Guard the Borders: A Pattern of Malicious Prosecution by U.S. Attorney Johnny Sutton

[Editor’s Note: This article is reprinted with permission from American Freedom Riders.]

by American Freedom Riders

Written by his own hand, former U.S. Border Patrol Agent Gary Brugman tells how, in the performance of his duty, he was falsely charged and convicted of violating the civil rights of an alien caught entering the U.S. illegally at the Mexican border. This case, along with the cases of Ramos and Compean, Hernandez, Sipe, and who knows how many more, serves as proof of the agenda of malicious prosecution by Johnny Sutton against law enforcement officers who dare to uphold our immigration laws. (Sutton bio – Note the joined-at-the-hip relationship with George W. Bush)

Once again, as in the Ramos and Compean case, Sutton worked in concert with the Mexican Consulate to locate a deported Mexican national and paid his way back to the United States many months later to testify against a Border Patrol agent on false assault charges. A Mexican national who had registered no previous complaint against Agent Brugman. What incentive was he given? Who knows. It is known that a member of his family subsequently received chemotherapy treatment in the U.S. In a post trial interview, Johnny Sutton went so far as to thank the Mexican Consulate for cooperation in locating the deported alien. (DOJ Press ReleasePDF file.)

A scandalous, but creative twist to this prosecution was that the Sutton gang also brought a convicted and incarcerated drug smuggler from his prison cell to testify against Agent Brugman. A drug smuggler who Agent Burgman himself had captured six weeks after the incident for which he was being prosecuted. Once again, there had been no previous accusation of any civil rights violation. Now however, the convicted drug smuggler conveniently offered supporting testimony to the prosecution’s false accusation that Gary Brugman was a rogue agent and a criminal. The false and vengeful testimony of this convicted drug smuggler should never have been allowed by the judge.

No one would listen to Gary Brugman several years ago and he spent two years in the general population at federal prisons wearing newspapers and magazines taped to his body as hopeful protection against inmate attacks. In view of what has recently been disclosed about Johnny Sutton’s malicious tactics, his story will be viewed with great interest now. Gary lost everything and his life was ruined but he survived his sentence and is now a free man again. Gary Brugman remains a patriotic American and tells his story now only in an effort to help Ignacio Ramos, Jose Compean, and Gilmer Hernandez prove their innocence against the power, influence, and treachery of the U.S. Attorney and George Bush water boy, Johnny Sutton.

Note: Gary has been a Harley rider for twenty years and on February 18, 2007 he rode with the American Freedom Riders and joined the families of Ramos, Compean, and Hernandez in El Paso, Texas to protest the conviction of the “Texas Three”. He is an honorable man and we are proud to call him our brother.

Read “My Story”, by Gary Brugman 2-20-07, now…


This has been a production of the Guard the Borders syndicate. It was started by Euphoric Reality to educate the public about the vulnerabilities of our open borders during an age of global terrorism and the resultant threat to our national security and sovereignty. If you are concerned about the lapses in our national security and the socio-economic burden of unchecked illegal immigration, join our blog syndicate. Send an email with your blog name and url to admin at guardtheborders dot com.


[Comment: “U.S. Attorney and George Bush water boy, Johnny Sutton”–Wow! Vicente Fox’s lapdog has a water boy!]

Facing the Issues II

Last Monday, I posted a quasi stream of consciousness outline of issues facing our society–Western society in general and U.S. society specifically–and “threatened” a continuance of the post as a series of posts on individual issues. I listed, in no particular order, a non-exhaustive list of issues that I felt were ourgrowths of moral failiure on the part of our society. That list included:

The lack of a reasonable immigration/border control policy
Attacks on essential liberties/lies from the Left… and the Right
The growth of anarcho-tyranny (and the death-by-inches of justice)
Islamic Jihad/GWOT
Education, so-called
Abortion, or “murder by euphemism”
Science and pseudo-science (a materialistic approach to/denial of truth)
Energy, productivity and responsible management of resources
Work ethic… or lack thereof.

Today, I’m briefly addressing the last item in the list above. Briefly, because every person who reads this can supply multiple examples of poor work ethic from life experience, and because the issue is so intertwined with so many other issues that the fabric will have to be woven a thread at a time as some of the other issues listed above (and not listed) are mentioned later. But meanwhile, a few illustrative examples:

Woman Fired For Writing About Avoiding Work

“This typing thing seems to be doing the trick,” she wrote. “It just looks like I am hard at work on something very important…. I am only here for the money and, lately, for the printer access. I haven’t really accomplished anything in a long while … and I am still getting paid more than I ever have at a job before, with less to do than I have ever had before. It’s actually quite nice when I think of it that way. I can shop online, play games and read message boards and still get paid for it.”

