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January 29 , 2014

Constitutional crisis in New Mexico reflects upon Minnesota situation

‘Blue code’ being replaced by the ‘new code'?

by Timothy Charles Holmseth

On January 28, 2014 Shane Harger, chief of police, Jemez Springs, New Mexico was placed on administrative leave after traveling to attend a meeting with an organization comprised of law enforcements officers that signed a document re-affirming their oath to uphold the United States Constitution.

Chief Harger’s commitment to the Constitution caused him to be a ‘suspicious person’ in the airport - resulting in his detainment.

Harger’s nightmare began at the airport when he attempted to board the airplane. He was stopped and questioned by TSA agents repeatedly, and then, stopped and questioned by an unidentified man dressed in black clothes that quickly flashed a badge and claimed to be a federal agent.

Harger said the creepy unidentified badge-flasher became agitated after Harger cited his Constitutional rights, and ominously warned Harger that he knew people in his district.

The following morning, Harger was informed by Sheriff Douglas C. Wood of Sandoval County, New Mexico, that Harger was to dismantle the Jamez Springs Police Department.

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During an interview on the Alex Jones Show, Chief Harger said that when he arrived at his destination he realized his lap-top computer had been secretly searched without a warrant.

The burning desire to violate a person’s privacy and rights seems to be consistent with a specific psychological make-up often found in perverted control freaks and weirdoes that abuse citizens in the name of law enforcement.

The events are creating a divide in law enforcement itself. 

The un-constitutional attack on the rights of Harger, a law-abiding citizen, ironically mimics the on-going situation in Polk County, Minnesota, where the search, seizure, and secret search of a reporter/journalist/author’s computer took place by rogue elements of the East Grand Forks Police Department and Polk County Sheriff’s Office.

In an incident much akin to the experience of Harger; Holmseth found his computer had been illegally turned on and searched by law enforcement.

Holmseth has filed a Prosecutorial Misconduct complaint against Ronald Galstad, prosecutor, State of Minnesota. Holmseth has turned over evidence, in the form of an Administrators log, to District Judge Tamara Yon that proved his hard-drive was activated and illegally searched.

Galstad had already been referred over to the Minnesota Lawyer Board for review after Holmseth reported Galstad and a State public defender, Michael LaCoursiere, told Holmseth that Galstad was going to have two police officers lie on thewitness stand to convict him if he didn't plead no-contest.

In addition to the illegal activation of Holmseth’s hard-drive, Sgt. Investigator Michael Norland, Polk County Sheriff’s Office, admitted to the Court during a hearing that he searched Holmseth’s computer (without a warrant) with a special program that would leave no trace.

Neither the Polk County Sheriff’s Office nor the East Grand Forks Police Department has any record to prove where Holmseth’s seized property was between December 14, 2012 and April 26, 2013.

The computer contained investigative information acquired regarding the federal kidnapping of HaLeigh Ann-Marie Cummings (some of which Holmseth turned over to the FBI in 2010).

When law enforcement returned Holmseth’s computer it was inoperable.

When Holmseth began filing document requests to the Police Department for chain of evidence records, a State Guardian AdLitem began to crypticlly warn Holmseth the State was going to take his child away if he didn't back off.

Officer Aeisso Schrage, EGFPD, a member of a federally funded task force in Minnesota boasted to Holmseth that he read all of his daughter’s text messages to her boyfriend. Holmseth personally felt Schrage was a sexually perverted, very sick, and dangerous man.

The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) dropped a bomb-shell when they disavowed statements made in open court by Prosecutor Galstad to Judge Yon, wherein the prosecutor had been claiming the BCA was involved in their raid on Holmseth.

Although Galstad was telling the Court he was working with the BCA; the BCA said they had no involvement whatsoever and didn’t even know about it. Galstad and his goons even placed Holmseth’s property in bags with BCA stickers to create the illusion it was Task Force Raid.

They got caught.

Sheriff Barb Erdman, PCSO, says she is investigating the wide-spread corruption. However, un-official polls reveal voters in Polk County find Erdman is a weak leader and confidence in her is plummeting.  

Situations in New Mexico, Minnesota, Florida, and elsewhere appear to be testing the out-dated ‘blue-code’ of gangster policing in favor of the ‘new code’ of ‘oath keeping’.