such an aggressive stance.” And the operational plan to end the standoff “needlessly created a situation that if Mr. Dean exposed himself as he did, the Counter Sniper, Sgt. Weaver, would have no option but to utilize lethal force, as he did.”

    Which is to say, Col. Hutchins, that it was you – your department, and the tactical units deployed on-site, who “decided” to end Jaime Dean's life. It was your choices that resulted in the shot being fired that killed Jaime in the doorway of his father's home, leaving his blood smeared five feet into the entryway of a house that had already been perforated with scores of chemical munitions.

    In a larger sense, however, these circumstances were devised by those who preside over the Warfare/Homeland Security State. Such people regarded Jaime Dean not as a wounded but affable young husband and father (to his newly acquired stepson), a generous neighbor, an exemplary employee – but only as someone to fill a uniform, and perhaps a coffin, in a pointless and immoral war in which needless tragedies like the one that killed Jaime are commonplace.

    (Thanks to Trevor Bothwell of the Free State Project for his capable reporting on this tragedy. Thanks as well to Lew Rockwell for tipping us to the New York Times essay about Jaime and his needless death. It should also be pointed out that Jamie's widow Muriel has established an In Memoriam website for her husband.)

    Please be sure to visit The Right Source.
    Congratulations! You May Already Be A Terrorist

    http://freedominourtime.blogspot.com/search/label/homeland%20security

    Dog and Man in Washington The Perils of Parens Patriae, or When the State Be... Down With the Draft! or How Ron Paul Could Win Biden Gives His Blessing to Derek Hale's Murderers... Stolen Sons (UPDATED) Uncomfortably Numb When Trouble Comes Knocking Planet of the Pig-Men Congratulations! You May Already Be A Terrorist The Ft. Dix "Conspiracy," or Why Dana Rohrabacher ...

    For this and many other informative articles about governmental Constitutional tyranny see my articles: http://www.thepriceofliberty.org/arc_ward.htm
    The US Is "a Distorted, Bastardized Form of Illegitimate Government." http://www.thepriceofliberty.org/04/09/10/ward.htm
    Operation Northwoods - FOIA Top Secret Document for False Flag Operation on Cuba. http://emperors-clothes.com/images/north-i.htm
    Pearl Harbor Attack Known by FDR (FOIA UNClassified Documents) http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=408
    Uranium: Deja DU - The Agent Orange of Eternity http://www.thepriceofliberty.org/04/09/07/ward.htm
    What is the Problem with Equality - Presumptive Equal Shared Parenting http://www.thepriceofliberty.org/04/09/15/ward.htm
    Aaron Russo's - America: Freedom to Fascism http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-4312730277175242198
    US Total Debt = 48.5 Trillion, US Gov. Spending = 43% of Economy, 6.1 Trillion Cumulative Trade Deficit, US Oil Production/Consumption = 1/4,
    SAT Scores/Dollars Spent = Decrease of 71% http://mwhodges.home.att.net/summary.htm
    "Bad Cops Took My Grandpa," Said 5 Year Old, Logan Klump http://www.thepriceofliberty.org/04/09/09/ward.htm
    The U.S. Constitution: Supposedly, Partially Revived on June 25, 2003 http://www.thepriceofliberty.org/04/10/04/ward.htm
    Only Two Gang Members Caught in The Great American "Hold Up" http://www.thepriceofliberty.org/06/09/04/ward.htm
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    HBO's "Hacking Democracy" http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=hacking+democracy&search=Search

    Frontline's "The Dark Side" The Iraq War Scam http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/darkside/view/
    Bombs in the WTC Buildings Proves Nothing to Racist-Fascist Bigots http://www.thepriceofliberty.org/06/08/21/ward.htm
    Micro-Nukes at the WTC
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    Update: Micro-Nukes at the WTC
    http://www.thepriceofliberty.org/07/03/05/ward.htm
    Update: Proves Micro Nukes in the WTC
    http://www.thepriceofliberty.org/07/04/16/ward.htm

    "Do not separate text from historical background. If you do, you will have perverted and subverted the Constitution, which can only end in a distorted, bastardized form of illegitimate government." --- James Madison.

    Phenomenon Archives: The Monopoly Men
    http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=3388799387341337020

    "On every question of construction [of the Constitution] let us carry ourselves back to the time when the Constitution was adopted, recollect the spirit manifested in the debates, and instead of trying what meaning may be squeezed out of the text, or intended against it, conform to the probable one in which it was passed." --- Thomas Jefferson
    Phenomenon Archives: Heavy Watergate, The War Against Cold Fusion
    http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=2229511748333360205

    "Someday the status quo will be more painful and difficult than changing and then America will change." "America Needs a Regime Removal, Not a Regime Change."
    Alex Jones - TerrorStorm - Fear & Propaganda CIA Tools of Tyranny.
    http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-7516705476148472744

    I have sworn before the alter of god, eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man." Thomas Jefferson, Letter to B. Rush, Sept. 23, 1800

    Congress.org: http://www.congress.org/ This is a good site to post the facts. I always include my prepared comments (a list of most of the pressing issues - impeach, 911, Constitutional rights, renewable energy, family rights, global warming, DU, etc.) on anything I post (vote) on: ADD YOUR OWN.
    LSLI: "Spaht", "Downs" on The People's Rights http://www.thepriceofliberty.org/04/09/15/ward.htm

