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green73
12-20-2011, 08:02 PM
http://www.lewrockwell.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/2arresting-victims-relatives-300x224.png
Killer's buddies assault the relative of a victim


Daniel Hiler ran out of gas during an evening motorcycle ride in Oildale, California on December 16. While walking his bike to a gas station, the twenty-year-old father of two ran into a family friend named Chrystal Jolley. The pair was crossing a street at a widely-recognized intersection when they were fatally blindsided by a vehicle traveling at a speed well in excess of the posted speed limit (http://oildale.bakersfieldnow.com/news/news/72851-families-crash-victims-speak-out). Despite the fact that darkness had descended, the driver hadn’t turned on his headlights. The victims were killed instantly.


Within minutes, police swarmed the scene, and arrests were made — none of which involved the driver, Deputy John Swearengin (http://www.bakersfield.com/news/local/x1836507362/CHP-releases-name-of-deputy-in-Oildale-crash) of the Kern County Sheriff’s Office. The four people arrested (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p38vi8bvtN0&feature=player_embedded) were relatives of the victims, who got into what the Sheriff’s Office described as an “altercation” with California Highway Patrol officers when they attempted to identify the victims.


"I was at home on Friday night working on my car when someone came running over and told me that a deputy ran over my daughter in the street,” recalls Jimmy Clevenger (http://www.turnto23.com/north_river_county/30034310/detail.html), Jolley’s father. “I ran down here, I was very upset…. The next thing I know, they had me by the neck and threw me to the ground and said I resisted arrest. My daughter was dead in the street and it was their fault.”


The outraged relatives were taken to jail, and face criminal charges. Swearengin, the killer, was taken to the hospital and wasn’t compelled to undergo drug or alcohol screening


The posted local speed limit (for Mundanes, of course) is 45 miles per hour. According to several on-scene accounts from horrified witnesses, Swearengin blew through the intersection at a speed of 75–90 miles per hour. Despite the fact that he was obviously in a hurry, Swearengin didn’t activate his siren or running lights — or, according to at least one eyewitness, his headlights.


Sheriff Donny Youngblood told the Bakersfield Californian (http://www.bakersfield.com/news/local/x1836507401/Deputy-in-fatal-crash-was-responding-to-stolen-vehicle-call) that the deputy “was responding to a report of a stolen vehicle with a suspect still at the scene” when he struck his victims. This would mean that he was not involved in a high-speed pursuit. Furthermore, as some skeptical witnesses pointed out, the main office of the Sheriff’s Department is about a mile or two west of the intersection where Swearengin killed Hiler and Jolley — and he was headed that direction at the time of the incident. This suggests that the deputy wasn’t motivated by an urgent call from an isolated and over-matched comrade, but rather engaging in a favorite pastime of uniformed adolescents — “Kickin’ ass and drivin’ fast.”


Some residents of Oildale, a suburb of Bakersfield, describe the Kern County Sheriff’s Deputies as notorious for their habit of speeding through the town’s narrow streets, blithely ignoring speed limits without bothering to activate their lights or sirens.


“They have no consideration for the other public,” objects Michelle Cameron (http://www.bakersfield.com/news/local/x1836507341/Names-of-pedestrians-struck-and-killed-by-patrol-vehicle-released), a distant relative of Jolley. Her assessment is seconded by Forrest Faulkner, an 11-year resident of Oildale who claims to know and be on good terms with most of the department. “They’re great people,” Faulkner maintains, even as he criticizes the department’s habit of putting the public at risk by needlessly reckless driving. “I’ve seen sparks fly from the car’s undercarriage when they hit a dip,” Faulkner recounts.


Under section 192 [c][2] of California state law, the deaths of Hiler and Jolley resulted from an act of vehicular homicide -- one involving “gross negligence,” and therefore a felony. No charges have been filed against Swearengin, and the deputy faces only an “administrative” inquiry, rather than a criminal investigation. The outcome of the administrative procedure isn’t exactly shrouded in mystery.
“What gets me is we already know the outcome,” complained Anna Rodriguez, one of Hiler’s friends, to a local reporter. “The officer will go on paid suspension. Then they will say he didn’t do anything wrong. And that will be the end of it.”

http://www.lewrockwell.com/blog/lewrw/archives/101226.html

RickyJ
12-20-2011, 08:06 PM
Very sad. Some cops should not be cops. My prayers go out to the victims' family.

