Title: Know Your Rights... DHS CheckPoint Source:
[None] URL Source:http://youtu.be/7AY79knXJK8 Published:Feb 28, 2013 Author:a guy with balls Post Date:2013-02-28 18:46:31 by wakeup Keywords:None Views:429 Comments:18
They should be working the border, not fifty miles in.
I think the distance has to do with the so-called "Constitution Free Zone", mentioned in this video version's Comments section (currently Pg. 5; postings by nvryder and D Nuqui):
§ 287 (a) (3) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, 66 Stat. 233, 8 U.S.C. § 1357(a)(3), - allows for warrentless searches within 100 miles of the border
According to case law - (§ 287 (a) (3) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, 66 Stat. 233, 8 U.S.C. § 1357(a)(3)) warrentless searches can be conducted within 100 miles of any border....
§ 287 (a) (3) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, 66 Stat. 233, 8 U. S. C. § 1357 (a) (3), which simply provides for warrantless searches of automobiles and other conveyances "within a reasonable distance from any external boundary of the United
States," as authorized by regulations to be promulgated by the Attorney General. The Attorney General's regulation, 8 CFR § 287.1, defines "reasonable distance" as "within 100 air miles from any external boundary of the United States."...
8 CFR 287.1 - Definitions.
Reasonable distance. The term reasonable distance, as used in section 287(a) (3) of the Act, means within 100 air miles from any external boundary of the United States or any shorter distance which may be fixed by the chief patrol agent for CBP, or the special agent in charge for ICE, or, so far as the power to board and search aircraft is concerned any distance fixed pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section.
The Immigration and Nationality Act does not trump the Constitution and Bill of Rights.
No, it doesn't and Border Patrol should be closer to the borders but here's something from Clif High at halfpasthuman.com that tells of even more pressing ID procedures at his local landfill:
So there i was, innocently minding my own business when the demand came. First i could not believe it....here, in America? Demands for identity papers?
"Who asks?" i ask?
Thurston County (state of Washington, Pacific Northwest USA) commissioners demand, came the response.
My own county commissioners?!? Now they are fascists! It was simply inconceivable!
While i had, of course, prepared myself for the inevitable intrusion of federal fascism into my life these remaining 8/eight months, it had never, in my wildest imaginings, occurred to me that it would be my own county commissioners who would sell my body to FEMA for harvest.
But that is where we are heading. No doubt.
It has to do with the level of oppression that the government HAS to use in order to maintain control. You see, the more desperate (and dangerous) they get, the more that the control freak becomes obsessed with minutia and triviality. [sic]
Some nutter fascist Thurston County commissioner (acting for Agenda 21 at the local level here in WA State) has decided that before citizens can throw away their trash, or recycling, they must present their identity papers.
[sic]
So, i had, on the spot, early on a Monday morning, after a terrible weekend with no sleep, to decide how to respond. The way my brain saw it at the time, there were 3/three basic options: i could comply (nope, that did not feel right); or i could fight it, which of course meant NOT dumping the trash, and probably would lead to me being involved with politics trying to defeat the [sic] politician county commissioner dumb enough to put his name to this 'papers to dump trash policy', and, also given the touchy state of the militarized police.....; or, option 3.
It was option 3 that i chose....to scam the system.
Actually i was pretty proud of my poor brain for coming up with it...but what i did was to claim 'federal protected class' status....
"sorry, i am illegal, and have no driver's license". The idea was to have one part of the system now dealing with another.
"ok", said the Land Fill employee. "But i have to fill in something here to let your truck get by, so what's your name?".
"Barak Rodrigues".
He did not bat an eye, and typed it in.
"Address?" he asked?
"Don't got one. Homeless".
"Ok, fine" he said, and passed my truck on through.
Today's drive to the landfill changed everything about the USA for me.