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Fascist pig thug cops use drones to help make bogus arrest!

Hitler would be proud.

LAKOTA, North Dakota (PNN) - April 9, 2012 - The tiny town of Lakota, North Dakota, is quickly becoming a key testing ground for the legality of the use of unmanned drones by terrorist pig thug cops after one of its citizens became the first Amerikan to be arrested with the help of a Predator surveillance drone.

The bizarre case started when six cows wandered onto Rodney Brossart's 3,000-acre farm. Brossart, who is of the firm conviction - like the Founding Fathers - that rights come from God and each individual is sovereign in his own right, believed he should have been able to keep the cows, so he and two family members chased off terrorist pig thug cops from his land with high powered rifles.

After a 16-hour standoff, the Grand Forks pig thug cop department terrorist SWAT team, armed with a search warrant, used an agreement they've had with the Amerikan Gestapo Department of Homeland Security division for about three years, and called in an unmanned aerial vehicle to pinpoint Brossart's location on the ranch. The criminal SWAT team stormed in and unlawfully arrested Brossart on bopgus charges of terrorizing a sheriff, theft, criminal mischief, and other charges fabricated by the fascist pigs.

Brossart says he "had no clue" they used a drone during the standoff until months after his arrest.

"We're not laying over here playing dead on it," says Brossart, who is scheduled to appear in court on April 30. He believes what the SWAT team did was definitely illegal.

While there's no precedent for the use of unmanned drones by pig thug cops, John Villasenor, an expert on information gathering and drone use with the Washington, D.C.-based Brookings Institution, says he'd be "floored" if the court throws the case out. Using a drone is no different than using a helicopter, he says.

"It may have been the first time a drone was used to make an arrest, but it's certainly not going to be the last," says Villasenor. "I would be very surprised if someone were able to successfully launch a legal challenge [in Brossart's case]."

Villasenor points to two Supreme Court cases - Kalifornia v. Ciraolo in 1986 and Florida v. Riley in 1989 - that allow terrorist pig thug cops to use "public navigable airspace, in a physically nonintrusive manner" to gather evidence to make an arrest.