A family returning from vacation in Nashville had their wallet fall off their car on interstate 40,
which a citizen mistook as robbery and reported it to the police. The police stopped the family's
vehicle, handcuffed them all, and shot their dog. In a radio show segment discussing the incident,
James Smoke suggests suing the cop who committed the act while Alex Jones emphasizes the need to
expose tyranny and defend liberty.
Losing your wallet in Cookville, Tennessee can get you handcuffed on the side of the highway and your dog shot to death by police.
At least that was the experience of the North Carolina family returning from vacation in Nashville.
Headlines in the World Net Daily.
Private stop traumatizes family.
Couple handcuffed dogs shot to death over lost wallet.
To make a long story short, we'll get the tales from James Smoke, the father He witnessed these horrors.
I hope he sues them.
He was at a gas station.
The police had met this.
He put his wallet on top of the car.
How many times has this happened to you?
I know you've driven off and the gas cap's fallen on the ground.
I've driven off and had the wallet fall off and went right back and got it.
He's going down the road and somehow money flying around the parking lot.
They thought it was a car jacking.
They pull him over, get him all in handcuffs.
The dog comes out of the car.
They shoot the dog.
And this just shows how the militarization of police and the corruption of society Which then gives police, basically on hair-trigger guard, is endangering all of us, and this policy of shooting people's dogs for almost nothing.
Yes, basically what you just said was accurate, but the wallet flew off on the interstate, somewhere around the 226 mile mark, according to the Tennessee State Police.
I got gas at exit 221.
So the car probably had to get up to speed before the wallet actually blew off.
Now, why did they panic so much at a wallet flying off of a car?
unidentified
A citizen with a cell phone called them saying that a large sum of money was seen flying through the air off of my car and felt that something was suspicious that there was probably a robbery.
And so they took that and turned it into a possible armed robbery.
And I've also seen written in some of the police documents possible carjacking.
I've talked to one IRS employee who works in the Tattletail Division.
And, uh, where, you know, where the tattletale phone calls come in.
Before 9-1-1, there were almost no calls.
Now, they are staffed 24 hours a day.
Phones ring off the hook.
Wives tattling on husbands.
Husbands tattling on wives.
Neighbors tattling on neighbors.
And there's no real terrorist to report on.
Everybody's just hysterically reporting on their neighbor.
Uh, there was a report last week out of the AP out of Maryland, out of Rockville, Maryland, where they have 10,000 plus phone calls about, oh, my neighbor's got a gun.
Well, now they're just SWAT teaming everybody's house, even though the guns aren't illegal, using those tips after the fact.
So, it's, this just shows what the Tattletail Society and overreacting does.
So, break down, Mr. Smoke, exactly what happened to you.
unidentified
Uh, first of all, we went to Opterland Hotel years ago, my wife and I, on our honeymoon.
So we planned a family vacation because we had heard that they'd added the Delta in the late 90s and the hotel had doubled in size.
And we were amazed at how beautiful the inside the hotel was, so we planned another family vacation to Nashville.
Everything went lovely until the way home.
Two years day, I stopped at exit 221 to get gas.
And this is what's ironic about it.
There was a gentleman there that was admiring my dog.
Uh, Gerald Patton is what we named him.
And I was showing my dog off because he's such a gentle natured dog and let him pet him and showed him and in the process of showing my dog off I left my wallet on top of the car obviously.
But unbeknownst to me we pull off and leave and go down the interstate approximately five miles down the interstate the wallet flies off the lady makes the call and sets the wheels in motion for the incident that happened on mile marker 287 in town of Cooksville, Tennessee.
Approximately six miles before 287 I'm doing 70 miles an hour, headed east on I-40.
Toward home, I notice a Tennessee State Trooper coming up the road.
Well in excess of the speed limit.
But as he approached my car, he braked back and got directly behind me.
So six miles, we follow, he matches me, lane change for lane change on my bumper.
So it's obvious to me he singled me out.
I'm thinking maybe I got a signal light out, a tail light out, something.
He's, he's, he's picked me out of all this traffic out here, he's on my bumper.
As I go to turn around into the right lane around a floor-moving vehicle with the officer right on my bumper, I notice several police cars coming on the on-ramp, getting ready to yield onto the interstate.
I'm in the process of going into the right lane.
I said, wait a minute, there's not going to be enough room in the right lane for everybody.
So I flip from right signal turning right, flip back left signal back into the left lane.
To allow them to come on, and he put the blue light on me.
So I'm thinking, hey, some kind of lane change, something, he's getting ready to try to start.
But what it is, is he's waiting on his backup.
Soon as he sees the backup come up the ramp, he puts the light on me.
I immediately pull over.
I reach for my wallet, get my driver's license, and I realize I don't have it.
So I'm still expecting the officer to come to my window.
But no, this brilliant light comes on, and he's blaring orders to come across the PA system to get our hands up in the car.
While I have my hands in the car, he says, now, with your left hand still in the air, take your right hand and take the keys out of the ignition and throw them out the window.
So, I cooperate.
