June 3, 2015

NOTICE OF COMMITTEE HEARING

The Senate Committee on the Judiciary has scheduled a hearing entitled "Nominations" for Wednesday, June 10 at 1:30 p.m., in Room 226 of the Dirksen Senate Office Building.

Senator Perdue to preside.

By order of the Chairman.

Witness List

Luis Felipe Restrepo, to be United States Circuit Judge for the Third Circuit

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Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Senator Chuck Grassley, Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, made the following statement after the Senate passed the USA FREEDOM Act.  Grassley voted for several amendments to improve the bill that did not pass.  He voted for the bill on final passage.

"I've pointed out in the past the concerns I have with this bill.  Those concerns remain.  I voted for several amendments to fix the amicus provision, provide the government notice if the telephone companies were not going to continue to hold the phone records for at least 18 months, and require the Director of National Intelligence to certify that the new program was operationally effective.  Those amendments would have addressed several of my concerns.  I remain hopeful that many of these deficiencies can be addressed in the future.

"In the end, I felt that the bill was better than no reform at all and it restored several important, noncontroversial national security tools."

(DES MOINES) - Governor Terry E. Branstad today announced appointments to Iowa's boards and commissions.

The following appointment is effective May 28, 2015, is unpaid, and is subject to Iowa Senate confirmation:

 

State Board of Educational Examiners:

Kathy Behrens, Carroll

 

The following individuals' appointments are effective May 28, 2015, are unpaid, and are not subject to Iowa Senate confirmation:

Iowa Statewide Interoperable Communications System Board

Debra Krebill, Marion

Southeast Regional STEM Advisory Board

Dana Klesner, Keokuk

Dependent Adult Protective Advisory Council

George Dorsey, West Des Moines

April Block, Des Moines

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SPRINGFIELD - Governor Bruce Rauner announced today the following appointments to the Illinois State Tollway Authority, the Illinois State Employees' Retirement System, the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority, the Illinois Board of Higher Education, the Illinois State Board of Health, and the Urban Weatherization Initiative Board.

 

Name: Joseph Gomez

Position: Director - Illinois State Tollway Authority

 

Governor Bruce Rauner has named Joseph Gomez to the Illinois State Tollway Authority. Gomez' extensive experience in finance will bring an important perspective to the board.

 

Currently, Gomez is the Senior Vice President of Byline Bank, where he oversees business development. Prior to that, he worked for the State of Illinois in the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation's Bureau of Banking. He was the Chicago Bank Managing Director. He has also worked for the United States Department of Commerce as a financial consultant, helping develop the department's globalization program in China, Latin America and Canada. Gomez has also served on the Illinois Development Finance Authority under Governors Thompson and Edgar.

 

Gomez earned his bachelor's degree from Southern Illinois University. He lives in Northfield.

 

 

Name: Craig Johnson

Position: Director - Illinois State Tollway Authority

 

Governor Bruce Rauner has appointed Craig Johnson to the Illinois State Tollway Authority. Johnson is the Mayor of Elk Grove Village and has extensive experience in multimodal transportation as his role as a city administrator.

 

Johnson has served the citizens of Elk Grove Village since 1993. He was first elected as a village trustee and became mayor in 1997. He is currently an active member of the Mayor's Tollway Advisory Council and the Governor's Advisory Council on the Elgin-O'Hare Tollway.

 

Johnson is also the CEO of the Johnson Insurance Agency, which handles all forms of insurance policies. He earned his bachelor's degree from Northeastern Illinois University. He resides in Elk Grove Village.

 

 

Name: Nick Sauer

Position: Director - Illinois State Tollway Authority

 

Governor Bruce Rauner has named Nick Sauer to the Illinois State Tollway Authority. Sauer is a member of the Lake County Board and the Lake County Forest Preserve District.

 

Sauer represents the 17th district on the Lake County Board. He is the Vice Chair of the Public Works and Transportation Committee, and is a member of the Rules Committee; the Planning, Building, and Zoning Committee; and the Finance and Administrative Committee. Sauer also serves the 17th district on the Lake County Forest Preserve District, where he is a member of the Education, Cultural Resources, and Public Affairs Committee; the Planning and Restoration Committee; and the Ethics Committee. Sauer also served on the Barrington Community Unit School District 220 Board of Education from 2009-2012.