That’s right. The woman had been told by a supervisor to stop “working” on her personal journal at work and do her job, so she started keeping her journal–which eventually reached over 300 single-spaced pages–on her work computer. Instead of doing her job. When fired, she filed for unemployment compensation, but in a rare case of judicial commonsense, her claim, taken to court, was denied, because

the journal demonstrated a refusal to work, as well as Bauer’s “amusement at getting away with it.”

At first glance, this may seem to some to be an extreme example of poor work ethics, but is it really all that much out of line with everyday slacking off? Sure, it might take two or three “normal” slackers to add up to this kind of behavior, but we can all come up with two or three slackers at any one job in our present or past, can’t we?

Teachers who are just marking time, going through the motions until that (relatively early) retirement. Repairmen who submit bills for NOT making repairs (I have more of those stories than I could possibly have room or time to relate). Supervisors who use their position to wander around (and wander off), slacking and goofing off and using company time and resources for personal use, employee (and frankly, employer–sometimes resulting in stupid damage to the company and “laying off” employees to falsely inflate the bottom line) pilfering. Government employees (though more often those in supervisory roles) wasting resources and placing roadblocks in the way of effective use of taxpayer funds.

Consider another bizarre case in which, strangely, inexplicably, the court system resulted in a commonsense result. Granted, Sandia National Lab is not a direct agency of the feddle gummint (it’s just that it’s totally funded and run under feddle meddle mandate). But it is regulated and run according to federal government rules of employment and management–most particularly security rules. And there’s the rub:

Continue reading “Facing the Issues II”

Monday Linkfest

THIS is an open trackbacks post. Link to THIS post and track back. 🙂

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Linkfest Haven, the Blogger's Oasis

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L’Eggo My Lego

Un. Be. Lievable.

I wish.

The surprising thing? Took place in a private school. The completely UNsurprising thing? The hypocrisy of the teachers. Read the school’s philosophy of education (including the statement below) and reconcile it with the actions taken by the school in the ,linked article (above):

Our program is inspired by children’s curiosity and natural inclination to learn through play. Teachers observe children’s play and listen carefully to children’s questions so they may support emergent projects and creations that come directly from the children instead of the teachers.

Riiiiight. Liars.

Weekend Linkfest

More posting later, meanwhile THIS is an open trackbacks post, open Friday through Sunday. Link to THIS post and track back. 🙂

If you have a linkfest/open trackback post to promote OR if you simply want to promote a post via the linkfests/open trackback posts others are offering, GO TO LINKFEST HAVEN DELUXE! Just CLICK the link above or the graphic immediately below.

Linkfest Haven, the Blogger's Oasis

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Entropy

It’s always good to re-read books you once thought were good. Sometimes, you discover that time has lent you perspective that reveals the flaws of what you once thought was good but is merely mediocre. Other times, experience allows absorption of ideas that may have bounced off a younger head. *heh* And very often re-reading a book simply brings things back to mind you once knew but had not thought about in a while, and current events or the experience of years casts those thoughts in a new light.

Jerry Pournelle insists he doesn’t write “literature”–and he’s right, if one goes by the debauched concept of literature espoused in late 20th/century early 21st century English departments or by literature critics *spit*. But he does write often cracking good fiction, extremely good (though often dense, good and readable, but densely-packed with information) non-fiction and has one of the best blogs (although he dislikes the word :-)) around. Really, his site is much, much more than a blog.

At any rate, I decided recently to re-read The Prince, a collection of stories based in his CoDominion universe. It’s pretty good fiction–not his best storytelling, IMO–though filled with pretty heavy-handed didacticism as well. Notaproblem, since the lessons he imparts are well worth absorbing… and thinking about again. A small sample from a dialog where a mercenary “technical advisor” is counseling some terrorists on effective revolution will serve to illustrate:

…the enemy will maintain superior conventional military power almost to the end. As your own plan outlines, we must keep the struggle on a political level as far as possible.” He smiled, an expression that went no further than his lips. “In this we are aided by the nature of reality, and the arrow of entropy. It is always easier to tear down than to build, to make chaos rather than order, to render a society ungovernable rather than to govern effectively.

