So, I thought I would pull up stuff on Fred Springmeier today and suddenlythe above is all I could get.....yesterday I had read some of his stuff prior to the story on his arrest - but it was under material on Knights Templar and bloodlines of Kennedy - and the information contained therein was wrong and maybe even lies for Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy's line is our line through Lord Thomas Fitzgerald and this I knew of the Fitzgerald connection for many, many years prior to death of JFK and back to when I was 4 or 5 my mother would speak of the Fitzgerald curse - and masonic matters. So I kept wondering why suddenly am I only able to get this informationo here - and it is out ofo my state, Ohio....... After many attempts to find this stuff I had yesterday and day before, I finally read this stuff and noted the list of the Sheriff's at the end...........Sheriff's are very important people - and a Fitzgerald had signed the Magna Carta and this is how I ran into Fredls name off and on connected to this bloodline stuff. So the name of the Sheriff in this one time frame, was Fred Springmeier....now note this - there have been illuminati investigators in this area for a long long time back to when I got into this stuff and the former Grand Dragon of the KKK had given me Illuminati Records an a bood Who Is Murdering Angola for nobody else seemed to care.....later he was also arrested for gun running between Canada which surprised me but he was a brilliant man. Now this Springmeier used an alias did he not? What if he is a plant for I say this, wish I could bring that stuff up I had previously but the only thing I can bring up today is this. Not being paranoid yet - when that kept coming up I decided to stay home and be quiet. And then I thought of that Meyer Lansky Hit Man - living in a trailor on the farm of this one doctor who was into guns, murder, with HOffa for a year and I was told got Hoffa away to Canada (or drumped him with the fishies).....but tht killer was wearing an officia Deputy Sheriff's Uniform the night the unholy three murdered a black doctor - when golly gee they only wanted to castrate the guy..... What is wrong here - is Fred Springmeier really Fred Springmeier? And if he was stupid enough to grow marijuana - who rat finked however there was another raid of a similar type the same night. What about Joe Six Pack......now he only had a copy of the constitution with him day they put him in the slammer and a six pack no doubt.... Ah when night falls and the shadows flee away.... Anyway, read this list of Sheriffs......creepy, huh.........but Springmeier did put some information that was NOT accurate and the reason I know is this - they are family these Fitzgeralds and this guy had information on web saying they were Italian? You got to be kidding....maybe it was just a link but he said Illuminati Bloodlines - Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy had same ancestors as mine in Limerick - do not know omuch about the Kennedy's except they were all murdered virtually - ah but there is always one who will survive - the idea is to demoralize a country and by systematic murders of these famous bloodlines - well that is how the scum also rises but then there will always be a new moon down the road. Saba Is Fred Springmeier a plant? Nice way to pass on information without drawing too much attention.......or is he a victim? If that is true about the marijuana plants - then that guy had really taken roots. The Office of Sheriff The office of Sheriff was first established in 1066AD by the Normans. The word "Sheriff" was derived from "Shire" (the equivalent of today's County) and "Rieve" (chief law enforcer). Thus, the term "Shire Rieve" was eventually shortened to simply "Sheriff". At the same time the title of Constable was also created and this was the position of keeper of the Rieve's stable of horses. Sheriff and Constable were the first two titles for police officers in America, and each owe their origins to English ancestry. Thomas Jefferson, in his work called "The Value of Constitutions," wrote, "...the office of Sheriff is the most important of all the executive offices of the country." After two hundred years, experience has proven that the perspective of Jefferson and other founding fathers is just as valid today as it was when they first perceived of how a free society could best be constructed. The office of Sheriff is certainly significant, and was in fact the first county office established in the United States. Some very outstanding Americans have held the office of County Sheriff, from the earliest days down to our present era. George Washington's father was an early Sheriff in Colonial Virginia. The history of the position and functions of a Sheriff, prior to establishment of the position in America, can reportedly be traced to provisions of the Magna Carta in England, in the year 1215. The Sheriffs of America have played a significant role in the history of our Nation, and the Sheriffs of Ohio are no