 

Currently, Sauer is a partner and sales representative at Scarsdale Marketing/Sauer Kitchen Solutions. He earned his bachelor's degree from the University of Denver and is expected to complete his master's degree in public policy and administration from Northwestern University this year. Sauer lives in Lake Barrington.

 

 

Name: Bob Schillerstrom

Position: Director - Illinois State Tollway Authority

 

Governor Bruce Rauner has appointed Bob Schillerstrom to the Illinois State Tollway Authority. His experience as the DuPage County Board Chairman will bring a unique perspective to the board.

 

Schillerstrom served three terms with the DuPage County Board. He had a reputation for doing more with less taxpayer money while lowering property taxes. He also held a number of leadership positions within the county and community.

 

Currently, Schillerstrom is a partner in Ice Miller's Public Affairs Group, where he advises clients on issues related to local and state government. He also represents governments in their relationships with other governments with their public finance needs and requirements.

 

Schillerstrom also served in the DuPage County State's Attorney's Office and has more than 20 years of experience as an attorney. Schillerstrom earned his bachelor's degree at Illinois College and his law degree at Chicago-Kent College of Law. He lives in Naperville.

 

 

Name: Yasmin T. Bates-Brown

Position: Trustee - Illinois State Employees' Retirement System

 

Governor Bruce Rauner has appointed Yasmin Bates-Brown to the Illinois State Employees' Retirement System. She brings extensive experience in the financial industry to the position.

 

For 34 years, Bates-Brown worked for BMO Harris Bank where she held a number of leadership roles, including the Executive Vice President of Community Affairs and Economic Development. In that position she oversaw community investments, government relations, Hispanic banking and community affairs in the United States. Bates-Brown is responsible for expanding the network of BMO Harris Banks in Chicago, and she also created the Harris Neighborhood Lending Program. That program helped families, small businesses and special purpose projects receive rehabilitation funding in underserved areas.

 

Currently, Bates-Brown serves on the Board of Directors for Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois. She is also a commissioner on the Chicago Department of Human Relations.

 

Bates-Brown graduated from the University of Illinois, and completed the Advanced Leadership Program at Northwestern University and the Advanced Executive Program at the University of Western Ontario in Ontario, Canada. She lives in Chicago.

 

 

Name: John M. Aguilar

Position: Board Member - Illinois State Employees' Retirement System

 

Governor Bruce Rauner has appointed John M. Aguilar to serve on the Illinois State Employees' Retirement System. His experience in human relations makes him well suited for the position.

 

Aguilar currently serves as Senior HR Manager at Arrow Plastic Manufacturing. His primary job is to assist with employee relations and union relations throughout the company. He is also an adjunct professor at Benedictine University, where he has taught human relations, operations management and business ethics classes for the past 13 years.

 

Aguilar has a rich history of giving back to his community. He served as an Aurora Township Trustee from 2003-2005 and was a part-time HR manager for the township from 2009-2010. He is a member of the Knights of Columbus and an Aurora Boy Scout Troop Leader. He has previously served in state government as a member of the Illinois Liquor Control Commission from 2005 to 2010.

 

Aguilar received a bachelor's degree in business and marketing from Columbia College and an MBA from Aurora University. He lives in Aurora.

 

 

Name: Rosemarie Andolino

Position: Board Member - Illinois Sports Facilities Authority

 

Governor Bruce Rauner has appointed Rosemarie Andolino to the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority. Andolino spent 24 years working for the City of Chicago, giving her an extensive understanding of how city operations work.

 

Currently, Andolino serves as CEO and President of the newly created North American business division of Manchester Airport Group (M.A.G.). She oversees the development of M.A.G.'s North American business, working with airports to develop and operate terminal and retail solutions, passenger lounges, and car parking facilities.

 

Andolino's most recent position in the public sector was as a commissioner with the Chicago Department of Aviation (CDA), where she helped manage one of the world's busiest airport systems. In addition, she oversaw the $8 billion O'Hare Modernization Program (OMP). Prior to her work with the CDA, she also held a number of positions within the City of Chicago including the Executive Director of the OMP and First Deputy Commissioner of the Chicago Department of Planning and Development.

