Debatable calling card in demand The daylight after Mayor Annise Parker said she was concerned almost a council member giving out cards advising people not to speak to police, City Councilwoman Jolanda Jones says metiers coverage of the dustup has been a boon. At one time the news got out, Jones said, she at once began receiving requests for her “Know Your Rights With The Police” cards. Jones said gobs of callers have requested the quick-reference postcards. One company even asked for a copy of the “Freedom Card,” Jones said with a chortle this morning. Jones has been administering the cards for years as part of her criminal defence law practice. The card became news when it was administered at a forum on police brutality at a Baptist church this month abiding by the release of a tape that appears to show police amazing a handcuffed black teenager. Amid the advice on the card: “NEVER speak with the police. You have a right to continue silent. Use it! Ask for & contact your lawyer.” The mayor said she was “implicated” about anyone who gave advice not to speak with police force, and the Houston Police Officers Union said such advice was polarising and could actually endanger policemen in the field. But Jones said people in the felon defence community have teased her about having the cheek to provide people with entropy on their rights. Since the news broke about the cards, she said, at least 30 people have neared her in person to ask for a card. She filled the bespeaks on the spot, since she carries them with her all the time, she said.