USSA- Let’s get started March 06, 2009

The reporting on bad cops as well as bad judges and even babysitters, that I like to call jailers and prison guards. Seem’s that I am feeling a lot better after almost being knocked down and out for my research on these freaks that I call protectors of the public citizens. No, not old stories as there is always some bad ass hole in this area all the time. Hard to believe that isn’t it? Sorry citizens of the USSA. Even since my home was robbed and broken into by bad cops and the leader. I have taken it up to let each and every citizen know who they are as well as there photo if I can get it. I normally get it. Ask any bad cop that has seen his/her photo some place on the web. Yes, I had a lot of nasty threats and letter’s and there all died off in the last year. Why? I was going under a damn doctor’s care for over a year. Was all I could do just to get a half story out and it was old before I could even get it posted. Took me a while to get off these so called legal drugs that I was told I need to take or I would die in a matter of days. To be exact took me almost two months. Now, I feel a lot better and more alert. Not up to par as of this writing but, able to get a lot of research done for all you citizens not able to afford to buy the newspaper to see what is happening. I now heard from a dear friend that was caught up in this legal web so to speak and reason why I am going after prison guards and jailers as well. I use the word babysitters myself. I found they really love that word. So, those of you that have loved ones in prison and jail remember that there babysitters not guards or cops. I will pick out the best story that I can for our local area as well as state. I also pick on other states from time to time if I see someone that I know from my time in school with them or had a working relationship with them. No, I no longer work. I am now retired and old as dust and live a good clean and honest life. No matter what the crooks may say. My kid’s and grand kids were not angels. But, dad and grandpa never did drugs in his life until a couple years ago, When I trusted my doctor and found later I was dying a slow death. May be the cause there goign to use later in the future for no longer taking the legal pill’s. In fact I have a couple stories I am working on now, and one is a judge locally a long with a few of the scum of the earth protectors. But, I run into these idiots so much now that I even take a photo or even run my camera when I need there photo for a future warning to the citizens. I hate that word citizen as if were creatures that are told what to do by these crooks that think there above the laws. Problem is they really believe they are above the law. We need to get them out and replace this corrupt system with real good guys and great good cops, as even the good cops are now in fear of not having a job if they don’t go along with the seasoned, old time crooked low scum life cop.  As you can tell by the words that I use, I can hit the right one’s all the time. So, here we go. As I said I want to post hundreds of past stories, but we have such great true and future bad cops going to prison soon, that your mouths will fall after seeing what you have been missing. Why do I do this. To get my revenge for the corrupt judge and cops that waited until I was at work to ruin my home and steal my $60,000.00. So, easy to ask for the key, but nope after all what fun is that even if your kid is home to offer to open things. Nope it was a lesson and one that I will never forget. But, what about now with what I have been doing since that time. Was $60,000.00 worth it? After all why not use it or call it drug money that way I would not be here starting up the stories again that I am sure will cause you sleepless nights. Well, sheriff and you big hand slapping pussies why was there nothing on this old man? Why? Because he was working most of the time. Why no police record? Why no jail time in my life? I have repaired everything and live good or better than most of you ever will. Even with what you stole from me. But, remember this and your fun you had and the message you sent did nothing more than make me use all my retirement time to track you low life scum down. I am easy as hell to way lay now, Old and slow and sure as hell can’t run. Not that I ever would in the first place. But, had to let you group of scum know I am well and ready to go. Are you? So let’s get started.

(1) In Farmington, Missouri, a former state prison guard was sentenced last Friday to seven years in prison on drugs and weapons charges. Seth Barton, who had worked at the Bonne Terre state prison, went down after prison employees searched his vehicle on prison property in February 2006. They found bags of marijuana, a loaded handgun, ammunition, a hunting knife, a jar of marijuana seeds, drug paraphernalia and more than $1,500 in cash. He pleaded no contest in April to charges of felony drug possession with intent to distribute and delivery of a weapon at a prison.
(2)

TEXARKANA, Ark. —  A former jail guard in Arkansas has been sentenced to 28 years in prison for sneaking syringes, marijuana and cell phones to inmates by hiding the items in food.

