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" nils carborundum illigitimus "

" don't let the bastards grind you down "


Bad Cops, Blind Courts, Weak Government:







Police, courts and government function only with the consent of the people, and the people are getting fed up.* The legal system from top to bottom is squandering the good will of the people as if there were no limit. Drunk driving offenders and even repeat drunk driving offenders in police departments, cover-ups, lies* and bogus internal investigations* into what amounts to murders committed by police, weak-kneed judges and inappropriate sentences, and a federal government that has simply opted out. A federal government that won't create an office with effective teeth to wade in and fix things. If we- you and I- don't correct the legal system soon, we may find it will be too late. " Every man for himself."



Is that going to be the future Status of the Status Quo?



Boycott the RCMP:



If you live on RCMP turf, call your nearest non- RCMP municipal police force if you need help from decent police or if you have information decent police should have. Let them relay it to the RCMP if they insist. This may help increase accountability for the RCMP thugs.

You could also contact investigate@cbc.ca and perhaps get public attention.

Delta Police, BC Phone: 604.946.4411Fax: 604.946.3729 Hours: 24 hours/day, 7 days/week Twassen Branch of the Delta Police 1108-56 StreetDelta, BC V4L 2A3Phone: 604.948.0199Fax: 604.943.9857Hours: Mon - Thur, 9 a.m - 5 p.m



Sticks and Stones?

Sticks and stones will break your bones, but names will get you a punch in the face. An on duty Kelowna mountie chased down and punched a man in the face for lipping him off- and if the mountie was swaggering arrogantly like some of them do, the mountie deserved to be lipped off. Either way, the mountie was found guilty of assault, but the judge gave him an absolute discharge.

Well, consider this: as of last month, an Angus Reid survey shows that 7 out of every 10 British Columbians think all of us  should be calling the RCMP names!

Now that the judge has declared open season on 70% of us, that could amount to a whole lot of face punching by armed thugs we don't like or respect against unarmed citizens who now don't even have the appearance of the protection of the law. Oh, and judge.... if somebody doesn't meekly submit to having his face punched by one of your enforcers, we all know a serious charge will be trumped up, the poor sap is going to be swarmed by a mob of your crazy RCMP thugs and  beaten up- if not actually killed *- back at the station house, and then to top it all off, if he survives you'll send him to jail.
70% of us are not amused.
(* video about Robert Wright, mugged 8 days ago by Terrace RCMP and still in a coma. In the video the spokesman for the Westminster police (appointed by the guilty police to investigate themselves as usual) very casually says- as if  he could hardly be bothered and was talking about a pesky fly that had just been swatted- that it will be MONTHS before they condescend to give their report. MONTHS!

I think that we as a society, are failing to take a few seconds to really FEEL the enormity of travesties like this one when we find out about them, and that's one reason they keep happening again and again. We need to make the effort and use the energy that it takes to really get deep down disgusted and let our blood pressure rise. Here's what I mean.... What would happen if the mountie had been punched in the face for swaggering and generally throwing his weight around in a totally bullyish and obnoxious manner? There wouldn't be any absolute discharges, I can tell you that for sure. I can also tell you there wouldn't have been any absolute discharges if the victim had been related to the judge. Maybe there wouldn't have been an absolute discharge if the mountie's lawyer hadn't been an ex-RCMP officer- which he is. After all, the legal system is quite a cozy little in-bred close knit group. For example, one of the lawyers defending one of the RCMP murderers in the airport tazer case was appointed a judge right after the case was over by, of course, the provincial government- the team leader. The team leader who quietly foisted the RCMP on us for another 20 years so sneakily.

CITIZENS, BE CAREFUL OUT THERE !


RCMP Earns No Respect

Confidence in Canadian police down by half in 15 years: poll

The survey of just over 1,000 Canadians, done in late March by Angus Reid Public Opinion, found that 7 of every 10 British Columbians have no confidence in the RCMP.

Terrace B.C. Travel Alert

At least nine RCMP officers in Terrace have been charged with assault , and at least one of those is facing charges for another assault on a different day.

Completely separate from all that, the Terrace RCMP gang members are also under investigation for a serious head injury suffered by a suspect in their care at their jail last weekend. The victim is in serious condition in a Vancouver hospital where he is still in a coma as of one week later. His wife was barely kept informed, and has had to take the initiate to keep posted.

