Archive for February, 2006

El Presidente BushThis is a brilliant article in a series from the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin, a fairly large paper that covers San Bernardino, California. San Bernardino is the “ground zero” of Southern California when it comes to illegal immigration. The Bulletin has been very outspoken on this issue. They produce a series called “Beyond Borders” that is absolutely spot on when it comes to the problems created by illegal aliens and illegal immigration. It’s worth bookmarking this site.



Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

By Sara A. Carter and Edward Barrera Staff Writers,

Usually glossed over in the debate about illegal immigration and border security is a seemingly endless battle fought in rural Mexican border towns, cities and political circles.

And like any battle, this one has casualties.

Since January 2005, more than 1,800 killings have been tied to drug cartels in Mexico, according to the Mexican newspaper El Universal.

Mexican police do not keep a tally of narcotics killings, but according to El Universal, at least 176 people were killed in January alone. High-profile assassinations of law enforcement officials are the latest manifestations of the drug war, experts say.

“Intimidation, violence and death is the result of speaking out against the cartels,” said Hardwick Crawford, a former special agent in charge of the FBI’s El Paso field office. “Sometimes it’s better to say nothing at all.”

The killings, though stunning in their number and frequency, certainly aren’t anything new. Those who deal drugs on the border have risked death on a near-daily basis for years, and so have those who try to catch them.

The kidnapping, torture and murder of U.S. Drug Enforcement Agent Enrique Camarena in Mexico two decades ago put a spotlight on the drug war, and a human face on the death toll.

For DEA agents still investigating the 1985 murder of their colleague, it has been a long and brutal crusade.

“If anything came out of his death, it was the awareness it brought to the serious drug problems our nation faces,” said agent Sarah Fenno, spokeswoman for the DEA in Los Angeles.

Last October, Mexico’s foreign minister, Luis Ernesto Derbez, said cooperation between both nations is vital if the Southwest border is to be protected.

“President Vicente Fox has continually fought organized crime in order to defeat violence in our country,” Derbez said. “The Mexican government takes most seriously any threat to its national security and to the security of North America. For this reason, it maintains various mechanisms of cooperation at the federal level with the United States.”

In the state of Tamualipas, which includes the border city of Nuevo Laredo, across from Laredo, Texas, execution-style murders are commonplace.

(Editors note; This is coming to your neighborhood.)

Derechos Humanos en Mexico, a nonprofit human rights organization in Tamaulipas, keeps detailed records of the killings.

In 2005:

205 people were shot to death.

29 people were stabbed to death.

61 were beaten to death.

Two were drowned.

11 were hung. Four decomposed bodies were found in the desert.

Eight people were burned alive.

Less than two weeks ago in San Pedro Garza Garcia — 145 miles south of Nuevo Laredo — a police chief was executed.

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This one is for you, Martillo. In the four months that I have had BrokenCountry.com up and running, illegal aliens have killed 11 Americans in accidents with 8 of these accidents involving alcohol. In all but one of these accidents, the automobile and driver were uninsured and unlicensed. This means that there is no compensation to the family of the victim. In four of these incidents it was a mother of children who were killed, and in three of the other incidents it was a father.

In all 11 accidents the illegal alien lived and had to be cared for at the expense of the U.S. taxpayer. Keep in mind that these are just the accidents across America where the newspapers aren’t liberal rags and they will actually use the word s “ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT.” I have counted 13 other articles where they failed to mention the status of the persons involved but it was implied that they quite possibly were in the United States illegally.

JD

He had no license; alcohol level three times the legal limit

By JUSTIN BOGGS

Staff Writer
VICTORVILLE — The drunken motorist who fatally injured a California Highway Patrol officer Saturday night is a suspected illegal immigrant from Mexico who was driving without a license, officials said Monday.

Domingo Esqueda, 20, of Adelanto had a blood-alcohol level three times the legal limit when he veered off northbound Interstate 15 near Oak Hill Road and crashed into CHP Officer Gregory Bailey’s motorcycle and a parked pickup truck, CHP officials said.

Esqueda is scheduled to be arraigned in Superior Court in Victorville today. He is being held at West Valley Detention Center with bail set at $100,000, according to the sheriff’s booking log. He was arrested for vehicular manslaughter and drunken driving. At the time of his arrest, he was found in possession of multiple forms of identification with different names, officials said.

