30 June 2011

Police media misinformation a policy

The government has been caught out with fraud, and deception and misinformation within its police force, yet surprisingly there are no criminal charges brought against these criminals, but rather a massive cover up.

When information from the police makes it out into the mass media, it undergoes a censorship via the police media liaison personnel.

Misinformation is supported and propagated by both the mass media and the government in order to misinform the populous, so the 'force' is intact.

There can be no inference that there is corruption or that the government is not in control of the situation, as this will sway public opinion that the governing authorities are incompetent, as an agenda of the mass media is not to entice the masses.

In recent times there has been the very public display of the Melbourne 'gangland' wars, in which the police had to ‘show’ that they were doing something about it, contrary to the unwritten policy of letting ‘them’ (the gangs) sort it out between themselves.

Police, politicians and legal teams are on the payroll of these criminal organisations, but they remain unknown to the population at large, but are well known to the people within.

The recent and well published ‘accomplished’ history of the Victorian Police Chief Simon Overland was a Public Relations exercise by the Herald Sun paper, and his resignation that followed missed many key elements that have not been made public.

There is corruption within the police force working together with the crime families.

There is corruption within the legal system handing out sentences favouring their Masonic brethren irrespective of any evidence pointing the other way.

The well publicised crime families of Melbourne’s western suburbs, the Chaouk’s, and now what has made the public arena, the Tiba’s of Melbourne’s northern suburbs are well known to police for many years, but nothing has been done.

Melbourne’s well establish drug lords the Williams’s and Moran families are again known the authorities, and have been allowed to operate for many years, with the help of the government.

No incarceration will occur for the corrupt people in politics, law, policing and governance with regards to co-working with Victoria’s biggest crime families.

The drug industry in Australia is worth approximately $18 billion per year ($1.5 billion per month)

There is a deliberate mass media, government sponsored cover up to a drug problem that is out of control.

corpau.

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