Monday, May 23, 2011

Death Squad Damage Control in Tucson (UPDATED with video, May 26)

Victims of an American death squad: Ex-Marine murder victim Jose Guerena with his wife and sons.



...no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution (emphasis added)

The Constitution of the United States is the supreme law of the land…. No person shall be disturbed in his private affairs, or his home invaded, without authority of law. 

Sections 3 and 8 of the “Declaration of Rights” from the Arizona State Constitution’s “Declaration of Rights”



People seeking to defend the manifestly indefensible often sabotage themselves by disclosing critical details that undermine their argument. Mike Storie, the police union lawyer representing the SWAT operators who murdered Jose Guerena in his home on May 5, did this during his May 19 press conference in an attempt to assign all of the blame for Jose’s death on the victim and his terrorized wife.

As reported by the Arizona Star, Storie insisted that if the Guerena family had permitted the armed intruders into their home, those inside “probably … wouldn’t have been arrested." This is because the "warrant was not directed at any particular person, and Guerena’s home was not mentioned, but it was targeting whoever might be inside the residence...."

That is to say that this was not a legitimate search warrant, under the requirements imposed by the Fourth Amendment (and expressly incorporated in Arizona law through the state constitution). The instrument used as supposed justification for the armed assault was akin to the "writs of assistance" used by British soldiers during the years leading up to the American colonial rebellion.

As Judge Andrew Napolitano summarizes, writs of assistance were "self-written search warrants" that "enabled [British] soldiers and government agents to enter any private building or dwelling and  search for whatever they had authorized themselves to search for." In this way, occupation forces could invade any home or business they chose, confiscate any item they suspected might be contraband, and haul away in irons anybody who attracted their malevolent  attention. 


The only material difference I can identify between that tyrannical practice and SWAT raids of the kind that resulted in the murder of Jose Guerena is the fact that British Redcoats were considerably more restrained in their behavior. 

Writs of assistance were conspicuous among the grievances that led the colonial Patriots to rebel against the British government, and they were the direct inspiration for the Fourth Amendment, a provision that as of May 16 is de jure dead letter in the American Imperium.

On that date, two rulings were announced -- one by the Indiana State Supreme Court, the other by the U.S. Supreme Court -- that formally vitiated constitutional impediments to warrantless intrusions by police. 

Those rulings simply formalized the state of affairs that has long existed in the United States; after all, owing the fraudulent, murderous enterprise called the "war on drugs," the Fourth Amendment has had no tangible relationship to public policy for decades.  Nonetheless, that Amendment remains on the books as part of the "supreme law" -- which means that the raid on the Guerena home was, in a literal, legally binding sense, a home invasion robbery. 

Michael Storie is a living illustration of the fact that there is no "mob lawyer" more drenched in disrepute than a barrister who prostitutes himself in the service of a police union. 


"Who's being evasive? I'm not being evasive! Why are you being evasive?"
Storie is lead criminal attorney for the Arizona Conference of Police and Sheriffs (AZCOPS). Through no fault of his own, Storie somewhat resembles Nathan Thurm, a fictional corporate attorney played by Canadian comic genius Martin Short.

In his performance at the May 19 news conference, Storie did a pretty creditable impression of Thurm, capturing the same odd combination of oleaginous dishonesty and prickly passive aggression that Short brought to his character, who was paid extravagantly well to protect the powerful and corrupt.


While he has been employed by AZCOPS, no member of that union "has ever been convicted of crimes relating to on-duty conduct," boast the organization. This isn't strictly correct: Storie represented former DARE officer Ramon Fernando Borbon, who was convicted of kidnapping and sexually assaulting a 19-year-old woman and a  16-year-old girl while he was on-duty. 

In the Borbon case, Storie employed a two-pronged defense strategy: He tried to depict the adult victim as a consenting party, and the child as a gold-digging opportunist. In other words: They were asking for it, and now they're just interested in money. He's using a variation on that approach in defending the SWAT team members who murdered Jose Guerena: It was all the victim's fault, and his family is now simply "trying to make money" through a lawsuit. 



The SWAT operators "had no choice but to shoot" after engineering a completely illegal raid, Thurm -- er, Storie insisted. After all, Guerena was armed with an AR-15, and several officers "did report that they saw a muzzle flash from the shooter" -- which means that their lives were in danger. 

