Apr 092011
 

A few days ago I wrote an article on how the IRS preys on innocent citizens coercing them with laws designed to stop money laundering.  As the State becomes desperate for funds, it will do anything to survive (except cut spending, of course).

From Michael Panzer comes another illustration of  predation.  This one is from the state of California, although is probably happening in your own state. There are many other forms.

Readers, if you spot any, alert me to them and I shall report them here.

In “Traffic Citations Statewide Jump Since Beginning of Recession,” the Whittier Daily News reports on an interesting development in the area of law enforcement.

The California Highway Patrol and local police officers issued 110,000 more traffic citations in Los Angeles County last year then they did at the start of the economic recession, and a Sacramento attorney is questioning the timing.

In fiscal year 2006-2007, officers wrote 1,746,852 tickets countywide, according to data from Los Angeles County Superior Court. Last fiscal year, they wrote 1,857,825.

Statewide, the CHP issued about 200,000 more tickets in 2009 than in 2007, CHP officials said.

The CHP attributes the increase to more officers on the highways and new cell phone laws.

But Matthew Becker, an attorney who specializes in traffic cases, said cash- strapped state and local lawmakers are looking for ways to generate revenue.

“The policymakers are sticking more officers on the street knowing the officers will generate more tickets and more profit,” he said. “It’s not so much a safety issue, but hey, it’s bringing in the bucks.”

In fact, if you look at the data for California as a whole, the police seem to have been far more diligent in their efforts to keep the roads safe than they were before the financial crisis struck.

Milescitations

Of course, the recent change in circumstances may just be an anomaly, or perhaps authorities have simply realized that it’s important to maintain law and order amid deteriorating economic conditions.

Yeah, right.

  One Response to “More on The Predatory State”

  1. I was just victimized by the state police on I-395 just south of Worcester, Massachusetts. They set up a 45 MPH sign like you see before a construction site on the top of a small hill where the speed limit is normally 65. They were parked just over the hill, out of sight, with radar guns pointed at the cars coming over the hill. If they were going more than 60 when they passed the sign they were pulled over. The 2 policemen were pulling cars over as fast as they could process the $150+ tickets. Just past the police, there was a permanent 65 mph sign, and no construction at all.

    What does this tell us about the government, the police, and who we need to fear? At this point, I fear the police and the government more than the criminals. It’s getting hard to tell which is which.

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