Bailey, 36, of Adelanto, was on his way home when he pulled over a pickup truck. He was talking with the pickup truck driver when Esqueda slammed into his motorcycle and the parked truck. Bailey was airlifted to Arrowhead Regional Medical Center where he died. Esqueda and the driver of the pickup, Francisco Trujillo, 52, of Lucerne Valley both suffered minor injuries.

Bailey’s death — the sixth death of a CHP officer since September — sent shock waves throughout the CHP. The agency’s commissioner, Mike L. Brown has ordered a “stand down” at all 108 CHP offices.

Commanders at each CHP station will be reviewing safety guidelines and allowing all officers the opportunity to vent their concerns about safety policies and procedures, said Capt. Doug Rich of the Victorville CHP office.

“We’re going to look at the policies and procedures and make sure that we are keeping everybody as safe as we can,” Rich said. “Over the next couple of days we will be conducting training sessions with a significant emphasis on our policies and procedures.”

Rich noted that all of the officers who had been killed since September — three of whom were killed by an alleged drunken driver — were correctly following all safety procedures.

Though the agency is on stand down, there will be absolutely no interruptions to the services CHP provides, said Officer Rosa Ray, a spokeswoman for the CHP office in Rancho Cucamonga where Bailey was assigned.

Ray added that officers from other CHP stations had been called in to cover shifts so that officers at the Rancho Cucamonga station would be allowed the opportunity to grieve or attend a counseling session.

Officers at the Victorville station were feeling the impact of losing one of their own. Rich said that though Bailey’s death was a terrible tragedy, his department was doing its best to stay focused on continuing to maintain the high quality of service that CHP has always provided.

“Obviously we’re all taking it a little rough,” said Sgt. Robert Grieve of the CHP office in Victorville. “But we have to continue doing our jobs to make sure this type of thing doesn’t happen again.”

Bailey was a 10-year veteran of the CHP and had previously been assigned to the Barstow station. He had recently returned from a 15-month tour of duty in Iraq with the Army National Guard. Bailey is survived by his wife and four young children.

Bailey’s funeral services are scheduled for Friday at 11 a.m. at The Rock Church and World Outreach Center in San Bernardino, Ray said. The church is located at 2345 South Waterman Avenue.


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Dennis Weaver dies Dennis Weaver McCloud Duel
Now this really sucks. The Hollywood deaths do come in three’s. Darren McGavin, Don Knotts and now Dennis Weaver. He was 81 years old. I really liked Weaver in Duel, directed by a then unknown Steven Spielberg. I also enjoyed him in McCloud. These three will be missed.

Burt Reynolds: “He was a wonderful man and a fine actor, and we will all miss him.”

American television actor Dennis Weaver best known for his roles as sidekick “Chester Goode” on TV’s first “adult Western” Gunsmoke and as Marshal Sam McCloud on the NBC police drama McCloud, died Friday, age 81.

Weaver passed away from complications of cancer at his home in Ridgway, in southwestern Colorado, it was reported Monday by his publicist, Julian Myers.

Burt Reynolds, Weaver’s co-star in “Gunsmoke” stated: “He was a wonderful man and a fine actor, and we will all miss him.”

Weaver was born in Joplin, Missouri to Walter Weaver and Lena Prather. His first role on Broadway came as understudy to Chapman as Turk Fisher in Come Back, Little Sheba.

He eventually took over the role from Chapman in the national touring company. Solidifying his choice to become an actor, Weaver enrolled in The Actors Studio, where he met Shelley Winters.

During this time–the start of his acting career–he supported his family by doing a number of odd jobs, including selling vacuum cleaners, tricycles and women’s hosiery.

In 1952, Winters aided him in getting a contract from Universal Studios. He made his film debut that same year in the movie The Redhead from Wyoming. Over the next three years, he played roles in a series of movies, but still had to work odd jobs to support his family.

It was while delivering flowers for one of these jobs that he heard he had landed his biggest break — the role of “Chester” on the new television series Gunsmoke — the highest-rated and longest-running series in TV history (1955 to 1975). He received an Emmy Award in 1959 for Best Supporting Actor (Continuing Character) in a Dramatic Series.

From 1967 to 1969, he appeared on the television show Gentle Ben as Tom Wedloe.