Well, actually, they didn't see a muzzle flash, since -- as the Sheriff's Office has admitted -- Guerena never removed the safety from his rifle. Ah, but he could have, you see, and since the omniscient heroes on the SWAT team "know that [the] walls [of the Guerena home] are stucco ... if this man starts shooting his rounds, every neighbor in the vicinity is in danger, including possible innocent residents that are in the residence itself." 

So we're told that waiting even a few seconds before opening fire was too risky; the only safe choice was for the SWAT team to unleash a 71-round barrage, since, as everyone knows, high-velocity rounds fired by sanctified personages in police uniforms possess a magical property that prevents them from endangering innocent people. 


That magical property, incidentally, is "qualified immunity" -- and it protects the only "innocent" people that police unions care about: Police officers who injure or kill Mundanes.

Within seconds of violating the Guerena home, the invaders had perforated Jose’s body with at least 60 gunshots. While Jose bled to death, his killers refused to allow paramedics to treat him.  During that period the SWAT team actually inserted a remote-controlled robot -- another pricey toy provided by the Pentagon's LESO program -- to clear the house. While Jose was dying on the floor, the SWAT team found "everything they [thought]  they’re going to find in there," Storie insisted.



What, exactly, were they looking for, and what did they find? After scraping away the layers of dissimulation applied by Storie, we arrive at this answer: They were looking for nothing in particular, and that's exactly what they found.

They found no narcotics, no stash of suspected narcotics proceeds, no documentary or physical evidence of a crime of any kind. Neither Jose nor Vanessa has a criminal record. 

Yet Storie, who appears congenitally incapable of decent shame, has left the air clotted with insinuation: He reports that handguns, rifles, body armor, and “part of a police uniform” were found in the Guerena household, along with a picture of Jesus Malverde, described as a "patron saint" of narcotics traffickers. In other words, in terms of actual criminal evidence, they found nothing.

Guerena, recall, is a former Marine who served two combat tours in Iraq, so the presence of body armor – as well as a small gun collection – would hardly be inexplicable. It's quite likely that his gun collection was smaller than those of many other Arizona residents who never served in the military. 

Furthermore, what, exactly, constitutes “part” of a police uniform? Might it be military-issue clothing in Guerena’s possession – the kind of combat couture affected by jock-riding poseurs of the kind who gravitate toward SWAT teams? Again, Storie hasn’t supplied the details, apparently in the hope that public perceptions will be governed by headlines, rather than details. 


Like everything else Storie said at the press conference, he extracted the detail about Jesus Malverde from the same bodily orifice he employs to dispose of used food. Malverde is not a Narcotrafficante, nor is he their proprietary saint. He is a semi-mythical Robin Hood figure venerated by ethnic Mexicans throughout the Southwest

By bringing up this inconsequential detail, Storie was trafficking in something that smells an awful lot like race-baiting. That comment could be a dog whistle directed at the segment of Arizona's population that considers Joe Arpaio a champion of law and order, rather than a viscous, opportunistic thug: Rather than seeing Jose Guerena as an honorably discharged Marine and (of infinitely greater importance) loving young husband and father, at least some Arizonans now have an excuse to suspect that he's an agent of the Reconquista plot.

The original story put out by the Pima County Sheriff's Office was that the raid in which Guerena was murdered was part of a large operation investigating a marijuana trafficking conspiracy. As outrage coalesced over Guerena’s death, the official line was revised: Now we are told that Jose and his family were somehow “connected” to an alleged home invasion robbery ring, as were three other homes targeted in the same May 5 SWAT rampage. 

Apart from the fact that Jose himself was murdered in a home invasion conducted under the color of supposed State authority, there is another connection to a previous crime of that kind: Two of their relatives were murdered a year ago in a home invasion of the non-government-approved variety. 

That fact might well have colored Vanessa’s perceptions of what was happening with a government-licensed home invasion crew materialized outside her home, began to vandalize the house, and threatened her life and that of her baby. It’s also quite possible that the murder of a relative, coupled with combat experience in Iraq, played a large role in Jose’s perceptions and actions on that horrible morning. 

 The search warrant has been sealed, and the Pima County Sheriff’s Department refuses to release details. Other than upbraiding local reporters who have abandoned stenography in favor of legitimate adversarial journalism, Clarence Dupnik, the Epsilon-grade personage in charge of Pima County’s Sheriff’s Office,has petulantly complained that the press has been “irresponsible” in “questioning the legality” of a military operation that resulted in the entirely avoidable violent death of a young father who was defending his wife and child against a feral pack of armed strangers. 


