As upheld by the 4th FL Ct of Appeals on 1st Anmendment rights, Campaign For Freedom is a group of concerned citizens exposing corrupt South Florida lobbyist and convicted criminal Ron L Book, and his bimbo daughter, current FL State Senator and Victim Industry Profiteer (Professional Victim) Lauren F. Book. We desire freedom from the corruption of the Book family and their political cronies. All news here posted under fair use.
Thursday, June 20, 2019
Lauren Book claims to "support free speech," but we all know better than that
Lauren "The Irresponsible Whore" Book claims she supports free speech, but we all know better than that. This public school teacher should be grateful that he did not call Lauren Book an irresponsible whore, because even though Lauren Book IS an IRRESPONSIBLE WHORE, we know that calling Lauren Book an IRRESPONSIBLE WHORE will cause her to file a restraining order on you AND possibly get one of her paid supporters to file a bogus complaint against you to silence your activism.
Lauren told the Miami New Times back in 2015 said she wished critics "would speak directly to me so I can show them the amazing work we are doing on behalf of children." When a group of protesters tried doing that a month later, she called the police to try to have them arrested.
When an online critic protested Lauren Book, she filed a restraining order to silence him.
When anyone dares to question Lauren Book on her questionable fundraising efforts, she hides behind her abuse narrative, as noted in the Miami New Times in 2015:
"Political points?" Lauren asked incredulously. "I want to be clear about one thing. I was raped every day for six years, and they were the six most horrible and horrific years of my life. I felt guilty, ashamed, invisible, bad, dirty, hurt, and afraid every single day from the time that I was 11 until I was 16... Children in every community on the planet are also enduring the pain I suffered. I am trying to turn my personal pain into something positive and hopefully prevent this from happening to others."
But they have no problems calling people creeping crud, monsters, ticking time bombs, SOBs, and other vile names:
https://www.liveleak.com/view?t=uDwrL_1526695160
Lauren Book needs to understand free speech is a two way street. She should stop acting surprised when a critics calls Lauren Book a CUNT or an IRRESPONSIBLE WHORE, because she IS both.
Saturday, June 15, 2019
Stop me if you've heard this song before: Homeless Registrants in Miami must move again
Where have we heard this before? It is like a music tour, the cities change but the names remain the same. Julia Tuttle, Shorecreast, Allapattah, Hialeah, and now apparently Brownsville.
Honestly, when can we stop citing Ron Book as if he's helping with the solution?
If there is a hell, Ron Book will have his own circle of it after his passing.
https://www.miaminewtimes.com/news/homeless-sex-offenders-booted-offered-shelter-by-frank-diazs-united-we-all-can-11191829
Homeless Sex Offenders Must Move Again
JESSICA LIPSCOMB | JUNE 11, 2019 | 9:00AM
Ever since the Julia Tuttle Causeway became an encampment for sex offenders more than a decade ago, officials have been trying to shoo the group away from the rest of civilization. Thanks to stringent requirements mandating that child predators live 2,500 feet from schools, parks, and daycare centers, the offenders have struggled to find legal housing, leaving many effectively homeless. For years, the roving offenders have been shuffled from one place to another, angering unlucky neighbors and nearby business owners.
After a 2017 New Times report about unsanitary living conditions at the group's tent city near Hialeah, county commissioners booted the group. It split into smaller factions across the county; some members even left the state.
Now the county is preparing to break up a growing colony of sex offenders living on NW 48th Street in Brownsville. An official notice posted in the area says the state has declared the encampment a sanitary nuisance, and the county considers those living there to be in violation of Miami-Dade code. The county "will be forced to take appropriate enforcement action including, but not limited to, civil penalties and/or arrest" of those who do not vacate by June 20, the sign warns.
"They put up a notice saying, 'Kick rocks — you've got to get out of here.' The question is, to where?" says Frank Diaz, a local pastor who ministers to offenders at the camp.
Diaz says he and his nonprofit group, United We All Can, already care for homeless people in faith-based shelters across Miami-Dade. He'd like to further his outreach by dedicating an entire "restoration home" to displaced sex offenders.