Next, he tells me to get out of the car, with my hands in the air, and walk backwards to the rear of the car.
So I cooperate once again.
Then he tells me, down on my knees.
Well, I'm turned sideways to the car, on my knees.
He says, no, down on your knees facing the rear of the car.
So I have to turn on my knees, Faced the rear of the car and said, now put your head on the ground.
Put my head on the ground.
He comes up, cuffs me.
No reading of rights, no nothing.
Throws me in the back of a trooper car.
And then they commit to do the same thing to my wife and child, and that's what really upsets me.
And in the process of doing this to my wife and children, the passenger right side door is left open to the car.
I'm in the car, in the back seat, talking to the trooper that's got me in his car, saying, sir, in the name of Jesus Christ, shut the door to the car.
There's dogs in there.
My wife and son are telling the officer right beside them, sir, please shut the door.
It's like you're talking to deaf people.
They can't hear nothing nobody's saying.
No cursing, nothing, just asking him polite.
It all falls on deaf ears.
So, when the final family member's taken from the car, the dog don't like to be by itself.
He's coming out the car.
He comes out the car and goes down into the grass or the side of the interstate.
Makes a loop and circle toward this officer with a flashlight mounted on his gun.
Well, we played with the dog out in the yard with flashlights.
He just run into the light.
And the guy shoots him point-blank in the head with a shotgun.
They were going to try to take him and put him in a bag.
And I said, oh no, that dog won't stay in Tennessee.
That dog's coming home with us.
So they gave me a bag.
I put my dog in a bag.
And we go to the next exit to turn around.
I'm thinking I got to go back to 221 where I got gas to get my wallet.
Because they told me it was in Davidson County.
And my wife goes to file reports with the Cooksville City Police and the Tennessee Highway Patrol.
And my father and my other two children are behind us.
They see it.
They see the incident happening.
So we split up.
My wife Goes to Cooksville City Police Department and the Tennessee Highway Patrolman and my father and I take his car and go back to Exit 221 where I thought my wallet would have to be.
Because we only stopped to get gas and the next time we stopped was at the incident.
They cared enough to call the police and cause all this to happen.
Now they don't want to get up off the wallet with the money is what I'm thinking.
So I'm so upset about the dog and everything, I could care less about the wallet.
I said, let's just go back.
So en route, going back to exit 287, the cell phone rings, as my wife said, I know where your wallet is.
Tennessee State Highway Patrol have it, and they're at exit 239 waiting on you, so you can reclaim it.
Well, at this time, we've passed exit 239, so we have to turn back around, but not a long distance, probably 10 miles.
We have two Tennessee State Patrolmen awaiting with my property.
This guy took the time to pick up the money off the side of the road and everything, and they were You could see the remorse in their eyes.
They weren't allowed to talk about it, but they knew that there was a big screw-up that occurred.
And I signed the form, he gave my property back, and they told us, this is the first I heard of a citizen with a cell phone calling the robbery in.
So we get back in the car and we head back to Cooksville, and we decide that this is not going to stand, that we're going to have to do something about it and file a report.
So we spend the night directly across from the highway patrol at a Super 8 motel in Cooksville, Tennessee.
During my wife's process of getting the reports filed, someone gave her the name of Miss Mary Jo Denton, who works with the Herald Citizen, which is the town paper of Cookville, and she decides she's interested in publishing this story.
So we go there and interview and tell us basically what I've just told you, and she printed it and got the ball rolling for this media exposure of this craziness.
Okay, James, uh, Smoke, let me just first just tell you a few things here, and I'm sorry to hear this happen to your dog, General Patton, correct?
Yes, sir.
I have been to multiple homes, in fact, I've even thought about making a documentary about this.
Here in Austin, Texas, and I've seen reports from around the country, because I scan a little local papers and news wires, SWAT teams have a policy of shooting any dog that is barking.
But when they do this, they kill your animals, they kill your children.
unidentified
I feel like we were a sneeze or a body cramp away from death ourselves, yes, sir.
Well, by a body cramp you mean... You know, when they had us in the position, if you started convulsing with your body and had a cramp, they'd have shot us.
Well, look, I read reports every week where they shoot cops at these spot raids.
It's just horrible, but Hollywood keeps promoting it, so everybody's got to be part of it now.
unidentified
And what was particularly appalling, Mr. Jones, was three separate occasions the trooper that had me in the back of his car walked over to the trigger man and he comes back grinning.
Well, see, it was over to the side out of the headlights of the car, but the trooper that had me in the car would go over to the trigger man, and as he walked back in front of the car light, he had the biggest grin on his face.
I'm not allowed to use it because people's lawyers won't let me use it.
I was shown by a lawyer three years ago.
He was an old veteran.
He wouldn't come out of his house and his neighbors were worried about him.
So they sent a SWAT team around.
It was a Korean War veteran.
They circled the house.
And the SWAT team, awesome SWAT team, went in, gunned him down, he didn't even shoot back, and they gave each other high fives, celebrating, like they just scored a touchdown, you know how they do it?
unidentified
Yeah, similar, very similar to what I'm talking about.