Like practically everybody else in the same racket, Sheriff Dupnik considers himself to be at war with the population his department ostensibly protects and serves. That's the only rational explanation for the fact that he is treating the details of this incident as if they were classified secrets in a combat zone, rather than facts he is obliged to provide to the public that employs him. 

While grousing that "it is unacceptable and irresponsible to couch ... questions with implications of secrecy and cover-up," Dupnik's office maintains that there is a "very real threat to innocent lives if ... details [about the killing] are released prematurely." Those "innocent" lives, we are entitled to suspect, are undercover police operatives -- informants and, what's much the same thing, provocateurs -- who helped precipitate the crime on May 5. 

 Storie peddled a similar line in his May 19 press conference, insisting that although Guerena was not individually targeted by a search or arrest warrant, detectives had concluded that someone at his residence had been keeping police investigators under "counter-surveillance."

"Now, what I mean by this is, at some point detectives, as is usually the case, were driving by this house to get some intelligence," Storie said. "At one point, when detectives were driving past this house once, the resident of this house, suspected to be Guereno [sic], jumped in his car and followed this detective. They then got a report from MVD" -- that's the Motor Vehicles Division, not the Soviet Ministry for State Security, despite the institutional kinship of those entities -- "that there was a hit on this license plate driven by this detective by someone. So, Guereno [sic!] or someone very similar to him, who followed this detective, searched the identity of this driver, who was the owner of his vehicle. This is known as counter-surveillance measures done by people who are in this type of business. OK?"

It is a credit to his composure, if not his character, that Storie could ladle out this is a greasy porridge of self-serving supposition and speculation with a straight face. How could "someone" -- just anyone, really -- get instant access to the information at the Motor Vehicles Division? Who was that "someone," incidentally? Who were the "detectives" who had been staking out Guerena's home, and stalking his family? For that matter, was it a detective, or more than one -- seeing that Storie can't seem to get that detail nailed down? What evidence, apart from inchoate suspicions, justified the initial surveillance of that home? For that matter, was the subject of surveillance Jose Guerena, or someone whose surname is "Guereno"? 

During the same press conference Storie admitted that the SWAT team "had no specific information about what particular kids were in this house, or if there were any" before laying siege to a home containing a young mother and her four-year-old son -- and a husband trying to get some sleep after pulling a long graveyard shift at a local mine. In other words, they knew nothing of any value about the home they attacked -- yet Storie, Dupnik, and the murderers themselves all insist that the violent death of Jose Guerena was an entirely appropriate outcome, and that only irresponsible people would suspect otherwise. 

UPDATE, May 26
The entire incident lasted less than a minute. The sirens sounded for less than ten seconds. The announcement was practically inaudible. And that much-discussed "portion of a police uniform" was a Border Patrol cap of the kind that can be purchased via Amazon:





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31 comments:

  1. The only hope we have is that the cost of such actions will soon out weight the ability of the local communities to pay. Faced with ever increasing monetary payouts the tax feeding storm troopers will be sent to the ash can of history. But then again I am not all that sure that will ever happen.

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  2. this is a very sickening miscarriage of justice. these murderers should all swing from the gallows. swing high.

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  3. no need to post

    Greetings Will,

    Shared

    Thank you for writing this essay

    Doc Ellis 124

    no need to post

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  4. It's not a sickening miscarriage of justice, it's "...the end of American liberty."

    http://lewrockwell.com/whitehead/whitehead31.1.html

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  5. Finally the powers that be in this despicable shit hole of a city show their true colors for all the planet to see.

    Storie was trafficking in something that smells an awful lot like race-baiting. That comment could be dog whistle directed at the segment of Arizona's population that considers Joe Arpaio a champion of law and order, rather than a viscous, opportunistic thug: Rather than seeing Jose Guerena as an honorably discharged Marine and (of infinitely greater importance) loving young husband and father, at least some Arizonans now have an excuse to suspect that he's an agent of the Reconquista plot.

