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Police arrest 67 at checkpoints
The Mobile Press-Register ^ | 5/31/06 | Nadia M. Taylor

Posted on 05/31/2006 12:54:05 PM PDT by AzaleaCity5691

Police arrest 67 at checkpoints Wednesday, May 31, 2006 By NADIA M. TAYLOR Staff Reporter Officers issued more than 1,800 tickets and arrested 67 people over the Memorial Day weekend at several driver's license checkpoints throughout the city, police said.

Most of the 1,834 tickets issued were for not having a driver's license or proof of insurance, according to interim Mobile police Chief Lester Hargrove.

Fifty-four people were arrested on outstanding misdemeanor warrants, and 13 people were arrested on felony warrants, Hargrove said. Most charges stemmed from traffic violations or drug offenses, police said.

One man, Carl Mitchell Washington, 22, was driving with his 2-year-old son when police stopped him at a checkpoint and found about 30 pills, which were believed to be Ecstasy, and $2,775 in cash, Hargrove said.

Washington was charged Sunday with possession of a controlled substance and endangering the welfare of a child and was released on a $3,500 bond, according to the Mobile County Metro Jail log.

Under Alabama law, possession of a controlled substance is a Class C felony, punishable by up to 10 years in jail. Endangering the welfare of a child is a Class A misdemeanor, which can carry a sentence of up to one year in jail, according to state law.

In addition to the weekend arrests, police seized two handguns and towed 53 vehicles as a result of the checkpoints, Hargrove said.

The topic of roadblocks garnered substantial media attention last month after two men were shot to death at a McDonald's drive-through in northeast Mobile. After the April 5 killings, city officials called for more frequent random checkpoints to look for and seize illegal weapons.

The latest round of checkpoints -- which ran Friday through Monday -- was the third weekend since April 28 that police have set up roadblocks in Mobile. Police issued a total of 1,362 citations during the first two weekends, which took place April 28 and 29 and May 5 and 6.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Government; US: Alabama
KEYWORDS: 4thamendment; banglist; billofrights; constitutionlist; damngoodidea; donutwatch; govwatch; jackbootedthugs; jbt; jbts; libertarians; notagoodidea; papersnow; policestate; roadblocks; statist; whatnoguns
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To: no dems
That's why they let you go 10 miles over the speed limit.

Anyone can be pulled over for speeding (1 mile over the limit.)

41 posted on 05/31/2006 1:34:05 PM PDT by HIDEK6
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To: Junior
You're a closet authoritarian, aren't you?

Apparently minus the closet part.

42 posted on 05/31/2006 1:36:29 PM PDT by Dead Corpse (It is not the oath that makes us believe the man, but the man the oath.- Aeschylus)
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To: no dems

"I had a cop friend of mine tell me that if he wants to stop you, all he has to do is follow you for 10 minutes and he'll find a reason to pull you over."

Wow, what a manly man. Does he kick dogs too?


43 posted on 05/31/2006 1:37:53 PM PDT by Hazwaste
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To: PghBaldy
Maybe they should check women smokers, to see if they're expecting.

What does it matter? They're just expecting useless lumps of flesh anyway.... < /s>

44 posted on 05/31/2006 1:40:12 PM PDT by akorahil (Thank You and God bless all Veterans. Truly, the real heroes.)
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To: Hazwaste

You wanna bet? You park 4 cruisers out on a busy street in high crime areas and you will be amazed at what you find behind the wheel and under the front seat. Until people started complaining about racial profiling I knew of towns that would stop anyone that looked like they didn't live in an area so as to cut down on the crime rate.
If you were 17, dressed like a gang banger and driving into areas that it was obvious that you didn't live you got pulled.


45 posted on 05/31/2006 1:40:48 PM PDT by misterrob
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To: AzaleaCity5691
you don't have a right to drive. The ability to drive is a privelege granted to you by the state, it's not your constitutional right

And you believe that because the State told you so?

Amendment IX

46 posted on 05/31/2006 1:41:56 PM PDT by ASA Vet (Those who know don't talk. Those who talk don't know.)
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To: joebuck; All
Thanks for all the replies.

I don't carry anything illegal in the Vette (actually I don't own anything that could be remotely considered illegal).

However, the Vette is filled with bits of this and that from the space program (ALL ACQUIRED LEGALLY) such as a meteorite, three axis Inertial Nav unit, carbon-carbon skin, MLI, shuttle tile material, sensors, PMTs, thermal OSRs, CCD focal plane assembly, honeycomb skin, solar panels, flight computer, spacecraft panels, mono-propellant fuel line, RF cable, solar sail material, Astro-Quartz, x-band dish antenna, microwave omni antennas, flat ceramic microwave antennas, an RF subsystem assembly, blue nomex flight suit, Carbon/Kevlar clean-room suit, Neutron detectors, Vela Satellite sensor assembly, Indium foil, Kapton, Mylar, Titanium struts, Cray 3 computer boards, ceramic parts, core memory arrays, waveguide, 76GHz microwave assembly with feed, ring laser 3 axis gyro assembly, beta cloth, gamma and xray detectors, etc.

I take this stuff around to schools so kids get a chance to handle actual spacecraft hardware. :-)

(at least four of these items have been flown in space)

Wonder what a LEO would think as all that got piled alongside the Vette?

47 posted on 05/31/2006 1:47:19 PM PDT by RadioAstronomer (Senior member of Darwin Central)
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To: AzaleaCity5691

Checkpoints would be a nice thing. Then again, I wonder what percentage of the people stopped would be skipped because they're in the US illegally.


