... and the clamor from the Libtard Left turns up to fever pitch again in three ... two ... one ... NOW!
Society is coming unglued.
"Ronald Gayman > Scott 23 minutes ago − There really is a simple solution to the gun violence. A complete, universal, nationwide ban on all guns, a massive rounding up of all existing guns on the municipal level, and harsh, mandatory sentences for anyone possessing a firearm. Only then will America be truly free."
Le Falonius, is that you?
Mohammed, is that you?
Bubba, is that you?
PA ping.
The Pocono Record said one of its reporters was in the township building and a gunman armed with a pistol with a scope shot through a wall into the meeting. An account from the reporter, Chris Reber, said a township official attacked the shooter and shot him with his own weapon.
Like Barry and the ‘RATS would say, “Just a little workplace violence”. Kind of like Fort Hood.
If it follows the normal pattern, the shooter will be some local whack-job that everyone knew should have been locked up a long time ago, and nobody will be able to give you a good explanation of why he wasn’t.
Had time to empty his “long gun” into the building, then return to his car for a pistol - wouldn’t have happened had someone been carrying in the building to begin with.....
Hoke said Newell has been removed from his home Thursday because of issues related to the lack of sewer service on the property. There was nothing on the agenda of the supervisors meeting related to his property.
Hoke noted that Newell had arrived at the meeting in a car with Texas license plates. Police were also working to obtain a warrant to search the car and obtain the rifle allegedly used in the shooting.
The handgun that Newell allegedly used was recovered from the scene by police.
For more than a decade, Newell has been in a dispute with the township over the property, which was littered with cast-off building parts, junk cars and other debris. Newell said in an interview at the time the items were like a museum collection.
Court records show the township obtained an $8,000 judgment against Newell in district court. The nature of the township's lawsuit against Newell is unclear in court records.
In a previous article, Newell said he couldn't afford septic hookup fees.
"If I lose this property, I have nowhere else to go," Newell told the Pocono Record in June. "What they're doing to me, what they've been doing to me for so long, it's wrong."
http://www.poconorecord.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20130806/NEWS/308060316