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rambone
06-04-2014, 01:50 PM
CHESTERTON, IN -- An innocent man was arrested in an early morning raid and jailed for 10 days because he had the same first and last name as a drug suspect. The ordeal caused him to lose his job, rack up bills, and nearly get evicted from his home.

Innocent man arrested, jailed 10 days for having same name as drug dealer (http://www.policestateusa.com/2014/steven-thompson-mixup/)

aGameOfThrones
06-04-2014, 03:23 PM
He did this to himself..... Or his parents.

Occam's Banana
06-04-2014, 04:37 PM
All who particpated in planning & executing the abduction & kidnapping of Mr. Thompson have been arrested & charged for their crimes.
They will, of course, stand trial in court under rule of law and justice will be done. Also, I am Napoleon Bonaparte. Oui, oui, c'est la vérité!!

bunklocoempire
06-04-2014, 05:04 PM
So pills and heroin was the "crime"? Maybe the Thoms should consider changing their names to Pfizer Karsai.

phill4paul
06-04-2014, 08:44 PM
But, wait, that's not all. For simply having the same name of someone else you also get to lose your job and, almost, your house.

He must have been doing something wrong...........


CHESTERTON, IN — An innocent man was arrested in an early morning raid and jailed for 10 days because he had the same first and last name as a drug suspect. The ordeal caused him to lose his job, rack up bills, and nearly get evicted from his home.

Steven M. Thompson, a service technician at Arcelor-Mittal Steel, received an “early morning visit” from the Porter County Drug Task Force (PCDTF) on on May 5th. He was taken from his teenage daughter in handcuffs.

Mr. Thompson had done nothing wrong. He assumed the misunderstanding would be easily cleared up once in police custody. Except it didn’t work out that way.

Despite collecting no evidence at Thompson’s home, he was charged with two Class B felonies for dealing pills and heroin. Each felony carries a 6-20 year prison sentence.

Accused of being a drug dealer, he was locked up in the Porter County Jail. Except he isn’t actually a drug dealer.

Days went by and he was not being released. With such difficulty in correcting the error, he began to think that going to prison might be a real possibility.

Finally, on the 10th day of confinement, he was able to prove his innocence with the help of attorney Bob Harper.

Although Thompson’s identity matched matched the signed warrant — down to the date of birth and middle initial — the data on the warrant had been incorrectly obtained. The intended suspect was Steven P. Thompson, who is three years younger and the same race, the Northwest Indiana Gazette confirmed.

Mr. Thompson’s false arrest caused him to rack up bills, face threats of eviction from his home, and lose his job after 6 years of employment.

Porter County Prosecutor Brian Gensel oversees the Porter County Drug Task Force (PCDTF), and dropped charges after it was evident that the wrong man had been arrested.

* * * * *

This case clearly illustrates the point that anyone — innocent or guilty — can be the target of government’s eager efforts to imprison Americans; the police state is not only felt by criminals. Those who turn a blind eye toward overzealous policing fail to recognize how easy it is to be subjected to a false accusation, a wrongful arrest, or a downright corrupt prosecution effort.

Mr. Thompson is “lucky” in the sense that the ordeal didn’t go further than it did. However, he still was fired from his job, lost 10 days of his life, lost his good name, and suffered numerous personal inconveniences. And this represents just one of countless botched arrests and injustices that have been caused by the War on Drugs.

http://www.policestateusa.com/2014/steven-thompson-mixup/

DamianTV
06-04-2014, 09:07 PM
There used to be a thing called "Guilt by Association".

Today, what we seem to have is "Guilt by Accusation".

ghengis86
06-04-2014, 09:47 PM
I hope he sues the hell out of the pigs.

Snew
06-05-2014, 08:21 AM
There used to be a thing called "Guilt by Association".

Today, what we seem to have is "Guilt by Accusation".

Spot on!