Deputies say 26-year-old Jordan Michael Waller carried tacos, pizzas and chili to work at the Miller County jail.

He used the food to hide a stash of cell phones and chargers, methamphetamine, marijuana, tobacco and cigarette rolling papers

Family members testified Waller had paranoid schizophrenia that manageable with medication. Jail officials denied knowing of Waller’s illness. He was sentenced Thursday in Texarkana.

The long-troubled jail had 13 escapes last year. A number of guards were fired, and some faced criminal charges for improper conduct with inmates.
(3) A Pulaski County sheriff’s office deputy was fired and charged with the rape of an inmate inside a basement holding cell at the county courthouse after the inmate produced a DNA sample she kept on the inside of her bra, sheriff’s office documents obtained Friday show.

Willie Lee Owens, 39, of Conway, had been a Pulaski County deputy for more than three years when on Dec. 18 he told a 26-yearold female inmate she might be needed back in court after a hearing during which she received three years’ probation after pleading guilty to criminal attempt to obtain prescription drugs by fraud, the records show. When another deputy arrived to pick up inmates who were supposed to return to the Pulaski County jail, Owens told the deputy to leave her behind, the records said.

Earlier in the day, Owens had given the inmate a cigarette and let her twice use the phone when she felt sick, the records show. During the first phone call, Owens grabbed her breast, she told investigators, but she didn’t say anything to him or tell anyone else at the time.

In the basement of the Pulaski County Courthouse after her hearing, Owens told her to go into a cell with a bench, the records show. She tried to close the door, she told investigators, but it wouldn’t lock. Owens went into the cell, started to talk to her and then grabbed her, she told investigators.

A sheriff’s office investigator asked the woman in an official interview to describe what Owens said to her.

“She replied that he began to ask her what her and her roommate did at night (regarding sexual activity),” according to an arrest warrant affidavit dated Jan. 15. “[She] advised that Dep. Owens came over to her and told her to stand up and bend over the bench.”

The woman told the investigators she was scared, so she did what Owens told her to do, according to the affidavit.

Then Owens pulled down her jail jumpsuit and had sex with her. She told investigators that when Owens left the cell to get a napkin with soap on it for her to clean up, she took the opportunity to wipe some semen on the inside of her bra for evidence.

“She washed her face and Dep. Owens took the napkin,” according to the affidavit.

The woman did not come forward until four days later, the documents show.

“[She] advised that she did not tell anyone out of fear that she would be harmed,” according to the affidavit.

After thinking about it, she told investigators, she felt she needed to come forward before losing the DNA evidence.

The sheriff ’s office placed Owens on administrative leave with pay Dec. 29.

During an interview with investigators, Owens denied “any sexual contact” with the woman, records show. He consented to four oral swabs to collect DNA samples.

His DNA and the inmate’s bra went to the state Crime Laboratory for analysis.

“The crime lab confirmed with scientific certainty that the swabs submitted by Dep. Owens and the samples taken from the bra were the same,” according to the affidavit.

On Jan. 16, a sheriff’s office investigator arrested Owens on one count of rape – a Class Y felony carrying a minimum 10-year prison sentence on conviction.

Sheriff Doc Holladay and Chief of Detention Randy Morgan fired Owens on Jan. 21 after an administrative hearing.

Owens pleaded innocent to the rape charge Jan. 20 in Pulaski County District Court. His $200,000 bail was reduced to $50,000 two days later. He posted bond the same day. Attempts to reach him Friday were unsuccessful.
(4) SHE WAS a beautiful young lady, a good friend, a mother and wife, a most pleasant person and funny to be around. Whether at a dinner party or a deer camp fish-fry, she was the center of attention. She was all Arkie, all grins and full of life. And if she’d just been wearing her seat belt that day in February 2005, she’d be alive today to watch her children grow.

It’s about time Arkansas joined the 21st Century. Or at least the 20th. So, yes, a police officer ought to be able to pull you over if you’re not wearing a seat belt. What are you thinking? Or were you?

Right now a cop trying to keep you safe in this state can give you, Gentle Traffic Dodger, a ticket for not wearing a seat belt-but only if he pulls you over for some other infraction first. A bill that is to become law soon would make not wearing a seat belt an offense all on its own. Then an officer won’t need another reason to stop Mr. or Mrs. Careless. The governor is expected to sign the bill into law any day now.