    Support Ron Paul for President 2008 - Our First and Best Hope in
    Decades Representative Ron Paul Is Running for President 2008
    http://www.dfw.com/mld/startelegram/news/state/16438882.htm
    Ron Paul: Next President Of The USA?
    http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/january2007/120107ronpaul.htm
    To see for yourself:
    http://www.house.gov/paul/bio.shtml - Who is Ron Paul?
    http://www.ronpaul.org/
    http://www.house.gov/paul/legis_tst.htm - List of Ron Paul's articles.
    http://www.house.gov/paul/ - Website
    Contribute - https://www.ronpaul2008.com/forms/contribute.cfm
    Register Republican to Vote for Ron Paul in the Primaries. Important.
    America's Only Real Choice: Constitution or Tyranny? http://www.thepriceofliberty.org/04/11/19/ward.htm

    SECRETS OF THE CIA - A Disturbing Documentary
    http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-8085945499556832271


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    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-2499663,00.html
    "The Coast Is Toast: Take the Money and Run"
    http://www.thepriceofliberty.org/06/07/03/ward.htm


    SAVE AMERICA! DEMAND AN HONEST VOTE! BRING OUR TROOPS HOME NOW!
    STOP SPENDING AND START SAVING! - CUT THE GDP - GOVERNMENTS EXIST BY
    THE PEOPLE'S SPENDING - WHEN OUR 'REPRESENTATIVES' START RETURNING
    THE CONSTITUTION - WE CAN START SPENDING AGAIN.
    http://www.wearenotbuyingit.org/
    http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2006/02/16/MNG2KH9P4767.DTL

    Dei Jurum Conventus - (God's Rights (Unity)/Convention)

    Ed Ward, MD; http://groups.yahoo.com/group/EdWard-MD/ ,
    http://www.thepriceofliberty.org/arc_ward.htm
    Independent writer/Media Liaison for The Price of Liberty;
    http://www.thepriceofliberty.org/

    ReplyDelete
  3. Mr. Ward: Wow. Was it really necessary to repost the whole column as part of your comment? How about a paragraph or so from you, a few quotes maybe, and then a link to your blog or website?

    ReplyDelete
  4. I'm very impressed by Grigg's quality of writing. By now I've heard quite a few stories of this nature, where a completely innocent, often disoriented citizen is besieged in their own home by SWAT teams and a situation is deliberately created in which the person is ultimately killed for trying to defend themselves. What I still don't understand is why. I don't mean "why" philosophically; I mean, seriously, WHY? It can't simply be gross incompetence on the part of military and police. It is usually implied and sometimes stated outright by journalists that the death of the innocent person is planned by someone powerful, and the siege is staged to make the victim look like a criminal, i.e. to cover up the murder. I believe this to be true. But who planned it, and why? I wish that were explained. Even some speculation (identified as such) would be appreciated. I understand they wanted to re-activate Jamie Dean even though he suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, and he seemed to be resistent, but I don't understand what anyone stood to gain by killing him. Here is some speculation: perhaps they (I don't know exactly who) were worried that if he did commit suicide, and it was subsequently publicized that he had a mental condition due to his combat experiences and that his reactiviation was the trigger of his suicide, it would be a rallying point for the anti-war movement??? To me it still seems like so much trouble to go to in order to silence just one family's situation. Surely there are many veterans with severe emotional scars. They can't send SWAT teams after all of them. I truly don't understand this story and others of its kind.

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  5. The only ones that can stop this perversion by our SERVANTS, is We The People. They have taken far too much power from us. More than was ever intended. We The People are still the "Final", "Legitimate", "Supreme", (when clothed with OUR Constitution), and "Ultimate" authority.

    We must unite and make a stand, and force our SERVANTS to return to their Constitutionally delegated positions. Failure to do so will just result in more unfortunate and heart-breaking victims like Mr. Dean.....

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  6. They are sending a clear message: the mafia ruthlessly kills renegade henchmen.

    MCLA

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  7. Thank God we have the government to murder us before we get a chance to commit suicide.

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  8. "The third was to cut off Jaime from his family, rather than to try desperately to reconnect him with them. Since bloody when is it proper to prevent communication between a suicidal person and his family?"

    This has been a practice for many years because those who are serious about killing themselves want to say their last words to their loved ones before the final act. Also the cops are often lied to, and they do not know if one of the family members who wants to talk is the actual catalyst for the sick fella's episode. The contact with a family member- or anyone who might have pushed him over the edge in the first place- might encourage him to take his own life.

    That said I find the secluded nature of the incident to be more of a concern. There doesn't seem to be a legitimate reason to go anywhere near the place, let alone pump in chemicals and prepare to use explosives to get the guy help........whether he wants it or not.

    Wait and talk. Talk and wait. He'll either off himself, surrender for medical attention, or fall asleep.

    BTW, the throw phones are wired for audio (most)and video (some). This is why they wanted them inside so badly.

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  9. Good blog. Were there any consequences to the "[eace officers" who shot this man?

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