The Kevin Trudeau Show: 8-27-11

August 27, 2011 by admin  
Filed under Archives

Today, Kevin explains where every ailment, every sickness, and every disease can be traced back to and how natural remedies are more effective than drugs and surgery.

Self Help:
Prevent Disease
Alternative To Sunlight
Decrease Your Cancer Risk
Get The Nutrition You Are Lacking
Avoid Processed Commercial Meat

Wealth:
51% of Americans Pay No Federal Income Tax
Americans Becoming Incompetent Due To Welfare System
Feds Oppose Ban On Food Stamps For Sodas In NYC

NWO:
Data Dealing Is A Bigger Scandal Than Phone Hacking
Why Do Feds Want To Keep Tucson Shooting Suspect Medicated?

Everything Kevin:
Become An Insider!
Support Kevin!
Kevin is on YouTube!
Sign Up For Kevin’s FREE Podcast
Follow Kevin on Twitter
Become A Fan of Kevin on Facebook

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The Kevin Trudeau Show: 8-22-11

August 22, 2011 by admin  
Filed under Archives

Today, Kevin explains why it is wrong for America to force the wealthy to pay for their mistakes. Plus, find out why the War on Terror is a joke and why food stamps should be abolished!

Self Help:
Decrease Your Cancer Risk
Get The Nutrition You Are Lacking
Avoid Processed Commercial Meat

Health:
Are Vitamin D Levels Linked to Certain Cancers?
Cancer Expert Blames Agencies For Losing War Against Cancer
Are There Toxic Chemicals In Your Kids’ Car Seats? YES!
Processed Meat May Give You Cancer
Chipotle Admits Major Menu Mistake
Why Are Fruits and Veggies Less Nutritious Today?
It’s Easier To Get Prescription Drugs Than You Think!
Lawsuits Pile Up Over Diabetes Drug

Government:
Secret Services Pays to Rent Joe Biden’s House
Former U.S. Officials Make Millions Advocating For Terrorist Organization
Some Immigrants With Criminal Records MIGHT Not Get Deported

Wealth:
Feds Oppose Ban On Food Stamps For Sodas In NYC

NWO:
Data Dealing Is A Bigger Scandal Than Phone Hacking
Why Do Feds Want To Keep Tucson Shooting Suspect Medicated?

Everything Kevin:
Become An Insider!
Support Kevin!
Kevin is on YouTube!
Sign Up For Kevin’s FREE Podcast
Follow Kevin on Twitter
Become A Fan of Kevin on Facebook
Kevin’s Film Club
Kevin’s Book Club

Take Trudeau on the Go! Click here to download this show to your iPod, mp3 player, or PC through iTunes!


Click below to watch The Kevin Trudeau Show!

$190k Seized Because Brothers Were Drug Suspects

December 21, 2010 by admin  
Filed under News Stories

December 21st, 2010

ChicagoBreakingNews.com

By: Clifford Ward

Two brothers who say police unlawfully seized more than $190,000 from them during a traffic stop had been under surveillance and were suspected of drug-dealing, a lawyer for the city of Aurora said today during a court hearing.

Though neither Jose nor Jesus Martinez is charged with a crime, authorities are seeking forfeiture of $190,040 found in Jesus’ truck when he was stopped by an Aurora police officer on Oct. 18.

A Kane County judge ordered the money returned, but the city has refused.

The Aurora residents claim the money was family savings earned from a remodeling business. But during the hearing, an attorney disclosed reports from an Illinois State Police drug task force saying police had received court permission to tap the brothers’ phones on the suspicion they were involved in drug trafficking.

Chicago attorney John Murphey, who is representing Aurora, said the city had not been at liberty to discuss the case until today.

“We were constrained by a live, serious investigation,” said Murphey, who said he had been informed that the phase of the investigation involving the Martinez brothers was over.

Attorney Patrick Kinnally, who is representing the brothers, said the allegations did not change his assertion that the money had been unlawfully seized.

“Not a bit,” he said. “Let’s just see how the evidence plays out.”

The new documents allege that North Central Narcotics Task Force officers were listening in on a call between the Martinez brothers in which they discuss Jesus’ planned meeting with a man named Charlie in the parking lot of a Home Depot in Aurora.

According to the report, Jose tells Jesus, “The package is ready,” though there is no explicit mention of drugs.

The report said police observed Jesus Martinez arrive in the parking lot at 8:07 p.m. on Oct. 18 and talk with another man for a minute before both left in separate vehicles. No exchange is reported between the men, and police apparently did not stop the second driver, who was in a gray minivan.

“I noticed the gray minivan turn from westbound Indian Trail to northbound Orchard Road and leave the area,” a task force officer noted in the report.