Before all these incidents, and due entirely to other RCMP crimes not mentioned in this article, a BC Civil Liberties report had already labeled Terrace as a danger zone for civilians due to the presence of the RCMP.

"The (BC Civil Liberties) report highlights three cities, Prince George, Williams Lake and, most concerning, Terrace, as areas where the RCMP should place increased attention in order to ensure that public confidence in the force is maintained. Participants were nearly universal in sharing the opinion that police should no longer investigate themselve in B.C."


As far as we know, in spite of being requested to intervene, the Terrace City Council is not doing anything to try to protect Terrace civilians from the RCMP gang members but- on the contrary- continues to pay their salaries, equip them and put uniforms on their backs.

RCMP officer pleads guilty to drunk driving, fined $1,000 | The Chronicle Herald

RCMP officer pleads guilty to drunk driving, fined $1,000 | The Chronicle Herald

Suspended with pay, it goes without saying. Oh, and by the way...

"Two other members of the regional police force are also before the courts on impaired-driving charges.

Sgt. Kevin Tellenbach, 53, was arrested Dec. 17 after an unmarked police vehicle was involved in a minor crash on Magazine Hill near Bedford.
Const. Jennifer Lea McPhee, 35, was charged Feb. 19 after police stopped a car on Coronation Avenue in Halifax.

Tellenbach and McPhee were both off duty at the time and have been suspended with pay.



"

RCMP Thug Summary

Thugs:

Cases of impaired driving, watching porn and sex with prostitutes described in report


By Kathleen Harris, CBC News Posted: Apr 24, 2012
Some of the disciplinary cases summarized in the report:




A constable received a reprimand and forfeiture of five days’ pay for allowing a prostitute actively soliciting sexual activity to enter personal vehicle for sexual activity.

A constable received a reprimand and forfeiture of 10 days’ pay for impaired driving.

A constable was dismissed for sexual assault and inappropriate comments of a sexual nature; reporting for duty while under the influence of alcohol.

A staff sergeant received a reprimand and forfeiture of 10 days’ pay for making a false statement to a Canada Border Services Agency official.

A civilian member received two reprimands and two forfeitures of seven days’ pay for use of controlled substances and theft.

A constable received a reprimand and forfeiture of five days’ pay for operating a motor vehicle at excessive speeds without legitimate operational purpose causing damage of vehicle beyond repair.

A constable received reprimand and forfeiture of one day’s pay for excessive force.

A constable received reprimand and forfeiture of five days’ pay for improper use of government credit card
 
And dozens and dozens more such cases.

RCMP Beating of Jailed Terrace Man

Open letter to Terrace Town Council:
A major selling point used by the RCMP in foisting themselves upon us for another 20 years is that they will be more supportive of the idea of being accountable to non-police supervision. Now, with the days old beating of a man in your Terrace jails by your RCMP, the timing is perfect for you to have the mounties put action where there collective mouth is and to insist on yourselves being part of the investigation. Three council members should go everywhere and see everything that the police investigators see and hear. Please step up to the plate and protect us.
Relevant Article:
"The (BC Civil Liberties) report also highlights three cities, Prince George, Williams Lake and, most concerning, Terrace, as areas where the RCMP should place increased attention in order to ensure that public confidence in the force is maintained. Participants were nearly universal in sharing the opinion that police should no longer investigate themselves in B.C."

New West police investigate after suspect injured in RCMP custody

New West police investigate after suspect injured in RCMP custody

Can Cities Fire the RCMP With 2 Year's Notice?

Maybe in addition to citizens boycotting the RCMP, towns and cities can fire the RCMP with two years notice: "Either party can break the agreement with two years’ notice."
or..."The contract isn't iron-clad to 2032. There are review periods every five years, at which time the city could opt out of the RCMP as a police force if so desired."

Sask RCMP Cpl. gets absolute discharge

Sask RCMP Cpl. gets absolute discharge

Alice in Wonderland

Independent police investigators ready to take on complaints | The Chronicle Herald

A new Nova Scotia provincial unit that will investigate serious incidents involving police is ready to go.

Justice Minister Ross Landry announced Friday that two retired RCMP officers, a current Mountie seconded from the force and a seconded Halifax Regional Police officer will be the investigators on the Serious Incident Response Team.

Wickipedia doesn't have a definition like this for the word 'Independent'.

