It was an SUV not a truck, and Waukesha is 45 min northwest of Kenosha, it is west of Milwaukee.
Send them a return letter from a law office that you will not violate your employees' constitutional rights!
Haha! Agree!
She was underaged, but was probably a prostitute and not held against her will. She planned the murder and after killing him, stole his BMW, cash and laptop, started his home on fire, then went on a spending spree to the Dollar Store, taking selfies along the way with 2 other men. She never went to the authorities to report him and find a safe haven for herself. She also bragged on social media about not being afraid to kill again. IMHO Its unfair to the trafficked kids stories to put her in the same category. It sounds like she was an underage hooker and had no remorse for her actions.
Much more to her story, comparing to an actual self-defense case is false ...
Yes but it has the pedophilia spiral on the cover (spiral in a spiral) :(
The sheet sets and duvet covers are very nice quality and comfy too!
We have all been praying for Kyle and his family. Please go on to do great things with your life Kyle!! Do everything in Jesus name!
You forgot a few things ... Hannah Gittings, Anthony Huber's so called 'girlfriend' is actually married to Dylan Gittings and he has a record much like Anthony Huber. Dylan and Hannah have a 3 yr old daughter. Just last week Hannah filed for a divorce in the Wisconsin Circuit Court records. Hannah is a proclaimed occult and magic follower. She dabbles in drugs some pretty hardcore, as did Anthony Huber in his past. She is known to be a very troubled individual and should not be raising a child. In a video the night of Anthony's shooting, she is striking a police officer, twice, once with a skateboard and the F bomb is every other word out of her mouth.
I can post the video but it is on fakebook. The video can be viewed if you go to 'Joseph Rosenbaum Memorial' Tom Gaeta's 9/11/2020 post, will need to scroll down to 9/11/2020. https://www.facebook.com/groups/767937110639252/user/1451444995/ Tom Gaeta has quite a nice collection of videos.
If you look up any one of these individual's names, much will be discovered. They are lost and filled with much hate, sadly! Anthony Huber Hannah Gittings Jacob Marshall Gaige Grosskreutz Joseph Rosenbaum
No one's business where he went other than to a safe place! God bless him and his family!!
She removed her LinkedIn account but there is this: http://www.atvn.org/alumni/byon.html
There were 11 boys sexually molested by this disturbed evil creep! 11!! Between the age of 9 - 11 yrs. Joseph Rosenbaum wasn't just out of the hospital that night, he was released from a psych ward for attempted suicide. He was released about an hour earlier, just enough time to drive from Milwaukee to Kenosha. Let that sink in! He wanted to end his life! Of course as he left this earth he needed to destroy even more lives on his way to hell. Would also be interesting to see the toxicology report of the drugs in his system that evening.
Should have 'axed' how to spell 'Emergency'. Haha! Idiots! No surprise coming out of lawless Chicago.
Those administering the death shot dressed as superheroes!? This is so disturbing on many levels!!!!
I am not the author of the story, it is a Racine news story posted late this afternoon and is an 'update' to the Sheriff's announcement last Thursday.
Cut and pasted due to author many times removing a news article
'Election fraud charges sought against 5 Wisconsin Election Commission Members' by Denise Lockwood 37 mins ago RACINE COUNTY – The Racine County Sheriff’s Office referred election fraud charges Wednesday to the Racine County District Attorney’s Office against five members of the Wisconsin Elections Commission.
Commissioners Margaret Bostelmann, Julie Glancey, Ann Jacobs, Dean Knudson, and Mark Thomsen were all named, but they have not formally been charged. Referrals for charging have been submitted to the Racine County District Attorney’s Office for:
Misconduct in Public Office (Felony) Election Fraud – Election Official Assisting with Violation (Felony) Party to the Crime of Election Fraud – Receive Ballot Non-Election Official (Misdemeanor) Party to the Crime of Election Fraud – Illegal Ballot Receipt (Misdemeanor) Party to the Crime of Election Fraud – Solicit Assistance (Misdemeanor) The referral comes just days after officials with the Racine County Sheriff’s Office held a press conference about alleged voter irregularities. Together the commissioners issued a joint statement on Friday denying those claims.
“To put it simply, we did not break the law,” said Commission Chair Ann Jacobs, an attorney from Milwaukee. “In fact, without action from the Commission, many residents in Wisconsin care facilities could have and would have been disenfranchised and not able to vote in the 2020 elections.”
Read more: Racine County Sheriff alleges voting issues during 2020 presidential election
Allegations of election fraud made During a press conference held Thursday morning, Racine County Sheriff Christopher Schmaling and Sgt. Michael J. Luell, the lead investigator on the case, released findings of a 10-month-long investigation into the role staff from the Ridgewood Care Center played in collecting absentee ballots.
