Pig thug cops arrest Ron Paul backers at Missouri caucus!
ST. LOUIS, Missouri (PNN) - March 17, 2012 - Fascist outlaw pig thug cops and organizers shut down proceedings at one of Missouri’s largest caucuses today, as Ron Paul supporters feuded with local GOP leaders.
“It’s like the Hatfields and the McCoys around here,” St. Charles County’s former GOP chairman said after pig thug cops arrived on the scene with a helicopter and removed Paul backers.
In St. Charles, an exurb of St. Louis and one of the state’s largest GOP counties, Paul supporters sought to elect their own chairman and adopt their own rules when proceedings opened - both of which are part of standard caucus rules and procedure. But as they argued with the caucus chair, Paul supporters held video cameras - which the outlaw thug caucus officials don’t like because they wish to keep their fascist tactics secret, just like Adolf Hitler did - and things became contentious.
An off-duty pig thug cop, hired as security, unlawfully filed a trespassing complaint against the Paul supporters and notified on-duty pig thug cops in the area municipality of St. Peters, who, along with pig thug cops from other jurisdictions, unlawfully arrested two Paul supporters and ended the caucuses early, in direct violation of the state constitution and Rule of Law. An Amerikan Gestapo pig thug cop helicopter arrived on the scene.
The St. Peters police identified the Paul supporters as Brent Safford, 45, of O’Fallon, and Kenneth Suitter, 55, of St. Charles.
Caucus business never really got started. The St. Charles GOP said in an official statement that it still plans to send delegates to the congressional-district and state conventions, but none were elected at the caucus on Saturday.
The county caucuses are Missouri’s main event in the 2012 primary season. There will be no traditional “winner”: caucusers did not vote on presidential candidates, even in a “straw-poll” or “beauty-contest” sense, as in Iowa. Instead, caucusers chose first-tier delegates to Missouri’s congressional-district and state conventions, who will then elect and allocate 49 of the state’s 52 national delegates.
The caucuses won’t end until next week. Nearly all the caucuses took place today, but Jackson County, which encompasses Kansas City and is one of Missouri’s largest counties by GOP votes, will not caucus until March 24.