He began appearing on the series McCloud in 1970, for which he received two Emmy Award nominations: in 1974, he was nominated for Best Lead Actor in a Limited Series and in 1975, for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited Series. His frequent use of the affirming Southernism, “There you go”, became a catchphrase for the show.

From 1973 to 1975, he was president of the Screen Actors Guild.

In 1978, he played the trail boss R.J. Poteet in the television miniseries Centennial on the episode titled “The Longhorns”. Dennis Weaver also appeared in many acclaimed television films.

In 1980, he played Dr. Samuel Mudd, who was unjustly imprisoned for the Lincoln assassination, in The Ordeal Of Doctor Mudd. In 1983, he played a real estate agent addicted to cocaine in Cocaine: One Man’s Seduction. Weaver received probably the best reviews of his career when he starred in the 1987 film Bluffing It, in which he played a man who is illiterate.

In February 2002, he appeared on the animated series The Simpsons (episode DABF07, “The Lastest Gun in the West”) as the voice of aging Hollywood cowboy legend Buck McCoy.

For his contribution to the television industry, Dennis Weaver was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6822 Hollywood Blvd, and on the Dodge City Trail of Fame. In 1981, he was inducted into the Western Performers Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

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I’m Larry H. Parker ….


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Scumbag lawyer Larry H. Parker asshole blood sucking leech Ron Jacoby from Jacoby and Meyers Lawyer blood sucking leechJames Sokolove Scum bag lawyer bloodsucking leech

Larry H. Parker, Len Jacoby and James Sokolove

Take a good look at these scumbags. Every major metropolitan city has one. In Los Angeles, we have Larry H. Parker. This miscreant is an absolute scourge on society. He has managed to single handedly turn the people of Los Angeles into a town of litigious idiots that seem to think that everyone owes them a free ride through life. Right about now you are thinking of the scumbag lawyer commercials you are bombarded with on a daily basis. Some have even started to spam us with “what we are entitled to” emails.

Len Jacoby started most of this mess when he founded Jacoby and Myers back in the late seventies. Jacoby and Myers is a national law firm that prides itself of screwing corporations, insurance companies and individuals out of millions annually. Mr. Jacoby has offices in almost every major U.S. city and has a website where he actually brags about how many people he has raked over the coals.

James Sokolove. Now this guy is a real shit heal. I am sure you have seen his commercials on television where you live. He is a lawyer from Texas. Like all lawyers, he produces nothing but misery on corporate America. He has commercials running constantly for Vioxx, Asbestos, Viagra, Fen Phen, Neurontin, and my favorite, Mesothelioma. Click here to see this assholes website. He makes millions referring people to local attorneys that will represent them. In other words, he is like a “yellow pages” for local scumbag lawyers looking to screw corporations out of millions. They have their own “shill doctors” that will convince you that there is something wrong with you and then attack corporations with huge lawsuits.

Rush Limbaugh put it best when he called these guys “Miners.” This is exactly what they are, miners. They get up in the morning and put on their miners helmets and grab their pick ax and get to work. They pick at corporations and individuals with their ax until they strike gold.

They produce nothing but heartache and misery. Think about it. They don’t build houses. They don’t produce cars. They don’t own factories. Yet they are multi-millionaires! They prey on the weakest in our society. The stay at home mom that has a self esteem issue because for the last five years she has been eating enough for 10 each day so now McDonalds owes her millions. The lazy welfare recipients that have been wronged by society. People at home faking a back injury because they are too fucking lazy to work for a living.

They run their commercials all day long during soap operas and game shows, trolling for saps that are dumb enough to get involved in the legal screwing of America. They convince people that somehow they have been wronged by corporate America and these corporations owe them something. The end result? Higher prices to the consumer! These corporations just pass the costs of litigation along to you and me.

Here is the best part of this scam. They file “class action suits” against these corporations. In a class action suit a typical settlement might be six hundred million dollars. This is divided among all of the people that join the class. They could number in the millions. Most people take the time to go to a shill doctor, fill out a mountain of paperwork and join the class.

What’s the payoff?? usually about a hundred bucks. Why such a paltry sum? Because the lawyers can take up to half of the settlement, leaving almost nothing for the suckers they duped into suing the corporation in the first place! You sit holding an empty bag and the lawyers buy new estates in Tuscany. What a racket, eh?