48 posted on 05/31/2006 1:48:26 PM PDT by Bhrian
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To: AzaleaCity5691

"It's a good idea and it should be adopted around the country"

As soon as the new recruits at the Police Academies get the goose step down it will be.


49 posted on 05/31/2006 1:48:43 PM PDT by jwh_Denver (If your ship hasn't come in it's probably because she docked in Wal-Mart.)
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To: misterrob

"You wanna bet?"

Uhm, no thanks. You're going to have to do better than that.

How does your argument demonstrate that checkpoints are not fishing expeditions? The majority of people passing through them are law abiding citizens who must prove that they are law abiding before they are allowed to pass.

From Miriam-Webster's Dictionary: "Fishing Expedition" -- an investigation that does not stick to a stated objective but hopes to uncover incriminating or newsworthy evidence


50 posted on 05/31/2006 1:49:12 PM PDT by Hazwaste
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To: CORedneck
"They that would give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety." - Benjamin Franklin

It is not for anyone to determine what I "deserve" in that regard. Ben Franklin can stuff it.

51 posted on 05/31/2006 1:50:15 PM PDT by SteveMcKing
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To: AzaleaCity5691
Oh, please, that old argument about driving being a privilidge and not a right is not true. Driving is one of the unenumerated rights of the constitution. They didn't have cars then but they sure as hell had horses and carriages. Do you think for a minute that the founding fathers would have put up with someone tellling them they didn't have right to ride a horse or drive down the road in a carriage and that this "privilidge" could be taken away from them?

The govenment uses this idiotic argument to keep us in line. We have the RIGHT to travel all over this country, that means we have the right to drive.

If you don't believe me show me where in the constitution it specifically forbids driving as a right?

As I said, it is one of the many unenumerated rights, reason tells us this and if you buy into the privilidge argument then I pity you.

52 posted on 05/31/2006 1:50:55 PM PDT by calex59 (No country can survive multiculturalism. Dual cultures don't mix, history has taught us that!)
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To: ASA Vet

If they had only issued 100 tickets, we could debate Constitutional allowance. But it was 1,834 tickets issued. Now it could be that people weren't carrying proof of insurance. They had it but they weren't carrying it. If you have ever been in an accident that wasn't your fault, you know the importance of the other guy having insurance. If he doesn't have a license or insurance, you are majorly screwed through no fault of your own. Your liberties are about to be trampled. You are going to the prom with your insurance company and YOU are going to be the one wearing your ankles for earrings.

In theory, it could be a violation of rights. In reality, you have to drive on the same roads as these people. Just remember: 1,834 tickets issued


53 posted on 05/31/2006 1:51:32 PM PDT by AppyPappy (If you aren't part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem.)
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To: calex59
If you don't believe me show me where in the constitution it specifically forbids driving as a right?

You can drive all you want. On your own property. When you hit the public roads, you have to obey the public rules.

54 posted on 05/31/2006 1:53:23 PM PDT by AppyPappy (If you aren't part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem.)
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To: CORedneck

you are darn right. how about checking them for citizenship? thats what pisses me off, legal citizens caught in a police state, while illegals do what they want and simply run after an accident or make bail and dissapear into the underground economy. sickening, really.


55 posted on 05/31/2006 1:54:30 PM PDT by RolandBurnam (I WANT SOME PORK RINDS!!!!!)
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To: CORedneck
Here in the Birmingham area 60 to 80 % percent of the drivers have no insurance. A bunch do not have proper tags or licenses. Up to now no one cared except those of us who were hit by these folks and had to fix our own vehicles. I live on a fixed income and spend money to keep insurance on my auto. If I am hit but one of these people I will not be able to fix my vehicle any more, and will be stranded. Most of these people are healthy and can work but chose not to. I have no sympathy for these law breakers.
56 posted on 05/31/2006 1:56:20 PM PDT by Lewite (Praise YAHWEH and Proclaim His Wonderful Name! Islam, the end time Beast-the harlot of Babylon.)
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To: Hazwaste

Denial: de·ni·al (d-nl) n.

An unconscious defense mechanism characterized by refusal to acknowledge painful realities, thoughts, or feelings.


Source: The American Heritage® Stedman's Medical Dictionary
Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company.


57 posted on 05/31/2006 1:58:22 PM PDT by misterrob
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To: AzaleaCity5691

It's a good idea and it should be adopted around the country
__________________________________________


About time...Good going Alabama.


58 posted on 05/31/2006 1:58:30 PM PDT by eleni121 ('Thou hast conquered, O Galilean!' (Julian the Apostate))
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To: AzaleaCity5691
Check points should be used more for illegals, in Alabama it is getting to be little Mexico in some places. All the brick masons have been replaced by illegals, so has concrete workers. These people make big bucks and pay hardly any taxes. The police have a nasty habit of tailgating people and I am like anybody else it makes me nervous, therefore you make mistakes. I was being followed by a Alabama state trooper one time for about five miles thru traffic, I halfway stopped in the middle of the road and walked back to him and gave him my license. He was kinda stunned, I ask him why he kept following me, he said he didn't realize he was. Told him if he needed anything just to put the lights on.
59 posted on 05/31/2006 1:58:49 PM PDT by catmanblack. (war is hell but so is islam)
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To: CORedneck

I second that!


60 posted on 05/31/2006 1:58:55 PM PDT by Richard-SIA ("The natural progress of things is for government to gain ground and for liberty to yield" JEFFERSON)
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