This Is What I Think.
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
The CBS "NCIS: Los Angeles" Anarchists.
"NCIS: Los Angeles" wants to kill 3 US Navy sailors with a bomb blast. That severe racketeering CBS production is how they are creating an alibi from prosecution which isn't difficult when you consider how STUPID the US DOJ/FBI is.
http://www.tv.com/shows/ncis-los-angeles/history-2641506/
tv.com
NCIS: Los Angeles Season 4 Episode 15
History
The team investigates the only survivor of a former terrorist group. Kensi and Deeks follow a trail that leads them to the woods.
AIRED: 2/19/13
JOURNAL ARCHIVE: From: Kerry Burgess
Sent: Saturday, February 02, 2013 5:18 AM
To: 'Chad Trammell'
Subject: RE: Wow. How could that be a clearer message from Microsoft Corbis Bill Gates al Qaida.
Listen to those secret Barney coyotes at Seattle Times and King County yip-yip-yip-yip.
They're really scared now.
Make no mistake about it: King County and Washington State is 100% perverted by al Qaida inside the United States.
Microsoft Corbis Bill Gates al Qaida with their guilty minds are now working out Plan B for their next violent attack against my person. The primary plan about an accident will only work on the judges here in Washington State that are corruptly under the influence of Microsoft Corbis Bill Gates al Qaida.
Hey, we're not talking about some hick lawyer in Kaufman Texas but those guys here are some real players. Harvard hot-shots who should know better.
That's how they had to do it. This is Washington's state. George Washington. The hero of the American Anarchist.
Anarchist. Those idiotic pansies of the Anarchist crew are without a doubt the most gullible of all the domestic terror groups.
What that clown Mike Carter is trying to do with his guilty mind is some kind of trick about memory association. Somehow that is his alibi. He has a guilty mind and that is his Seattle Times premeditated scam in the mainstream media.
http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2020269170_spdlawsuitdismissedxml.html
Seattle Times
Originally published February 1, 2013 at 9:10 PM | Page modified February 1, 2013 at 10:38 PM
Judge dismisses federal lawsuit against SPD in jaywalker arrest
A judge threw out a civil-rights lawsuit filed by a developmentally disabled teenager who was roughly arrested by Seattle police during a 2009 jaywalking incident.
By Mike Carter
Seattle Times staff reporter
A civil-rights lawsuit filed by a Seattle teenager who claimed he was twice assaulted and wrongly arrested by Seattle police has been dismissed by a federal judge, who ruled that officers were justified in both instances.
U.S. Magistrate Judge Brian Tsuchida, in a 23-page opinion issued Monday, said evidence he called undisputed — including dash-camera footage — shows that then-17-year-old Joseph Wilson was belligerent and uncooperative on two occasions in 2009 when he was stopped by police, including a widely publicized incident in July in which he was punched and taken hard to the ground by three officers after he jaywalked.
The lawsuit filed by Wilson alleged that he suffered a broken nose and a concussion in the July stop. However, the Police Department was able to prove through medical records that Wilsonbroke his nose a month later in a skateboarding accident.
Tsuchida also noted the dash-camera footage disputed Wilson’s claim that one of the officers had kneed him in the face, and he pointed out that officers took Wilson to a Seattle hospital after his July arrest. He was examined and given a CT scan “and no fractures were identified,” the judge wrote.
The broken nose showed up during a medical examination after Wilson suffered lacerations and other facial injuries after he was hit by a skateboard Aug. 14, according to the judge’s opinion.
Tsuchida said the dash-cam footage confirms that “no officer hit plaintiff in the head or face.”
“It was a misrepresentation that the broken nose was attributed to the officers,” said Seattle attorney Evan Bariault, who represented the city and officers.
Charles Swift, one of Wilson’s attorneys, said, “it was the information we had at the time.”
Nonetheless, Swift said Wilson was weighing an appeal.
“Joey Wilson was the victim of a tragic overreaction by the Seattle police,” he said.
What the dash-camera video also showed, the judge said, was that the first officer who contacted Wilson for walking down the middle of West Smith Street on Queen Anne spent eight minutes unsuccessfully attempting to get Wilson to get out of the street. During that time, the judge said, Wilson — who is developmentally disabled — was “uncooperative and verbally argumentative.”
Wilson’s lawsuit notes that three officers eventually fought with the teenager.
What it didn’t say was that the elevated response was because a citizen had called 911 to report that there was a lone officer “in a struggle,” resulting in Seattle police dispatch upgrading the call and sending additional officers to the scene, the judge said.
The second incident, on Nov. 6, 2009, involved one of the same officers, John Girtch, who was the only individual named in the complaint. Tsuchida said Girtch’s appearance at both scenes was a coincidence and said he acted reasonably under the circumstances.
All of the officers involved were cleared of wrongdoing in a department internal investigation.
In the November stop, Girtch and his partner pulled over a vehicle in which Wilson was a passenger, according to the lawsuit.
The officer justified the stop by saying the carload of teenagers who should have been in school were acting nervously — they would not look at his car when he pulled alongside — and were in an area noted for car prowls and burglaries.
The vehicle he was in had been “associated” with a previous narcotics and theft incident, according to the judge’s order.
Under those circumstances, Tsuchida said, the officer was justified in stopping the car. The judge found that Wilson again was argumentative and would not obey the officer, repeatedly lifting his hands off the car hood after being asked to keep them there.
Again, a struggle ensued and Wilson was taken to the ground and arrested.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0093640/quotes
IMDb
Memorable quotes for
No Way Out (1987)
Tom Farrell: Who are these men?
Scott Pritchard: They're associated with Special Forces.
Tom Farrell: What? What does that mean?
Scott Pritchard: It means that they are associated with Special Forces.
1973 film "High Plains Drifter" DVD video:
Morgan Allen: This whole business has gone sour since that deal with that former marshal, Duncan.
Dave Drake: Wait a minute. We had no choice in that matter, and you know it.
Morgan Allen: Aw, come on!
Dave Drake: The big mistake we made was hiring that man Duncan in the first place and you did that all by yourself. Quiet. Shut up. We can trust one another. This whole town had - had a hand in what happened. Hell, why do you think Stacy Bridges and the Carlin brothers kept their mouths shut all this time? Same reason everybody else did in this town. One hang, we all hang.
[ JOURNAL ARCHIVE 02 February 2013 excerpt ends ]
- posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 2:19 PM Pacific Time Seattle USA Tuesday 26 February 2013