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Hawaii Police Commission <br /> Regular Session Minutes <br /> December 16, 2022 <br /> Page 3 <br /> humanity and their own kuleana regardless of what they're being ordered to do, <br /> regardless of unlawful regulations and mandates, and instead, choose to abide by the <br /> law, the Constitution of the United States regardless of the fact that this is an illegally <br /> occupied situation that we're dealing with as well. In the meantime, before law is <br /> restored, we are all beholden to the Constitution of the United States which honors <br /> every single one's right. She stated that she cares for everyone and she has been <br /> working so hard as a single parent that she can't even afford to live here and is on a <br /> plane in a few days. She's moving to a place that is constitutionally compliant, a place <br /> with an elected sheriff, a county that takes kuleana seriously. <br /> Commissioner Sur asked where she was moving to, she stated Castle Rock, Colorado. <br /> • Kevin Hill came before the commission and stated the new chief will face pressures <br /> from money, unions, politics, and pressures from everywhere. He stated he's here <br /> today to speak about the most important pressure, the pressure that happens when <br /> people don't feel like they're heard. There are a lot of people who have been frustrated <br /> because they don't feel like they've been heard and he's grateful for the commission <br /> because this is an opportunity to be heard. Someone might look at the structure of <br /> where the chief of police fits in. You have the department of public safety, who's <br /> appointed by a politician and everything else trickles down from that. One might think <br /> that the police chief answers to a politician. As much as that may or not be true, what <br /> the police chief needs to do is answer to the people. If the civil system doesn't work <br /> and doesn't hear the needs of the people, there has to be a way to hear the people <br /> from the people and not have to wait until it trickles down through a court. He spoke <br /> about the power of an affidavit when people sign under witnesses and under penalties <br /> of perjury and speak their truth. You're going to be seeing a grand jury of the people. <br /> He stated the seventh amendment; when the people gather together, there's no higher <br /> court in the land than the voice of the people. If the police chief and people who <br /> represent us can be answerable to the people, not to politicians, not to big money, not <br /> to unions, not to any of these pressures, but the pressure of conscience, and the <br /> people. If the police can be answerable to people with skin in the game, he would feel <br /> so much more at peace. <br /> • Chris Hirose came before the commission. He thanked the commission for listening to <br /> them. He stated he sees a major apocalypse coming, where there will be food and <br /> energy shortages. He spoke about Bill Gates sponsoring Event 201 in October and <br /> stated they came out with a new one, a new tabletop exercise and there will be a new <br /> virus that targets children. He stated apocalypse means a lifting of the veil, there will be <br /> an awakening of the people. He wants to inspire the new chief to be like Vladimir <br /> Zelenko, who was an ordinary doctor who got a rare form of lung cancer. He searched <br /> for a cure, found it and it extended his life. When COVID came to New York, he <br /> searched for a cure and he found it. Dr. Zelenko found a substitute for <br /> hydroxychloroquine, which was quercetin. His lung cancer gave him the wisdom to look <br /> and the banning of hydroxychloroquine gave him the opportunity to look for an <br />