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FEATURE ARTICLE |
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Homeland Security Checkpoint Video Now Available
Terry Bressi Website: Checkpoint USA Blog: Roadblock Revelations Date: 01-09-2008 Subject: Police State This is an update to my earlier article
regarding an internal Homeland Security checkpoint currently being
operated on Southern Arizona's State Route 86 near Mile Post 146. I was stopped at the checkpoint while traveling back to Tucson late in the afternoon. I videotaped the encounter and have posted the 9MB wmv file online so others can experience a suspicionless federal checkpoint for themselves. It
should be noted by those who live far from the border that internal
suspicionless checkpoints are quickly becoming the norm while our
fundamental right to travel unmolested absent reasonable suspicion of
wrongdoing is being routinely trampled upon. Keep in mind, this
checkpoint did not take place on the border. It took place over 40
miles North of the border along a regularly traveled State highway that
never intersects the border at any point. After being
stopped by a Border Patrol agent (who wasn't actually patrolling the
border), the agent refused to identify herself or her badge number
while at the same time demanding to know my citizenship. Unlike local
or State police who have never given me a hard time about identifying
themselves, just about every federal agent whose ever approached me in
the field has refused to do so. At the last
federal checkpoint I was stopped at along this route, I had to read
their name tags to find out who they were. This time around, the agents
weren't even wearing name tags. To put it another way, Homeland Security
agents are increasingly acting like secret police by hiding their
identities from the very public they allegedly serve and protect. This
attitude is also pervasive when requesting documentation from DHS. The
department routinely redacts the names of its agents making it
difficult to find out who they are, let alone hold them accountable for
their actions. It's also extremely difficult to get any documentation
out of the department in the first place. DHS routinely violates
the Freedom of Information Act and the current waiting period for those
few who receive responsive replies is several years long. When
I asked the stopping agent whether or not I was being detained, she
indicated I wasn't. When I requested to leave however, she told me I
couldn't until I answered her questions - quite a contradiction! Legally,
the agent can only hold an individual for a very limited amount of time
absent reasonable suspicion. Her citizenship demands are nothing more
than an attempt to create reasonable suspicion
out of thin air based upon an individual's response along with their
general appearance, mannerisms, skin color and other arbitrary
profiling indicators used to build cases against individuals for
further detention and investigation. Make no mistake - these
federal suspicionless checkpoints are nothing more than dragnet fishing
expeditions designed to intimidate and harass the traveling public.
They represent a fundamental violation of our right to be free from
unreasonable search and seizure and shouldn't be suffered by a free
people. Unfortunately, the Supreme Court created a 4th Amendment loophole for immigration checkpoints over thirty years ago in United States vs. Martinez-Fuerte.
This court case is now used as a blanket excuse for all manner of
Homeland Security abuse and is helping to usher in the burgeoning
American police state. As
my interaction with the federal agent continued, she eventually
'requested' that I pull my vehicle off to the side of the road and into
a secondary inspection area. All the while claiming I wasn't being
detained. I continued to challenge her contradiction however and was
eventually given permission to go on my way. How very nice of her. |