Official Retaliation OK, Police-State’s Kangaroo Court Rules
You may remember a passenger and runner of marathons named Roger Vanderklok: the TSA “detained” him in 2013 because of “a heart-monitoring watch” in his luggage. While questioning Mr. K, the thugs’ supervisor waxed “confrontational,” whereupon his victim asked to file a complaint. In the finest tradition of a police-state, the supervisor “retaliated” by calling the cops on Mr. K—and, for good measure, lied about him, too, claiming Mr. K threatened to bomb his flight. That bought the professional, never-before-arrested Mr. K a night in the hoosegow. When the case went to court, the supervisor’s allegations didn’t match the surveillance … Continue reading Official Retaliation OK, Police-State’s Kangaroo Court Rules
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