Skoro kazdy den je nejaka zminka o tom jak nackove dovazeji odpadky do ceska.
Ted Cehuni vratili z hranice 3 kamiony. Tohle je blby pristup.
Velmi jednoduchy zakon ktery by stipuloval ze vozidlo uzite k preprave je ZKONFISKOVANO rozsudkem specialniho soudu. Na tohle ustanovit jednoho soudce
pri nejakym soudu v kazdym kraji, kterymu by to prislo pod ruku stejny den a za pet minut rozsudek.Naplnena skutkova podstata,dekuji pekne,priste to nedelejte nebo se zase uvidime.
Myslim ze po prvnich paru mercedesech a kamionu by kazdy uz pred rozvadovem vyhodil i sacky od mcdonalda :-))))
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Re: Odpadky
by
Starý dobrý Max
on Sun 26 Feb 2006 05:32 AM EST | Profile | Permanent Link
To by asi neprošlo, ale mastné pokuty řidiči a provozovateli vozu by asi pomohly.
Kdysi mi jeden kámoš říkal, že v Holandsku mají zákon, že kdo překročí v obci rychlost dvojnásobně, tak je mu zabaveno vozidlo a sešrotováno. Nevím jestli nekecal. stupidita zurivych/zlocinnost "povolanych"
by
RON
on Sun 26 Feb 2006 01:25 PM EST | Profile | Permanent Link
Myslenka tech zesrotovani coby trest ( nejsem si jist ze tomu tak v Holandsku je) je/byla uplatnena v nekolika lokalitach v souvislosti s ruznou "trestnou" cinnosti.
Je to presne na mentalni urovni stredoveku kdy trestali a popravovali zvirata. Jedna z nejvetsich idiocii bylo paleni slonich klu (zkonfiskovanych). Misto je prodat "spotrebitelum" DRAZBOU...a tim snizit cenu/ poptavku a iniciativu pytlaku jit lovit dalsi ...blbci je slavnostne palili. Misto mit desitky milionu na placeni parkovych rangeru zver ochranovat ,spalili tyhle penize a pridali na iniciative pytlakum protoze cena na cernem trhu stoupla. Samozrejme v americe policie ktera je predevsim sebrankou zlocincu kteri jeste zlocin neudelali (dokud se jim nenaskytne prilezitost) zjistila ze je mozne zabavovat majetek "za drogy".Jakepak SOUDY. Na konfiskaci aut,baraku,penez kvuli drogam neni zapotrebi zadneho soudu. Prvne to bylo zabavit auta naprana metrakem heroinu. Tak se to prodalo lehce priblblemu amikovi....kdo by mnel soucit s rozdavaci "jedu".Pro ty je i Ustava skoda. No ale s jidlem roste chut serifu a v zapadakovech obycejne neprojizdi kral drogaru,takze kdyz hraji sve karty spravne, tak si prisvoji( BEZ SOUDU) pro prilepseni policajtum auto v kterem " najdou" par jointu. Taky kdyz uz zase kasa vola po prispevku nejaky hlupak kdo projizdi buranovem se dozvi ze nezastavil uplne na STOP signu a mnel v kufru sacek drog a jeste neregistrovanou zbran.Nejlip urezanou brokovnici:-)))))). A nova Corveta,Viper,Lexus jdou do drazby. Holt...tak se bojuje ta drogova valka. Re: stupidita zurivych/zlocinnost "povolanych"
by
Juchelka
on Sun 26 Feb 2006 02:27 PM EST | Profile | Permanent Link
No ale s jidlem roste chut serifu
a v zapadakovech obycejne neprojizdi kral drogaru,takze kdyz hraji sve karty spravne, tak si prisvoji( BEZ SOUDU) pro prilepseni policajtum auto v kterem " najdou" par jointu. Bezva historka k Ječmínkovi... ; ) Re: Re: zlocinnost "povolanych"
by
RON
on Sun 26 Feb 2006 02:48 PM EST | Profile | Permanent Link
Slo by takove pocinani vymyslet??
