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Seriously.  The Big Green Bus, home to the Wilson family, arrived from Montana to demonstrate solar panels, hydroponic gardening and sustainable environmental practices.  Instead,  it was impounded:

The Wilsons had just done a training in Minneapolis on urban permaculture. They were pulled over on the Cretin exit ramp from I-94 as they headed to a friend’s house to park the bus and get a good night’s sleep. Megan was changing clothes, and was in her underwear when the cops ordered them off the bus, but did manage to grab a dress.

Why were they pulled over? That’s what Stan asked the police. Repeatedly. “I asked them more questions than they asked me,” he said.

“A routine traffic stop,” the police told him. A routine traffic stop, with more than a dozen police cars including Minnesota highway patrol, St. Paul, Minneapolis, University of Minnesota and Ramsey County officers lined up with lights flashing.

Stan isn’t buying it. For one thing, the police never gave any reason for pulling him over. They never asked to see his vehicle registration or proof of insurance. Instead, they asked him: “Have you ever called the police before?” and “Do you like cops?” And then they towed away the big, green bus, telling him they had to “ascertain whether it was being used for commercial purposes,” and that they had to make sure it was safe to be on the road.

According to Bruce Nestor of the National Lawyer's Guild, law enforcement officials who conducted the raids were also crowing about having confiscated five buckets of dangerous urine in one of their raids (which could presumably be used to make urine bombs).

It turned out to be from an illegal apartment within within one of the houses that didn't have a bathroom.

Feeling safer yet?