PDA

View Full Version : Combat Cops Evict Homeowner in Colorado



ELVIS
11-05-2012, 07:24 AM
Kurt Nimmo




Militarized cops in full combat gear were called to evict a woman from her house in Idaho Springs, Colorado, on October 30.

“The homeowner facing eviction was apparently underwater on her mortgage with US Bank. She says she told the bank that all she was asking was for another 30 days in the home before an eviction. She needed an extra month in order to find another place to live, she said,” the PrivacySOS blog reported on October 31.

“But US Bank and the Creek County Sheriff’s Department had other plans, culminating a show of force that thoroughly alarmed activists who had descended on the property to attempt to prevent the eviction.”

As the video below demonstrates, militarized cops dispatched by the bank were primarily interested in sending a message to Occupy Denver activists.

The militarized response by the establishment to the Occupy movement last year – culminating in riots in Oakland, California – is only the beginning. As the wheels continue to come off the economy and people realize the government works for banksters dedicated to stealing their homes and wealth, many will take to the street and combat cops will be dispatched in larger numbers to squelch their indignation.

Eviction and foreclosure activism is growing around the country. On October 30, combat cops in Portland, Oregon, clashed with We Are Oregon demonstrators.

In early October, police in Hampden County, Massachusetts, decided not to respond militarily to around seventy demonstrators protesting a home eviction order by a Colorado bank.

“In its latest 1960s-style protest, the group [Springfield No One Leaves!] planned to form a human blockade around the single-story home, with some members prepared to be arrested for refusing police orders,” MassLive reported.

Oakland mayor Jean Quan admitted that she had participated in a conference call with the leaders of 18 other cities to discuss destroying the Occupy movement. According to DHS documents obtained from a Freedom of Information Act request by the Partnership for Civil Justice Fund, the Department of Homeland Security coordinated efforts with city officials around the country to undermine the Occupy movement.

The Department of Homeland Security – established under the manufactured threat of al-Qaeda cave dwellers under every bed (replacing Cold War commies) – has spent the last few years militarizing police around the country to confront the real enemy: the American people



:elvis:

Nitro Express
11-05-2012, 01:36 PM
The truth of the matter is unless there is a political solution to this, it's only a matter of time before things snap. Once people believe there is no political solution, that's when things will get bloody. Once that hope is gone. Nothing is more dangerous than large groups of people with no hope.

ZahZoo
11-05-2012, 02:08 PM
Can't blame local law enforcement... In most places County Sheriffs execute eviction/foreclosure proceedings. Add well intentioned neighbors or worse political groups with agendas and any type blockade activity can get dangerous for all present.

Sure the story sounds sad for the owner who was asking for 30 days more to move out... but foreclosures don't just happen quickly. They take months and in some cases up to or over a year before anyone has to vacate. So the home owners knew this day was coming months in advance and it shouldn't have drug out to the point of law enforcement removing them from the property.

Nitro Express
11-05-2012, 02:14 PM
Can't blame local law enforcement... In most places County Sheriffs execute eviction/foreclosure proceedings. Add well intentioned neighbors or worse political groups with agendas and any type blockade activity can get dangerous for all present.

Sure the story sounds sad for the owner who was asking for 30 days more to move out... but foreclosures don't just happen quickly. They take months and in some cases up to or over a year before anyone has to vacate. So the home owners knew this day was coming months in advance and it shouldn't have drug out to the point of law enforcement removing them from the property.

It's not so much what they are wearing or what weapons they have, it's how they act. Hey we are back to where we were in the 1930's but it's not as obviously bad because we have more government assistance. The only thing is things won't get better until we have enough jobs for everyone paying a living wage and the opportunity to advance if you are motivated enough to do so. You don't get that with massive outsourcing and buying imports. Also, we have to restore the old banking regulations they put in in the 1930's. The only thing is another world war won't pull us out of this shit like World War II did. Einstein once said the fourth world war would be fought with sticks and stones after the third one wiped away most the people and put them into the stone age.

Nickdfresh
11-05-2012, 02:33 PM
Can't blame local law enforcement... In most places County Sheriffs execute eviction/foreclosure proceedings. Add well intentioned neighbors or worse political groups with agendas and any type blockade activity can get dangerous for all present.

Sure the story sounds sad for the owner who was asking for 30 days more to move out... but foreclosures don't just happen quickly. They take months and in some cases up to or over a year before anyone has to vacate. So the home owners knew this day was coming months in advance and it shouldn't have drug out to the point of law enforcement removing them from the property.

Exactly. Foreclosure takes forever. On my street (which I'm hoping to get the hell out of soon), there is a rather large house that was essentially abandoned. I think the couple that owned it got divorced after it was discovered she was blowing one of the Buffalo Bills, so they simply broke up and left the house. I haven't seen anyone official from the bank, nor is there any realtor sign out front or anything and they've been gone since the summer of 2011!

I don't know what the point of this thread is...

ELVIS
11-05-2012, 03:17 PM
It's about you living on the streets because the banks manipulated your mortgage to the point where you couldn't afford to pay and they sent a SWAT team after you to kick you out...

Nitro Express
11-05-2012, 03:27 PM
The banks gave mortgages to people who had no business getting one. The banks wanted to generate as many mortgages as possible because they could use those to make additional loans. I also think they knew they had enough politicians bought off to get the bailout they would need when it all blew up. They have ruining the economy but are doing better than ever on the condition the government keeps buying their debt. Without that the banks fail because there is no reality there.

Nickdfresh
11-05-2012, 03:34 PM
It's about you living on the streets because the banks manipulated your mortgage to the point where you couldn't afford to pay and they sent a SWAT team after you to kick you out...

They "manipulated" her mortgage? Then she has a pretty good lawsuit, like the people who were auto-signatured! Banks don't send SWAT teams. Locally, it's usually one or two County Sheriffs IIRC. However, there have been a rash of cops shot while serving a psychotic resident...


The banks gave mortgages to people who had no business getting one. The banks wanted to generate as many mortgages as possible because they could use those to make additional loans. I also think they knew they had enough politicians bought off to get the bailout they would need when it all blew up. They have ruining the economy but are doing better than ever on the condition the government keeps buying their debt. Without that the banks fail because there is no reality there.

That's sort of another sweeping pile of stool you so love to post. People may be fully qualified to get a mortgage, but a job loss, divorce, medical bankruptcy, etc. happens. The real problem is that banks have too little incentive to work with people having problems to restructure loans, then many banks simply abandon properties after throwing out the previous owners and let them decay in hopes of selling it off cheap with as little investment as possible. More and more towns however are suing them as absentee owner slumlords...

Nitro Express
11-05-2012, 05:37 PM
No the banks gave mortgages to people who obviously didn't have the credit rating to show they could pay back the loan. But they wanted to generate as many mortgages as possible because they could bundle the bad mortgages with the good mortgages and sell them as AAA prime assets. Then they can make additional loans using the mortgages as collateral. Everyone was going for commission along the line. I worked in the finance industry and watched it all pop. If the banks did not make all those bad mortgage loans, they would have avoided the problem. You don't loan money to people who show in their credit history or job data they won't be able to pay it back. Anyone with a pulse pretty much could get a mortgage in the 1990's. In California you had migrant workers qualifying for $200,000 mortgages.

The next bubble to pop will be the college tuition bubble. That's a default disaster the government will end up buying and socking us 53% tax payers for.

Nickdfresh
11-05-2012, 07:26 PM
No the banks gave mortgages to people who obviously didn't have the credit rating to show they could pay back the loan....

Not just credit rating, you can have good credit and buy way too much, but sure they did. But some people were qualified and still went into foreclosure...