NoogacentrismPeacemakingPersecutionsRight to travelWarrantless arrest

To media fogbombers: Is suit to cut arrests 60% news?

June 6, 2020, another in a series of protests in Chattanooga over police violence and lawlessness, with Steve Bedford shouting to demonstrators and taking photos. (Photo David Tulis)

David Tulis of Eagle Radio Network is suing over the police abuses he’s been reporting on in Chattanooga since at least since 2018. (Photo Eagle Radio Network)

CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., Thursday, Nov. 14, 2024 — When I sued the former chief justice for having a false arrest to keep his conference secret, the fogbombers ignored it.

And I sued cop William Orange of Franklin, Tenn., for putting hands on me and arresting me at the judicial conference Nov. 6, 2022,, the fogbombers paid no mind.

When I sued vampire lenders in federal court in Chattanooga — with interest rates near 600% per year  in violation of the usury and RICO laws — the fogbombers — whose job it is to carpet bomb the population with smog and smoke — ignored it.

When I sued the commissioner of revenue for fraud in U.S. district court in Nashville on behalf of 1 million poor and uninsured motorists in Tennessee, fogbombers ignored it.

Quick take ———————–

  • TV stations, news outlets can’t see real news

  • Major suit targets 2 police power abuses

When on Nov. 1 I sued the commissioners of safety and revenue for mass F$2 billion a year fraud in Tennessee’s new three-judge anti-corruption panel, based here in Hamilton  County chancery court, local and state fogbombers ignored it.

When I sued Gov. Bill Lee and a local official for fraud October 2020 — the Covid-19 mRNA shots that killed 150,000 Tennesseans and injured a million of them — the fogbombers pretended it was worth no more than five graphs on a jump page in a story by Nasvhille correspondent Andy Sher.

Why, you ask me, should I bother trying to “make the rounds” of the TV stations and media outlets next week to publicize my coming case — the  second most important lawsuit I’ve done in the public interest? 

Arrest-on-sight program seems unstoppable

This case over my false imprisonment and false arrest Nov. 22, 2023, will demand an end to redcoat warrants used by all cops and deputies in Tennessee, an “arrest-on-sight” policy ignoring the Tennessee constitution at art. 1, sect. 7, and the warrantless arrest by officer exceptions law at T.C.A. § 40-7-103 that says an offense has to be a “public offense” before an arrest can issue without a warrant. 

In my filings I promise to assail “traffic stops” that lack lawful basis and criminalize matters that are civil and administrative in nature. The law does not envision criminalizing administrative matters subject to UAPA — the uniform administrative procedures act — especially when we demand a hearing of a traffic case in Nashville.

Traffic stops are commercial transportation regulation upon haulers and truckers brought to ordinary private travelers on rebuttable legal presumption. Traffic stops and warrantless misdemeanor arrests are the main supporting roots for what’s left of the Jim Crow treetrunk.

Is suit to slash arrests ‘news’?

So, you’re asking me why would I want to publicize my latest lawsuit aimed at draining the swamp of the police-industrial complex in Hamilton County, Tenn., where I live? Why want to have fogbombers publicize and inform the public about real news?

Do they care that a proper petition, citing proper law, in a proper venue, will reduce arrests by up to 60 percent? Do they see enough harm in false arrest and false imprisonment to care that ending the oversupply of jailings and criminal cases is a blessing for a free and open society?

Do they not see something heroic about the cause, a story to follow, a party whose public interest is good to promote, so people will slowly learn what cops cannot do?

Is not a 60 percent drop in arrests worth noting? Will the enforcement of arrest warrant obligations per the constitution make the public less safe? City of Franklin made that argument when I sued it over redcoat warrants. Will the reduction in warrantless arrest reduce the stress, harm, injury, losses and poverty in Hamilton County that arrests tend to cause, especially among the poor? If Sheriff Garrett’s deputies have to get a warrant, will that take time away from “law enforcement” duties, or, worse, “peacekeeping” duties?

My arrest Nov. 22, 2023, was routine. See what happened in Shields of Shame’s reporting of the tort. 

The mood of the country changed to an angry pitch leading up to national elections that put President Trump back in office. People are fed up with lies, deceit, CNN and the legacy lying media that President Trump has consistently criticized for serving the deep-state blob of agencies and their corporate profiteers and hangers-on.

My lawsuits are Christian charity work; please support

Deputy Brandon Bennett, who considers himself a patriot who upholds the constitution, dragged me from his county cruiser to the jail, the toes of my dress shoes scraping along the tarmac in front of the two steps and the steel door of Silverdale. In a train of criminal acts Mr. Bennett initiated, I was mugshotted, fingerprinted, kept in a holding cell and criminally charged (light law, refusal to show driver license). DA Coty Wamp dropped the charges. Judge Amanda Dunn signed the expungement order.

Do the fogbombers care? If I bring them the story by press release or personal appearance at their lobby front desks, will they move a finger to make report? And, if they finally relent to tell the story, will it be accurate? As you can tell, I’m torn about spending time with discredited news outlets.

Deputy arrests citizen on private business

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