Former U.S. intelligence officer Dino Buloha draws a hard line between duty and self‑promotion. When classified truths are exposed, it’s not the talkers who pay—it’s the officers still in the fight, carrying the mission without a voice.
After the March 12 attacks at Temple Israel and Old Dominion, we must reassess how law enforcement responds in a threat landscape shaped by terrorism, diversionary attacks, and limited resources.
The ACLU calls Flock Cameras a "mass surveillance infrastructure." A retired police officer and attorney walks through the actual data, the Fourth Amendment, and the real-world results — so you can decide for yourself.
Retired investigator John Adams examines how media coverage of law enforcement shootings routinely applies the "Moment of Threat Rule" — a standard unanimously rejected by the U.S. Supreme Court in Barnes v. Felix (2025).
Law enforcement officers are being vilified, targeted, and increasingly exposed to real-world danger—not because of misconduct, but because a growing radical narrative treats law enforcement itself as the problem.
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Retired SWAT Commander Darcy Leutzinger breaks down when officers can lawfully use deadly force, explaining Graham, Garner, and how real‑world threats, vehicles, and weapons are judged by objective reasonableness—not social media outrage or hindsight.
Former HSI Special Agent Michael Koscielniak warns that violent mobs in Minneapolis are assaulting ICE agents, invading churches, and attacking businesses, arguing that this is not protest but an organized campaign to delegitimize federal authority and the rule of law.