The investigation also looked into the Wisconsin Election Commission directive to not allow Special Voting Deputies (SVDs) in nursing homes and care facilities to oversee the elections.
One alleged election integrity issue involved a resident at Ridgewood Care Center with “diminished mental capacity” voting in the fall presidential election. The woman’s daughter filed an affidavit with the Wisconsin Election Commission alleging staff at the facility “took advantage” of her mother’s “diminished mental capacity” and filled out an absentee ballot(s) in her name. The woman voted absentee in early October for the November 3 election but had died just before the November 3 election.
“The Sheriff’s Office is again calling on Attorney General Josh Kaul to conduct a statewide investigation into the illegal directives issued by the Wisconsin Election Commission,” according to the press release by the Racine County Sheriff’s Office. “In the directives, the Wisconsin Election Commission ordered the voting clerks in every municipality in the state to ‘not use the Special Voting Deputy ‘process’ as required by Wis. Stat. § 6.875.”
Kaul responded via email with the following statement:
“This disgraceful publicity stunt shows an appalling lack of judgment. This is a transparently political effort and an abuse of authority.”
Read the statute https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/statutes/statutes/6/iv/875/4/a
WEC Commissioners respond to allegations The joint statement released by the WEC Commissioners pointed out that the law directs election officials to “be sent to some facilities to allow for in-person voting for residents. Not every care facility utilizes the SVD process. For those that do, during the COVID-19 pandemic, only ‘essential workers’ were allowed into nursing homes as part of the required quarantine for residents.”
Additionally, the statutes call for SVDs to attempt two visits to a facility over a five-day notice. If the care facilities do not allow them access, absentee ballots are sent to those residents. They then complete the ballots just as other absentee ballot voters.
“We knew that for the protection of residents, only essential workers (which did not include SVDs) were being allowed into facilities across the state,” Commissioner Julie Glancey said. “As such, we knew it was essential to preserve the right to vote for those residents, so rather than require the absurdity of sending SVDs to knock on a locked door, we pivoted to the absentee voting process.”
The WEC Commissioners noted that they also found the Ridgewood Care Center case “horrifying.” They hoped that the Sheriff’s Office would investigate and prosecute any offenders. They stressed that a person’s right to vote can only be restricted by a judge that finds the person incompetent.
“The statutes are very clear on this,” Jacobs said.
The statement also highlighted that the rules around voter assistance are “different” than someone voting with an SVD, and an absentee voter can, in fact, receive some help in completing their ballot, which is outlined in the statutes.
While the WEC has embraced virtual SVDs as a possible solution to providing nursing home residents with voting assistance, not all facilities have the necessary equipment or training to allow for digital assistance. Additionally, it is unclear how a digital process would work with the rights of observers. The WEC is an agency that can’t make demands on private facilities to purchase technology. Nor does the WEC have control over the individual staff members who work in nursing homes.
Investigator frustrated with media coverage Luell takes issue with the commission’s position, specifically when they admit to breaking the law during commission meetings, he said.
He calls their argument a “straw man argument,” meaning that he’s not arguing the same points they are. His focus is on how the WEC Commission authorized care facility staff to proctor the voting process.
“So they can stay in the realm of ‘we did nothing wrong, or we didn’t break the law.’ Well, that’s great. I mean, I was a prosecutor for 10 years. Do you think if someone just told me, I didn’t break the law, that was the end of the inquiry. I mean, it’s ridiculous with some members of the media and press. They won’t even compare our two positions,” he said.
Luell argued that the WEC has administrative powers, not legislative powers. The agency requested that Governor Tony Evers suspend the law. But Evers’ office told the WEC they didn’t have the power to do that.
“They decided to do it anyway,” Luell said.
He also pointed to how the WEC failed to solve the problem but discussed solutions including using the same protocols hospitals used, including using PPE, social distancing, technology and cell phones. “Remember, they said that they were going to put out their training to staff via a webinar, meaning you have to watch it on a computer,” he said. “So why couldn’t they use that?”
Next steps
During the press conference, Luell called on Racine County residents to file complaints of voter irregularities. Since then, he’s been inundated with calls and emails. But he hasn’t been able to go through them all.
“I want to make sure those allegations are in the same ballpark of what I’m dealing with and are credible,” Luell said.
It is not clear whether Racine County District Attorney Patricia Hanson plans to officially charge the Commissioners. Hanson did not respond to a request for a statement.
If you would like to file a complaint, you can call (262) 636-3853 or email Luell at [email protected]
2nd Video ... Re: Not enough workers in the US ... Did he not remember the New Green Deal regulations that he put into effect in California ... remember the emissions regulation that only 'compliant electric trucks' may operate to haul the loads ...
Cut and pasted the article (minus the video and photos) See comment below.
Am wondering if this is the same camper they drove around in prior to the elections, that had a handwritten sign written with their foot 'mobilevoting.com' that went around to areas in town.
