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FBI agent stops wrong car, shoots driver in face
Baltimore Sun ^ | March 2,2002 | Tom Pelton

Posted on 03/02/2002 1:20:32 PM PST by Donald Stone

Edited on 09/03/2002 4:50:01 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]

FBI agents searching for an armed bank robber pulled over the wrong car last night on Fort Smallwood Road in Pasadena and shot a man in the face who had no connection to the crime, authorities said.

The 27-year-old victim, whose name was not released, was flown by helicopter to Maryland Shock Trauma Center and is expected to live.

"Anytime anyone gets shot, whether it's the right or wrong person -- we are traumatized by it as well," said FBI spokesman Peter Gulotta. "This is not something that we like to see happen. The circumstances will be thoroughly investigated."


(Excerpt) Read more at sunspot.net ...


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: banglist; donutwatch; govwatch
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To: _Jim
I would point out the following:

The driver is not the suspect the FBI was looking for.

The agent had time to walk to the car.

There was no statement from the FBI alledging any hostile behavior by the person shot.

There was no mention made of an attempt to verify that the person shot was the armed and dangerous suspect the FBI said it was seeking at the time this individual was shot.

It appears routine police procedure was not followed. Had the individual who was shot been driving a vehicle that was registered to the person being shot we may presume that fact would have been immediately forthcoming.

Now it could be negligence that has crossed the line into criminal behavior. In my state it is refered to as reckless endangerment if the injured party lives. Alternatively it was raw naked abuse of power.

Stay well - stay safe - Stay armed - Yorktown

141 posted on 03/02/2002 10:06:17 PM PST by harpseal
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To: MadRobotArtist
There should have been several ways to determine if this person was the guy they were looking for.

There were several things that should have done at minimum to link a subject that matched a description to the name that they were looking for prior to going up to the car.

Now why would an agent go up to a car and shoot? I guess I'd have to have that one explained.

so would many others.

Did the driver look guilty,

How does one look guilty by driving one's car?

did the driver do anything out of the ordinary?

Being pulled over and approached by an man with what appears to the ordinary civilian to be an evil assualt rifle is a rather extrodinary circumstance so I really can not answer what is ordinary behavior in that stuation.

Were his windows tinted too dark? This one I think we can safely dismiss. If the windows were tinted too dark to see his behavior how did the agents match him to the description? If they saw him outside the car and waited for him to enter the car then why did they not call for a large number of state and local LEO's to assist in the stop. If it had been an armed and dangerous bank robbery suspect they were askking for a repeat of the Miami massacre by stopping him without a lot of additional back up.

Stay well - Stay safe - Stay armed - Yorktown

142 posted on 03/02/2002 10:16:43 PM PST by harpseal
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To: harpseal
Gee Whiz ya'd think Quantico's FiBi Farm still might teach "felony stop" after the Miami fiasco . A simple procedure that every LEO academy teaches and pounds repeatedly into the rookies as part of officer survival which suprisingly keep's a lot of Suspects / Officers alive and sadly a lot of guilty criminal animals alive (double edge sword :o).............

IMHO they still do but this dumbass who shot the "suspect" must have slept through that class or was as stated above tapped for reasons unknown for now..........

May just come down to an AD for real but as stated ,.....sure seems like a lot of AD's for a bunch of highly trained college graduated FLEAS ?!?!?!?

Hope yer doing well friend.......

143 posted on 03/02/2002 10:55:56 PM PST by Squantos
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To: _Jim; Lurker; Askel5
FBI Unveils New Image
"The 21st Century has arrived," declares spokesman, "and we are sensitive to that fact."
March 3, 2002

"Anytime anyone gets shot, whether it's the right or wrong person -- we are traumatized by it as well," said FBI spokesman Peter Gulotta today, commenting upon a Maryland confrontation in which a bullet became lodged in a motorist's face. Gulotta, who worked as post-liposuction therapist in Southern California before joining the Bureau, spoke to reporters after news broke that the face in question belonged to an, apparently, innocent motorist and not a heavily armed bank robber.

"We must get beyond those unhelpful stereotypes of FBI Agents that stubbornly cling to the national consciousness," implored the therapist Fed "and grow out of the good guy/ bad guy dichotomy of our childhood."