OK, class, applications? Try to branch out farther than just “The Democratic party” OK?

🙂

St David’s Day

I do not observe St. Patrick’s Day. So sue me. (Good Luck!) However, I would like one and all to note that today is St. David’s Day. Dewi Sant, as he’s known in Wales, was quite a man, according to all records. Patron saint of Wales, he’s one of the few national patron saints of whom much is known, in fact.

Let me encourage you to read a bit about this guy, don a leek or a bit of parsley, hoist a Welsh dragon banner and celebrate the life of someone whom our own society’s leaders would do well to learn from, someone who had good character, instead of being a bad character as most of our political and other “leaders” (celebrities among media, for example, who function as de facto cultural leaders) seem to be.

And here’s my own lil tribute to the life of the man credited as the fist Christian missionary to Wales:

(CLICK for larger view)

Submitted this St. David’s Day, March 1, 2007 anno domini by St David the Younger (Almost. Well, close. OK, a fur piece away from… :-)).


Trackposted to Blue Star Chronicles, The Virtuous Republic, The Random Yak, and Pursuing Holiness, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

T-13, 1.18: Thirteen Examples of Anarcho-Tyranny in Action

Thirteen Examples of Anarcho-Tyranny in Action

Yeh, another micro-mini-rant. 😉

Just follow the links for the examples. Any one of them is enough to skew my blood pressure results for a day…

1. Magistrate judge to decide if couple will be prosecuted for ‘stalking’ officer. Yeh, they set up cameras and a radar gun to catch speeders (plural) down their residential street, cos the cops were doing zippo. So, when they turned one of them in, this is what they get.

2. The Martha Stewart Rule. And here as well. Yeh. “Manufacturing” safely-prosecuted “criminals”.

3. And what about the Plame Game outcome? Seems the feds can gin up a prosecution if your memory (or someone else’s whom they want to believe) is faulty.

4. Ruby Ridge coverup and the continued freedom of Lon Horiuchi, the murderer of Vicki Weaver. No justice for the Weavers, that’s for sure.

5. The TSA. Examples too numerous to cite. *sigh* Try this one. Remanufacturing citizens as subjects.

6. You need look no further than the sticky post at the top of thos page for a prime example of anarcho-tyranny: the unconscionable persecution of two Border Patrol agents by an unjscrupullous feddle prosecutor (the position should be retitled as “persecutor” just for him, although he’s not the only one by far) for doing their job and following the rules the Border Patrol has for doing their BP agents!

7. The most obvious example of deliberate state-caused anarcho-tyranny is the willfull, witting and completely irresponsible and desrtructive behavior of the feddle gummint in NOT enforcing the laws against illegal immigrants, and, indeed, persecuting darned near anyone who does attempt to get those laws enforced. Save for the paltry few examples like the Swift plant raid that (unintentionally, I’m sure) exposed the lie that illegal immigrants are necessary to “do the jobs Americans won’t do,” the feddle gummint under the explicit leadership of President Bush has even managed to make the Clinton administration look good on border/immigration enforcement!

8. “Police blotter: Teens prosecuted for racy photos” Not condoning or in any way endorsing these kids’ behavior, but the courts determined that they were old enough to legally engage in sex in Florida, but arrested them and put them on trial as adults for engaging in child pornography… because the girl sent pictures of them in the act… to the boy. Let’s see… the pictures were of “children” who were then tried as “adults” for taking the pics and sharing them. Anyone make sense of that? That they were stupid on many levels doesn’t excuse the irrationality and injustice of the courts.

9. Julie Amero. The more I read of this case, the less respect I have for the people of Connecticut. In this case, the school system administrators, the police, prosecutor, judge and jury should all be introduced to Dr. Tarr and Mr. Fether and escorted on a long walk off a short pier.

10. The Duke “not-a-rape” case. Another case where the police (and school officials) as well as–especially!–a prosecutor all need introductions to Dr. Tarr and Mr. Fether…

11. Not here–yet!–but given the antipathy the “prisons for kids” system of public “education” has for homeschoolers (and the justifiable fear politicians and others have of citizens who can actually think), can it be far off? Police take home-taught student to psych ward: Government objected to her parent-led courses in math, Latin.

12. Of peanut butter and dogs: is there nothing the State cannot meddle in to restrict the liberties of common citizens while enabling outlaws to thrive?

