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  • Zersetzung - It seems to me that many (all?) of the techniques described here would be deemed illegal harassment.
    • "Operations were designed to intimidate and destabilise them by subjecting them to repeated disappointment, and to socially alienate them by interfering with and disrupting their relationships with others as in social undermining. The aim was to induce personal crises in victims, leaving them too unnerved and psychologically distressed to have the time and energy for anti-government activism.[16] The Stasi intentionally concealed their role as mastermind of the operations."
    • "It also had a comprehensive 50-page Zersetzung teaching manual, which included numerous examples of its practice."
    • "They exploited personal traits, such as homosexuality, as well as supposed character weaknesses of the targeted individual — for example a professional failure, negligence of parental duties, pornographic interests, divorce, alcoholism, dependence on medications, criminal tendencies, passion for a collection or a game, or contacts with circles of the extreme right — or even the veil of shame from the rumors poured out upon one's circle of acquaintances. From the point of view of the Stasi, the measures were the most fruitful when they were applied in connection with a personality; all "schematism" had to be avoided."
    • "The aim was to disrupt the target’s private or family life so they are unable to continue their “hostile-negative” activities towards the state. Typically, the Stasi would use collaborators to garner details from a victim’s private life. They would then devise a strategy to “disintegrate” the target’s personal circumstances – their career, their relationship with their spouse, their reputation in the community. They would even seek to alienate them from their children. Pingel-Schliemann cites the case of Herr J. First Herr J lost his driver’s licence. Months later he found anonymous notes insulting him hanging on the trees of his village. Then rumours circulated that he was cheating on his wife. At work Herr J faced growing problems. Finally, the police arrested him and sentenced him for a theft he didn’t commit. To Herr J, these events were disturbing, random and inexplicable. He had no inkling that the Stasi were behind them. The security service’s goal was to use Zersetzung to “switch off” regime opponents. After months and even years of Zersetzung a victim’s domestic problems grew so large, so debilitating, and so psychologically burdensome that they would lose the will to struggle against the East German state. Best of all, the Stasi’s role in the victim’s personal misfortunes remained tantalisingly hidden. The Stasi operations were carried out in complete operational secrecy. The service acted like an unseen and malevolent god, manipulating the destinies of its victims."




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  • Misc Links:

 

Dealing with the police

Widget Connector
urlhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Au4_EdPwTkE

Widget Connector
urlhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=B1t3vtr0kxk

Reneging on oral agreements

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Reneging on oral agreements

  • 2010.12.06 - Forbes - Peter Nygard answers to no one
    • Ebker testified that she and Nygård had orally agreed to a 50-50 partnership in which he would kick in $700,000 to finance the design and production of two sportswear lines out of her existing showroom. (Ebker says Nygård discouraged her pursuit of a written agreement, telling her that involving lawyers would be a “big mess.”) Within months of the closing Nygård fired Ebker, took over the offices and threw her out.

      Ebker is still fuming. “He literally ruined my life,” she says. Ebker claimed in court testimony that in their heated final conversation Nygård told her, “I have all your patterns, I have everything. I own everything. . . . I never intended to put anything in writing. . . . You have nothing, and I am a millionaire.” “Let’s try to reason,” she said she interjected. To which Nygård responded, “If you don’t have $1 million by Friday, I am going to see to it that your name and reputation are totally destroyed in this market.”

      Nygård told the court a different story, saying the two had a calm conversation in which he suggested they amicably part ways. The judge found Ebker to be “highly credible” and deemed Nygård “evasive,” “insincere” and “utterly lacking in credibility.” “We deplore the unseemly conduct of Nygård,” Judge Irving Cooper wrote but ultimately ruled that Ebker failed to prove she was damaged by his actions. Nygård’s counterclaim was also dismissed. Ebker, who calls him “a true villain of the world,” is writing a book about the case.
  • Get the quote from Barbara Corcoran's book about getting an agreement with Donald Trump in writing.

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trust_law
http://www.investopedia.com/articles/re ... z1olRcY5Tc
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_disobedience
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westboro_Baptist_Church - the tactics these guys use could be used to harass someone legally

Books:
Law For Dummies
Law 101
Legal Research for Beginners
You and the Police!
Arrest-Proof Yourself
Games Criminals Pay