Gulotta is credited with replacing photos of controversial FBI Founding Father J Edgar Hoover in bureau offices throughout the country with the slogan "If we weren't busy solving crimes we could re-decorate your house".

"We sorely needed an image lift and this was a way of reassuring Americans--the majority of whom are now women--that we can mean business and still be sensitive," explained a long-time bureau secretary, now retired. The phrase lost popularity in the hinterlands, however, in the wake of the Ruby Ridge and Waco operations.

"We should have stuck with it," contends Gullota." It was a good slogan. A purposeful slogan."

But, in spite of the fact that in many ways the Bureau, like the military, is far ahead of the general poplulation in terms of its heightened cultural consciousness, the slogan was retired.

"Many Americans, unfortunately , cling to cruel outmoded notions about interior decorators, and I guess higher ups were not ready to march with the flow of a different river," sighed Gulotta, shaking his head sadly.

The dapper lipo-crime fighter was soon back with a new slogan, certain that the words--"Your Face is Our Face"-- would inspire trust in the heart of the population at large--whatever their political beliefs.

Now, the Bureau is reeling in the wake of a cruelly ironic incident in which a motorist's face appears to have interrupted the flight path of a bullet fired from an FBI Agent's M4 Carbine assault rifle.

The Bureau has refused any official comment on the incident itself except to warn: "It would be irresponsible and premature to tie the face in question with any of the other faces Americans have witnessed recently in the news, driving airplanes into buildings or burning down Black churches in the South."

In the meantime, Agent Gulotta must once again call upon his vast experience as a cosmetic surgery therapist to comfort traumatized agents involved in the mysterious, violent confrontation.

"A highly trained professional walks up to car expecting to see a violent bank robber and is, instead, shattered by the vision of some rube's dumbfounded face with a giant hole in it."

Gulotta is confindent that the "bad old days of black-and-white," as he put it, are long gone at the Bureau. Replaced, he fervently hopes, by a more comforting set of pastel ethics that will provide aid and comfort for traumatized agents. To that end he will be conducting a series of seminars titled: "The self-esteem of my bullet" to help Agents pick the pieces of their lives out of the unknown face that stuck itself into the wrong place at the wrong time.

His previous program "My flame-thrower is OK--I'm OK" is credited with saving a number of Agents in the wake of the Korsh cult's attack upon officials at WACO

144 posted on 03/03/2002 5:08:10 AM PST by LaBelleDameSansMerci
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To: tracer
Didn't realize the SS was under Treasury and not Justice. Seems we learn things we never knew when they foul up.
145 posted on 03/03/2002 5:36:26 AM PST by OldFriend
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To: Dog Gone
some lucky person just became a millionaire

Doubt it. These shootings are becoming so common, the cost has gone way down. The family of the 11-year old boy who was killed by a SWAT shotgun blast as he lay face down on his bedroom floor only collected $450,000 from the Feds. And that's probably pre-tax.

146 posted on 03/03/2002 5:44:28 AM PST by Wolfie
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To: Demidog
I'm sure the victim of this "accident" will be comforted by the words of this thug.

Typical of the arrogance of the elite Federal law enforcement groups in this nation; ie, Secret Service, U.S. Marshal Service, FBI, CIA, Postal Inspectors, and many of the States' own jack booted officers who assume no one but their own has any authority to challenge their sometimes thuggish actions against the citizenry of this nation!!

147 posted on 03/03/2002 5:58:19 AM PST by VOYAGER
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To: LaBelleDameSansMerci
Good God...we could redecorate your house? Is he saying that the FBI is full of homosexuals named Bruce who gave up carreers in the interior decorating business?

Oh wait....is this from the onion?

148 posted on 03/03/2002 6:02:28 AM PST by Demidog
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To: Donald Stone
"I'm putting a fine edge on that axe."

People tend to cut themselves with sharp axes during kneejerk reactions.

149 posted on 03/03/2002 6:09:24 AM PST by verity
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To: cake_crumb
"civil rights"

I guess it should say civil liberties?

Civil rights . "See Civil Liberties"

Civil liberties . "Personal, natural rights guaranteed and protected by Constitution...Constitutionally they are restraints on government."

Black's Law Dictionary, 6th Ed, page 246.

Using this definition, than I would agree.

150 posted on 03/03/2002 6:23:43 AM PST by Mikey
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Were the agents following standard felony stop procedures?