Here is the best part of all. There is nothing we as Americans can do about this little scam, because we continually elect lawyers as our representatives in Washington DC. We are stupid enough to ask the fox to guard the hen house! As long as lawyers are making laws for lawyers, we are all screwed.

I figure if I keep this up too long Larry H. Parker will sue me for 2.1 million!

JD


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George Michael arrested for marijuana pot tree cannibis tree skoking dope GHB drugs More on the George Michael drug bust. I have come to the conclusion that George would be better suited to being a gay porn director rather than a hasbeen recording artist. I just giggle my ass off when these people fall off of the societal high horse.


George Michael admits possessing Class C drugs after police discover him slumped behind the wheel
GEORGE MICHAEL admitted last night that his arrest on suspicion of possessing drugs was his “own stupid fault, as usual”. The singer was found slumped at the wheel of his car near Hyde Park Corner, Central London, in the early hours on Sunday after a passer-by raised the alarm.

Police and an ambulance raced to the scene after hearing that Michael’s vehicle was parked at a dangerous angle to oncoming traffic. The arrest has raised fears for the physical and mental wellbeing of the controversial singer, 42, who has admitted in the past to being a heavy cannabis user.

The Sun quoted a witness as saying: “George was out of it; he was all over the place. He was found with his head slumped against the wheel. No one could rouse him. He was virtually unconscious. When the police came he could hardly speak.”

Acording to the newspaper, police then searched the car and found cannabis and GHB, a Class C drug known as “liquid ecstasy” which is popular with clubbers.

Michael was initially arrested under his real name, Georgios Kyriacos Panayiotou, on suspicion of being unfit to drive. He was “de-arrested” for this offence after being taken to a police station in the West End where he was examined by a doctor. After spending the rest of the night in a cell he was bailed to return to a police station next month, when he will find out if he is to be charged for drug possession.

In a statement last night Michael said that he had “been through enough” in 24 years of fame to know that he would be the subject of speculation this week after his arrest.

“Much of it will be inaccurate or simply untrue. I can handle that, it is my own stupid fault, as usual. I was in possession of Class C drugs, which is an offence, and I have no complaints about the police who were professional throughout.

“The only thing I care about is that people know that I was properly tested by the police doctor on Saturday night, who stated to the officers present that I was not impaired in any way and should be allowed to drive home. In fact, the only reason I didn’t drive home was that the police accidentally immobilised my car when they parked it. The duty solicitor very kindly gave me a lift home.”

In a lighter postcript he added: “PS: I promise I won’t make a record out of this one — even though it is tempting.”

This appears to be a reference to Michael’s last well-publicised brush with the law, when he was detained for lewd conduct in a public lavatory in Los Angeles in 1998 after propositioning an undercover police officer.

The incident led him to reveal he was gay, ending years of speculation about his sexuality, and inspired the video for his hit song, Outside.

It is not clear what he was doing by Hyde Park at 1.50am on Sunday. The Daily Mirror reported that he had spent Saturday night having a late dinner with friends in Mayfair. The Sun claimed that sex toys, masks and pornography were found in the boot of his car.

Michael, who lives with his long-term boyfriend, Kenny Goss, spent Sunday attending a memorial service for his mother who died of cancer ten years ago.

Wham!, the band that he formed with his schoolfriend Andrew Ridgeley, were one of the most successful acts of the 1980s and their biggest hits, including Wake Me Up Before You Go Go, Club Tropicana and I’m Your Man, are still played in nightclubs up and down the country every night. The duo split in 1986 and Michael embarked on a solo career which has combined great success with controversy.

He has has sold more than 85 million records worldwide and notched up six No 1 singles in the US and 11 in Britain, but he was heavily criticised for the satirical video to his 2002 record Shoot The Dog, which portrayed Tony Blair as George Bush’s poodle.

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George Michael busted for marijuana drugs smoking tree

Watching George Michael self destruct has been an interesting ride to say the least. I post stuff like this because there is nothing funnier than watching has beens fall even farther down the ladder of success.

Singer George Michael was arrested on suspicion of possessing drugs in London after he was found slumped at the wheel of a car, British media reported yesterday, quoting police.

Police were called by a concerned citizen and took Michael into custody. Michael, 42, was checked by paramedics but did not need hospital treatment. He was released on bail.

The seized substances are suspected to be marijuana and GHB, also known as liquid ecstasy.

