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Lovely Wisconsin:The Coming Police State Control Grid is Here

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Lovely Wisconsin

The Coming Police State Control Grid is Here and

Locking Down

March 13, 2005

 

The amazing feat of solving a major murder case by a

routine traffic stop in the Bart Ross Wisconsin story

illustrates the nightmare we are headed into living in

a Police State Control Grid. My guess is this man is

innocent and is being set up because he angered

someone in Wisconsin’s government police state.

Meanwhile, some other huge story is probably being

covered up. The typical MO for a government op is to

“find the killer” right away. Who knows what twists

and turns this story will take?

 

The point is, with the current technology, anybody the

government wants to red flag, for whatever reason, can

be followed and spied on, even picked on—perhaps they

have guns, home school, go to anti-war demonstrations,

hug trees, for example. Or maybe they complain too

much.

 

Bart Ross, a man who complained too much about his

medical treatment and lost his court case, happened to

be pulled over for a broken taillight, and he suddenly

committed suicide. (Or should I say committed

“suicided”). Amazingly, he had a suicide confession

note already written, taking blame for the notorious

murder of the husband and mother of a judge who had

recently been murdered.

 

To the eyes of the unsuspecting public, the stop would

seem random and the story believable.

 

Believable? Not really, if one thinks about the

claim.

 

The man was pulled over because a taillight was out,

committed suicide, and just happened to have penned a

suicide note where he confesses to murdering the

husband and mother of a judge who tried his case

before shooting himself. How did he find the time to

write the note while he was being pulled over?

 

What other explanation could there be? The police do

not have ESP. They don’t know who they are pulling

over, do they?

 

Wisconsin police have cell phone tracking where the

phone’s location shows up on a map at the police

station. Many if not all states are in the process of

installing cameras at intersections which scan license

plates and link them to a data bank which identifies

any red flags. Hand held devices, which can be

directed towards the traffic are also available.

Additionally, a tracker device can be place without a

warrant on the bottom of a citizen’s car. These tools

are already in place, and more on the way. They give

potentially corrupt police the ability to know where

any particular citizen is at a given time and to stop

him for “a broken taillight.”

 

Not to worry, the police are definitely telling the

truth because “his DNA matched the DNA found on a

cigarette stub thrown on the ground at the house of

the murders he confessed to doing in his “suicide

note.” I won’t bore you with the stories of corruption

of crime labs, and it’s silly to think someone might

have wiped some of the dead man’s spittle on a

cigarette butt. La, la, la, I am happy and free.

 

 

Wisconsin is crazy about control. It also takes

fingerprints when a police officer pulls you over for

a broken taillight. (And blood specimens if they

suspect you are intoxicated or on drugs.)

 

Additionally, Wisconsin has the proud honor of

sponsoring the Super National ID legislation which

will also be a Pan American Union Card. Wisconsin

Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, Rep. James

Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., is responsible for writing this

National ID legislation which will further erode our

privacy. (Passed the House Feb 05)

 

Wisconsin’s 14 year governor, who later became head of

HHS, championed building a super-max prison in the

state. Amnesty International has called Supermax one

of the two worst facilities of its kind in the nation.

 

I think Wisconsin is a good example of why we do not

want to give government this level of control over our

personal information and whereabouts or to allow data

banks to be linked to our driver’s license and auto

license plates. Get on their bad side by complaining

too much and you could end up red flagged, harassed,

in jail or, who knows, even dead.

 

What else is Wisconsin famous for of late?

 

A man was sent to prison for five years for “paper

terrorism.” He sent too many papers in a complaint he

had with the government.

 

The article notes, “The case produced the first prison

sentence to result from a special anti-terrorism

Domestic Security Unit created by then-Attorney

General Jim Doyle after the terrorist attacks on Sept.

11, 2001.

Among its other duties, the unit investigates and

prosecutes anti-government activists who try to

intimidate government officials, police and citizens

by filing false legal documents.”

 

Hum. Reminds me of another complainer… Bart Ross.

 

 

References:

 

Note Links Man to Deaths in Judge's Family (Bart Ross)

March 10, 2005

http://story.news./news?tmpl=story & e=1 & u=/ap/20050311/ap_on_re_us/judge\

_bodies

 

Police get DNA match in slayings

March 10, 2005

http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/10lefkow_pm.html

 

Alex Jones Report 1-12-05

http://www,prisonplanet.tv

Wisconsin will have a screen to track each cell phone

in real time. They can click on a phone and listen in

like a bug by law.

 

Experimental License-plate Scanners Track Cars on

Highways

http://www.infowars.com/articles/bb/license_plate_scanners.htm

 

 

New dispatch system allows for tracking cellular calls

County is first in state to use technology (4-29-03)

http://abclocal.go.com/wjrt/news/042903_NW_da_dispatching.html

 

 

Lost? Hiding? Your cell phone will be keeping tabs.

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/12/21/technology/21WATC.html?ex=1387342800 & en=11f981\

a7246ae204 & ei=5007 & partner=USERLAND

 

Federal judge's ruling on GPS worries privacy

advocates

January 20, 2005

http://www.bradenton.com/mld/bradenton/news/nation/10687965.htm

 

 

Police Begin Fingerprinting on Traffic Stops (re

Wisconsin)

http://www.wbay.com/Global/story.asp?s=2776926

 

Drivers in Wisconsin Forced by Police to Give Blood

Samples

http://www.infowars.com/print/ps/blood_checkpoint.htm

In the past, police routinely asked suspected drunk

drivers to blow into devices that extrapolated their

blood's alcohol content from their breath. Now,

authorities in most states are taking blood, by force

if necessary.

 

 

 

Rough Reception for DNA Law

http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0%2C1283%2C65744%2C00.html

Wired | Nov 27 2004

Attempts to legally block DNA databases in other

states have not succeeded. In Wisconsin, for example,

a lawsuit filed earlier this year by prisoners who

argued that giving DNA samples violated their 4th

Amendment protections against unreasonable search and

seizure was tossed out by a federal appeals court.

 

Super National ID Card Passes House

Infowars.com | February 11, 2005

http://www.infowars.com/articles/ps/nat_id_super_card_passes_house.htm

 

The Patriot Act: Targeting American Citizens

http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/october2004/091004patriotact.htm

 

'Paper terrorist' gets five years in prison

http://www.jsonline.com/news/state/jan03/111509.asp

 

Citation Dropped for Anti-War Sign

January 11, 2005

http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory?id=404907

WAUSAU, Wis. Jan 11, 2005 — The city dropped a public

obscenity citation Tuesday against a man who erected

an anti-war sign in a public square that mixed

President Bush's name with a profanity.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sports - Sign up for Fantasy Baseball.

http://baseball.fantasysports./

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