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| quote: | Originally posted by pmoisse
Good points, and the pork analogy sounds pretty accurate actually. I'm a bad person for lol'ing at it, aren't I? 
Though I have one question regarding the obviously distressing story about your Aunt. Why did the judge award $45k in penalties if the son was just defending the home? Strikes me as though there's some sort of double-standard (maybe not the right term). I know hindsight is 20/20, but would the thieves have taken $45 each worth of stuff? And add to that, your Aunt was killed!?!!? Why the $$$ penalty?
Honestly, I'm not at all being critical of how your relative handled the matter. In the context of gun ownership defending the home, the kid did everything to help.
Are Texas laws different from Florida ones which let people shoot first and ask later, so long as they can prove they were fearing for their life (which would have applied in the case of your Aunt for sure)? |
It was a terrible scene, the Wet Backs knocked on the door and when my aunt answered the door, they kicked in the door, smashed her in the head with a rifle butt and commenced to raid and one of the fat fucks shot her in the face, no open casket, apparently, my cousin went to his step dad's gun rack, grabbed the gun and went downstairs. The focked up thing was, the DA sent him to the Grand Jury to levy man slaughter charges, but the Grand Jury came Back No Bill. It did not help my cousin out that he went total primal on one of the dead guys carcass...won't go into details but a total of 20 long mins elapsed before the cops showed up...he went apeshit on one of the guys... really bad..almost animal like... and was about to shoot the other in the face with a hollow point, but the cops got there first and stopped him.
Simply Put, the focking Mexican nationals that did the deed were not citizens and it also did not help that the gun was not registered to my cousin...it was registered to his step father. I also should state that it was civil court that the wetback's family got rich off of. Kind of like the Border Patrol Agents who recently shot and wounded a wet back drug runner; they are sitting in jail at the moment for violating the little Wet's civil rights... I MEAN THE GUY WAS A DRUG RUNNER!!! but you know.....America is a nice place, but the laws favor the criminal and that's the fact..
There is nothing in my mind that would ever change my right to have a fire arm. I do have some, but that's mainly for the Job.... but that's another side to the pentagram that makes up my psyche 
here is an example of the FOCKED UP SITUATION
| quote: | Border Patrol agents' case, House of Death go to the heart of Justice scandal
By Bill Conroy,
Posted on Fri Apr 13th, 2007 at 08:52:47 PM EST
It seems the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Texas, overseen by Johnny Sutton from his throne in San Antonio, has a PR problem when it comes to dealing with drug smugglers.
In the high-profile case of the two Border Patrol agents in Texas who are now serving long prison terms for shooting a drug smuggler in the rear end, conservative media outlets are proclaiming that Sutton’s office showed special favor to the smuggler in order to ruin the lives of the agents.
Likewise, in the House of Death mass murder case, an informant was shown special consideration by Sutton’s office after a run-in with Border Patrol agents in New Mexico, recent documents uncovered by Narco News show.
The two Border Patrol agents at the center of the controversy in Texas were stationed near El Paso in February 2005 when one of them shot a drug smuggler in the butt cheek after a bungled apprehension attempt and then allegedly covered-up the evidence of the shooting. The agents (Ignacio Ramos and Jose Alonso Compean) were prosecuted by Sutton’s office, convicted by a jury of violating the smuggler’s civil rights and of covering up evidence, and each sentenced to more than a decade in prison.
Sutton, in a Jan. 19 appearance on FoxNews, said the Border Patrol agents in this case “deliberately lied, deliberately covered-up … and filed false reports” about the shooting of the smuggler, an individual named Osvaldo Aldrete-Davila. Sutton also stressed that a jury convicted the agents based on the facts, which he alleged have been distorted by the media.
The fate of Ramos and Compean is likely to continue to be a flashpoint in the divisive battle over immigration. Those on the right who have rallied to the agents’ cause claim they are victims of the Bush administration’s pro-illegal immigration agenda and of its cozy relations with the rulers of Mexico.
