https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-vib2a-10ca7e3
The episode explores the disadvantage Montana has over other states in the country in exposing political corruption – specifically, how Montana’s Privacy In Communications Act is used to outlaw any video recording of official misconduct. In discussion of real world impact, I discuss the case of Dave Burgert, who was horrifically assaulted by law enforcement officers to prevent his serving a lawsuit which identified then-Judge Katherine Curtis a cocaine dealer – an assault that recorded but confiscated by then-Police Chief Frank Garner for violating the Privacy In Communications law. When a police state can censor what information is dissiminated about their own conduct, corruption is hidden behind the censorship without little to no effort.
Please help support our cause! For interview requests or information sharing from incarcerated or “supervised” individuals, please contact Bill Russell at PO Box 234, Dubois, Idaho 83423 (USA). For material or resource donations, please send them to Ron Glick, 40 1st Avenue West #2, Kalispell, MT 59901. Monetary donations can be sent via Paypal to ron_glick69@yahoo.com (you can also email me directly at that address), or you can purchase my books on Amazon (but contact me directly if you intend the purchase of any book besides the autobiography to support my efforts here).