Anti Federalist
12-20-2011, 08:08 PM
That has to be the great Will Grigg posting that.

"Policy" was followed.

Two weeks vacation and back to work.

And I'm sure a bunch of slack jawed locals watched vacuously as the family received their beating.

Until that changes, nothing changes.

DamianTV
12-20-2011, 08:14 PM
They wont cause trouble because they are in too much fear of those same daughter killing cops killing them as well. A Dishonest Justice Systems makes for Dishonest Law Enforcement.

green73
12-20-2011, 08:18 PM
Two weeks vacation and back to work.

Paid vacation, no less.

Anti Federalist
12-20-2011, 08:20 PM
They wont cause trouble because they are in too much fear of those same daughter killing cops killing them as well. A Dishonest Justice Systems makes for Dishonest Law Enforcement.

Fear.

The universal lubricant that has greased the gears of every despot and bully since prehistoric man first picked up a blunt instrument.

RickyJ
12-20-2011, 08:26 PM
Fear.

The universal lubricant that has greased the gears of every despot and bully since prehistoric man first picked up a blunt instrument.

Fear is the biggest reason most people do not live up to their potential. They are too afraid of failure to even try.

green73
12-20-2011, 08:30 PM
All people have to do is withdraw consent.
http://www.lewrockwell.com/rothbard/rothbard78.html

Anti Federalist
12-20-2011, 08:35 PM
All people have to do is withdraw consent.
http://www.lewrockwell.com/rothbard/rothbard78.html

Human nature contradicts just simply withdrawing consent.

No man dances until the first one boogies.

Until 10 or 20 percent are willing to suffer wood shampoos and pepper spray facials, which is what will happen to the "first wave", nothing will change.

And I can't even get 10 percent to "opt out" of the porno scanners and interrogations at the airports.

aGameOfThrones
12-20-2011, 08:38 PM
So if Deputy John Swearengin is part of the 5% bad, then the officers who are arresting the family members are the 95% good?

Anti Federalist
12-20-2011, 08:43 PM
So if Deputy John Swearengin is part of the 5% bad, then the officers who are arresting the family members are the 95% good?

LoL

Icymudpuppy
12-20-2011, 08:48 PM
So if Deputy John Swearengin is part of the 5% bad, then the officers who are arresting the family members are the 95% good?

I was in a military police unit for the first two years of my service. This was before 9/11, and things were pretty civilian at Ft. Wainwright, AK in those days. We didn't even check for ID at the gate.

Anyway, I found that about 50% of the road patrol were power mongers. Their sole purpose in joining the MP corps was to lord over others. I suspect that is true in most LE offices. I delegated our composition thus... 50% = Power mongers. 25% Black and White by the books stick up their asses. 10% Dudley do-rights, 10% females who wanted to be infantry, but aren't allowed, and 5% guys who chose the MP corps for other reasons such as their best score on the ASVAB or in my case because it was the only MOS with the chance to be a wildlife manager as MP Game Warden.

green73
12-20-2011, 08:50 PM
Human nature contradicts just simply withdrawing consent.

No man dances until the first one boogies.

Until 10 or 20 percent are willing to suffer wood shampoos and pepper spray facials, which is what will happen to the "first wave", nothing will change.

And I can't even get 10 percent to "opt out" of the porno scanners and interrogations at the airports.

Perhaps. But more likely it will be economically driven. When the dollar implodes who will feed leviathan?

Anti Federalist
12-20-2011, 08:50 PM
Well, there's a depressing cross section of dysfunctional personalties.


I was in a military police unit for the first two years of my service. This was before 9/11, and things were pretty civilian at Ft. Wainwright, AK in those days. We didn't even check for ID at the gate.