 

Andolino earned a bachelor's degree from DePaul University. She lives in Chicago.

 

 

Name: Jeffrey Yardon

Position: Board Member - Illinois Sports Facilities Authority

 

Governor Bruce Rauner has appointed Jeffrey Yardon to the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority. Yardon brings 45 years of senior management experience to the position and was a college athlete.

 

Recently, Yardon was CEO and Chairman of Sagent Pharmaceuticals for nine years. He founded the company in 2006, which developed and made injectable pharmaceuticals. Prior to that, he worked as the founder, president and COO of American Pharmaceutical Partners.

 

Yardon earned his bachelor's degree from Northern Illinois University (NIU). He attended NIU on a football and track scholarship. He currently serves as the chair of the Athletic Advisory panel at NIU. He lives in Schaumburg.

 

 

Name: Alice Marie Jacobs

Position: Board Member - Illinois Board of Higher Education

 

Governor Bruce Rauner has appointed Alice Marie Jacobs to the Illinois Board of Higher Education. Jacobs' experience as an administrator in higher education makes her well suited for the board.

 

Jacobs has 45 years of experience in higher education and is currently the president of the Danville Area Community College (DACC). She oversees 60 full-time faculty, 100 part-time faculty and more than 120 other staff members, who serve approximately 9,000 students annually. In this position, Jacobs added academic programs and doubled enrollment while state funding was reduced for community colleges.

 

Prior to her work at DACC, she was the president of Kaskaskia College in Centralia for five years. She also served students at Cape Fear Community College in Wilmington, NC as the Vice President of Instruction and Student Development. She also worked at Rochester Community College in Rochester, Minn. and at Kellogg Community College in Battle Creek, Mich.

 

Jacobs holds a Ph.D. in college and university administration from Michigan State University and a master's degree in business education from Western Michigan University. She also earned her bachelor's degree from Western Michigan University, and an associate's degree in business from Louisburg College.

 

 

Name: Vincent Bufalino

Position: Board Member - State Board of Health

 

Governor Bruce Rauner has appointed Vincent Bufalino, M.D. to the State Board of Health. Bufalino has more than 35 years of experience as a physician and administrator.

 

Bufalino is a clinical cardiologist and the Senior Vice President for the Advocate Cardiovascular Institute, where he oversees cardiovascular services for the Advocate Medical Group (AMG). In this position, he is responsible for 140 cardiologists in the system and has helped lead the expansion of cardiovascular services AMG offers. Prior to that, he was the Vice Chairman and CEO of Midwest Heart Specialists, which merged with AMG in 2011. He has also advised the DuPage County Board of Health on its obesity programs.

 

Bufalino earned his medical degree from the Stritch School of Medicine at Loyola University Chicago. He also earned his bachelor's degree from Loyola University Chicago. He lives in Glen Ellyn.

 

 

Name: Jorge Perez

Position: Board Member - Urban Weatherization Initiative Board

 

Governor Bruce Rauner has appointed Jorge Perez to the Urban Weatherization Initiative Board. Perez brings more than 20 years of experience in the private and public sectors to the position.

 

Currently, Perez is the Executive Director of the Hispanic American Construction Industry Association (HACIA), where he leads and manages the day-to-day operations of the organization. The HACIA works to ensure equality in the construction industry. Prior to his work at the HACIA, Perez worked for the Chicago Transit Authority and the Chicago Department of Aviation.

 

Perez holds a bachelor's degree from Roosevelt University and an MBA from Loyola University Chicago. He lives in Chicago.

 

 

Name: Robert E. Wordlaw

Position: Board Member - Urban Weatherization Initiative Board

 

Governor Bruce Rauner has appointed Robert E. Wordlaw to serve on the Urban Weatherization Initiative Board.

 

From 1995 to 2014, Wordlaw served as the Executive Director of the Chicago Jobs Council, where he managed the finances, fundraising, advocacy and internal operations of the organization. He also oversaw the training and education programs administered by the council. His prior experience includes time at The Neighborhood Institute where he served as Vice President and Director of Employment and Training. His duties were comprised of managing employment and training including carpentry construction and weatherization programs.