    I'm tempted to agree wholeheartedly with this statement, except for the fact that Tucson is the decidedly more liberal of Arizona's two major cities, as the ongoing "urination contest" between the offices of Maricona County's own Il Duce, Joke Arpiggo, and Pima County's dimwitted "liberal" sheriff Clarence "The Dope" Dupnik demonstrates. Granted, Tucson definitely has far more than its fair share of race-baiting rednecks, but these are heavily counterbalanced by the open borders, multiculturalism-embracing liberals. If I were to try to divine a reason for the Guerena travesty (and trying to divine "reason" behind any Tucsonan's actions is a fool's errand), I would have to guess that the current liberal majority feels itself under siege, and, as a visceral survival reaction, is trying to outdo the fascists at their own game.

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  6. I wonder if Mrs Giffords will have anything to say about this.

    Reading your posts it does seem that the police = the home army or perhaps an updated colonial presence.

    Unfortunately the purveyors of truth , the MainstreamMedia will concentrate on violence in foreign lands or an act of nearly-terrorism at home, while playing 'the police are under incredible pressure' doowop.

    Kill the innocent, protect the criminals, seems to be the guiding principle.

    cheers

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  7. It's definitely a sad day for America when the 3rd Amendment has to be invoked again.

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  8. I wonder if Mrs Giffords will have anything to say about this.

    Not even if cornered. "Gabby," like all good gun-grabbing liberals, couldn't care less about victims of the murderous state of which she is an agent unless it is she who should somehow become one of its victims. While she hasn't yet sufficiently recovered from her encounter with Jared Lee Loughner's bullet to launch her campaign against citizens' right to armed self-defense, we can count on such a self-serving effort getting underway in the very near future.

    Finally, two observations:

    1. I find it very strange that a self-proclaimed liberal like Gabby Giffords would be married to a man who represents something her liberal ideology demands that she despise.

    2. The fact that Jared Lee Loughner's bullets even managed to leave the chamber of his weapon, much less hit any human targets, is almost certainly due to the fact that no devotee of the 2nd Amendment who openly carries (and these are everywhere here in Tucson, yours truly being one among them) would be caught anywhere near a rally sponsored by a known gun-grabber. Had Gabby been known as a defender of liberty, and the Constitution that ensures it, someone with heat at their side just MIGHT have been there to stop Jared dead (literally) in his tracks before he could have squeezed off a single shot.

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  9. there are an awful lot of veterans being killed in these 'home-invasions'. it seems likely that the soldiers have been marked by information gleaned from their tours of duty; they fit a profile that needs to be dealt with in a special way. they are on a list. could this be a patriotic-profile list?
    let's be honest. these are most likely men who would be the first AND most effective soldiers in a revolution. this is indeed black crime. as kennedy stated, it is a 'monolithic conspiracy' and is indeed 'death squads by night instead of soldiers by day.'

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  10. "Every normal man must be tempted at times to spit on his hands, hoist the black flag, and begin to slit throats."
    H.L. Mencken

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  11. Interesting:

    Oath Keepers to Rally in Tucson on Memorial Day Over Death of Young Marine Veteran

    "Oath Keepers will join Vanessa Guerena, the widow of Jose Guerena, to conduct a Memorial at the Guerena home on Memorial Day. There will be various Oath Keepers activities over the Memorial Day weekend. Please check at Oath Keepers’ national site for updates and details."


    http://oathkeepers.org/oath/2011/05/21/oath-keepers-to-rally-in-tucson-on-memorial-day-over-death-of-young-marine-veteran/

    "He died with his safety still on. He didn’t fire a shot. The Pima County, Arizona (Sheriff Dupnik’s department), SWAT Team fired 71 rounds at him, hitting him with approximately 60 rounds. He had no criminal record. The only justification given by the Sheriff’s spokesman for using SWAT to serve the warrant was that it was a search warrant in a narcotics conspiracy investigation (with three other homes searched in the same neighborhood), and that this is their policy when the home-owner may be armed

    This policy of using SWAT to serve mere search warrants on people with no violent criminal history will lead to more deaths of veterans and other trained American gun owners because a trained man will react precisely the same way this young Marine did.

    We must take a stand on this use of SWAT against gun owners and veterans who have no violent crime history, and that stand needs to be a firm one.

    Therefore, we are going to rally in Tucson this coming Memorial Day, May 30, 2011 to honor this young Marine’s service and to express our opposition to the destruction of our liberty, and our opposition to this policy of using SWAT Teams to serve mere search warrants on gun owners and veterans who have no violent criminal record."


