chefdennis
Veteran Expediter
and are around the City of Whiteville today April 4th, make sure you buckle-up...I know we all should be, but some still don't...But this checkpoint is a bit different:
Whiteville Tenn. Police,Military & DHS hold Joint Seat Belt Checkpoint
Fri. Apr. 03, 06:25am
Whiteville Tenn. Police,Military & DHS hold Joint Seat Belt Checkpoint | Politics4All - Real World Politics Daily
While i have no issue with these check points one way or the other, other then they are just money makers for the cities, i wonder why they feel the need to use the U.S military as an "observer"???? Maybe the sane thing they are trying to do with the "war games" they are doing in cities across the country now, to get the people use to seeing the armed military on our streets on a regular basis!?!?
Makes you go hmmmmm....
Whiteville Tenn. Police,Military & DHS hold Joint Seat Belt Checkpoint
Fri. Apr. 03, 06:25am
Whiteville Tenn. Police,Military & DHS hold Joint Seat Belt Checkpoint | Politics4All - Real World Politics Daily
The Hardeman County, Tennessee, Bulletin Times announcing a seat belt checkpoint to be conducted on April 4 “in conjunction with a Homeland Security training exercise by the 251st Military Police in Bolivar who recently returned from Iraq” (see a PDF version of the announcement here, on page two).
The operation in Hardeman county is similar to one held last December in San Bernardino County, California. The California operation was a collaboration between the California Highway Patrol and the Marine Corps Air and Ground Combat Center. It did not include Homeland Security.
“Dispatching Marines on California highways is an obvious violation of the Posse Comitatus Act (18 U.S.C. § 1385) passed on June 16, 1878. The Act prohibits members of the federal uniformed services, including military police, from working with state and local police and law enforcement,” reported in December. The seat belt checkpoint in Tennessee with the participation of military police is also a direct violation of the Posse Comitatus Act.
The collaboration between Homeland Security, the military, and local law enforcement in Tennessee sets a dangerous new precedent. In the case U.S. v. Martinez-Fuerte, the Supreme Court ruled that DHS checkpoints could be set up to search for illegal immigrants and smugglers and so long as the checkpoints and searches were brief and for that purpose only they could be done anywhere within 100 miles of a US border. It appears DHS is now moving beyond U.S. v. Martinez-Fuerte and expanding operations beyond the 100 mile limit.
DHS will likely argue they are not conducting the checkpoints in Tennessee and are there only as monitors. However, this point will be lost on the victims of the checkpoints when they see uniformed military police and DHS personnel.
In California, the attention of the media put the CHP and the Marines on the defensive. Last month, the coverage of the MIAC documents in Missouri by alternative media resulted in wide coverage of the issue in the corporate media. In response to the attention, the Missouri State Police and the governor of the state were obliged to repudiate the document and order an investigation into the Missouri Information Analysis Center’s practice of designating followers of political candidates Ron Paul, Bob Barr, and Chuck Baldwin as “militia” terrorists.
Attention placed on the operation in Tennessee will produce similar results.
While i have no issue with these check points one way or the other, other then they are just money makers for the cities, i wonder why they feel the need to use the U.S military as an "observer"???? Maybe the sane thing they are trying to do with the "war games" they are doing in cities across the country now, to get the people use to seeing the armed military on our streets on a regular basis!?!?
Makes you go hmmmmm....