Anyway, I found that about 50% of the road patrol were power mongers. Their sole purpose in joining the MP corps was to lord over others. I suspect that is true in most LE offices. I delegated our composition thus... 50% = Power mongers. 25% Black and White by the books stick up their asses. 10% Dudley do-rights, 10% females who wanted to be infantry, but aren't allowed, and 5% guys who chose the MP corps for other reasons such as their best score on the ASVAB or in my case because it was the only MOS with the chance to be a wildlife manager as MP Game Warden.

Anti Federalist
12-20-2011, 08:52 PM
Perhaps. But more likely it will be economically driven. When the dollar implodes who will feed leviathan?

Possibly.

That was the case when the USSR imploded.

Soldiers and cops just wandered off after not getting paid for a couple of months.

I don't anticipate it being as placid here.

green73
12-20-2011, 08:59 PM
Possibly.

That was the case when the USSR imploded.

Soldiers and cops just wandered off after not getting paid for a couple of months.

I don't anticipate it being as placid here.

But possibly that will be the start of people withdrawing consent. Like the USSR and most other regimes, the fall comes quick once the people lose faith.

Icymudpuppy
12-20-2011, 10:38 PM
Well, there's a depressing cross section of dysfunctional personalties.

The Dudley do-rights are only 10%, but they are actually the best police. They tend to lead by example. Their only weakness is their inability to see the corruption and greed of their fellow police.

Pericles
12-21-2011, 12:50 AM
They wont cause trouble because they are in too much fear of those same daughter killing cops killing them as well. A Dishonest Justice Systems makes for Dishonest Law Enforcement.

Cowards die many times before their deaths;
The valiant never taste of death but once.
Of all the wonders that I yet have heard.
It seems to me most strange that men should fear;
Seeing that death, a necessary end,
Will come when it will come.

Philhelm
12-21-2011, 01:44 AM
Cowards die many times before their deaths;
The valiant never taste of death but once.
Of all the wonders that I yet have heard.
It seems to me most strange that men should fear;
Seeing that death, a necessary end,
Will come when it will come.





Julius Caesar

coastie
12-21-2011, 01:57 AM
Possibly.

That was the case when the USSR imploded.

Soldiers and cops just wandered off after not getting paid for a couple of months.

I don't anticipate it being as placid here.


We don't have the history of the USSR....

And that scares the shit out of me. Think about it:how many here really have it anywhere near as hard as an average criticize there had it before/during their collapse? AT least they had an understanding of having it hard before it got worse, the folks here are riding the Food Stamp/welfare gravy train, and are gonna be pissed when the faucet stops running.


Its gonna get ugly, glad I am nowhere near any real population centers, but I do live a block or to from a whole swath of Section 8'rs, but my neighbors and I've got enough ammo for all of them.;)

I really wish I could get some relatives/friends out of the bigger cities, but you can only lead a horse to water....

TexanRudeBoy
12-21-2011, 02:16 AM
If he was on duty, reporting to a call, there are two MAJOR issues with this. The first obviously being that he was driving at a high rate of speed without his lights on. The second is that he wasn't screened for drugs or alcohol after the accident. Its policy to conduct drug and alcohol screening after a vehicle accident in most departments.

TRIGRHAPPY
12-21-2011, 05:04 AM
I'd say what I'd do, but most would just take it as one more internet tough guy.... However, I'd actually do every bit of it.

asurfaholic
12-21-2011, 05:47 AM
This is TERRIBLE.

Sick sick sick.....

123tim
12-21-2011, 06:20 AM
Human nature contradicts just simply withdrawing consent.

No man dances until the first one boogies.

Until 10 or 20 percent are willing to suffer wood shampoos and pepper spray facials, which is what will happen to the "first wave", nothing will change.

And I can't even get 10 percent to "opt out" of the porno scanners and interrogations at the airports.

What you said reminds me of a video that I saw a year or two ago:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hO8MwBZl-Vc&feature=player_detailpage

It made quite an impression on me.