 

Wordlaw currently serves as a consultant to organizations and individuals engaged in the planning and delivery of workforce development services.

 

Wordlaw earned his bachelor's degree from Goddard College. He lives in Homewood.

 

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Senator Grassley will be holding a meeting with employees at Genesis Health System on Thursday, May 28, 2015, as part of his 99-county tour.  The meeting will include a tour of the Genesis Health Emergency Room, followed by an open press availability, and a question and answer (Q&A) with employees.

Reporters are invited to join Grassley on the tour, and Grassley will be available for 10 minutes afterwards to answer questions from local reporters.  Members of the media should contact Genesis Health System about attending the Q&A portion of the event.

The tour begins at 3:30 p.m. and the open press availability will be from 3:50-4 p.m. at the Genesis Health System Emergency Room.

Thursday, May 28

3:30-4 p.m.
Genesis Health System
1227 East Rusholm St.
Davenport

(DES MOINES) - Iowa Gov. Terry E. Branstad today signed the following four bills into law:

House File 504: an Act relating to insurance, including electronic delivery and posting of insurance notices and documents and to certain duties, responsibilities, and liabilities of insurance producers.

House File 626: an Act relating to the processes for appealing tax matters in this state by extending the future repeal of the Property Assessment Appeal Board, providing for the future repeal of the state board of tax review, providing for appeals to the director of revenue for certain tax matters and modifying the powers and duties of the director of revenue, and including effective date provisions.

Senate File 486: an Act relating to the approval and imposition of the facilities property tax levy and equipment replacement and program sharing property tax levy for a merged area and including effective date and applicability provisions.

Senate File 501: an Act relating to interstate student tuition reciprocity agreements involving certain postsecondary educational institutions, creating a tuition refund fund, appropriations moneys from the fund, and including effective date provisions.

A photo of the formal signing of SF 501 can be found here.

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(DES MOINES) - Iowa Gov. Terry E. Branstad and Lt. Gov. Kim Reynolds today released the following statements on the death of Omaha, Neb., Police Officer Kerrie Orozco, 29, who was a Walnut, Iowa, native and resident of Council Bluffs, Iowa. Orozco was killed in the line of duty yesterday, May 20, 2015, while attempting to arrest Marcus D. Wheeler on a felony warrant for first-degree assault.

"I wish to extend my deepest condolences to the family and friends of Officer Kerrie Orozco," said Branstad. "As a former military policeman, I am keenly aware of the dangers law enforcement face every single day on the job. Officer Orozco served with integrity and was a model peace officer. My thoughts and prayers are with her newborn daughter and her entire family."

"Officer Kerrie Orozco went to work every day to serve her community and keep her neighbors safe," said Reynolds. "This is a devastating loss of a dedicated public servant, community member and new mother. I offer my deepest sympathy to the family of Officer Orozco."

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SPRINGFIELD, Ill. - State Rep. Mike Smiddy, D-Hillsdale, is supporting a multi-year capital construction project proposed by the governor and the Illinois Department of Transportation to provide critical maintenance to Illinois roadways.
"A statewide infrastructure investment like the IDOT proposal will help keep all of us safer on the roads and will put hard-working men and women back on the job," Smiddy said. "I look forward to working with the governor on this issue to help restore critical infrastructure across the state."
Last week, IDOT released its multi-year construction plan to restore approximately 1,400 miles of roadways and 360 bridges across Illinois. Smiddy will work through his role on the House Transportation: Regulation, Roads and Bridges Committee to enact the plan to make our roadways safer and utilize local contractors to provide good, well-paying jobs to local residents. Smiddy's district would receive over $200 million dollars to restore over 22 miles of roadways over the life of the six year proposal if approved and carried out as planned.
"This investment is an area where we can work in a bipartisan way to improve our roads and bridges," Smiddy said. "I'll continue to look for partners in my mission to improve transportation accessibility across Illinois and jump-start the local economy."
The IDOT proposal includes ten projects in the 71st District that would begin in Fiscal Year 2016, which begins on July 1. The plan would still need a favorable vote in the General Assembly before projects can break ground.
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This is a comprehensive invitation for those interested in the advancement of the Hilltop Campus Village, to attend the the Hilltop Campus Village Annual Meeting, this Thursday, May 21, beginning at 5:30pm at 1600 Greatest Grains Event Center.
Additional information is provide at the following link:
This is an important time for the district, as it seeks to rebuild and reinvigorate itself. The second five years will be at least as exciting as the first. We hope to see you there.

