Well done, that man!

NZ: ‘McCready sets sights on PM over Banks case’
I predict it will never get to trial. Politicians, the police and the judiciary are a close-knit gang.
A court case will be found to be “not in the public interest”
meanwhile:
This is not justice
The penalty far, far outweighs the gravity of the “crime”.

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19 Responses to Well done, that man!

  1. Cadwallader says:

    I sincerely hope none of McCready’s latest round of civil proceedings get anywhere near a Courtroom. He claims to be a litigant on behalf of all private citizens, while I remain in the dark when he asked whether I wished him to be my advocate. McCready has been adjudicated bankrupt at least once. All bankruptcies create genuine victims, why not spend his efforts attempting to recompense his victims?

    • KG says:

      Because he’s doing something far more important.Holding bastards who consider themselves to be above the law to account.
      And “All bankruptcies create genuine victims” isn’t necessarily true. There are plenty of people who invest speculative cash in ventures which fail. They’re not victims.
      I remain the dark when all kinds of lobbying organisations advocate supposedly on behalf of “the public”. I never asked them to act on my behalf.
      At least McCready is doing useful work.

  2. KG says:

    The problem with the indoctrinated sheeple is that they’re terrified of anybody with principles who sticks his head above the parapet–he or she is a reminder to them of their own cowardice and apathy.
    Easier to demonise the principled man than to look at themselves…..

    • Cadwallader says:

      I think you err to assume McCready has principles. Please list them. My take on McCready, having seen him in a courtroom, is he is a self-aggrandizing nutcase.

      • KG says:

        In that case, we need a few more self-aggrandizing nutcases.

        • Cadwallader says:

          I was an arbitrator in a proceeding for which the aforesaid gentleman was one of three opposing litigants. It was not an experience for which I relish the memory. McCready despite being a purported vanquisher is a sniveling victim.

  3. Darin says:

    “You do the crime, you do the time, that’s just the way it is, but compared to P dealers and gang members, to me it’s bull sh.. .”
    -They are picking on you simply as business practice,they did it to eliminate their compitition

    The house had been on the market for the past three weeks. Tittleton discovered it was going to auction only when he was told by the real estate agent selling the house, he said.
    nothing like due process eh?

    Police found 1.64 kilograms of dried cannabis head and eight cannabis plants during a raid on Tittleton’s Wellington St home in 2009. Cultivation and harvesting equipment was also found under his house.
    “harvesting equipment” rake and garden hose? 8 whole plants and some tops,sounds like enough to last one person a year

    The estimated street value of the cannabis was between $32,000 and $41,000.
    see there is the problem right there,that’s money out of the hands of cops pet dealers hands

    In 2011, Tittleton was sentenced to forfeit 50 per cent of the value of his home, in the first time the Criminal Proceeds (Recovery) Act 2009 had been used to seize a house in Marlborough.
    got nice real estate someone wants,but you don’t want to sell?The cops and the law can solve that.

    Sergeant Kris Payne, of Picton, said it had been a long process, and he was glad it was finally over.
    weren’t you paid?

    “It sends a clear message to criminals,” he said.
    “If you deal or grow drugs, you could lose your house.”
    translation,don’t cut in on our business

    The house is being sold by real estate company Bayleys on behalf of the Crown.
    at a nice commission I’m sure

    The guy ain’t a drug kingpin,he’s an old,probably harmless fellow which is why the cops went after him.Much to dangerous to go after real criminals like gang members.The cops might get hurt and besides there’s profit in it for them. :evil:

    • KG says:

      “The guy ain’t a drug kingpin,he’s an old,probably harmless fellow which is why the cops went after him.Much too dangerous to go after real criminals like gang members…”

      Spot on, Darin. Your whole comment is right on the money.
      As for the “street value” bullshit…A kilo of very good weed can be bought for around $1500, so the cops have reached the street value figure by assuming it will be broken down into the smallest market packages and sold at the top price per package.
      It’s a dishonest tactic they use to make every bust look bigger than it really is.

      • KG says:

        We lived for a while in the Far North area of NZ and saw firsthand how the local cops virtually ignore maori gang criminality. And fisheries inspectors who would have pinged us for a single undersized fish were conspicuous by their absence when maoris arrived at the boat ramp with sacks of illegally harvested seafood. :evil:
        Police corruption takes many forms……

        • Darin says:

          Yup,around here weed goes wild in the swamps,so many little pot gardens have gone native when the gardeners have quit tending it’s now part of the landscape.The cops only pay attention to the dealers(legit ones)and people pushing it on kids.I’m fine with that,I don’t use the stuff and as long as the people I work with can pass a piss test I could care less.

          These forfeiture laws though are scary.Somebody doesn’t like you or the cops have a bit of a hard on for you they plant a little weed or stash some pills and the next thing you know your house is being sold :shock:

  4. Cadwallader says:

    Darin: I think in the ranks of public servants there is a mentality that provided they bash the easy targets their jobs are performed and protected. However, this doesn’t mean that the police willfully co-operate with the bigger players in any rort. The Proceeds of Crimes Act is a tool which can be used not solely for meteing out justice but also for revenge. Mind you, the justice system itself can be applied to this end: NB; the above mentioned Mr McCready.

    • KG says:

      Oh horseshit, Cadwallader. McCready actually corrected a major malfunction (whether that malfunction was deliberate or not is unknown at this point) in the so-called “justice” system.
      Police declined (yet again) to prosecute a high-profile figure, that figure subsequently being found guilty after a private prosecution indicates that McCready did the right thing.
      You’re allowing personal dislike to blind you to the principle McCready is upholding and if you can’t grasp the fact that his history and character are irrelevant here then further argument is pointless.

      • Darin says:

        I’m not to sure Cad,I have seen it happen here.We had a corrupt sheriff once that literally made drug busts only on his competition.He was running as it later turned out,a multi-million dollar racket on the side.It went so far as murder to cover evidence to prisoners being put into service as drug mules on commercial airlines.He was eventually found out and sent off the federal prison for life,but he did a lot of damage while he was in office.
        Another example are the cash forfeiture laws we have on the books over here.Several sheriff and police departments in Tennessee are doing quite well off these laws as they get to keep a percentage of the money seized.
        There are several east west interstate highways running through the state.They are major arteries for the drug trade with drugs heading east to the eastern seaboard and cash heading back west from the sales.
        The cops almost never bust any of the drug mules going east,but they routinely catch the money transporters going back.Now if the war on drugs were really about public safety and getting drugs off the street wouldn’t they catch the drugs going east?I rest my case.

      • Cadwallader says:

        Who pays Mr McCready?

  5. KG says:

    Anybody who thinks the law should be subservient to personalities and emotions belongs over at Whale Oil’s blog, vilifying Kim Dotcom because he’s a “fat German” and justifying illegal search and seizures of his property on that basis. :evil:

  6. Michael in Nelson says:

    And our favourite Labour leader who was found to have a secret trust after railing at National for them, has once again shot himself in the foot (although by now he must be up to his knee) over his latest rant at others for assisting a Chinese businessman, one Mr Liu.

    http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11276510

  7. Redbaiter says:

    Did you guys read where that fucking wanker Key went and had lunch with the Clintons today?

    https://twitter.com/Redbaiternz/status/479158654810083328

    Check the sickening grin in the photo.

    He really is the Manchurian candidate.