I saw a bit on Fox News the other day; the FBI is recruiting more and more people without a Law Enforcement background,(e.g. schoolteachers, computer geeks).

I'm curious what the "mystery agent's" background is.

151 posted on 03/03/2002 6:38:43 AM PST by csvset
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To: LaBelleDameSansMerci
You should be working for The Onion my dear.

L

152 posted on 03/03/2002 7:02:49 AM PST by Lurker
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To: Donald Stone
IT WAS AN EAGLE SCOUT!!!

Man shot in face by FBI in serious condition
Eagle Scout, 20, had been mistaken for robbery suspect --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
By Kimberly A.C. Wilson
Sun Staff
Originally published March 3, 2002

An Eagle Scout who was mistaken for a bank robber and shot in the face by an FBI agent in Pasadena on Friday remained in serious but stable condition at Maryland Shock Trauma Center last night.

Joseph Charles Schultz, 20, was shot at close range about 6 p.m. Friday when FBI agents searching for a bank robbery suspect pulled over his girlfriend's car.

Schultz, who lives in the 7900 block of Seabreeze Drive in Orchard Beach in Anne Arundel County and works with fiber optics for a local medical company, has no connection to the bank robbery, officials said.

At the time of the shooting, Schultz, who graduated from Northeast High School in Pasadena in 2000, was a passenger in a Pontiac Grand Am driven by his girlfriend, 16-year-old Krissy Harkum.

Rest of story here: http://www.sunspot.net/news/custom/guns/bal-md.shooting03mar03.story?coll=bal%2Dlocal%2Dheadlines
153 posted on 03/03/2002 7:19:49 AM PST by The Bored One
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To: LaBelleDameSansMerci
BUMP !!!!!!

What a joke this guy Gulotta is !!!!!!!!

This is a great article on Gullotta.

"Anytime anyone gets shot, whether it's the right or wrong person -- we are traumatized by it as well," said FBI spokesman Peter Gulotta today, commenting upon a Maryland confrontation in which a bullet became lodged in a motorist's face.

Gulotta, who worked as post-liposuction therapist in Southern California before joining the Bureau,spoke to reporters after news broke that the face in question belonged to an, apparently, innocent motorist and not a heavily armed bank robber.

154 posted on 03/03/2002 7:46:51 AM PST by Donald Stone
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To: Justa
Obviously the FBI can't be trusted to investigate FBI corruption, but there is a legal & lawful way to make a bunch of corrupt FBI agents very uncomfortable.
155 posted on 03/03/2002 7:56:26 AM PST by Donald Stone
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To: verity
People tend to cut themselves with sharp axes during kneejerk reactions.

That's a risk I'm willing to take !!!!

I wouldn't say that a privately financed investigation into political corruption over 8 or 9 year period would constitute a kneejerk reaction.

156 posted on 03/03/2002 8:03:44 AM PST by Donald Stone
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To: luvzhottea
Excellent list of Free Republic pages maintained by freeper, ~Kim4VRWC's~:
Updated Gun Control and related links here (#9)

157 posted on 03/03/2002 8:07:22 AM PST by First_Salute
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To: First_Salute; all
We dont have a complete picture of what happened yet.

When we do, it sounds like the law enforcement agent, made a negligent error - if he did, he will be gone.

But there is a possibility that the driver did something that led to this also (not an excuse though)

My problem with the majority of these posts is that LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS AND AGENTS are all being thrown into negative light. That is a critical leap in judgement being made on here and says more about the posters paranoia than anything based in reality.

158 posted on 03/03/2002 8:39:02 AM PST by rbmillerjr
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To: spooner;TPartyType;snopercod;Grassontop;luvzhottea
Posted May 4, 2000, originally as reply 321 at U.S.S.S. Visits Freeper --- Thread 1; then reposted by TPartyType (formerly JimmyT) as reply 24 at U.S.S.S. Visits Freeper --- Thread 3:
A call to Arms is not sufficient

The suggestion of "a call to arms," is not sufficient to warrant a concern by the government if the lawful process is followed.

The Militia is not a "gun club." The Militia are answerable to civilian authority and cannot exercise military force [a.k.a. "martial power"] without local or State direction [setting aside, here, federal calling].

