*Source: Prison Planet
Using cash increasingly seen as suspicious activity
Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet.com
September 24, 2012
The Eleventh Circuit US Court of Appeals has ruled that private
contractors operating toll roads on behalf of the state have the power
to detain and store records on motorists who pay by cash at toll booths –
another example of how using cash is increasingly being treated as a
suspicious activity.
Having been held hostage by the Florida Department of Transportation
(FDOT) and the private contractor in charge of the state’s toll road,
Faneuil, Inc. at a toll booth last year for paying cash and refusing to
have a report filled out on them and their vehicle, Joel, Deborah and
Robert Chandler filed suit.
“Under FDOT policies in place at the time, motorists who paid with
$50 bills, and occasionally even $5 bills, were not given permission to
proceed until the toll collector filled out a “Bill Detection Report”
with data about the motorist’s vehicle and details from his driver’s
license. Many of those who chose to pay cash did so to avoid the privacy
implications of installing a SunPass transponder that recorded their
driving habits,” reports TheNewspaper.
“They were likewise unwilling to provide personal information to the
toll collector, but they had no alternative because the toll barrier
would not be raised without compliance. FDOT policy does not allow
passengers to exit their vehicle, and backing up is illegal and usually
impossible while other cars wait behind.”
The three-judge panel dismissed the suit, ruling that detaining
motorists in order to record details about people who paid by cash was
not a constitutional violation and that the state and the contractor
could subject motorists to such treatment because, “In Florida, a
person’s right and liberty to use a highway is not absolute.”
This is merely the latest example in a growing trend of authorities
treating people who use cash to pay for goods, bills or services as
suspicious. Given that the use of cash cannot be used to track purchases
or movements of individuals, extra layers of bureaucracy and
intimidation are becoming institutionalized in order to dissuade people
from using hard currency as part of the move towards a cashless society.
Earlier this year we reported on how the FBI was telling businesses to treat people who use cash to pay for a cup of coffee as potential terrorists.
The flyer, issued under the FBI’s Communities Against Terrorism (CAT)
program, lists examples of “suspicious activity” and then encourages
businesses to gather information about individuals and report them to
the authorities.
The flyer aimed at Internet Cafe owners characterizes customers who
“always pay cash” as potential terrorists. Given that some retail
outlets don’t even accept card payments for amounts lower than $10
dollars, this would put millions of innocent people under the spotlight.
We also recently highlighted the case of Texas resident Julia Garcia,
who was falsely imprisoned and harassed by Wal-Mart employees for
attempting to buy goods with a $100 dollar bill the Wal-Mart cashiers
erroneously claimed was fake.
The Wal-Mart cashier ripped the $100 dollar bill in half before
taking another in Garcia’s possession and doing the same. Despite a
counterfeit detection test proving the bills were genuine, the Wal-Mart
employees tried to hide the fact and told Garcia they were keeping the
money. Only after police were called was the Wal-Mart store ordered to
replace the stolen bills.
Wal-Mart is part of the Department of Homeland Security’s See
Something Say Something campaign, which encourages shoppers and Wal-Mart
employees to report suspicious activity. In a PSA for its snitch program, the DHS characterizes using cash as a suspicious activity and a potential indication of terrorism.
Earlier this year a Tennessee man was
charged and jailed by police after using an old $50 bill to pay for
goods at a Quik Mart store. Two banks analyzed the bill and confirmed it
was genuine. Police apologized to Lorenzo Gaspar and he was
subsequently released from prison.
*********************
Paul Joseph Watson is the editor and writer for Prison Planet.com.
He is the author of Order Out Of Chaos. Watson is also a regular
fill-in host for The Alex Jones Show and Infowars Nightly News.
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