Jesus Martinez was stopped by an Aurora police officer working with the task force about four minutes later. He and his passenger were questioned, and Jesus Martinez consented to have his vehicle searched.

Police brought in a drug dog but no drugs were found. However, they did find a sack of cash.

Aurora police were only involved in an intermediary fashion, Murphey said. After questioning Jesus Martinez at the Aurora police department and giving him a receipt for the money, Aurora police say they transferred the money that same night to the drug task force, which reported handing the money over the following day to the Department of Homeland Security.

The brothers have denied being involved in drugs, and neither has a criminal record. But another brother and a cousin had been convicted of drug charges following a 2002 arrest. Those convictions were overturned on appeal, and the charges were later dropped.

Kinnally filed a complaint on behalf of the brothers about a month after the seizure. In late November, Kane County Judge Michael Colwell signed a temporary injunction against Aurora, ordering the city to return the money because it had been seized unlawfully.

Since then, Colwell has retired. Judge Thomas Mueller, who has taken over the case, set Jan. 5 for a hearing.

A call to the North Central Narcotics Task Force was not immediately returned.

Click here for the full report from ChicagoBreakingNews.com

Arrest of Wrong Person Gives Glimpse of Future

February 17, 2010 by admin  
Filed under News Stories

February 15th, 2010

CNN

By Stephanie Chen

Three police cars pulled into Christina FourHorn’s front yard one afternoon just before she was supposed to pick up her daughter at school. The officers had a warrant for her arrest.

“What do you mean robbery?” FourHorn remembers asking the officers. Her only brushes with the law had been a few speeding tickets.

She was locked up in a Colorado jail. They took her clothes and other belongings and handed her an oversize black-and-white striped uniform. She protested for five days, telling jailers the arrest was a mistake. Finally, her husband borrowed enough money to bail her out.

“They wouldn’t tell me the details,” she said.

Later, it became clear that FourHorn was right, that Denver police had arrested the wrong woman. Police were searching for Christin Fourhorn, who lived in Oklahoma.

Their names were similar, and Christina FourHorn, a mother with no criminal record living in Sterling, Colorado, had been caught in the mix-up.

FourHorn went public about her case more than two years ago, filing a lawsuit that alleged the arrest violated her constitutional rights. The Fourth Amendment protects citizens from arrest without probable cause.

The problem of mistaken arrests continues, said attorneys with the American Civil Liberties Union of Colorado. The group, which represented FourHorn, calls Denver’s police work “recklessly sloppy.” An ACLU mistaken identity lawsuit on behalf of four other people is pending against Colorado police agencies.

A mistaken identity arrest occurs almost every day, said policing experts and officials at the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. But most people taken into custody are released shortly after the mistake is realized.

Since the FourHorn case, the ACLU found at least 237 cases in Colorado in which police may have arrested the wrong person. The figure is likely a small sample since police often release those wrongfully arrested before the first court appearance, the ACLU said.

“We are trying to demonstrate that this is a widespread practice,” said Mark Silverstein, an ACLU attorney who filed FourHorn’s suit in 2008. FourHorn’s case was settled, and the terms remain confidential.

“This is not some fluke in a rational system,” Silverstein said. “It’s something that happens regularly, predictably, and therefore the city should be doing more to ameliorate the problem.”

Silverstein said his search of Colorado court records showed repeated examples of police arresting the wrong person:

“Defendant states this is not him and he has never driven a car!!!!” said one.

“Dismissed, wrong defendant. Sister used her ID,” another said.

In 2009, Denver’s Department of Safety found 51 cases in which a person claimed the warrant naming them was incorrect — a number that’s a small fraction of the 46,864 people arrested that year. A Denver police spokesman declined to comment on the mistaken identity arrests.

“While no one should be misidentified and incorrectly held in jail, we realize it can happen,” said Mary Dulacki, records coordinator for Denver’s manager of safety.

Experts at the Legal & Liability Risk Management Institute said name similarities such as in the FourHorn case are a common reason for errors. The group, based in Indianapolis, Indiana, trains police departments across the country on how to avoid mistaken arrests.

Other times, police may be relying on a person’s alias. Suspects often give officers false names, which remain on their records as an alias. Also computer typos and glitches lead to mistaken identity arrests, policing experts said.

An alias mistake allegedly occurred in March 2007 when Denver police arrested Muse Jama, a college student studying for an exam, under a warrant for a person named Ahmed Alia. Jama’s name had popped up as one of Alia’s aliases.

Jama protested and showed the officers his identification cards. Still, he was arrested and remained behind bars for eight days. His lawsuit against the Denver Police Department, filed in 2008, is pending.

Click here for the full report