UPDATE—Voicemail released of ICE agent contacting poll worker on Election Day.
First the agents went to her home—and interrogated her husband.
Then they tracked her down at work—she was manager of a polling location on Election Day.
All over a social media post.
🚨BREAKING: ICE agents stalked a U.S. citizen, at a POLLING PLACE, to pressure her into deleting her post, from JANUARY, about indicting ICE agent, Jonathan Ross.
The exact post read: The ICE agent who shot and killed Renee Good in broad daylight has been identified as Jonathan Ross by the Minnesota Star Tribune. I think today is a great day for Jonathan to be indicted!
FEDERAL AGENTS walked into a polling place… one of the most protected civic spaces we have… to intimidate a citizen, over political speech, about holding law enforcement accountable.
The document they handed her said…
“This notice officially informs you that it is unlawful to threaten to assault, kidnap, and/or murder a federal official or that federal official’s immediate family member with the intent to impede, intimidate, and/or interfere with the federal official’s duties or retaliate against a federal official due to the performance of their duties,”
The document also said she could be subject to both federal and state prosecution.
And just to be clear… The post, in question, wasn’t “doxxing.”
Doxxing is releasing private, non-public information. Repeating publicly reported facts… is not that.
Because law enforcement’s identities are not supposed to be private information, especially when they have been involved in the death, or shooting, of a civilian…
But, instead of upholding the constitution, the current administration is attempting to stretch “threatening” language to cover political speech they don’t like.
And let’s talk about election integrity…
Polling places are legally restricted civic spaces. It is illegal to deploy federal troops, or armed federal law enforcement, to any polling place.
Using that space to confront someone, over speech about federal agents, is highly inappropriate at minimum… and potentially unlawful.
And this isn’t the first instance federal agents have hunted U.S. citizens down to silence calls for government accountability.
Which should alarm everyone…
Because a government that punishes scrutiny instead of answering it, is not a government holding its agents accountable…
It’s a system telling you its agents are above it.
I'm not running for office. But if I were, these are some of the lessons I'd take away from what happened in NY yesterday.
1. Authenticity is measurable. Voters can smell a focus group from a mile away.
2. Endorsements from the current Democratic leadership now read like warnings. The establishment wing of the party is no longer a sword. It's a question mark.
3. Conviction beats caution. The candidates who said hard things about rent, about who pays for what, about Gaza, they won. The triangulators lost.
4. Cost of living is everything. Everything else is wallpaper.
5. The middle is not a strategy. It's an empty room. Voters reached past the establishment to grab someone who actually believes something.
6. Don't fear the base. Court it. The Democrats who ran from their own voters lost. The ones who ran toward them won.
7. If you want to lead a party you have to be willing to fight inside it. Mamdani didn't ask permission. He took the field.
The lesson under the lessons: the country is tired of being managed. People want to be led.
If this doesn't make your blood boil, you don't believe in liberty. Border Patrol agents smashed down a business's locked doors and arrested two employees, and when the owner demanded to see a warrant, they smugly said, "We don't need one." Absolutely criminal. Straight to jail
Officers arrest a man that is deaf and with a disability claiming he was resisting their verbal commands. The corruption runs deep with this one.
Tyron McAlpin—a 34-year-old completely deaf man living with cerebral palsy—was walking home from a convenience store when he was suddenly intercepted by the Phoenix Police Department.
Officers were responding to a 911 call regarding a minor disturbance across the street. A bystander mistakenly pointed out McAlpin, who had absolutely no involvement in the incident they were called out for. So yes they have the wrong man as the person they were called out for was white.
Because McAlpin is deaf, he could not hear the verbal commands being shouted from the windows of the approaching police cruiser. Within seconds of arriving, officers exited the vehicle and immediately put hands on him.
There was a struggle that ensued became McAlpin had no idea what was going on due to his condition. If the conduct from the officers was not bad enough during the struggle, the corruption continued.
The subsequent police paperwork heavily distorted the reality of the encounter:
Omission of Disabilities: In their official report, the responding officers completely omitted the fact that McAlpin was deaf and disabled.
The "Stolen Phone" Falsehood: Officers claimed in their narrative that McAlpin was carrying a stolen phone. In reality, the phone belonged entirely to McAlpin. He had been using it immediately prior to the encounter to communicate via sign language on a video call with a woman that helps him.
Survival Instinct vs. Aggression: The report claimed McAlpin took a "fighting stance." Defense attorneys emphasized that any physical struggle from McAlpin was a basic, defensive survival instinct from being suddenly and ambushed by strangers he could not hear.
Instead of being recognized as a victim of a false accusation and the fact that he was the wrong guy, McAlpin was booked on felony charges of resisting arrest and aggravated assault on law enforcement.
Unable to afford a $6,500 cash bail, McAlpin spent nearly a month in a Maricopa County jail cell. Because jail staff failed to provide an American Sign Language (ASL) interpreter, he was kept in near-total isolation, unable to communicate with staff, his family, or his defense team.
Following the public release of the bodycam footage, the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office officially dismissed all criminal charges against him.
The internal police investigation resulted in mere 24-hour unpaid suspensions for the three officers involved, a move heavily criticized by civil rights advocates. Two tier justice strikes again!
McAlpin's legal team filed a $3.5 million federal civil rights lawsuit against the City of Phoenix and the individual officers. The case remains active in federal court as both sides navigate discovery, highlighting the urgent need for systemic reform in how law enforcement interacts with disabled citizens. This case looks to continue in September of this year unless the city decides to settle.
Keep in mind it's the tax payers that ultimately lose in a situation like this as tax money will be used to cover up for corrupt officers that basically attacked a disabled man.
We now have undercover, plain clothes Feds, Park police, Oklahoma police, Secret Service, & the National Guard, at the reflecting pool.
All because our President is a liar that takes NO RESPONSIBILITY.
Great job America 👏
Trump could have multiple Supreme Court vacancies to fill in the next two years.
If we don't replace Susan Collins in November, we could have an extremist Court locked in for a generation.
🚨 Holy shit! Can we say excessive force? 😱
Police officer violently rips 18 year-old girl from her vehicle, yanking her out by her hair. You can hear the girl yelling “She’s pulling my hair! Please STOP! Please don’t rip me out… Can you stop?”
This brutal footage is sparking outrage—And here’s the kicker: This is the SAME Officer Bianca Camacho who was just reassigned after the viral high school incident where she punched and dragged a 16-year-old student by the hair. Maybe she likes to pull someone’s hair.😉
Full video of that in the second clip. 👇👇
Pattern? Or just coincidence?
#ExcessiveForce #PoliceAccountability