exception to this heritage. A brief study of the history of Ohio reveals that Ohio Sheriffs have contributed greatly to the development of the Buckeye State. Until Ohio achieved statehood in 1803, the position of Sheriff was filled through appointments made at the pleasure of the Colonial Governor. The first Sheriff on the record in Ohio was Colonel Ebenezer Sproat. At the time he was appointed in 1788, Colonel Sproat's jurisdiction covered all of Washington County. This enormous area of land included all of eastern Ohio from the Ohio River to Lake Erie. After statehood became a reality, only three public offices in Ohio were filled through the electoral process system. The position of Sheriff was one of them. Through this new system, William Skinner became the first elected Sheriff in the Buckeye State. Since the early 1800's, Ohio Sheriffs have been elected on the county level by the people they serve. By virtue of this process, this office has become the oldest law enforcement position in the United States. It is also the only remaining law enforcement office which is filled through the election method. The term of office for County Sheriffs in Ohio is four years. In each of the 88 counties of Ohio, the Sheriff is the chief law enforcement officer. His primary duties are to provide common pleas court services and corrections on a countywide basis, and full police protection to the unincorporated areas of the county. However, he also maintains full police jurisdiction in all municipalities, townships, and villages. In an effort to become consistent on a statewide level, Ohio Sheriffs and Deputies wear a standardized uniform, and all patrol vehicles are marked in the same manner. There are several interesting tidbits of trivia about our Sheriffs. The first Sheriff in the state of Ohio was not elected, but was appointed in 1788. The first Hamilton County Sheriff we have record of was also appointed, in 1790 by Governor A. St. Clair and was John Brown (1790-1792). James Smith (1797-1804) was also titled Collector of the Government Revenue, while Morton L. Hawkins (1883-1884) served during the Court House riot and fire. Asa V. Butterfield (1931-1934) was a candidate on two tickets (Democrat and Independent) and Sheriff Dan P. Tehan (1949-1972) served the longest as Sheriff with a total of 24 years of service (he declined to run for a 7th term), followed by Sheriff Simon L. Leis, our current Sheriff since 1987, and the third longest, Sheriff Lincoln J. Stokes (1977-1987) with 10 years Within Ohio, Sheriff's Offices have probably one of the most extensive sets of responsibilities to those they serve. By statute they must provide the following: Line Law Enforcement Court Security and Service of Papers Jail Operations Extradition Process Transportation of Prisoners Ohio's 88 counties each have a Sheriff's Office and these vary in size from a dozen deputies to over 600 deputies. Hamilton County is one of the largest, along with Cuyahoga, Franklin, and Montgomery Counties. Since the appointment of John Brown in 1790, 57 men have served as Shire Rieve of Hamilton County. They are as follows: HAMILTON COUNTY SHERIFFS 1790-PRESENT 1987-Present Simon L. Leis, Jr. 1977-1987 Lincoln J. Stokes 1973-1976 Paul J. Fricker 1949-1972 Dan P. Tehan 1943-1948 C. Taylor Handman 1939-1942 Fred Sperber 1937-1938 George A. Lutz, Jr. 1935-1936 George A. Lutz, Sr. 1931-1934 Asa V. Butterfield 1927-1930 William Anderson 1923-1926 Richard B. Witt 1919-1922 Fred Bader 1915-1918 George F. Schott 1911-1914 Charles Cooper 1907-1910 Henry W. Hamann 1903-1906 Salmon Jones 1899-1902 Thomas A. Taylor 1897-1898 Chris Reichel 1893-1896 R.M. Archiabald 1891-1892 Val Heim 1887-1890 Leo Schott 1885-1886 Samuel Beresford 1883-1884 Morton L. Hawkins 1881-1882 Samuel Bailey 1879-1880 George Weber 1877-1888 William Pitt Wallace 1875-1876 Fred Springmeier********************* 1873-1874 George W. Zeigler 1871-1872 Joseph E. Heart 1869-1870 Daniel Weber 1867-1868 Henry S. Schotman 1865-1866 Richard Calvin 1863-1864 William Long 1861-1862 John B. Armstrong 1859-1860 Henry Kessler 1857-1858 Richard Matthews 1855-1856 Gassaway Brashear 1853-1854 Benjamin Higdon 1851-1852 Charles W. Smith 1849-1850 Joseph Cooper 1847-1848 Thomas S. Weaver 1843-1846 John H. Gerard 1839-1842 John C. Avery 1836-1838 Samuel Fosdick 1831-1834 Ebenezer Hulse 1829-1830 John C. Avery 1823-1825 William Ruffin 1818-1822 Richard Ayres 1817-1817 William Ruffin 1816-1816 Daniel Hosbrook 1813-1814 John S. Wallace 1811-1812 Joseph Jenkinson 1806-1810 Aaron Goforth 1805-1806 William McFarland 1797-1804 James Smith 1795-1796 Daniel Symmes 1793-1794 John Ludlow 1790-1792 John Brown Saba Note: I say, a lot of names over the years in Ohoi that are familiar even today....the only John Brown I ever heard of was an old song we used to sing "We Will Hang John Brown to the Sour Apple Tree".....and our Lt. Govenor John Brown - Brown has always been a good name in Ohio - but Fred Springmeier - is this right spelling?
http://www.hcso.org/history/office.htm