JEREMIAH:7 How shall I pardon thee for this? thy children have forsaken
me, and sworn by them that are no gods: when I had fed them to the full,
they then committed adultery, and assembled themselves by troops in the
harlots' houses.
Check out the names of the people Quoted in the
article below ! You can't get any higher in their fields !!!
This Satanic Catholic Jesuit controlled War on drugs/ Hell's Angels
Prostitute Religion uses sex and children as weapons they continually
put back on a persons head what they were able to get a person to do but
the biggest problem with that is these are the people who taught them to
do the wrong meaning there wouldn't have been a crime if these people
hadn't created one.
They aren't finding bad people they are finding weak minds. This war
has killed hundreds of millions of people and again it is all being done
in secrete for the Roman Catholic Pope. If you have time first watch
this video exposing who controlled the drugs and their world take over
agenda.
The Catholic Jesuit plan to control the
world exposed <-- Must watch video
The Jesuits
(society of Jesus) have totally taken over
just about every facet of America. From
all religions to all secret societies,
government agencies,
intelligence agencies in America and all over the world. Here an
ex-Jesuit priest Alberto Rivera
(murdered by the Vatican in 1997 by poisoning) tells of why and how the
Jesuits are doing this. We can see the evidence of this by the attacks on
our civil liberties and the U.S. Constitution. It's time to wake up. Share
this video and and post it anywhere you can. Also speaks of the Kennedy
and Lincoln assassinations being plots of the
Jesuits from Rome.
Download this
video and pass this video link around to everyone you know
These Catholic Jesuits puppeteer the Greek mafia called
the Hell's Angels through the War on Drugs
Crooked law
Experts say a new Canadian law will
create a hell of crooked cops and professional informers
Alex Roslin
Early the morning of October 2, 1993, 30 U.S.
federal and local police officers raided Donald Scott' s Trails End ranch
in Malibu, California. Acting on an informer' s tip that he was
cultivating marijuana, they busted down his door and shot Scott, 61, dead
in front of his wife. No drugs were found on the premises.
An inquiry by the district attorney found that
police used an invalid search warrant to raid Scott' s $5-million (U.S.)
Malibu ranch in an attempt to seize it under American asset-forfeiture
laws.
After 15 years of draconian Reagan era narcotics
laws, even conservative Americans are starting to get turned off by the
war on drugs. In April, the Republican controlled Congress adopted a law
to reign in America' s out-of-control drug warriors and curb police
forfeiture powers.
Canada, on the other hand, is moving in the
opposite direction.
A tough new law is now before the Senate that' s
ostensibly designed to crack down on money laundering and crime proceeds.
Bill C-22 sailed through the House of Commons with no opposition on May 11
following a fierce back-room-lobbying campaign by American police
agencies.
The idea behind Bill C-22 is to make life harder
for criminals trying to turn illegal profits into "clean" assets that can'
t be traced to crime. The law will require bankers, lawyers,
life-insurance salesmen, casinos and securities dealers to report all
large financial transactions by their clients - likely to be set at
$10,000 and up - to a new federal agency that will try to spot suspicious
money movements. Failure to report is punishable by up to five years in
jail and a maximum fine of $2-million.
Also, for the first time travellers crossing the
border with $15,000 or more in cash will have to make a declaration to
customs. Travellers who don' t do so automatically will forfeit the money
if it' s found. Even if the money is declared, however, it can still be
seized if a customs official is suspicious about its origins. In that
case, the onus is on the traveller to prove the money was acquired
legally.
This last provision is a radical departure from
existing Canadian law. For the first time, you no longer have to be
charged with a crime for your assets to be seized.
"This is a revolution in criminal law, an
absolute revolution. You will have policing that will be judged according
to the proceeds. We' re already halfway to the American nightmare," said
McGill University economist Tom
Naylor, an internationally renowned expert on organized crime who has
consulted for the United Nations.
"We'
re moving toward police becoming bounty-hunting organizations,"
said Naylor,
who wondered why Ottawa isn't as eager to crack down on tax evasion by the
wealthy and large corporations - something that' s far more economically
damaging than money laundering.
Furthermore, some of Canada' s top
organized-crime experts and a former officer of the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Agency say Bill C-22 will
strip away our privacy rights and unleash
many of the nightmarish problems the Americans are trying to dig
themselves out of.
"The lessons we see over the border are hideous
lessons, and yet we strive to mimic them," said
York University
criminologist Margaret Beare, a former director of police policy and
research at the federal Solicitor-General' s office,
who currently heads York' s Nathanson Centre
for the Study of Organized Crime and Corruption. "There is a wealth of
literature that documents the abuses and the U.S. is now trying to step
back from them," she said.
***
...
and it doesn't even work
For all their harshness, laws like Bill C-22(which
has long been law) have proven completely ineffective elsewhere
against organized crime groups, which usually hire the cream of accounting
talent to hide their transactions, according to Naylor.
Michael Levine
,
a former officer of the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Agency, agreed: "The end result of all the laws is a bigger
drug problem than ever. The jails are filled with non-violent people,
many of whom were entrapped into
violating money-laundering laws. It' s a mess."
Levine, a highly decorated officer who spent 25
years with the DEA, said American money-laundering and forfeiture laws
have created
a large parasitical class of professional
informants who have become rich conning gullible cops and businesspeople.
"Criminal informants go out and prey on people
and con them into breaking the law. Informants don' t target criminals.
They target people with money. They find it easy to set people up," he
said. "It' s an informant-driven drug war. Ninety
percent of the cases are informant related."