It’s about time. Past time, actually.

Two years ago, a House committee killed a bill that would make more of us buckle up. Why? Well, believe it or not, there was opposition. And not just from the righter-than-right and lefter-than-left libertarians out there.

This year there was opposition from people who really should know better.

Representatives from the NAACP and the ACLU and even our old friend, Wendell Griffen, formerly of the Arkansas Court of Appeals, showed up to speak against safety. Their argument was essentially this: Make not wearing a seat belt an offense all on its own, and you’ll give cops another excuse to pull over Hispanics and black folks.

We’re trying to understand this, uh, reasoning: A police officer pulls over a black man or an Hispanic woman for not wearing a seat belt, and that’s bad for those drivers? Simple us, we would think it would be just the opposite. Seat belts save lives.

Judge Griffen says he himself wears his seat belt religiously-which is not surprising; he’s no dummy-but he says the bill might allow for what he calls Bad Stops.

“The stop is a gateway to something else,” he told legislators considering the bill. “Not all stops are bad, not even most stops. The problem is: Can we pass a law promoting public safety and to discourage bad stops? I think we can do both.”

Hmmm. How? The judge might want to explain how pulling over somebody for not wearing a seat belt-and possibly saving a life in the process-is a Bad Stop.

Dr. Wayne Moore, chief of medicine at Meharry Medical College in Nashville, Tenn., also testified. He said traffic crashes are the leading cause of death for black Americans up to the age of 14. They’re the second-leading cause of death for those between 14 and 20 years old.

Dr. Moore’s diagnosis: “The disease is a lack of seatbelt use. The vaccine is a primary seat-belt law.”

We’ll go with the good doctor on this one.

Another opponent of the bill, Pam Adcock, a state rep from Little Rock, had an even curiouser argument than Wendell Griffen’s: “Enough is enough,” she said of all this government intrusion into our lives. “When it’s your time, it’s your time.”

That’s not an argument, it’s fatalism. Why not just go ahead and pass out the cigarettes in school and hand out rusty scissors for all the kindergarteners to run with? And why do the kids need football helmets and old folks medicine? When it’s your time, it’s your time!

Instead, how about we push off that time for as many happy, healthy years as possible? That’s what a responsible lawmaker would do. Thankfully, most of the lawmakers were responsible this year when it came to a tougher seat-belt law.

Many of us are old enough to remember when kids rode in truck beds-down the interstates, no less-and the little ones stood up in the front seat of cars. The only seat belt was Mama’s right arm when she put on the brakes. Those days are long gone.

Thank goodness.

The Ledge made a wise decision this time. And the governor would be doing the responsible thing if he signed this bill into law.
(5) Thursday, March 05, 2009
Judge Alan Sadler Arrested for DWI
CONROE, Texas

A Montgomery County judge was arrested on suspicion of a DWI after a minor traffic accident.

Judge Alan B. Sadler was arrested after a minor accident involving another vehicle in the 2100 block of North Loop 336 West on Wednesday night.

Police said the judge was given a Breathalyzer test and he had .0257, which is below the legal limit of .08.

No charges were filed and the judge was released.

Sadler told a local newspaper, “No one is immune from being arrested for suspicion of DWI in Montgomery County. They did an excellent job at the jail. I have nothing but praise for how they handled it.”

The arrest is under investigation.
(6) Trooper Steven Spoonire Pleads to Marijuana Possession
A Maryland State police trooper has entered an Alford plea to possessing marijuana.

Thirty-six-year-old Steven Spoonire was granted probation before judgment Thursday, fined $200 and ordered to pay court costs of $145.

Spoonire also resigned from his job as a trooper. The 16-year veteran had been suspended without pay.

Spoonire and his wife, Jennifer Lynn Frazier, were arrested in August by police who said they found a foot-tall marijuana plant growing outside the back door of the couple’s Woodsboro home.

Frazier pleaded guilty to possession of marijuana in January.
Hmm, makes you wonder why there free and walking around. Bet you wouldn’t be!

There are no comments on this post

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.