13-year veteran of RCMP faces charge of retail fraud

13-year veteran of RCMP faces charge of retail fraud

Suspended with pay, of course
.
Drunk driving and punching handcuffed people in the face are the RCMP's preferred methods of getting some extra paid holidays, and they do it many many times. Fraud is a new twist. It will be interesting to see how it pans out.

B.C. municipalities to get extension on signing RCMP contract

B.C. municipalities to get extension on signing RCMP contract

The RCMP should be given an immediate pay cut while steps are taken to fire them completely.

RCMP Sneaks

"This (sneaking a wage increase in) gives you a lack of ease over the whole contract and negotiations. You wonder, `If we didn't know about that, what else are they going to spring on us?"'
He said unexpected costs were a major criticism of previous RCMP contracts. Now, just such an issue so soon after the contract was negotiated to build trust with the RCMP has shaken his confidence that much has changed, Brodie said."

The judge and the two time drunk RCMP officer | The Chronicle Herald

Judge orders counselling for Mountie | The Chronicle Herald

Curative discharge set for (second) impaired conviction

BRIDGEWATER — An RCMP officer who has admitted she is an alcoholic was handed a curative treatment discharge Tuesday for an impaired driving conviction, the second such charge to be laid against her.
That means Catherine Frances Mansley will have no criminal conviction if she abides by her probation conditions for the coming year.
"I do recognize that this is not something of your choosing. Your career is of your choosing and, hopefully, it will continue," Judge Gregory Lenehan of Bridgewater provincial court said

CURATIVE DISCHARGE !? 
What a cosy team the police and the courts make.

Is This Everyman for Himself?

An innocent father left swinging in the wind, an innocent son, and an innocent girlfriend. No police, no government.

A  B.C. father is refusing to pay a $1,400 bill received from Rogers after his teenaged son was charged for sending hundreds of texts to his girlfriend, despite a contract that includes unlimited texting in Canada.

"I thought he could text a thousand times a day, because that’s perfectly fine. He’s covered for all of Canada," said Alex Dunsmore of Kamloops, B.C. "His girlfriend lives four blocks away."
It started when Dunsmore's son's girlfriend downloaded a "free" texting app — from a U.S. company called HeyWire — to send free texts anywhere. When Dunsmore’s son Ryan texted her back, he had no idea it would incur a charge for long distance texts, routed through the U.S. then to his girlfriend in Canada.
“He was responding to a text.… He thought he was just texting down the street,” Dunsmore said. “Obviously it took a long, different path [via] Arlington, Illinois."
Dunsmore said Rogers allowed 1,300 of those texts to go through in one month — all to the same number — without informing him his son's $35 "unlimited" texting plan was going way over the basic charge.
“Why was I not notified, as the legally responsible person in this contract, that there was suddenly this atypical spending?” Dunsmore asked.
He said this type of long distance texting should trigger a notice to the customer, similar to the one sent when cellphone customers leave Canada and face roaming charges.
“I think that somebody somewhere has decided not to [notify customers] about this because they don’t have to.”
When Dunsmore got the bill — $400 for one month, including the texts — he complained to Rogers and refused to pay for that portion.
“I think it’s a deliberate process on Rogers's part to try to get more money out of their clients,” he said.
Dunsmore continued to pay for the services he signed up for. He appealed to Rogers to forgive the texting charges, he said, but got nowhere. He said the company (ROGERS) told him his son should have recognized the U.S. area code (and initiated a new text rather than clicking on REPLY).....
Dunsmore pointed out that his 16-year-old doesn’t know all the area codes inside or outside Canada, and that Ryan's girlfriend told him it was a special number for free texting.
“She feels pretty bad. Not that it’s her fault or anything,” Ryan Dunsmore said.
'No charge' to app user
Ryan’s girlfriend had downloaded the app on her iPod through the iTunes App Store. HeyWire’s advertising on its App Store page says there is "no charge to you even if your friends don’t have the app."
"Both parties are thinking it’s free," Alex Dunsmore said. "There is no notification on her end, either. As far as she’s concerned, she’s texting for free."
Because the texting charges went into arrears, Rogers eventually cut off both Dunsmore's son's and daughter's phones — and charged him $800 for "cancelling" the contracts. (Dunsmore doesn't have his own cellphone).
"They charged me $400 [each] because the contract was terminated early. But they were the ones that terminated it because I simply didn’t pay the money in dispute," he said.
Rogers told CBC News in an email that it’s up to parents to monitor their teen’s usage.
"I recognize that the customer may find this frustrating," spokesperson Leigh-Ann Popek wrote. "But the account holder is ultimately responsible for the account. We do not monitor how many texts or calls customers make. But we offer the tools to allow our customers to keep a close eye on their usage.
"Customers are able to see their current usage through our free Rogers MyAccount app on their device or online at www.rogers.com. This is especially helpful for parents."
'A lot of money in it' Vancouver app developer and industry commentator Ian Bell said he believes it’s in Rogers's financial interest not to inform parents when these kind of charges are mounting.
"Carriers need to do a better job of helping people understand when they are incurring these charges as they are happening. But they are not, because there’s a lot of money in it."