That the Militia are answerable to civilian authority is older than the country. Author David Hackett Fischer goes deeper into the details on the Militia, in the immediate time frame of the Battle at Lexington, in 1775, in his book, Paul Revere's Ride. [See Chapter "The Muster - The Rising of the Militia," pg. 149.]

Since the formation of the United States from the "united states" in the American Revolution, the level of federal burden or tyranny must affect enough people in a community or State, to compel their elected officials to authorize the Militia to muster for the common defense.

A "well regulated Militia," that is, "well trained to Arms," was an expectation that, when so trained, the Militia's "military discipline" would lend this assembly of able-bodied men to respond to its civilian authorities --- the body of elected law-makers --- the lawful authority to apply force.

Our burden --- seeing as how the socialists certainly do not think it is their burden --- is to make good law [through our duly-chosen representatives] and make it work, and to remind both our neighbors and government of the limits on government.

If we do not understand the Founding Fathers' and Framers' original intent in the construction of our Constitution, nor understand that government's powers are limited by the process of enumerating such powers --- that is, listing such powers --- then our burden is much greater.

These burdens must be addressed, whether or not armed force stikes one as being some sort of solution at this time.

I think that "President" Clinton is a vile creep because he preys upon what the people do not know about the rule of law --- and I hasten to add, he also preys upon what some federal law enforcement agents do not know about the rule of law.

On the side of the people, is the limitation upon government power, by the Founders' and Framers' establishment of the process of enumeration. Government may only do what is specified, i.e. S-P-E-L-L-E-D O-U-T, enumerated, listed.

What too many Americans do not know, is that the reverse is notÝtrue, wherein the people and the rule of law are burdened or threatened by all power being in the hands of government, and government doing anything except for whatever is specifically prohibited ... which would be a state of tyranny, when government fails to adhere to the original intent and process of enumeration laid down by the builders of our Constitution.

We have recently witnessed in "Reno's Raid," that the government acted on the assumption that it could do what was not prohibited by the 11th Cir. Ct. of Appeals decision of April 19, 2000. And we have witnessed that the government placed a burden upon the rule of law, by the striking fact that the Court immediately sought to make itself more clear to the Attorney General.

That event was more telling than much of the hue and cry in the major "liberal media." Because it was a moment we should dread, wherein we witnessed absolute tyranny, when the government takes the stance that it may do what is not prohibited.

The Clinton Administration broke the law, broke the rule of law, and defied the limits binding government to only do what is enumerated. Those U.S. Secret Service Agents, who interviewed [Freepers,] Mr. and Mrs. Grassontop, are only authorized to do "thus and so" by the Constitution and federal statutes and some procedures currently set forth by the U.S. Supreme Court. Otherwise, those U.S. Secret Service Agents have no power other than you or I as American citizens.

In fact, in the United States, there is no "power in title" ... in a government official's title or title of position. That is, no power comes from the title. Statements such as "Well ... she is the Attorney General" do not mean anything other than she has the title.

The power comes from the statutes and from the Constitution. The office holder gains through the office the authority to exercise certain, and only those specified, actions approved by the Congress in statutes.

The punch line being, if you are an official or agent of the federal government, you can only do, in official capacity, what is specifically authorized by the federal statutes and the Constitution. You may not assume any power, no matter what title "graces" your office.

But a lot of people who have seen too much TV and too many movies, do not know this. And armed force will not educate them in this.

We need a new, nationwide "conservative medium" which is in print, is everywhere one finds the New York Times and other socialist standard bearers, and tells what such socialist rags do not, about the rule of law, the original intent of our Founding Fathers and Framers of the Constitution, and the many, many stories of everyday life, where the fruits of conservative ideas are demonstrated.

Even if a two-thirds majority of the States mustered their Militia and affected an arrest of Clintonism, extant, this problem of the people understanding government power, how it is authorized, how it is limited, and how the law works, must still be improved upon, to secure in our American culture, a stronger foundation for preserving our Liberty.

If we review the pain and suffering of war, it may appear that the sacrficies we might make, in establishing an expansion of a well-built "conservative media" support base across the nation, will be less costly, though perhaps, more time consuming.