    And here is a Forbes.com article on it:

    http://blogs.forbes.com/erikkain/2011/05/24/oath-keepers-to-protest-killing-of-jose-guerena/

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  12. What the state mercenaries ("law-enforcers") are too dense to see, while doing their power-happy gang stunts, is that they are endangering themselves. I don't mean they are bravely putting themselves in harm's way for truth and justice. (Nice joke.) I mean they are showing more and more people that so-called "law enforcement" is often evil, and "cop-killers" are often justified. It's a shame the victim of this invasion didn't at least take a few of the Nazis with him. Obviously being able to THINK, or having a CONSCIENCE, isn't enough to keep cops from routinely committing evil. Unfortunately, maybe what has to happen, to create any sort of deterrent to this fascist garbage, is for SWAT thugs to start being gunned down in their own living rooms.

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  13. Lawrence A. OshanekMay 24, 2011 at 4:06 PM

    I once again appreciate the work and thought behind the words.

    I do truly feel that your country is so far into assassination that it can not be stopped except ........

    God bless and help you all.

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  14. IMHO, ALL of the perps iv0nvolved in this crime, from the sheriff on down, need to be charged with 1st degree murder, tried, convicted, and lined up against the wall, facing the firing squad.

    Since I know that will never happen, I pray that the citizens of Tucson storm the Bastille.

    Bob
    III

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  15. Excellent, Will! The self-proclaimed peace-maintaining agencies in Arizona - as well as the rest of the US - are greatly deserving of continuous outing of their harm-causing actions and the "legal" shenanigans that routinely follow. You've done a great job here and earlier pulling all the details together for everyone to see clearly.

    Now as a follow-up, those of us who would like to negatively social preference these vermin - withdraw/cease/avoid all voluntary association - we need published identifiable photos of the SWAT team members to go along with the one you have provided of their lawyer, Michael Storie. And I would urge this same shaming and shunning of the lawyer just as much as towards his clients. Let all of them try to enjoy life, even just exist, when virtually no one will have anything to do with them - no voluntary interactions at all, no sales/services/camaraderie, no anything!

    For more on this concept for social order without government - http://selfsip.org/solutions/Social_Preferencing.html

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  16. How about posting the name and a picture of the judge that signed off on a blanket no-name search order. 100 heads. III

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  17. It's not the end of American liberty... it is the throwing down of the gauntlet of tyranny and oppression. The enemies of freedom are saying, for all to hear, "What are you going to do about it?"

    What response are each of you prepared to offer?

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  18. Omni Consumer ProductsMay 25, 2011 at 4:41 AM

    http://realitybloger.wordpress.com/2011/05/22/the-sheriff-who-sold-his-county/

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  19. Good luck on the cost out weighing the benefits. They aren't spending their money, they're spending the tax payers money and we all know that's a bottomless pit.

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  20. Voice of Freedom said...

    " It's not the end of American liberty... it is the throwing down of the gauntlet of tyranny and oppression. The enemies of freedom are saying, for all to hear, "What are you going to do about it?"

    What response are each of you prepared to offer? "


    How very well spoken. These words need to be repeated, loudly and often.

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  21. SARAH BRADY and your collective gun grabbing Lib-tard Brady Bunch, et al; Are all of you in a zombie sleep trance?
    Of course you are. No forthcoming official outcries with demands for "limiting the 'clip capacities'" (that's mag cap, for the rest of us) for these unconscionable N.W.O. Einsatzgruppen that have emerged like mindless mushrooms on manure piles across this land? No calls for immediately barring their access to FULLY AUTO SELECTIVE FIRE military weaponry ,with double 30 round magazines, chemical warfare & incendiary devices (tear gas, flash bang grenades),milspec armored personnel vehicles, and no proposals on the table to immediately dissolve these sociopathic death squads?

    "Silent enim leges inter arma." ~Cicero~ "In times of war, the law falls silent."

    Oh slow witted self, thank you so very much Brady Bunch for the defacto reminder-by-silence complicity: the screaming yellow zonkers Blanket Guncontrol is to be applied only to the "unenlightened ones" (the Mundanes" as brother Will has aptly named), that is, the rest of us. With psychopath Jared Loughner as our latest assigned poster-boy such was NEVER meant for "the Only Ones", the badged enforcer masked gangs.
    There's the singular notable difference that leaves our servicemen overseas, whose lives are on the line hourly, wide open to prosecution for flawlessly performing their jobs in open combat. Dare you go ask them what they think now of your 'preferred class' legal protection?

