New 'I've-Been-Violated' app. SECRETLY reports alleged abuse to police

image credit: UK Telegraph
A disturbing new app called 'I've-Been-Violated' promises to SECRETLY report alleged domestic abuse to the authorities. Apps that SECRETLY report on citizens are Un-American and are the exact opposite of a democratic government.
According to the iTunes Apple store, "the app is the first app of its kind to allow a victim of sexual assault to confidentially record contemporaneous evidence (with video and audio) of an incident. The evidence is double-encrypted and stored offline. The app also, utilizing geo-coding technology, stores information about where the user was when he or she recorded the video. As a legal safeguard, the video record that the user creates is only available through appropriate authorities (legal, health, school) or by court order and is never directly available to the user."

image credit: UK Telegraph
Users of I’ve-Been-Violated app are instructed to get to a safe location and then “tell their story by following the on-screen instructions. The app will prompt you on what to say while recording video and audio.” The evidence is then stored for use by authorities once the user has alerted them to the alleged crime.
This app prompts the accuser to answer leading questions which in turn will make it easier for police to arrest someone!
The White House is directly responsible for creating apps that perpetuate fear and allow the police state to grow.
Since 2011, the White House has been encouraging companies to develop abuse reporting (spying) apps. Another app called the 'Circle of Six' won the White House's App Against Abuse contest.
'OnWatchOnCampus' like Circle of Six, instantly contacts the police at the touch of a button.
Callisto, is another college sexual assault program that allows victims to write up an alleged report of a rape which only cops have access to.
Many of the apps target colleges and universities for good reason, college juries only need to be 50.01% certain that a student accused of sexual harassment or domestic abuse is guilty!
The university of Delaware police has even created a video parody of Drake’s “Hotline Bling” encouraging students to use apps to SECRETLY contact the police.
Almost every college and university accepts government aid from the Dept. of Education (DOE) and are bound to follow their policies. On April 4, 2011, the DOE's office for Civil Rights (OCR) sent a letter to colleges and universities nationwide mandating policy changes in the way schools address matters of sexual harassment and sexual assault on campus.
Are you beginning to see a pattern? Citizens are being encouraged by our government to SECRETLY report people to the police.
Apps, like "See Something Send Something' and "LiveSafe" perpetuate students fear of terror and crime. For more info. about how DHS/Police are creating fear-mongering apps read my article, DHS's everyones a terrorist app comes to New York.
Jealous spouses, girlfriends and boyfriends rejoice these apps, allow you to SECRETLY accuse anyone of abuse. The downside of course, they'll be arrested and probably issued a restraining order since our courts hand them out like candy.
Attorney Paul Stuckle warns about the dangers of arresting anyone accused of domestic violence...
"If an argument between intimate partners and spouses is the benchmark for domestic violence, then almost every couple and family in America would be defined as an abusive relationship. This governmental overreaction, and dragnet targeting of normal families and relationships, and treating them as criminals has led us to massive injustice across the nation."
John Flaherty, co-chairman of the Fatherhood Coalition issued this warning...
"This industry [domestic violence] is an octopus, It's got its tentacles in more and more parts of everyday life. It's a political movement. Many of its employees are, directly or indirectly, damaging children. This industry doesn't answer to anybody. They're in it mainly for the money -- and the children be damned."
John Maquire warns...
"The domestic violence entrepreneurs and state officials live in a different world from us. A sense of nameless vague threat is always in the background. To hear the pros talk, all the men they deal with are batterers, sexual abusers, or virtually time bombs of violence. Repeated cliches like "at risk" and "a safe place" and "maintaining safety" pepper their sentences. Yet, in many cases, there is no evidence of violence or any kind of serious harm to children, merely an accusation by the mother. But in the DV industry, when the accusation is made, the case is closed."
And finally Scott Greenfield of Simple Justice warns...
"The generic concept of “domestic abuse” has gone the way of rape and sexual assault, a vague slur of amorphous violent conduct in the mind of the public. And much like these words that have become untethered from definition, its mere mention is sufficient to raise cries of boyfriends killing girlfriends and psycho stalkers, even when the actual conduct involved is nothing more than an unwanted phone call or, on occasion, a woman striking a man and the man defending himself from attack."
"Allegations are sometimes used to gain advantage in divorce and custody proceedings, or to “teach a man a lesson.” How often this happens is subject to the same claims as false rape allegations, and is thus subject to vehement denial that it’s a real problem. But to the guys who are victimized by false allegations, the problem is very real."
68 million Americans have criminal records, which is more than the entire population of France.
Rick Jones, executive director of Neighborhood Defender Service of Harlem, testified to the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers last year. Jones said, “68 million people are living with convictions – more than the entire population of France. We are in danger of becoming a nation of criminals, because we are policing from a place of fear.”
Who's behind the 'I've-Been-Violated' app?
The app was designed by a 'divorced, semiretired weirdo' named Michael Lissack. I bet his ex-wife would have loved to have this app before the divorce.
According to a NY Times article, Lissack earned undisclosed millions and went through a divorce and psychiatric therapy. "I'm this semiretired weirdo, I read a little. I fiddle with this. I fiddle with that'' said Lissack.
Who is Mr. Lissack?
Mr. Lissack is the Executive Director of the Institute for the Study of Coherence and Emergence which designed the app.
Mr. Lissack was involved in the 1994 Wall St., yield burning scandal. According to Wikipedia, Mr. Lissack was banned by the SEC from the securities industry for five years and had to pay a $30,000 fine. Mr. Lissack made millions by becoming a whistleblower for the Feds but had to take "some responsibility for the scandal."
To find out more about Michael Lissack’s involvement in Wall Street's yield-burning scandal click here.
Not EVERYONE accused of domestic abuse is guilty, the White House, DHS and our police are responsible for creating these apps. Our justice system lives or dies on domestic assault and battery cases, traffic tickets etc. We need to break the cycle of balancing budgets by criminalizing EVERYONE.