Unfortunately for us, conservativism's "higher-ups" swim in a sea of information, which make so obvious to them, what is actually not so readily available to the heartland. And without a conservative sustenance in the day to day news --- in print and therefore easily readable within the time and task constraints of many Americans --- then conservatives' and Republicans' statements will continue to land in the "public eye," out of [seeming] context.

The socialist "liberal media" own the context; and so, a "brain blip" from Sen. Ted Kennedy, "fits." Whereas a well thought out argument from Sen. John Ashcroft, is awkward in that "liberal context."

In the absence of a "conservative medium's" establishing the truth about our Constitution and the limits on government power, within the context of Americans' day to day lives, the nationalizing socialists will win. The nationalizing socialist idea that government has all power except where prohibited by polls of public protest, will appear "in context." And federal agents will continue to "just obey orders."

______

See David Barton's Original Intent, The Courts, the Constitution, & Religion.

See Raoul Berger's Government by Judiciary, The Transformation of the Foutheenth Amendment, ©1977.

See FR page, Original Intent and Enumeration of Powers v. Herz:

Much of the public is unaware of the importance of both original intent and enumeration of powers --- and how these basics of American jurisprudence are fundamental to limiting the powers of government. It is unfortunate that these basic concepts are not taught along with the "checks and balances of federalism," in our classrooms. And it is also unfortunate that these basic concepts are not now refreshments to, or included in, articles in the rare and elusive "conservative print media."

Because original intent and enumeration of powers are our peaceful checks against the whole of the three parts of the federal government, the legislative, executive and judicial branches --- and against the government becoming corrupt and tyrannical through its failure to adhere.

To make a word mean other than its creator's defined intent, may be used for humor. But to make the language mean other than the Framers' use, is to render the rule of law meaning---less and a path to war.

To have Liberty and a free republic responsive to the rule of law, requires adherence to the law.

But if the law is slippery, because the language suffers (as it has) from "lawyering" such as Mr. Herz's, then the law cannot be adhered to, which in-adherence is the design of authoritarian centrism whereby it achieves ruling power for the ultimate minority --- Clintonism's supremely judgemental committees and their enforcers, the "politically correct 'thought police'" ... and their progeny.*

Then, the protection that is equal for each and all of us before the law, is meaning---less and ignored before such regents of arrogating committees, courtrooms and regimes of socialism.* The scrapped rule of law is replaced by the dialogue, generated in the "politics of the moment," for the benefit of, and by, dialogists such as Mr. Herz, in the model of his worship, William J. Clinton, who "is" our "President."

Furthermore, "to make the language mean other than the Framers' original intent, is to" fabricate a by-pass through "Extra-Constitutional Space" around the right of the people to make the laws through their elected representatives. A right that is obviously at odds with Mr. Herz's allegience to "government by judiciary" and the design of authoritarian centrism.*

From : Government by Judiciary..., by Raoul Berger, pg. 287 ---

Given a Constitution designed to "limit" the exercise of all delegated power ... the admonition contained in the Massachusetts Constitution of 1780, drafted by John Adams and paralleled in a number of early State constitutions, [was] that "A frequent recurrence to the fundamental principles of the constitution ... [is] absolutely necessary to preserve the advantages of liberty and to maintain a free government ... The people ... have a right to require of their law givers and magistrates an exact and constant observance of them."

The author of Government by Judiciary, is a retired Harvard Law School professor. Inside the front jacket of the book: "He writes: 'The Fourteenth Amendment is the case study par excellence [on the] continuing revision of the Constitution under the guise of interpretation.'" For more information on Prof. Berger, here on the Internet:

Profile in Constitutional Courage

The Fourteenth Amendment and the Bill of Rights

First_Salute


159 posted on 03/03/2002 8:44:06 AM PST by First_Salute
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To: The Bored One;LaBelleDameSansMerci;Lurker
At the time of the shooting, Schultz, who graduated from Northeast High School in Pasadena in 2000, was a passenger in a Pontiac Grand Am driven by his girlfriend, 16-year-old Krissy Harkum.

Maybe Krissy was the actual target. After all, how often are the paasengers the target when law enforcement officers shoot into a vehicle? Maybe she fit the description of the thief and the unfortunate passenger simply got his face in the way of the bullet meant for her.

You people need to read these articles more carefully. Thanks to The Bored One we now know the rest of the story.

Regards.

160 posted on 03/03/2002 9:32:13 AM PST by The Irishman
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