In 1998, Michael was arrested for lewd conduct in a public toilet in Los Angeles after being spotted by an undercover police officer.

Formerly of the group Wham! and now a solo artist, Michael has sold more than 85 million records.

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Don Knotts passes away.  Don Knotts dies Don Knotts Barney Francey Yarborough Andy Griffith showDon Knotts, the rail-thin comic actor who was perhaps best known to millions of television viewers as the bungling Deputy Sheriff Barney Fife in “The Andy Griffith Show” and the squirrelly landlord in “Three’s Company,” died of lung cancer Feb. 24 at UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles. He was 81.

Mr. Knotts, who often played high-strung characters, won five Emmys for Best Supporting Actor in the 1960s as the swaggering but hapless Fife. Mr. Knotts developed the idea of the deputy sheriff when he heard that Andy Griffith, with whom he had worked in the play “No Time for Sergeants,” was putting together a TV pilot set in the fictional North Carolina town of Mayberry.

Don Knotts, who kept generations of TV audiences laughing as bumbling Deputy Barney Fife on “The Andy Griffith Show” and would-be swinger landlord Ralph Furley on “Three’s Company,” died at 81.

The series was a huge success when it aired, from 1960 to 1968, consistently ranking in the top 10 of the Nielsen ratings.

Fife, who grew into one of the most beloved comic characters in American popular culture, generated sympathy and laughs in scenes in which he fumbled to load his service revolver with the single bullet Griffith allotted him.

“Don meant everything,” Griffith said in a telephone interview. “Don made the show. I’ve lost a lifetime friend.
The two actors remained close friends over the years and reprised their roles in the 1986 television movie “Return to Mayberry.”

Mr. Knotts’s wife, actress Francey Yarborough, said in a statement that Griffith visited Mr. Knotts at the hospital shortly before his death to say goodbye.

“Don was an actor who played comedy as opposed to a comedian who does stand-up,” said Mr. Knotts’s longtime manager, Sherwin Bash, in a telephone interview. “He was one of a kind.”

Mr. Knotts, who lived in West Los Angeles, left television in 1965 to devote more time to family-oriented film comedies that featured his zany, bugged-eyed expressions, high-pitched voice and perfect slapstick timing.

His movie cedits include “The Incredible Mr. Limpet” (1964), “The Ghost and Mr. Chicken” (1966), “The Reluctant Astronaut” (1967), “The Shakiest Gun in the West” (1968) and “The Love God?” (1969).

In the 1970s, Mr. Knotts teamed with fellow comic actor Tim Conway in the Disney movies “The Apple Dumpling Gang” and “The Apple Dumpling Gang Rides Again.”

“It’s because of Don that I’m in this business,” Conway said in an interview last year with the Kansas City Star. “When I used to watch the old ‘Steve Allen Show,’ with Don Knotts and Louie Nye and Tom Poston — the ‘Man on the Street’ stuff — I just thought Don was the funniest guy I’d ever seen. And I used to wait for that show at night.”

Mr. Knotts returned to television in the late 1970s, joining the cast of ABC’s popular sitcom “Three’s Company” as the cad landlord Ralph Furley, a swinger who usually donned an ascot and bright, colorful leisure suits. He remained with the show until its final season in 1984.

In recent years, he had recurring roles on television, including a part on Griffith’s show “Matlock” and the series “Pleasantville.” He also performed in dinner theaters and did voice-over for animated films. Most recently, he was the voice of Mayor Turkey Lurkey in last year’s “Chicken Little.”

He was born Jesse Donald Knotts on July 21, 1924, in Morgantown, W.Va., where he grew up with three brothers. As a young man, he gravitated to the world of entertainment, starting as a ventriloquist. He lived in New York briefly before returning home and enrolling at West Virginia University.

He joined the Army during World War II and served as an entertainer. After the military, he returned to West Virginia University to finish his degree.

He worked in radio before getting his big break in the 1950s, when he won a spot to perform on “The Steve Allen Show.” He drew howls from the audience playing a weatherman. The skit featured Mr. Knotts as a television weatherman forced to ad-lib the forecast without any information on the weather. As he wrote on a map about a weather system in California, stumbling over his words, it became clear he was writing “h-e-l-p.”

His marriages to Kay Knotts and Loralee Knotts ended in divorce.

Survivors also include a son and a daughter.

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