We Have a "Duty" to Submit;
They Have No Duty to Protect
by Will Grigg"Somebody is going to die tonight," a visibly agitated Anthony Lord told a close friend on July 16, 2015. Lord, a resident of Benedicta, Maine, was a registered sex offender who displayed symptoms of violent derangement. His anger had been kindled by a voice mail message from the Maine State Police reporting that a woman named Brittany Irish had accused him of sexually assaulting her, and asking him to visit a local barracks to be interviewed about the matter.
Lord's entirely plausible threat was reported to Jaime Irish, Brittany's brother. His frantic phone call to Brittany interrupted a conversation in her home with two Maine state troopers. They were discussing both Irish's sexual assault complaint and her report that the barn at her parents' home had been set on fire – most likely by Lord, who knew the family well.
Brittany's initial relief at the presence of two officers sworn to "serve and protect" she was quickly transmuted into incredulity when the troopers refused a request to deploy officers to watch her and her two small children (who were visiting relatives at another location). Protecting a rape victim and her family against a credible murder threat from an assailant who was also suspected of carrying out a retaliatory arson attack was not a priority worthy of the man-hours it would entail.
Frantically grasping for whatever reassurance they could get, Brittany and her mother, Kimberly, asked if the police could leave a marked vehicle parked outside the home as a bluff. Even that was seen as an unacceptable expenditure of precious department resources that could be used for more important undertakings, such as traffic enforcement. Indifferently assuring Brittany that they would "keep an eye on the situation," the troopers drove away.
Read more at https://www.lewrockwell.com/2016/07/william-norman-grigg/duty-submit/.