13. Well, in answer to that apparently rhetorical question, no. Thursday Thirteen Hub, and Trackposted to Outside the Beltway, The Virtuous Republic, Perri Nelson’s Website, basil’s blog, Stuck On Stupid, The Amboy Times, Cao’s Blog, Leaning Straight Up, Conservative Thoughts, Pursuing Holiness, stikNstein… has no mercy, Blue Star Chronicles, Pirate’s Cove, The Pink Flamingo, Gulf Coast Hurricane Tracker, High Desert Wanderer, and Right Voices, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

Triage

After long (five seconds give [not] or take 4 seconds), I have decided that learning INTERCAL just isn’t gonna make the cut. Herewith some sample code:

DO (5) NEXT
(5) DO FORGET #1
PLEASE WRITE IN :1
DO .1 <- '?":1~'#32768$#0'"$#1'~#3 DO (1) NEXT DO :1 <- "'?":1~'#65535$#0'"$#65535' ~'#0$#65535'"$"'?":1~'#0$#65535'" $#65535'~'#0$#65535'" DO :2 <- #1 PLEASE DO (4) NEXT (4) DO FORGET #1 DO .1 <- "?':1~:2'$#1"~#3 DO :1 <- "'?":1~'#65535$#0'"$":2~'#65535 $#0'"'~'#0$#65535'"$"'?":1~'#0 $#65535'"$":2~'#0$#65535'"'~'#0$#65535'" DO (1) NEXT DO :2 <- ":2~'#0$#65535'" $"'":2~'#65535$#0'"$#0'~'#32767$#1'" DO (4) NEXT (2) DO RESUME .1 (1) PLEASE DO (2) NEXT PLEASE FORGET #1 DO READ OUT :1 PLEASE DO .1 <- '?"':1~:1'~#1"$#1'~#3 DO (3) NEXT PLEASE DO (5) NEXT (3) DO (2) NEXT PLEASE GIVE UP

‘Nuff said?

[OK, enough from the peanut gallery. I thought it was funny… *hmph!* Oh, well, enough lunchtime fun… ]


Trackposted to Stuck On Stupid, The Random Yak, and basil’s blog, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe, AND to The Trouble With Angels, where Diane’s midweek open trackback post is all that it’s cracked up to be…

Quick PSA–“Storm” Worm Variant Infecting Via Blogs

FWIW, from eWeek:

New Storm Worm Spreading Via Blog Posts

A Storm worm variant using both e-mail and Web sites to infect Windows-based PCs is injecting itself into the responses people are leaving on blogs.

Dmitri Alperovitch, principal research scientist at Secure Computing, told eWEEK that the worm is injecting itself into the operating system as a rootkit and is capable of intercepting Web traffic.

When a user with an infected system visits a bulletin board or posts to a blog, the worm inserts a malware into his or her comments. The line asks readers to look at a fun video and contains a link leading to a Web site where the malware is waiting to reinfect more users.

Check the article.

Wednesday OTA

Yep. A linkfest. May not be much else at twc today, so knock yourself out. Link to this post and track back.

If you have a linkfest/open trackback post to promote OR if you simply want to promote a post via the linkfests/open trackback posts others are offering, GO TO LINKFEST HAVEN DELUXE! Just CLICK the link above or the graphic immediately below.

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If you want to host your own linkfests but have not yet done so, check out the Open Trackbacks Alliance. The FAQ there is very helpful in understanding linkfests/open trackbacks.


Meanwhile, via email (from HH), this (slightly edited) list of handy tips. *heh*

Eleven Step Guide to Being Handy Around the House [#11 is my fav]

1. If you can’t find a screwdriver, use a knife. If you break off
the tip, it’s an improved screwdriver.

2. Try to work alone. An audience is rarely any help.

3. Despite what you may have been told by your mother, praying and cursing are both helpful in home repair … but only if you are
working alone.

4. Work in the kitchen whenever you can … many fine tools are
there, it’s warm and dry, and you are close to the refrigerator.

5. If it’s electronic, get a new one … or consult a twelve-year-
old.

6. KISS: Get a new battery; replace the bulb or fuse; see if the tank is empty; try turning the switch to “on”; or just paint over it.

7. Always take credit for miracles. If you dropped the alarm clock
while taking it apart and it suddenly starts working, you have
healed it.

8. Regardless of what people say, kicking, pounding, throwing, and shaking sometimes DOES help.

9. If something looks level, it is level.

10. The politician *spit* principle: If at first you don’t succeed, redefine success.

11. Above all, if what you’ve done is stupid, but it works, then it
isn’t stupid.