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Handcuffed,
Assaulted, Ticketed By Cop For Distributing 9/11 DVD's
Harassment, unconstitutional search, attempted frame-up of Livonia
man for truth movement activism
Prisonplanet | Oct. 15, 2007
By Paul Joseph
Watson
A Michigan man was
harassed, handcuffed, assaulted, branded "unpatriotic" and subjected
to an unconstitutional search of his vehicle during which drugs were
allegedly planted, before being ticketed by a police officer for the
apparent crime of freely distributing DVD's about 9/11 truth earlier
this month.
Josh Skoll was driving in his car when he noticed a slowly moving
vehicle without its lights on in front of him. The vehicle's light
were turned on shortly after Josh passed the car, identifying it as
a Livonia "Charger" police cruiser. Josh stopped about 10 seconds
later to continue delivering free 9/11 truth DVD's to homes along
his route before the police officer began to question him.
The officer asked Skoll who the owner of the house he had stopped at
was, to which Skoll responded that he didn't know, upon which the
officer told him that he needed a permit to hand out free DVD's and
ordered him to return to his vehicle.
The officer then
ran Josh's license plate and ordered him to again step out of his
vehicle. As soon as Skoll exited the vehicle, he was slapped in
handcuffs and threatened with arrest.
With increasing anger, the officer slammed Josh against the car and
announced that he would search his vehicle before detaining Skoll
inside the police cruiser.
Shortly after proceeding with the unconstitutional search, the cop
returned with a small bag of marijuana that Skoll claims was
planted. Skoll noted later that his other belongings had hardly been
moved during the search.

The police officer defined Skoll's crime as "pasing out 9-11 CD's"
on his citation ticket.
The officer continued to voice more threats asking Josh why he
shouldn't be taken jail before interrogating him about the
information contained on the DVD's he had been freely distributing.
Despite Skoll's best efforts to explain, the cop dismissed him as
"unpatriotic," "unfit for the military" and "too young to have an
opinion."
Josh was eventually
allowed to leave but not before being cited for a misdemeanor and
given a ticket. The comments section of the ticket reads "passing
out 9-11 CD's," which is supposedly now a crime in police state
America. Skoll's court date is to be set within the next few weeks.
Skoll is not the first to be harassed and abused by police for
handing out free information.
In 2004,
Kelly Rushing was charged with making
"terroristic threats" after he handed out Alex Jones'
videos and recordings of a Ron Paul speech on C-Span to Lyon County,
Kentucky officials and Kentucky State Trooper Lewis Dobbs.
A jury later ruled in favor of Rushing but he continues to be
harassed by authorities and local law enforcement.
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