A spokesperson for the Georgia Transmission Corporation told Channel 2 they had hired a deputy...Serving two masters.
1 posted on
09/20/2007 4:29:29 PM PDT by
decimon
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To: decimon
another power mad cop.....its an epidemic..
2 posted on
09/20/2007 4:31:13 PM PDT by
cherry
To: decimon
Worley said she went down the road to talk. She said she didnt threaten anyone, A lot missing from this story. She didn't threaten anyone...but what exactly did she say?
3 posted on
09/20/2007 4:33:20 PM PDT by
Bloody Sam Roberts
(Don't question faith. Don't answer lies.)
To: decimon
Guess she wants to be on the grid, just wants the power lines in someone else's back yard.
Power line have to be ran in order to support human life as we know it.
At least she will not have to worry about lice.
5 posted on
09/20/2007 4:39:19 PM PDT by
Mark was here
(Hard work never killed anyone, but why take the chance?)
To: decimon
6 posted on
09/20/2007 4:39:27 PM PDT by
Westlander
(Unleash the Neutron Bomb)
To: decimon
“A spokesperson for the Georgia Transmission Corporation told Channel 2 they had hired a deputy...”
How does he arrest someone if he’s working a side job?
To: decimon
The "perp"
Resident: Former land of the free
10 posted on
09/20/2007 4:43:52 PM PDT by
Popman
(Nothing + Time + Chance = The Universe ---------------------Bridge in Brooklyn for sale - Cheap)
To: decimon
Its just pure, old-fashioned intimidation. They want peoples land and they dont want to pay for it, said Worley's lawyer, Don Evans.
That's the money quote.
12 posted on
09/20/2007 4:44:27 PM PDT by
OldEagle
To: decimon
17 posted on
09/20/2007 4:49:07 PM PDT by
TommyDale
(Never forget the Republicans who voted for illegal immigrant amnesty in 2007!)
To: decimon
A bit dramatic with the headline. She was strip-searched and deloused as part of the standard jail intake procedure. Now, should she have been in jail in the first place? That is where the real question lies. That Kerry jerk deserved to get tased and I’m sure he got strip-searched and deloused too ... did this woman offer similar resistance?
18 posted on
09/20/2007 4:49:14 PM PDT by
NonValueAdded
(Fred Dalton Thompson for President)
To: decimon
Late last year, a letter from the Georgia Transmission Corporation told her a 230 Kilovolt power line was going to go through her property.Doesn't seem like she much of an option.
I'm not familiar with these things, but I assume she was compensated financially for her property and the lose of it's use?
19 posted on
09/20/2007 4:50:00 PM PDT by
Popman
(Nothing + Time + Chance = The Universe ---------------------Bridge in Brooklyn for sale - Cheap)
To: decimon
The utilities are some of the most arrogant people when it comes to property;you pay taxes on the land but they can destroy any plantings or anything that impedes access.I used to hate the idea of strangers having keys to my basement door for meter checking in the city. Up until the 1990s we read our meter on the farm and mailed in the postcard and once a year the co-op checked the meter to verify it hadn't been tampered with and the reading was correct as sent in. Then we became a "rurban" utility with a manager with a big degree and experience in the power industry;who didn't trust anyone but their own employees to write down the same numbers we had for 30 years;except the readers were bad-tempered jerks who demanded farm gates be left unlocked,watchdogs tied and claimed they would "own this place if I fall,slip,or get bit or chased by any animal".Farms have animals and the meters were often installed on poles in the barnyard;moving the meter is now a major expense .
I believe one of the greatest benefits of energy self-sufficiency would be curtailment of the utility monster,which is one of the reasons utilities fight homeowner power.
23 posted on
09/20/2007 4:55:05 PM PDT by
hoosierham
(Waddaya mean Freedom isn't free ?;will you take a creditcard?)
To: decimon
I’m not an attorney. Here’s what it looks like to me.
That company must have had some authority to be there. If they didn’t they’re in deep caca.
Unless money had changed hands, that power company had no business being on her property. A court may have given them that authority to complete surveys. If not, they were tresspassing. As for the deputy, he would have been too.
He can be there as security for a firm if they have a right to be there. If they don’t, he would be a party to a crime.
This woman may be get herself an attorney and clean these folk’s clock.
If they had been in Texas and tried to pull this, the husband may have been within his rights to use lethal force to prevent his wife from being kidnapped. Of course that’s assuming the company did not have the right to be there.
I have a real hard time thinking they didn’t. They would be opening themselves up to some serious litigation if they didn’t.
This sort of thing bothers me alot. Property rights are very important.
33 posted on
09/20/2007 5:11:51 PM PDT by
DoughtyOne
(Hillary has hay fever. There she goes now... "Ha Hsu, ha hsu, haaaa hsu, ha hsu...")
To: decimon
She said she didnt threaten anyoneThey never do.
37 posted on
09/20/2007 5:13:28 PM PDT by
AppyPappy
(If you aren't part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem.)
To: sockmonkey
52 posted on
09/20/2007 5:27:00 PM PDT by
Liberty Valance
(Keep a simple manner for a happy life :o)
To: decimon
She said she didn’t threaten anyone, but the Barrow County deputy working with the surveyors didn’t see it that way -- the deputy called for backup. ================= Ya, sure, deputy called for backup to share the coffee and donuts she brought with her.
78 posted on
09/20/2007 5:53:24 PM PDT by
Joan Kerrey
(Believe nothing of what you hear or read and half of what you see.)
To: decimon
People who don’t want power lines should not have electricity.
To: decimon
They want peoples land and they dont want to pay for it
***Sums it up.
134 posted on
09/21/2007 6:45:07 PM PDT by
Kevmo
(We should withdraw from Iraq — via Tehran. And Duncan Hunter is just the man to get that job done.)
To: decimon
You don't want power lines? Fine. The utility company will be out to remove your line tomorrow.
Utilities DO need to make reasonable compensation, but don't think for one second that we can meet existing needs with the system we have, and don't even get me started on projected use in 20-30 years.
139 posted on
09/22/2007 4:50:05 AM PDT by
OCCASparky
(Steely-Eyed Killer of the Deep)
To: decimon; nicmarlo; yorkie; processing please hold
She and her lawyer said theyre suing, not just for her, but for other Georgians facing the threat of eminent domain and what they see as loss of property rights. I just dont see how this could happen in a land of freedom, but we dont have freedom anymore because people can just do anything they want to, said Worley.
Who knows what really happened, but could be interesting to watch...
To: decimon
There is a LOT missing here- wanna bet she didn’t just want to “talk”? I’m betting she was loud, abusive and yes, threatening. I’ll bet she gave the cop a bad time and resisted when he asked her to leave the workers alone. Just because she is an old lady, doesn’t mean she cannot be a true pain in the butt.
And how about that “strip search”? What did they do? Make her take her sweater off? Hand over her handbag?
There needs to be more info before we hang the cop. I live in Barrow and have had dealings with the cops out here and they are a seriously laid-back and decent bunch. The population here is booming and they are putting in new infrastructure to handle it and upgrade the services. They are NOT “grabbing land”.
My initial reaction to this story is the same as now- this old lady is a crock.
145 posted on
09/22/2007 5:36:00 AM PDT by
13Sisters76
("It is amazing how many people mistake a certain hip snideness for sophistication. " Thos. Sowell)
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