"What we're asking is the county give us a place in an industrial area where it's away from parks, schools, and communities,” Diaz says. “We can build that place up and house them there. We'll minister to them, but the county's gotta help us find the property."
Ron Book, the ultrapowerful lobbyist who chairs the Homeless Trust, sees merit in the idea. It could help rehabilitate some sex offenders and make it easier for law enforcement and probation officers to keep track of the population.
"If somebody wants to build something away from the general population, we would certainly encourage that," Book says.
But he says he can't seriously entertain a proposal until it's fully fleshed out. And he's uncertain about using the Trust budget for such a project.
"Taking significant funds to fund the building or the renovation — you know, that remains to be seen as to my willingness to do that," Book says.
Without any clear direction on legal homes, the offenders now rely on word-of-mouth suggestions for places that fit the county's narrow criteria. Diaz says the law actually makes residents less safe in some ways because the sex offenders can't find steady housing or work.
"The only thing they're doing is getting angry," he says, "and what we want to do is restore them so they become productive and they don't recommit these types of offenses."
In the meantime, the group on NW 48th Street will be forced to find a new home, which, Diaz says, "is not a solution that works. They're just sweeping bodies under the rug and saying this is not a problem."
Honestly, when can we stop citing Ron Book as if he's helping with the solution?
If there is a hell, Ron Book will have his own circle of it after his passing.
https://www.miaminewtimes.com/news/homeless-sex-offenders-booted-offered-shelter-by-frank-diazs-united-we-all-can-11191829
Homeless Sex Offenders Must Move Again
JESSICA LIPSCOMB | JUNE 11, 2019 | 9:00AM
Ever since the Julia Tuttle Causeway became an encampment for sex offenders more than a decade ago, officials have been trying to shoo the group away from the rest of civilization. Thanks to stringent requirements mandating that child predators live 2,500 feet from schools, parks, and daycare centers, the offenders have struggled to find legal housing, leaving many effectively homeless. For years, the roving offenders have been shuffled from one place to another, angering unlucky neighbors and nearby business owners.
After a 2017 New Times report about unsanitary living conditions at the group's tent city near Hialeah, county commissioners booted the group. It split into smaller factions across the county; some members even left the state.
Now the county is preparing to break up a growing colony of sex offenders living on NW 48th Street in Brownsville. An official notice posted in the area says the state has declared the encampment a sanitary nuisance, and the county considers those living there to be in violation of Miami-Dade code. The county "will be forced to take appropriate enforcement action including, but not limited to, civil penalties and/or arrest" of those who do not vacate by June 20, the sign warns.
"They put up a notice saying, 'Kick rocks — you've got to get out of here.' The question is, to where?" says Frank Diaz, a local pastor who ministers to offenders at the camp.
Diaz says he and his nonprofit group, United We All Can, already care for homeless people in faith-based shelters across Miami-Dade. He'd like to further his outreach by dedicating an entire "restoration home" to displaced sex offenders.
"What we're asking is the county give us a place in an industrial area where it's away from parks, schools, and communities,” Diaz says. “We can build that place up and house them there. We'll minister to them, but the county's gotta help us find the property."
Ron Book, the ultrapowerful lobbyist who chairs the Homeless Trust, sees merit in the idea. It could help rehabilitate some sex offenders and make it easier for law enforcement and probation officers to keep track of the population.
"If somebody wants to build something away from the general population, we would certainly encourage that," Book says.
But he says he can't seriously entertain a proposal until it's fully fleshed out. And he's uncertain about using the Trust budget for such a project.
"Taking significant funds to fund the building or the renovation — you know, that remains to be seen as to my willingness to do that," Book says.
Without any clear direction on legal homes, the offenders now rely on word-of-mouth suggestions for places that fit the county's narrow criteria. Diaz says the law actually makes residents less safe in some ways because the sex offenders can't find steady housing or work.
"The only thing they're doing is getting angry," he says, "and what we want to do is restore them so they become productive and they don't recommit these types of offenses."
In the meantime, the group on NW 48th Street will be forced to find a new home, which, Diaz says, "is not a solution that works. They're just sweeping bodies under the rug and saying this is not a problem."
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