"grand jury"
14 episodes tagged with this keyword
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The episode featured discussions on grand jury procedures and constitutional rights, followed by extensive coverage of a Bundy Ranch-type standoff developing in southern Oregon between miners of the Gallus Mining District and the BLM over mineral rights and land control. The host also covered a controversial police case involving a corrections officer who killed his wife, a shooting at a North Carolina community college, and a lengthy segment critiquing Nelson Mandela's legacy, including his role as head of a terrorist wing and communist ideology. Callers contributed perspectives on property rights, government overreach, and militia preparedness.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge occupation in Oregon, the trial of the occupiers in Portland, and critiques of both Article III court strategies and militia tactics. He argued that federal courts are illegitimate admiralty courts designed to treat Americans as property, and that meaningful resistance requires either establishing proper People's Courts or preparing for armed conflict. Koernke analyzed the Hammond family case, the death of LaVoy Finicum, and the failures of the refuge occupation strategy, emphasizing that property-based resistance (like the Bundy Ranch model) is more effective than occupying federal land. He also provided updates on firearm parts and ammunition availability from various suppliers.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Eric Garner choking death in New York City and the grand jury's decision not to indict the officer, analyzing the video evidence and grand jury testimony from witness Ramsey Orta. He criticized the corruption of police departments, the role of Homeland Security in training law enforcement, and the systematic nature of police brutality across multiple cities. The episode also included technical discussions about cell phone antenna improvement and broader commentary on the federalization of police forces as part of a national police state agenda.
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Mark Koernke discussed multiple controversial topics including a shooting incident involving a 12-year-old with an airsoft gun, police use of airsoft for training, illegal immigration and violent crimes by undocumented aliens, the Ferguson incident and media manipulation of narratives, and made an extended fundraising appeal for the Micro Effect radio network. The show featured caller contributions about airsoft regulations, weather manipulation concerns, and cell phone driving laws, while emphasizing the need for listener donations to keep the network operational through 2015.
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Mark Koernke discussed a shooting incident at Florida State University's Strozier Library where one gunman was killed by police after firing shots that wounded at least two students. He criticized media coverage for lack of clarity on how bystanders were injured and drew connections to a pattern of shootings at educational facilities. Koernke also addressed Ferguson protests, noting that media was recycling old summer footage to exaggerate current unrest despite cold weather limiting actual turnout, and discussed the prolonged grand jury deliberation in the Michael Brown case as politically motivated rather than justice-focused. He recounted experiences with NBC and ABC news crews being laid off in the 1990s and how media outlets manipulate interviews and lighting to control narratives.
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Mark Koernke and co-host Joe McNeil discussed the Ferguson, Missouri grand jury decision and broader issues of police violence, racial division, and government overreach. They analyzed how the Ferguson case and similar incidents across the country are being used as tools for propaganda and social control, arguing that racial tensions are deliberately inflamed to distract from systemic oppression affecting all Americans. Callers contributed perspectives on gun rights, Washington D.C. security operations, police misconduct in multiple cities, and the coordination of planned protests in 85 cities nationwide. The hosts emphasized that education about constitutional rights and recognition of how citizens are manipulated as pawns is essential to addressing these issues.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Ferguson grand jury situation and police response protocols, analyzed voting patterns in recent elections showing significant third-party support that media outlets failed to report accurately, and reviewed preparedness and reloading supplies including AR-15 components, ammunition, powder availability, and alternative bullet technologies like paper-patched cast bullets. He also covered electronics deals including solar panels and power supplies from various vendors.
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Mark Koernke discussed a Kentucky police shooting case in which an officer killed a teenage girl at a field party, analyzing dash cam footage that showed the officer jumped onto the moving vehicle before firing. The episode featured extensive caller commentary on police accountability, grand jury decisions, and broader themes of government overreach, property rights, and civil resistance. Koernke drew parallels between police violence and civil unrest in Ferguson, arguing that both represent violations of private property and personal liberty that demand accountability.
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On November 14, 2014, the morning show discussed the fatal shooting of a 19-year-old girl in Hebron, Kentucky by a police officer, criticizing the grand jury's decision not to indict. Callers and hosts debated police brutality, misconduct, and the pattern of officers shooting family pets and civilians with impunity. The show also covered topics including alternative engines (Tesla turbines and hit-and-miss engines), police hiring practices that favor low IQ candidates, medication use among law enforcement, and the need for citizens to resist government overreach. Listeners shared personal experiences with police harassment and discussed the Hatfield-McCoy feud as a historical example of prolonged conflict.
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Mark Koernke discussed a Time magazine article by Barton Gelman attacking militia groups, criticizing its yellow journalism and false connections between constitutional patriots and extremists. He covered FBI and ATF misconduct, including cheating on ethics exams in the Detroit office and the agency's failure to win cases in three years. Callers reported on Child Protective Services seizing a newborn from an Oath Keeper in New Hampshire and discussed tactics for resisting unconstitutional government overreach, including refusing to cooperate with social workers without proper warrants and the importance of grand jury investigations into CPS abuses.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness, alternative communications, and legal issues affecting citizens. The show covered heirloom seed storage and long-term food solutions, penny sheets and CD distribution as information dissemination methods, Y2K as a government test, old technology paired with modern microcircuitry for resilience, and foreclosure fraud involving improper banking instruments. Callers raised concerns about Florida's attorney general Bill McCollum, Child Protective Services immunity from prosecution, fraudulent CPS accusations, and alternative radio frequencies and microwave transmission techniques for independent communications networks.
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Mark Koernke discussed legal strategy with a caller named Spike regarding a motorcycle titling case in Indiana, advising on motions to dismiss and evidence presentation. The show featured extensive tactical training content on magazine pouches and combat load configuration, including methods to modify pants pockets with elastic bands for magazine storage. Koernke promoted an upcoming April training meeting covering medical, firearms, and preparedness instruction, and took calls about child protective services cases, grand jury procedures, women's firearms training, and suicide weapon analysis related to recent events.
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Mark Koernke discussed militia training preparations, equipment maintenance protocols, and NBC (nuclear, biological, chemical) protection measures. He emphasized proper magazine inventory management, load-bearing equipment configuration, and the importance of gas masks for family preparedness, addressing misconceptions about surplus masks and advocating for affordable solutions like the M9 mask. The show included caller segments on grand jury procedures and citizen oversight of government corruption, with Koernke stressing jury nullification as a check against prosecutorial abuse.
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Mark Koernke hosted the second hour of the afternoon Intelligence Report on March 23, 2020, discussing emergency preparedness during the COVID-19 lockdown in Michigan. The show covered CB radio acquisition at truck stops before the midnight curfew, water and food storage strategies, medical blowout kits, operational security measures, and radio frequency designations for communication. Koernke and co-host Dave Stone addressed government overreach, the planned nature of the pandemic, and community mobilization through militia units and local government infrastructure. The evening segment included caller reports on suspicious break-ins, analysis of the coronavirus death toll claims, and warnings about imminent police state enforcement and potential military deployment.