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  • Bill of Rights

    Cogito, ergo porto.
    Site Supporter
    Rating - 100%
    7   0   0
    Apr 26, 2008
    18,096
    77
    Where's the bacon?
    ...Of course this small town in Montana still has an empty jail, no doubt someone will eventually come along with a plan to throw some people in it....

    I suggest that the people who said they would fill it would be good ones to do so, just not the way they planned.

    Another option would be to start with a few quisling politicians and give them new accomodations to await their sentencing. Isn't the penalty for treason some form of execution?

    Blessings,
    Bill
     

    mrjarrell

    Shooter
    Rating - 0%
    0   0   0
    Jun 18, 2009
    19,986
    63
    Hamilton County
    I suggest that the people who said they would fill it would be good ones to do so, just not the way they planned.

    Another option would be to start with a few quisling politicians and give them new accomodations to await their sentencing. Isn't the penalty for treason some form of execution?

    Blessings,
    Bill
    The last time I checked it was. That'd probably be a decent storage place for them. Lots of tall trees in Montana, too. :D
     

    WWIIIDefender

    Expert
    Rating - 100%
    3   0   0
    Jul 7, 2009
    1,047
    36
    Saudi Arabia
    Above The Law? Hilton Refuses To Co-operate With Montana Attorney General


    Shadowy outfit fails to meet deadline to turn over documents, arrests could follow
    131009top2.jpg

    Paul Joseph Watson
    Prison Planet.com
    Tuesday, October 13, 2009
    Michael Hilton, the leader of American Police Force, the paramilitary organization that recently terminated a deal with local authorities in Hardin Montana to take over a detention camp in the town, has failed to co-operate with the Montana Attorney General’s demand that the company turn over financial record pertaining to the deal, opening up the possibility that Hilton could be arrested for contempt.
    Hilton, a career criminal who is still wanted by authorities in Wyoming for his part in multiple cases of fraud, was given until yesterday to provide the documents but has failed to meet the deadline, instead sending a one page fax to the Attorney General’s office saying he was abandoning the deal to take over the Hardin facility.
    However, as we reported on Saturday, despite the termination of the deal, the AG’s office indicated that it still needed to see the documents and if it didn’t receive them, APF could be held in contempt and Hilton could be arrested.
    “Assistant Attorney General James Molloy had issued a demand on Oct. 1 for American Police Force to turn over its tax records; lists of customers; and names of company employees, owners and officers and other information,” reports the Associated Press.
    The documents were demanded under a Montana law that bars unfair or deceptive business practices.​
    “This is the response,” (Becky) Shay said of the company’s one-page reply. “It outlines that APF (American Police Force) was only in contract negotiations, did not do business in Hardin and has pulled out of contract negotiations.”
    However, APF went further than merely negotiating with local officials. As was widely documented, APF SUV’s with decals that read “City of Hardin Police Department” were driven around town before an uproar prompted their removal. Before the story garnered intense media scrutiny, it appeared as if APF was preparing to act as law enforcement for the town, which would have been completely illegal and unconstitutional.
    As the NY Times reports today, when Hilton rolled into town with his Serbian accent, his mock police uniform and his shadowy paramilitary outfit, he promised to make Hardin “the safest place in the United States to live, and in six months the best place to live.”
    APF’s reluctance to hand over the documents likely centers around its refusal to identify the parent company that owns the organization.
    The Attorney General’s only response to APF’s refusal to turn over the documents was to state that they were reviewing whether they could discuss the issue publicly, implying that further action is likely to be taken against Hilton and APF.​
     

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