"judicial overreach"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed Hillary Clinton's public appearance on September 13, 2016, analyzing claims about body doubles, latex masks, and drug use to explain apparent physical changes between morning and afternoon appearances. He played a congressional audio clip featuring Rep. Chaffetz issuing a subpoena to the FBI Assistant Director over withheld documents and 302 investigative reports. Koernke addressed judicial overreach and the Constitution, voter fraud allegations, and took caller requests about preparedness gear including FRS radios at Menards, external hard drives at Office Depot, military surplus items from Copes Distributing, and solar lighting deals.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness topics including winter gear acquisition, deer hunting in Michigan, and weapons customization on Weapons Wednesday. He highlighted a Connecticut case involving a gun owner whose home was raided by SWAT teams based on false allegations during a custody dispute, resulting in job loss, home confinement with GPS monitoring, and loss of custody. Koernke criticized the judicial system and government overreach in the case, drawing parallels to similar situations where ex-spouses weaponize the court system to destroy their former partners financially and professionally.
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Mark Koernke opened with a Phyllis Schlafly segment on judicial overreach regarding polygamy law in Utah, then discussed preparedness topics including ammunition stockpiling, food storage on minimal budgets, water purification using charcoal and sand filters, and survival nutrition including military rations and prison nutriloaf. The show featured extended discussion of Michigan open carry rights and police harassment, with detailed analysis of Michigan State Police Legal Update 86 regarding firearm laws and citizen identification requirements. A caller shared personal experience being stopped while openly carrying on a motorcycle, highlighting law enforcement overreach and the importance of knowing constitutional rights.