"Part of the long distance charge goes to Rogers, part goes to the U.S. carrier," said Marc Choma of the Canadian Wireless Telecommunications Association. He said Canadian telecoms don't reveal how much their cut is, even to him.

Choma also said the popularity of texting has exploded, especially among teens. Last year, he said, 78 billion texts were sent from within Canada, compared to 56.4 billion in 2010. He said he doesn't know how many of those texts were sent via apps.
Companies 'always looking for another sucker'
Commentator Bell said telecoms and app marketers count on customers blaming themselves for excessive charges and simply paying the bills.
"People get caught in it, then they stop using the app forever and then they move on," Bell said. "These [app] companies are always looking for another sucker."
Dunsmore’s bill from Rogers — for the texts, contract cancellations and other fees — is now almost $1,400. It’s been sent to a collection agency, but he said he won’t pay it out of principle.
"Cellphone companies are getting a reputation, and I believe rightly so, of actually bullying people around," he said. "This is about what is reasonable and what is right."

RCMP Thugs Sick Dogs on Men Sitting Quietly as ordered.

"The court was told that shortly after Ly was arrested at the scene, he was sitting quietly on the ground when the police dog, Bak, who was on a leash, suddenly and without warning lunged at Ly and bit him on the calf.

Ly’s lawyer, Neil Cobb, added that while the police executed the search warrant, a second police dog bit another accused, Siu Shing Wong, who suffered puncture wounds on the face and head.

The Crown, Clarke Burnett, said Ly’s bite was an “unfortunate accident”

If  this was an 'accident' it gives a whole new meaning to the word. Two dangerous animals held close enough to two compliant persons to be able to inflict a bite. Supposedly professional dog handlers, allowing dogs to bite two compliant men?  And these are 'accidents'?

Read more: http://www.timescolonist.com/news/Vancouver+judge+dismisses+application+exclude+million/6463554/story.html#ixzz1sDkmfiU6

BC Judge Guilty of Flagrant Racial Prejudice

Judge Walker declined to give any jail time to the young man who sucker punched a Vancouver bus driver in the face. Her reason: the assailant was an indian.
Judge Walker is one of the most philosophically defunct people I have ever heard of. In one stroke she delivered a horrible racial insult to indians and white men alike.

RCMP pay hikes surprise B.C. municipal, provincial governments | The Chronicle Herald

RCMP pay hikes surprise B.C. municipal, provincial governments | The Chronicle Herald

That's net zero to the teachers...... Nice going Christie. Good looking but a little short on brains and fairness.
Policing is the TENTH most dangerous job, and it only made the list at all because of the RCMP being involved in traffic accidents. Sometimes they were drunk!. Driving a garbage truck is ninth on the list. Go figure.
Most dangerous jobs in BC:


1.Fishing     (average annual salary  $38,000 / yr)

2 Logging

3 Aircraft pilots

4 Steel workers

5 Farmers

6 Roofers

7 Power line workers

8 Truck drivers

9 Garbage men

10.Police "..deaths among police and sheriff patrol officers aren’t usually caused by homicide or other violent crimes that we often see on TV. Deaths among these men are mostly caused by transportation-related accidents."

RCMP officer arrested after shots fired

RCMP officer arrested after shots fired

Two time killer Robinson still on the payroll

Robinson has been suspended with pay since Oct. 28, 2008, and he is STILL being paid even though he has been convicted! The RCMP and the legal system has pretty much totally squandered it's credibility.







Read more: http://www.theprovince.com/news/RCMP+dismiss+guilty+Mountie/6356190/story.html#ixzz1rDEBMbTMHistory : http://www.bcpolicecomplaints.org/monty_robinson.html