    Speaking of complicity by silence why no official outcries from that grandaddy bastion of 'wienermobile' gun advocacy, otherwise referred to as the NRA? Politically not expedient enough apparently. Just as well, they are but another relative to the dead elephant party.

    Each of these yellow panties, masked coward Tuscon SWAT sh*tweasels, need to be airdropped with all their equipment right into a middle eastern hotzone and we'll then see how long they last with a leveled playing field. Any wagers?

    Even if Jose Guerena or Gabby Giffords were remotely guilty of anything, neither deserved the fate dealt to them by badged sociopaths or a lone disturbed psychopath, regardless of the tools used, allowed access being the debatable factor in both cases.

    [quote]"It's not the end of American liberty...it is the throwing down of the gauntlet of tyranny and oppression" [end quote] Rightly so, American Voice. Frederic Douglass is credited with the nearly forgotten quotes in 1857, so important to understanding of regaining ground concerning true liberty: [quote]"Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will. The limits of tyrants are prescribed by the endurance of those whom they oppress."
    "Who would be free, themselves must strike the blow."[end Douglass quotes]

    [quote from anonymous]seems likely that the soldiers have been marked by information gleaned from their tours of duty; they fit a profile that needs to be dealt with in a special way. they are on a list. could this be a patriotic-profile list? let's be honest. these are most likely men who would be the first AND most effective soldiers in a revolution...[end quote]
    A totally possible scenario given the escalating paranoia of the state for 'enemies of the state' under every rock or leaf.

    *********************************************************************************************************
    May God continue to bless and protect you and your family, brother Will Grigg, for your relentless and fearless clarion expose essays as a Christian Patriot Journalist, concerning these endless assaults on American citizenry, aka, We The People - the Mundanes.

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  22. He pointed a gun at police, he got shot. I don't see the problem.

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  23. "He pointed a gun at police, he got shot. I don't see the problem."

    I'd say you were a sociopath but a sociopath usually try to hide their depravity. A comment like this could only come from a cop (the US's lowest class of criminal -- the type of criminals that commit crimes not for monetary gain but for enjoyment) or a cop-sucker (the only thing lower than a cop).

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  24. Unfortunately Anon @ 2011-05-25 23:18, you have it completely backwards. Had luck been somewhat on Guerena's side, and he been able to return fire and successfully kill any of the bandits unlawfully raiding his home, that's what you should have no problem with. I am sure it's safe to assume you have no problem with him being denied emergency medical care either. Especially since he was such a grave threat to the throng of bandits; being prostrate and deluging vital life fluids.

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  25. "1. I find it very strange that a self-proclaimed liberal like Gabby Giffords would be married to a man who represents something her liberal ideology demands that she despise."

    He is a career government employee. He would squawk and cry just as much as any "liberal" if you tried to cut off his government gravy train.

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  26. "He pointed a gun at police, he got shot. I don't see the problem."

    Of course you don't. It's hard to see anything when the backside of your belly button blocks your view.

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  27. A comment like this could only come from a cop

    Only indirectly. In order to post such a comment, a cop would first have to conscript the services of someone who could read and write.

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  28. "He pointed a gun at police, he got shot. I don't see the problem."

    Really? He was in his own home. The storm troopers had no right to enter. I see Media Matters blast fax talking points. Nice try.

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  29. http://oathkeepers.org/oath/2011/05/25/oath-keepers-muster-_-tucson-info/

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  30. Incredible article and horrific incident. I have copied your article in whole on my blog. I hope you don't mind. If you do, please let me know. Thank you for exposing this horrendous actions. The police have forgotten they are public servants and now think they are public controllers! (it's posted here by the way - http://endthelie.com/2011/06/01/death-squad-liquifies-veteran-with-60-bullets-then-defends-their-actions/ )

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  31. We do need the police but this is one more case that shows how poorly trained and ignorant they are. We need to give them less laws to in-force and far more training, say marine boot camp for starters, then maybe a tour with the army overseas and all along the way personality tests, repeat the process every couple years. Add to it an oath that they are not out there to protect themselves, they are out there to protect the public.
    IF I had the names of that Swat team, I would call 911 every day to report drug dealings at their house, at their parent's house, at their brother's house, at their friends house.....

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