Such a conspiracy theory makes for sexy headlines in the world of political punditry. But could it be that there is a much more human-scale reason for Sutton’s aggressive prosecution of Ramos and Compean, and his kit-glove treatment of the drug mule Aldrete-Davila?
It pays for a prosecutor to appear tough on crime, particularly when it comes to the alleged misconduct of law enforcers – such as Ramos and Compean. The payback can be even greater if it diverts the media spotlight away from the skeletons in the prosecutor’s own backyard.
For evidence of that, we only need to turn to the House of Death mass murder case, which also was overseen by Sutton’s office.
As you recall, in that case, a U.S. government informant helped to arrange, and even participated in, the murders of a dozen people in Juarez as part of a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operation targeting a narco-trafficking cell headed by Heriberto Santillan-Tabares. To date, not one U.S. law enforcer or prosecutor has been held accountable in a criminal court for their complicity in the House of Death murders.
But you can never be to safe on that front, if you’re a powerful prosecutor working for a paranoid administration with a lot of political enemies. So when an opportunity presents itself to produce a script for the mainstream media that depicts you as being tough on law enforcement corruption, as it did with the case of Ramos and Compean, then a politically astute prosecutor naturally jumps at the opportunity.
It’s the perfect way to divert attention away from your own bungled, and possibly criminal, handling of a quite separate law-enforcement corruption case that could ruin your career and deepen the political troubles of the administration you serve. And, as in the House of Death, if the ongoing cover-up implicates even high-level officials in the government, possibly even the White House, all the more reason to reach for a script that will divert attention away from your problems.
So, Ramos and Compean become the perfect scapegoats for a politically motivated prosecution based not on a grand conspiracy to create a New World Order, but rather on the very human desire to protect your neck. In the wake of the U.S. Attorney purge, and its charges of politically motivated prosecutions, is that such a far-fetched speculation?
But as with every plan of man, the world always has its own way. And now Sutton and his boss, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, face a major backlash – on the right due to the Ramos and Compean case, and on the left due to the recent U.S. Attorney purge.
But ironically, should these esteemed leaders take a fall from their wall due to their political miscalculations, it can be argued that a pair of drug smugglers, and the House of Death, helped to push them off their perch.
Tough on crime
In the House of Death case, court documents obtained by Narco News show (similar to the case of Ramos and Compean) that Border Patrol agents early on apprehended a key player, Guillermo Ramirez Peyro, for attempting to smuggle dope across the U.S. border.
And just as in the Ramos and Compean case, the drug smuggler Ramirez Peyro (who also happened to be a U.S. government informant) received favorable treatment, approved at high levels in Washington, D.C. This was done in order to protect an ongoing narco-trafficking investigation.
Importantly in this case, at the time Border Patrol agents caught up with Ramirez Peyro, he allegedly was acting on his own and had not informed his U.S. government handlers (at the time both DEA and ICE) of his freelance dope smuggling enterprise.
SOURCE
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Some damn utter shite that the state of Texas seems to have with Wetbacks and their country......
The same with my Cousin, the wetback invaders, since they were not citizens, were deported and then a few months later.... they sued!!
Had Lulac, FOCK THEM, doing their case Pro Bono, since the Grand Jury came back No Bill against my cousin, they went after him in civil court.
In Texas, the gun laws are very liberal. Lets say you are behind in a car payment....a repo man comes on to your land to take your car... if he does it in the manner that most repo men do, they will sneak up in the middle of the night and trespass on your land to get said car. In Texas you can blast his ass away.....but there are stipulations, but still. In Texas if you shoot a man outside your house its can be murder, if you shoot the man and then drag his ass in the door, its self defense. Unless like my cousin, you have a Spanish last name..... There are big difs between Texas Gun Laws and other states.. I am just a little foggy since the past 4 years I have been having to abide by Federal Protocols for gun ownership... a lot more B.S.
but my cousin is all good now, a few years later he joined the army, went to Iraq for a few tours, came back and started his own business, Home security and protection... also he teaches self defense to battered women, he was the staright arrow of the familia 
Last edited by LazFX on Apr-18-2007 at 08:48
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