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Dead Constitution See other Dead Constitution Articles Title: But for Audio Wednesday, March 28th, 2012 An incidental recording taken while a Florida woman was on the phone with her insurance company shows that the police who arrested her and charged her with a felony for resisting arrest lied in their reports, and then again under questioning. Here is the cops story: Fernandes, 35, pulled up behind her vehicle to see what was wrong. Mait approached his car and told him that two of her tires had blown out, and she needed a tow . . . According to police reports and the officers sworn depositions, Mait told Fernandes and later Stasnek, who arrived as backup, that she was on Xanax, and that she couldnt move the car out of traffic but that she did want to drive it the two miles to her home. Before Stasnek pulled up, Fernandes told Mait to call for a tow, which she did from her passenger seat. But as she waited for a GEICO roadside assistance representative to dispatch a wrecker, things unraveled. When Stasnek, a four-year member of the force with a clean prior record, approached Maits SUV, she repeatedly asked for a drivers license, the tape shows. Mait refused. In her deposition, Stasnek said she warned the driver repeatedly she would be disobeying my lawful command and would be arrested for resisting my lawful command. At some point, Mait put a hand in the officers face to dismiss the request, according to police accounts, which was apparently one insult too many. The officers hauled her out of her car and tried to arrest her, which they claim she resisted by tensing her body and slamming into Stasnek. The alleged Xanax didnt show up in toxicology tests. And then Maits attorney got the recording: Mait: Did you not see me on the phone? Stasnek: Did you not see this uniform I have on? Dont give me any s right now. Give me your fing drivers license. During her deposition, Stasnek was asked by Catalano who did not tell the officers the encounter had been recorded if she had used those words. She twice said no. Catalano also pressed both officers under oath on whether Stasnek had given Mait notice that the driver was disobeying a lawful command. Both officers testified she had at least twice. The recording catches no such exchange, although it is possible she did during a short stretch when GEICO had Mait on hold. Late in the recording, while Mait can be heard sobbing in the distance, the officers say the following: Fernandes: I didnt hear anything you said. I was in the back of the car. Stasnek: I did drop the F-bomb. Fernandes, laughing: I didnt hear that. In my [internal affairs] statement, Ill say I didnt hear that.
Dont worry, I will put everything I heard beforehand. If you live in Illinois, you might consider sending this story to those of your state legislators who last week voted down an amendment that would have allowed citizens to record on-duty police officers. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: farmfriend (#0)
This wouldn't be an issue if we lived in a civilized country where women are chauffeured when they needed to travel. : ) Gentlemen, if youve ever thought about it, the quality of a mans life is directly proportionate to his commitment to excellence. ~Vince Lombardi
LOL
Having sex for money is illegal unless you film it and distribute it.
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The relationship between morality and liberty is a directly proportional one. "If you love wealth more than liberty, the tranquility of servitude better than the animating contest of freedom, depart from us in peace. We ask not your counsel nor your arms. Crouch down and lick the hand that feeds you. May your chains rest lightly upon you and may posterity forget that you were our countrymen. Samuel Adams America: Israel's Handmaiden
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