(In
case you missed it, take a glance at South Carolina PolitiChick Sonya
Sasser’s informative article about the immense powers held by
local sheriffs. Truly, they are the last line of defense between the
people and the criminals, both from the streets and from the federal
government. They don’t answer to the state or federal government.
They answer to YOU…because you elect them. As elected officials, they are
under oath to protect the Constitution above all else. Thus, if they
think a federal law contradicts the Constitution, they are under no obligation
to enforce it. )
According
to the book They Fired the First Shot, “Sheriffs across our
nation are standing up against tyranny and are winning their battles without
violence, without protests, without lawsuits. How? Because constitutional power
is clear as to who holds the final authority in local areas. Not the President
of the United States, not Congress, not the Supreme Court, but the local Sheriff holds the authority and
he is fast becoming the hero of the people.”
The
states and the feds are almost powerless against the Constitutional sheriff…and
they know it. That’s why they are now on the attack.
A
new bill coming from Colorado, SB 13-013,
passed on a nearly-party-line vote in the Democrat-controlled House and was
signed into law recently by Governor John Hickenlooper. The bill’s long
title is “CONCERNING PEACE OFFICER AUTHORITY FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES OF THE
UNITED STATES SECRET SERVICE.” The official summary reads, “The bill
gives a special agent, uniform division officer, physical security technician,
physical security specialist, or special officer of the United States secret
service limited peace officer authority while working in Colorado.”
I
readily confess that I am becoming increasingly paranoid of all realms of our
government, but this is hardly a far-out conspiracy theory. Without a
doubt, this law essentially gives police powers and arrest authority to the
executive branch of federal government (Secret Service) within the State.
In other words, it is shoving out the elected peace officers (the local
sheriffs) who answer to the people and the Constitution and is replacing them
with unelected Secret Service members who answer only to the federal government.
As
if there was any doubt, the text of the bill reinforces it: The secret
service agent acts in accordance with the rules and regulations of his or her
employing agency. A secret service agent is a person who is employed by
the united states government, assigned to the united states secret service,
empowered to effect an arrest with or without a warrant for violations of the
united states code, and authorized to carry a firearm and use deadly force in
the performance of his or her duties as a federal law enforcement officer.
Sen.
Kevin Lundberg, R-Berthoud, said, “Often in laws like this they will give broad
authority in one section, then later in another section they will have wording
which appears to restrict the authority,” he explained. “Unlike the state’s law
enforcement, the Secret Service would not have any jurisdictional concerns.
Under this bill they can go anywhere in the state of Colorado regardless of
jurisdiction.”
“This
is absolutely insane,” Rep. Lori Saine, R-Dacono, said. “In theory if a Secret
Service agent is in a county where the sheriff has refused to enforce some of
the recent unenforceable gun laws, the agent could arrest an individual if he
believes the law has been broken.”
It
is obvious that SB 13-013 was introduced in direct response to the hundreds of
county sheriffs, including many in Colorado, who have justly stood up to the
Washington bureaucrats and said they cannot enforce federal restrictions that
would violate the Second Amendment.
But
it gets worse.
Rep. Saine
says she believes the bill is intended to be used as a
foundation for later legislation that will surrender still greater control to
federal officials. “There’ve been so many explanations for the reasons
they really need this bill passed. So what is it really?” “I believe it is
intended to be used for setting up a framework so that at some other time they
could expand it to possibly include being able to arrest a sheriff who is
refusing to enforce unconstitutional laws. They would justify it by saying that
since we’ve already given the Secret Service this ability, why not give them
just one more?”
This
has already happened…and is happening increasingly.
In
the Texas state legislature, Dallas Democratic Representative Yvonne Davis
introduced a measure similar to the Colorado law that would fire any law
enforcement officer who disobeys state or federal orders. The bill even
calls for the removal of any law enforcement officer who just promises — either
on paper or just verbally — not to enforce any federal gun control mandates
that the federal government passes.
Coincidentally
(or not so coincidentally), Connecticut, the state where the infamous Newtown
school shooting occurred, voted in 2000
to eliminate county sheriffs as constitutional officers. Among
the provisions eliminated were the requirements to hold an election of sheriffs
in each county every four years for four-year terms and the requirement that
sheriffs submit a bond to the treasurer to ensure the faithful discharge of their duties. Voters in
Connecticut opted instead for a system of federal marshals who don’t bother to
take an oath to uphold the Constitution; the marshals’ only loyalty is to those
in upper echelons of power who appoint them, not the lowly “we the people” they
are supposed to serve.
When
you realize the power a local elected sheriff has, you quickly realize why
there is a concerted effort to take away the position and change it into some
kind of a yes-man governmental appointed fluff job. After all, as Thomas
Jefferson said, “Timid men prefer the calm of despotism to the tempestuous sea
of liberty.” The local sheriff’s job is to ensure the existence of that
tempestuous sea of liberty, so, of course, liberals are doing everything to
take that power away and instead ensure the calm of despotism.
Even
as far back as the 1970s, when the
threat to eliminate the sheriff was openly before California supervisors,
Supervisor William Johnson of El Dorado County persuaded two California State
representatives to join him in getting an initiative qualified for the
California ballot which stated in print in the state’s Constitution that the
sheriff must be an elective office. The proposition on the
ballot passed easily and it was entered into California’s constitution.
At that time Supervisor Johnson declared that it “was an attempt to put a road
block in the way” of the ‘change agents’. It gave the people more time to
find ways to protect themselves against the ‘change agents’ who were trying to
eliminate the Constitutional sheriff.
Many
states, including Montana, Ohio, Kentucky, Idaho, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Texas,
Arizona, Michigan, Utah, and New Mexico, are trying to protect the power of
their sheriffs in much the same way, with many gun rights bills gaining
momentum. Will other states answer the bell and protect their sheriffs
from the despotic, power-hungry agents who want to put them out of
business? It is essential that they do because what is so eerie about the
Colorado bill is that the state is willingly transferring enormous power to the
federal government. Is this the new normal?
Welcome to
the new police state, America.
Source: PolitiChick April 9,
2013 at 10:00 pm / by Elizabeth Hermesch
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