That's it folks, wrap it up. We're done here.
Turns out no one considered that the tyrannical surveillance police state that lives off the money stolen from you would replace the cameras using money that it stole from you.
Who would have ever guessed??
Seaside security Karen somehow thought she had permission to ban two people for wearing MAGA hats .. UNTIL she spoke to the police .. Then she got OWNED ! ☺️
Itchy trigger finger cops get schooled. All 8 of them had to do that walk of shame.
A tense standoff highlights a critical dynamic in law enforcement: the power of a knowledgeable supervisor to prevent a massive civil rights lawsuit. While the interaction started with intimidation and legal misinformation, it ended up being a masterclass in how police supervisors should handle citizens who know their rights.
A journalist—lawfully filming in public while open-carrying a holstered handgun outside the Henderson County Sheriff's Office get surrounded by 8 deputies all worried about a guy with a camera.
One of the deputies seems to have an itchy trigger finger by the name of Detective Williams gets challenged by the journalist on his defensive posture. Williams is standing with his hand resting on his firearm, his security hood completely deactivated.
When questioned, Williams claims he's doing it for his safety and "because I can." The journalist stands his ground, pointing out that preparing a weapon's unholstering mechanics without an active threat serves as an implicit, lethal threat to a peaceful citizen.
As backup arrives, the situation deteriorates into a classic display of "authority by default." Multiple deputies try to bully the journalist into compliance by confidently claiming that the parking lot is restricted because it is "county property."
The journalist doesn't flinch. He holds his ground and educates the deputies on a vital legal distinction: while the lot is county-owned, it is a taxpayer-funded, public-use space. He openly acknowledges that carrying a weapon inside the government building is illegal, but correctly notes that the exterior parking lot remains public domain. The deputies look visibly uncomfortable, caught off guard by a citizen who refuses to be intimidated.
The entire trajectory of the encounter shifts the moment unit supervisor Corey Payne enters the frame. Instead of backing up his deputies' bad legal takes, Payne takes a rare, commendable approach:
Admitting the Law: Supervisor Payne explicitly concedes that the parking lot is public property and that open carry is 100% legal under state law.
The Voice of Reason: While Payne defends his team's response—explaining that walking a government lot with a firearm and a camera is highly "abnormal" behavior that naturally prompts a public safety check—he completely validates the journalist's right to be there.
When Payne asks for the journalist's name to document the contact, the journalist politely declines, asserting he has broken no laws and identifying only as a "good citizen."
Because Supervisor Payne actually knows the law, he recognizes a legal stalemate when he sees one. He understands that the journalist is fully within his rights to open carry, film, and refuse identification without reasonable suspicion of a crime. Rather than letting his deputies violate a citizen's rights, Payne shuts down the interaction, commands his team to leave, and walks away.
This supervisor likely saved his county thousands of dollars in legal fees just by respecting the Constitution.
The walk of shame is in effect at the end as it should be.
@boonesghost@BarrySux Right. A corroborated military joint cooperative. Congratulations, you just demonstrated how it's treason by definition, and still don't see it.
@boonesghost@BarrySux Every one of them but Massie should be physically removed from the building. And permanently banned from the premises immediately. Go....