A brief conversation (Photo) Luis Hernandez, COVID-19 clinic specialist for Health Care Network in Racine, answers a resident's questions in Spanish on Saturday during the city's mobile vaccination clinic. The City of Racine converted its voter van, a bus introduced in the summer, to a mobile vaccination clinic for the first time.
Diana Panuncial RACINE — “How do you feel about the COVID-19 vaccine?” “Do you have any medical questions?” “Do you live with anyone who isn’t vaccinated?” “Are you afraid of needles?”
These were just a handful of questions Luis Hernandez asked residents on Saturday during the City of Racine’s mobile COVID-19 vaccination clinic.
The city’s mobile voter registration van, which was first introduced in June in an effort to register more voters in the area, was converted to a vaccine clinic that ventured through 10th, 16th, Packard, Austin, Slauson, Taylor, Bluff and Delamere streets with plans to cover more ground in the coming weeks.
Canvassing information Claudia Garcia, dental coordinator at Health Care Network in Racine, speaks with a resident of Packard Avenue on Saturday about the COVID-19 vaccine.
Hernandez, a COVID-19 clinic specialist for Health Care Network, along with other HCN representatives and Alderman John Tate II (who serves the area the mobile clinic stopped in) were knocking on doors and letting people know they could get vaccinated just a few steps away.
HCN is a nonprofit organization providing free or affordable health care to Racine County residents who are either uninsured or have low income. It’s been working to reach out to communities and provide the vaccine to them, breaking any barriers like transportation, fear or misinformation.
Lt. Jessie Metoyer explains why she got the COVID vaccine Rachel Kubik ‘The nurses are so good’ For example, when a 13-year-old girl expressed her fear of needles, Hernandez and Claudia Garcia, a dental coordinator at HCN who was helping canvass, said the needle was no thicker than a strand of hair.
“You won’t even know it by the time it’s over,” Hernandez told the girl. “The nurses are so good, they’ve done thousands of vaccinations.”
“We provide them with all of the resources to get the vaccine,” Hernandez told a reporter. “We’re also here to inform them of the benefits (of the vaccine), and the incentive that Racine currently has, which for some individuals, that is the tipping point to actually get the vaccine.”
Anyone who was vaccinated at the mobile clinic — either with their first or second dose — was rewarded by the city with a $50 gift card.
‘You’ve got to keep coming’ Recent data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show Racine County is sitting at about 63% of its eligible population as being vaccinated; a number that the city wants to bring higher, propelling their pop-up and mobile vaccination efforts.
Door-to-door Alderman John Tate II, who serves the 3rd District of Racine and is also Common Council president, speaks to a Packard Avenue resident about the COVID-19 vaccine clinic on Saturday. He knocked on several doors in his district answering questions and informing residents of the mobile vaccine clinic.
Diana Panuncial “Today’s an example where you have to keep doing something differently, because each new intervention kind of gets this initial wave of response, and then tapers off,” Tate said. “You’ve got to keep coming because very easily, folks will be like, ‘It must not be that big a deal,’ because they’re not hearing or seeing about it anymore.”
The mobile clinic and pop-up vaccination sites are ways to “remind folks that we are very much still within a pandemic,” Tate said.
When parked at the intersection of 16th Street and Packard Avenue, Hernandez saw a man he’d met the day before and had informed of the pop-up clinic. On Saturday, the man returned with a friend; they both got vaccinated.
Explaining the process Luis Hernandez, left, explains the process of getting vaccinated and earning a free gift card during the City of Racine's mobile vaccination clinic on Saturday. Hernandez was formerly a volunteer for Health Care Network in Racine, but was recently promoted to an official staff member.
Diana Panuncial “As we continue to do this, and the program is more known that we go to the community to help out, I think (vaccination rates) will get better,” Hernandez said.
Meeting residents where they are allows for that “first-hand communication,” Hernandez called it.
“It allows us to go to them at their comfort zone,” he said, which could ease their feelings of hesitation or fear about the vaccine. “I continue to enjoy (talking) because that receptiveness that eventually comes in after the hesitance — because I’ve had quite a few individuals that are initially hesitant, combative or defensive — but then they see I’m here to help out and give factual information about the vaccine.”
Hah! His mega-yacht's name 'Lana', spelled backwards! (Anal)
NO! Not likely!
Here you go ... What does Wingspread look like, from the ground and an aerial view too.
https://onmilwaukee.com/articles/wingspread-spelunking
I find it rather interesting, Susan repeats herself a number of times describing it as 'magic'.
Well then, suggest to them to clean up their facility because, it is, and has been, a dump for a really long time. Its one of the worst places for a patient to go. I do not say this lightly either.
Not an accident, was deliberate, driver was a black man with dreads (according to a Kentucky news station)