NOTACON 8: Hacking The Man: Your Guide to the Courtroom
http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&v=tCC4m3sRu9U
Law-Fu idea: a bumper sticker that says "I FIGHT ALL TICKETS"
- you can represent yourself if you aren't a lawyer, but you can't represent someone else
- He says court clerks become much more friendly when you say you aren't a lawyer, because they associate lawyers with demanding jerks who are getting paid way more.
- He says judges hate pro se litigants because so many of them are kooky. Apparently half of the petitions they get are hand-written.
- He says don't lie, but you're allowed to ask questions that have implications.
- He says the legal system sucks for teaching people a lesson.
- He says that when you're filing a brief, you can't just write stuff based on common sense; you need to cite stuff.
- He says nobody cares about your clever idea about how the system should work. All they care about is what the rule is, and how it applies in your case.
- He says to shut up when you talk to a cop, give as little info as possible.
- He says the best line to use is "I do not consent to any search". He says there's an ACLU video about it.
- He says the second best line is "Am I free to go?" He says that if they say "No", they have to decide to arrest you.
- "Circumstances are paramount when deciding what to say; everything in law depends on the circumstances."
- When it's worth getting pro help: Ask yourself, "What's the worst that could happen"? (29:00) Any disputes under a few thousand dollars.
- He said it's really important to take stuff off the table ASAP.
- He said now every contract he writes has a liability limit that says "At the MOST, I owe you your money back."
- DON'T call the judge, it makes you seem crazy.
- DON'T use fancy language in court to try to sound impressive.
- DO have a point when you're going to dispute something that the other party has said.
- The rules are not what you think they should be, what you heard they were, or whatever. The rules are what are in the book.
- You can find the local rules on Google.
- You can't appeal any issue that you didn't raise at trial, except with something called "plain error", which is an extremely aggregious, like the judge imposed the maximum penalty b/c he was pissed off at you, and you can prove it by looking his behavior in other cases.
- If you lose the lower decision and they tell you to pay the fine, and you want to contest it, DON'T PAY THE FINE. He almost lost his case b/c he did pay it.
- He says doing legal research is almost exactly like doing research for a math proof.
- 38:00 - CREXAC - Conclusion, Rule, EXplanation, Application, Conclusion
- Sheppard's Citations (40:40) - this lets you check if a case you want to use was superseded
- prosecutor tried to bargain him down to a chipped windshield and accidentally said "I tried to offer him a lesser offense, he's a pretty good driver."
- Around 43 mins in he gives a GREAT description of how he'd been able to get the officer to screw over the prosecutor's case.
- 45:30 - the only reason he was able to appeal was because he was "still serving his sentence" b/c he had his points.

Prenda Law
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prenda_Law
- This company was running an extortion racket in a superficially-legal way.

Forum Discussions

HackerNews Discussion after Google Glass wearer was harassed by police
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=7093369



Product Ideas

Keep it simple!

- A CD / DVD / software / iPhone app that would show you a first-person view of a particular situation and would test you to see if you could produce the correct response.
- Sell it at Wal-Mart for a few dollars near the checkout aisle or near the UFC stuff.
- Ask Dr. Lewis from Shark Tank how he got his sales so high for that wall-fixer thing he invented.
Here's his website, it doesn't have to be that fancy! - http://walldoctor.com/


Individual ideas

Cameras are the new guns

Joël Franusic ‏@jf Sep 21
The camera phone is mightier than the gun.



Get a person fired, or ruin their career / reputation

  • YouTube - Buds131 - Phony Navy SEAL of the Week. MICHAEL ORLANDO HALL
    • Summary: This former SEAL, his wife, and a bunch of other ex-SEALs and trainees all went to New Orleans to confront a guy who was known to hang out in public and talk about being an ex-Navy SEAL. The guy seems like a real tough guy when he's on the street. They then later confront him at his job, where he's totally different.
    • Skip to 17:40 to see them confront the guy at his job. You can see the fear in his face that he could lose his job.


Hiring / using lawyers


Lawsuits


Vehicle-related interactions with the police

  • http://fairdui.org/
  • 2015.02.10 - BusinessInsider - A lawyer in Florida has come up with an ingenious way for drivers to evade drunken-driving checkpoints
  • Original video - DUI Checkpoint, Civil Rights Audit
  • The driver's license, insurance, and registration are all inside a zip lock freezer bag.
  • <Fair DUI Flyer - Link broken so I removed it>
    • You may not be comfortable using this flyer. A police encounter is a difficult and uncomfortable situation. Most cops will not like it. They will get mean and threaten you. It is a very intimidating experience. You have to know yourself and whether you can handle that.

      The same advice applies to liberty activists. It’s easy to talk big when you’re on Facebook or hanging out with your friends. When you’re alone on a dark road with armed men shining powerful flashlights in your face, it can be a lot tougher to stay calm and handle things well. It’s also important that you use it correctly, so you have to get past your preconceived notions of what to do. If you show a cop a card that says “I Remain Silent” and then you ask if you’re being detained, you look like an idiot.

      In the DUI book, Mr. Redlich describes practical strategies to prevent yourself from drinking and driving, handle police encounters, breath test devices and lawyers. Anyone who ever drives after just one drink should read this book.


Avoid legal trouble

Examples of how legal trouble can affect how you are treated in future disputes

LA Times - Costco shopper punched in fight over samples: 'He hit me, and the blood started'

He has been charged with one count of elder abuse, as well as a special allegation that he inflicted great bodily harm on the elderly man, prosecutors said. If convicted, he faces up to 11 years in state prison.

Gharabighi has a history of criminal convictions.

In the last three years, he was convicted twice for trespassing, and earlier this year he was convicted of petty theft and drug possession for sale, according to Los Angeles Superior Court records.

  • In the video, you see the reporter telling the victim that his attacker had been in jail before, and the victim responds, "He has been in jail? OK, so they have to keep him [in jail]."