By John W. Whitehead
May 19, 2015

"If we're training cops as soldiers, giving them equipment like soldiers, dressing them up as soldiers, when are they going to pick up the mentality of soldiers? If you look at the police department, their creed is to protect and to serve. A soldier's mission is to engage his enemy in close combat and kill him. Do we want police officers to have that mentality? Of course not."? Arthur Rizer, former civilian police officer and member of the military

Talk about poor timing. Then again, perhaps it's brilliant timing.

Only now?after the Departments of Justice, Homeland Security (DHS) and Defense have passed off billions of dollars worth of military equipment to local police forces, after police agencies have been trained in the fine art of war, after SWAT team raids have swelled in number to more than 80,000 a year, after it has become second nature for local police to look and act like soldiers, after communities have become acclimated to the presence of militarized police patrolling their streets, after Americans have been taught compliance at the end of a police gun or taser, after lower income neighborhoods have been transformed into war zones, after hundreds if not thousands of unarmed Americans have lost their lives at the hands of police who shoot first and ask questions later, after a whole generation of young Americans has learned to march in lockstep with the government's dictates?only now does President Obama lift a hand to limit the number of military weapons being passed along to local police departments.

Not all, mind you, just some.

Talk about too little, too late.

Months after the White House defended a federal program that distributed $18 billion worth of military equipment to local police, Obama has announced that he will ban the federal government from providing local police departments with tracked armored vehicles, weaponized aircraft and vehicles, bayonets, grenade launchers, camouflage uniforms and large-caliber firearms.

Obama also indicated that less heavy-duty equipment (armored vehicles, tactical vehicles, riot gear and specialized firearms and ammunition) will reportedly be subject to more regulations such as local government approval, and police being required to undergo more training and collect data on the equipment's use. Perhaps hoping to sweeten the deal, the Obama administration is also offering $163 million in taxpayer-funded grants to "incentivize police departments to adopt the report's recommendations."

While this is a grossly overdue first step of sorts, it is nevertheless a first step from an administration that has been utterly complicit in accelerating the transformation of America's police forces into extensions of the military. Indeed, as investigative journalist Radley Balko points out, while the Obama administration has said all the right things about the need to scale back on a battlefield mindset, it has done all the wrong things to perpetuate the problem:

  • distributed equipment designed for use on the battlefield to local police departments,
  • provided private grants to communities to incentivize SWAT team raids,
  • redefined "community policing" to reflect aggressive police tactics and funding a nationwide COPS (Community Oriented Policing Services) program that has contributed to dramatic rise in SWAT teams,
  • encouraged the distribution of DHS anti-terror grants and the growth of "contractors that now cater to police agencies looking to cash DHS checks in exchange for battle-grade gear,"
  • ramped up the use of military-style raids to crack down on immigration laws and target "medical marijuana growers, shops, and dispensaries in states that have legalized the drug,"
  • defended as "reasonable" aggressive, militaristic police tactics in cases where police raided a guitar shop in defense of an obscure environmental law, raided a home looking for a woman who had defaulted on her student loans, and terrorized young children during a raid on the wrong house based on a mistaken license plate,
  • and ushered in an era of outright highway robbery in which asset forfeiture laws have been used to swindle Americans out of cash, cars, houses, or other property that government agents can "accuse" of being connected to a crime.

It remains to be seen whether this overture on Obama's part, coming in the midst of heightened tensions between the nation's police forces and the populace they're supposed to protect, opens the door to actual reform or is merely a political gambit to appease the masses all the while further acclimating the populace to life in a police state.

Certainly, on its face, it does nothing to ease the misery of the police state that has been foisted upon us. In fact, Obama's belated gesture of concern does little to roll back the deadly menace of overzealous police agencies corrupted by money, power and institutional immunity. And it certainly fails to recognize the terrible toll that has been inflicted on our communities, our fragile ecosystem of a democracy, and our freedoms as a result of the government's determination to bring the war home.