Pro obycejne lidi ani kdyby vzali overdose acid-u(LSD). Ovsem pro dnesni ruku "spravedlnosti" :-)))))) je to v poradku. o co vlastne jde?? jde o PENIZE. Z omezeneho mnozstvi penez vyzdimat z populace jde o soutez jestli skonci v kapsach policajtu jejich metodama ci v kapsach drugaru jejich metodama:-)))) Customs evidence preserved? Drugs in confiscated cars missed in push to protect resale value, suits allege By Anna Cearley STAFF WRITER September 27, 2004 PEGGY PEATTIE / Union-Tribune Adrian Rodriguez and his wife, Ali Jazmin (background), are moving to Illinois. "I'm just hoping that justice will be served," he said of his federal lawsuit. U.S. customs inspectors have been more interested in preserving the resale value of confiscated vehicles than in removing all contraband from secret compartments, according to two federal lawsuits. In the more high-profile case, U.S. citizen Adrian Rodriguez spent a month in a Mexican prison last year after a Tijuana mechanic found drugs inside a car Rodriguez had purchased at an auction of cars confiscated in the United States. A Mexican judge released him after determining there was no reason for Rodriguez to have reported the drugs to Mexican authorities if he had been trying to smuggle or sell them. After he was freed, Rodriguez sued the U.S. government, as well as the private auction agencies that contract with the government to sell the cars to the public. His attorney, Teresa Trucchi, updated Rodriguez's case in June by including sworn depositions from several inspectors with U.S. Customs and Border Protection that she says prove the government is liable. An attorney with the federal government said the comments are being misconstrued. In addition, federal attorneys in both cases say a recent Supreme Court decision, Sosa vs. Alvarez-Machain, overrides Trucchi's arguments because it provides immunity to the U.S. government for harm done in a foreign country. Trucchi provided only portions of the sworn depositions to The San Diego Union-Tribune because the rest have been ordered sealed, she said. Adrian Rodriguez watched as his son Adrian Javid, 2, worked with letters and numbers. Rodriguez, who was imprisoned in Mexico after drugs were found in the confiscated car he bought at auction, hopes to distance himself from his ordeal by moving with his family to a rural community in Illinois. The depositions also are being used in another case, in which Trucchi represents two Tijuana printers who spent a year in an Ensenada prison after they were caught with drugs concealed in another previously confiscated car. A Mexican appellate court overturned their conviction, and they are suing the U.S. government on similar grounds. In one excerpt from the depositions provided by Trucchi, Joseph Marilao, who is identified as a federal officer, is asked about limiting damage on the vehicles. "It's been said by other supervisors that you want to make – minimize the damage for a vehicle for resale purposes, you know, as far as seizures go," Marilao testified. But in excerpts of Marilao's sworn deposition provided by Timothy Stutler, an assistant U.S. attorney in the case of the two Tijuana printers, Marilao is asked if inspectors ever were asked to minimize the damage to cars for resale purposes, and he responds "no." Trucchi also points to a statement made by Robert Bickers, the anti-terrorist contraband enforcement team supervisor with U.S. Customs and Border Protection, in which Bickers admitted to hearing other inspectors talk about reducing the cars' damage. "They don't want you to tear it up, but I correct them and direct them to do what they need to do," he said. Stutler released portions of a deposition from another agency official, David Murphy, that suggests officers' comments were being misunderstood. "We did not want officers basically arbitrarily destroying vehicles," Murphy testified. "It had nothing to do with the resale value per se." Barry Morrissey, a spokesman with the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Agency, said government employees aren't allowed to comment on pending litigation. Stutler said Customs inspectors' priority has always been to search thoroughly for drugs. He said inspectors have been criticized in the past for going too far while searching for drugs in cars that ended up not containing any hidden drugs. "Their mission was paramount," Stutler said. "There have been cases where owners have complained, 'Why did you have to do this to my car?' so they tried to minimize that – but never at the expense of their mission." The U.S. attorneys in the two cases say the bigger issue is that the