What' s wrong with using informants to catch bad
guys? Plenty, according to Levine, especially when the system gives
professional snitches and
police officers large
financial incentives to go out and turn regular people into criminals.
"Rather than catching someone
who' s violating the law, you' re seeing if you can convince them to do
it. What it comes down to is if it wasn' t for the government, there
wouldn' t be the crime," said Levine, who teaches informant handling and
undercover police tactics at the Ontario Police College.
The top informer rewards have jumped from a few
thousand dollars 20 years ago to millions of dollars today. By the early '
90s, the U.S. government was paying informants more than $100-million a
year, according to a PBS Frontline exposé on informants broadcast last
year. They paid thousands of others by reducing their sentences.
Levine said professional informers have put an
"enormous" number of businesspeople with no prior record behind bars and
gotten numerous businesses seized. "They may not have been the most honest
people in the world," Levine said of the victims.
"But the
question you have to ask yourself is, 'Is it the government' s place to
test the honesty of people? Should the government, for example, send out
beautiful women to see if men will cheat on their wives?' "
***
Entrapment
In a piece published in the Utne Reader in 1996,
Levine wrote about the case of Miguel, a parking-lot attendant in
Washington, D.C., with no criminal record who fell for a clever informant'
s scam. The informant faced 17 outstanding theft and fraud charges in
Latin America. He approached the DEA and convinced them his friend Miguel
was the head of a large South American cocaine cartel. He then told
Miguel, who was short of money, that he had met an American Mafia don who
was a little slow upstairs. He convinced his friend they could make a few
hundred thousand dollars by getting the Mafioso to front the money for a
cocaine deal and then taking off.
The DEA didn' t bother checking out the informer'
s information. After the unsuspecting Miguel bumbled his way through the
"cocaine deal," he was arrested and got a ten-year sentence, even though
he never had any cocaine in his possession. His friend, the con man, was
paid $30,000 and his charges were dropped.
Then there is the case of Donald Carlson, a
45-year-old Fortune 500 executive in San Diego. In 1992, narcotics
officers burst into Carlson' s suburban home and shot him three times,
leaving him in critical condition. They were executing a search warrant
based on the uncorroborated, uninvestigated word of a professional
informer, who claimed Carlson had 5,000 pounds of cocaine in the house. No
drugs were found. Carlson was paid $2.75-million (U.S.) in a settlement.
Susan Wells, spokeswoman for the Washington,
D.C.-based watchdog Forfeiture Endangers American Rights, predicted a
similar torrent of abuses in Canada if Bill C-22 passes: "If you start
having the same types of law as we have, I guarantee you will have just
as much corruption, crooked cops and kids on drugs. It' s as crooked as
a dog' s hind leg." Levine agreed: "They will declare open season on all
businesspeople.
You will have informants testing the honesty of
every Canadian businessperson."
More than 1100 killed in war on
drugs: PM
March 4 2003
The death toll in Thailand's
month-old
war on drugs has exceeded 1140,
Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra has said, admitting for the first
time that police might have made some "mistakes".
"More than 1100 deathswere not
government orders to killbut were the
work of their own
gang
memberswho feared that
investigation could implicate themselves," Mr Thaksin said in his weekly
radio address.
He said police had killed another 28 people in
self-defenceand admitted that "
bad officers " might have been
involved in other killings.
"It's normal that we have some mistakes in
such a big war and a few cases may be the work of officers since there are
some bad officers. We have to resolve the problem," he said.
He said four police officers had been killed
since the crackdown started on February 1 and nine others wounded.
Authorities have arrested 76 suspects in the
killings, he said.
The high death toll would not sway the
governmentfrom the anti-drugs campaign but only reaffirmed its
commitment to uproot the drugs problem, he said.
"We are now at war on drugs, which have
already destroyed a million of our people," he said.
"
Don't be moved by the high death
figures, we
must be adamant and finish this war."
While human rights and Thai opposition
politicians have raised fears over the climate of fear the campaign is
generating, Mr Thaksin said the campaign would continue and has ridiculed
critics of the government's tough policy.
He said the public should worry less about
drug related killings and instead assist the Government in overcoming the
drugs problem. Criticism over the deaths has led to the Government to stop
publicising toll details.
Former foreign minister Surin Pitsuwan said
innocent people were dying.
"Not all the victims are beyond reasonable doubt
guilty of the charges.
The
human toll is rising, and the anxiety is building up around the country,"
Mr Surin said.
Australian and other foreign diplomats have
been assured that the campaign is being carried out according to the law.
Thailand's Foreign Ministry gave a special
briefing to diplomats to head off growing alarm.
With the number of drug dealers gunned down
rising rapidly, there are concerns among human rights
groups and the United
Nations that
officers have been carrying out extra-judicial killings.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Sihasak
Phuangketkeow said the diplomatic briefing was aimed at clarifying the war
on drugs campaign and highlighting the severity of the narcotics problem
in Thailand.
He said the campaign was being conducted
according to the law.
"The point we would like to emphasise is that
whatever the circumstance of the deaths or murders everything
will be done according to the law," he told AAP.
Up to 5 per cent of the population - or three
million Thais - are reported to be addicted to drugs, mostly amphetamines
and heroin.
Each year between 800 million and one billion
amphetamine tablets flood into Thailand from illegal factories inside
Burma, the production overseen by Burmese ethnic minorities in league with
the Thai underworld.
Their gang are the
under cover Hell's Angels operations