Will the young black man guilty of nothing more than running away from brutish police officers be any safer in the wake of Obama's edict? It's unlikely.

Will the old man reaching for his cane have a lesser chance of being shot? It's doubtful.

Will the little girl asleep under her princess blanket live to see adulthood when a SWAT team crashes through her door? I wouldn't count on it.

It's a safe bet that our little worlds will be no safer following Obama's pronouncement and the release of his "Task Force on 21st Century Policing" report. In fact, there is a very good chance that life in the American police state will become even more perilous.

Among the report's 50-page list of recommendations is a call for more police officer boots on the ground, training for police "on the importance of de-escalation of force," and "positive non-enforcement activities" in high-crime communities to promote trust in the police such as sending an ice cream truck across the city.

Curiously, nowhere in the entire 120-page report is there a mention of the Fourth Amendment, which demands that the government respect citizen privacy and bodily integrity. The Constitution is referenced once, in the Appendix, in relation to Obama's authority as president. And while the word "constitutional" is used 15 times within the body of the report, its use provides little assurance that the Obama administration actually understands the clear prohibitions against government overreach as enshrined in the U.S. Constitution.

For instance, in the section of the report on the use of technology and social media, the report notes: "Though all constitutional guidelines must be maintained in the performance of law enforcement duties, the legal framework (warrants, etc.) should continue to protect law enforcement access to data obtained from cell phones, social media, GPS, and other sources, allowing officers to detect, prevent, or respond to crime."

Translation: as I document in my book Battlefield America: The War on the American People, the new face of policing in America is about to shift from waging its war on the American people using primarily the weapons of the battlefield to the evermore-sophisticated technology of the battlefield where government surveillance of our everyday activities will be even more invasive.

This emphasis on technology, surveillance and social media is nothing new. In much the same way the federal government used taxpayer-funded grants to "gift" local police agencies with military weapons and equipment, it is also funding the distribution of technology aimed at making it easier for police to monitor, track and spy on Americans. For instance, license plate readers, stingray devices and fusion centers are all funded by grants from the DHS. Funding for drones at the state and local levels also comes from the federal government, which in turn accesses the data acquired by the drones for its own uses.

If you're noticing a pattern here, it is one in which the federal government is not merely transforming local police agencies into extensions of itself but is in fact federalizing them, turning them into a national police force that answers not to "we the people" but to the Commander in Chief. Yet the American police force is not supposed to be a branch of the military, nor is it a private security force for the reigning political faction. It is supposed to be an aggregation of the countless local civilian units that exist for a sole purpose: to serve and protect the citizens of each and every American community.

So where does that leave us?

There's certainly no harm in embarking on a national dialogue on the dangers of militarized police, but if that's all it amounts to?words that sound good on paper and in the press but do little to actually respect our rights and restore our freedoms?then we're just playing at politics with no intention of actually bringing about reform.

Despite the Obama Administration's lofty claims of wanting to "ensure that public safety becomes more than the absence of crime, that it must also include the presence of justice," this is the reality we must contend with right now:

Americans still have no real protection against police abuse. Americans still have no right to self-defense in the face of SWAT teams mistakenly crashing through our doors, or police officers who shoot faster than they can reason. Americans are still no longer innocent until proven guilty. Americans still don't have a right to private property. Americans are still powerless in the face of militarized police. Americans still don't have a right to bodily integrity. Americans still don't have a right to the expectation of privacy. Americans are still being acclimated to a police state through the steady use and sight of military drills domestically, a heavy militarized police presence in public places and in the schools, and a taxpayer-funded propaganda campaign aimed at reassuring the public that the police are our "friends." And to top it all off, Americans still can't rely on the courts, Congress or the White House to mete out justice when our rights are violated by police.

To sum it all up: the problems we're grappling with have been building for more than 40 years. They're not going to go away overnight, and they certainly will not be resolved by a report that instructs the police to simply adopt different tactics to accomplish the same results?i.e., maintain the government's power, control and wealth at all costs.

This is the sad reality of life in the American police state.

WC: 1728

This commentary is also
available at www.rutherford.org.

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