Sosa vs. Alvarez-Machain ruling protects the government because the arrests and incarcerations took place in a foreign country. "It simply can't be brought forth in a district court," said assistant U.S. Attorney Richard Tolles, who is representing the government in the Rodriguez case. Trucchi counters that Sosa vs. Alvarez-Machain can only be used in cases in which the U.S. government is acting within its designated role. She argues that the government was improperly focused on making a profit, when it should have been working to inspect cars more carefully. Two judges are deliberating the cases, and a decision could be made in coming months, Trucchi said. Rodriguez and his family say they hope to create some distance from his ordeal by moving to a rural community in Illinois next month. "It's just something that we haven't really overcome, but it's going away and fading with time and we are definitely looking forward to a new change," said his wife, Ali Jazmin Rodriguez. The Rodriguez case got the most publicity because the victim was a U.S. citizen. In a third case, a Tijuana man spent three months in a U.S. prison after marijuana was found inside a secret bumper compartment in his car, which he had purchased in a government-sponsored auction. U.S. prosecutors eventually dropped charges. The Tijuana man's attorney, Stephen Estey, expects the civil case will go to trial. But the agencies involved are different from those in Trucchi's cases, and the arrest took place in the United States – not Mexico. The cases raise questions about how the U.S. government is inspecting seized vehicles, but the U.S. government won't discuss inspection procedures. "We don't want drug dealers to know what we do out there," Stutler said. At the time of Rodriguez's arrest, the U.S. government issued a statement saying that "a systemized and layered inspection process" is used on "all vehicles seized with narcotics." But the statement also said "no search procedure will prove in every case to be 100 percent effective." While Rodriguez was still in a Tijuana prison, the U.S. government issued an order to tighten the inspection process. The order came after a 12-year-old Mexican girl, who was being smuggled into the United States inside a van, eluded detection by U.S. inspectors. She was found two days after the van was confiscated. After his release, Rodriguez returned to his job as a social worker at a center for neglected youths. His wife also gave birth to their second son, Abraham Jared, in August. Their first son, Adrian Javid, is 2. The Rodriguezes say they are looking forward to moving to Illinois, where they bought an uncompleted house for $7,222, also at a government auction. The two-bedroom house wasn't confiscated for drug-related crimes, Rodriguez said. Throughout his ordeal, said the deeply religious Rodriguez, now 26, he maintained a calm and steady faith that he would be freed and that his incarceration would serve a greater purpose – to prevent others from going through what he did. Rodriguez said he hasn't considered monetary damages; he is leaving that up to his attorney. "I'm just hoping that justice will be served," Rodriguez said. "We want this thing to go through and we want everybody to be aware of it so they can also take part in helping the U.S. become better for them and for their children." Cehuni beze studu
by
RON
on Mon 27 Feb 2006 02:35 AM EST | Profile | Permanent Link
Lidé se slétli na německý odpad a rabují
Obnošené německé oblečení láká mnoho lidí 26.2.2006 20:40 Nelegálně dovezený odpad z Německa přitahuje do Sytna na Tachovsku zástupy lidí z blízkého... více v I-dnes No to sakra uz uplne ztratili rozum v kotline? To se zas budou nacci chechtat. Re: Cehuni beze studu
by
Anonymous
on Mon 27 Feb 2006 05:13 AM EST | Permanent Link
Ale Roniku, ty si zase vedle jak ta jedle. Oni nemůžou napsat, že odpad rabují cikáni, to by byl rasizmus. Proto musí napsat, že odpad rabují lidé.
Takže co si se ptal? Jestli v kotlině ztratili rozum? Buď neznáš cikány, nebo jsi ztratil rozum ty. Re: Cehuni beze studu
by
ASTR
on Mon 27 Feb 2006 06:17 AM EST | Profile | Permanent Link
ostuda ano,
je to dost trapne, ale obavam se, ze i v jinych stech sveta by se nasel podobny vykvet spolecnosti a podobny vysledek! Jiz leta se cas od casu i v tisku objevovaly i nadale objevuji zpravy o tom jak jsou prikopy kolem silnic plne pytlu s odpadky, ktere tam odhazuji TURISTE ze spratelenych sousedskych zemi. Nyni uz do dostalo podobu kamionu! Jen dalsi presvedciva ukazka, jak nekteri Nemci pohlizi na Vychodni uzemi:-) Trackbacks
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