Wednesday, May 22, 2013

And the Woman Calling.

I received a call from someone named "Cell Phone" at 917-656-0115 at 11:05 P.M. on May 25, 2013.

I received a call from "Quinnipiac University" on May 23, 2013 at 8:51 P.M. originating from  203-582-3050. I wonder whether this call has anything to do with Ms. Quinn's campaign? Probably, this was only a coincidence. 

May 24, 2013: Happy birthday, Gemini. I wish you all the happiness in the world, great health, patience, courage and faith. The good things will happen. No one will stop this meeting from taking place.

The Voice

by

Thomas Hardy

WOMAN much missed, how you call to me, call to me,
Saying that now you are not as you were
When you had changed from the one who was all to me,
But, as at first, when our day was fair.

Can it be you that I hear? Let me view you, then,
Standing as when I drew near to the town
Where you would wait for me: yes, I mean you then,
Even to the original air-blue gown!

Or is it only the breeze, in its listlessness
Travelling across the wet mead to me here,
You being ever dissolved to wan listlessness,
Heard no more, again, far or near?

Thus I; faltering forward,
Leaves around me falling,
Wind oozing thin through the thorn from norward,
And the woman calling.

John Wain, Ed., The Oxford Anthology of English Poetry: Blake to Heaney (Oxford: Oxford U. Press, 2005), p. 518.

Will there be justice for Danielle Willard?

Jack Healy,"A 'Pandora's Box' of Problems From a Police Shooting and Drugs in a Utah Town," in The New York Times, May 18, 2013, at p. A10.

Elizabeth Mallin, "Guatemala's High Court Overturns Genocide Conviction of Former Dictator," in The New York Times, May 21, 2013, at p. A6.

Brian Steller & Michael D. Shear, "Justice Dept. Investigated Fox Reporter Over Leak," in The New York Times, May 20, 2013, at p. A16.

Peter Baker & Jonathan Weisman, "White House Says Obama Was Not Told of I.R.S. Investigation as it Unfolded," in The New York Times, May 21, 2013, at p. D8. 

Fintan O'Toole, "The Real Men of England," in The New York Review of Books, June 6, 2013, at p. 19. (Review of John Le Carre's A Delicate Truth (New York: Viking, 2013), 310 pages.) 

James Gleick, "Time Regained," in The New York Review of Books, June 6, 2013, at p. 46. (Reviewing Lee Smolin, Time Reborn: From the Crisis in Physics to the Future of the Universe (New York: Houghton-Mifflin, 2013), 319 pages.)

"WEST VALLEY CITY, Utah -- It began with bullets and bloodshed one November afternoon. A 21 year-old woman was dead. Two undercover officers had opened fire on her car. The police began asking the usual questions about what happened and why."

As with New Jersey's Office of Attorney Ethics (OAE) and tainted Attorney General's office, corrupt local police in Utah tend to find drug offense assignments lucrative.("New Jersey's Politically-Connected Lawyers On the Tit" and "Corrupt Law Firms, Senator Bob, and New Jersey Ethics.")

A number of my former clients commented on the greed of DEA officials who had an uncanny ability to make expensive t.v. sets, Rolex watches, cash and designer clothes "disappear" after a drug raid of a suspect's apartment. ("Senator Bob Loves Xanadu!")

New Jersey persons devoted to a life of crime understand that bribing police and politicians is a cost of doing business. ("Does Senator Menendez have mafia friends?" and "Is Menendez For Sale?" then "New Jersey's Child Sex Industry" and "Menendez and N.J.'s New Child Sex Crisis.")

There comes a point, however, at which corrupt cops can become too greedy for their own good. As with most things, the process of corruption becomes a spiral in which the need to cover-up thefts (Gilberto Garcia?) or drug use by cops results in the commission of greater offenses by the same cops or their superiors. ("Bribery in Union City, New Jersey" and "Is Union City, New Jersey Meyer Lansky's Whore House?") 

I suspect that the OAE's efforts to cover-up and lie about crimes as well as breaches of ethics rules in my matters has caused some of these culprits to commit further and more heinous offenses. John McGill, Esq.? I wonder whether Mr. McGill's dinner at the Martinez home was arranged by Gilberto Garcia? Who was present on that occasion, Terry Tuchin? Diana Lisa Riccioli? ("New Jersey's 'Ethical' Legal System" and "New Jersey's Office of Attorney Ethics" then "Jennifer Velez is a Dyke Magnet!")

Increasingly desperate efforts to preserve a public image of pristine purity ("Have you no shame, Mr. Rabner?") can even result in murder, or the close equivalent to murder -- like setting-up or framing a person -- which is what I suspect was done to Marilyn Straus. 

"Ms. Willard, who had struggled with drug addiction was shot and killed by undercover officers from the West Valley City Police Department's neighborhood narcotics unit. The police say that Ms. Willard had been seen buying drugs, and that when officers approached her ... Subaru Forrester, she backed up [sic.] in their direction, striking one officer. They opened fire, hitting her in the head. She was unarmed."

Subsequent investigation revealed drugs and other questionable items in the trunk of a vehicle owned by Detective Sean Cowley. Mr. Cowley was one of the two officers at the scene of the shooting of Ms. Willard. Based on the newspaper accounts, there were no drugs on the person of Ms. Willard who has not yet -- again based on media accounts -- received an autopsy. This is very unusual. 

No one has examined the body of Ms. Willard to determine whether she was sexually violated before death or suffered physical injuries consistent with a beating prior to being shot. It is ridiculous to suggest that Ms. Willard would, deliberately, have "backed-up" her vehicle into the armed police officers, choosing to challenge a police barricade. No sane person would do such a thing. 

More plausible is the possibility that officers from this drug enforcement unit that is under suspicion for THEFT, tainted evidence that has resulted in "dismissals" of 125 cases and other dismissals because of lack of evidence due to drugs being "lost," or "missing" evidence after the transportation of Controlled Dangerous Substances (CDS) to labs for testing, "came upon" the young (21 years-old) and attractive Ms. Willard -- who may have been "about to" purchase drugs or simply in the neighborhood for some other reason. 

Mistaking the victim for a drug addict or prostitute, the boys in blue may have decided to rape and steal from Ms. Willard, then to get rid of her in order to avoid having a witness to deal with later. Killing the victim is more efficient than framing her on a drug charge which might go to trial. 

Shooting Ms. Willard in the head, then claiming that Ms. Willard was a "threat" to their safety means that there is only one version of events that night and no possible factual contradiction from other witnesses. 

A dead 21 year-old woman -- ideally for the dirty cops, someone with a minor criminal record for drug use or prostitution (those things usually go together) -- will not present any credibility issues or much concern for the authorities. 

Who's going to care about her? No one, usually. I wonder what they did to Marilyn Straus? ("Trenton's Nasty Lesbian Love-Fest!")

Except that this young woman, Ms. Willard, has a feisty mom who is suing the town. I suspect that they will settle this lawsuit. Ms. Willard also has several writers (like me) with legal training who will follow-up on this story, every day, until all the issues are resolved fully. ("Abuse and Exploitation of Women in New Jersey" and "Not One More Victim.")

Happily, there is now a federal investigation of Ms. Willard's case, also (I believe) of my allegations against New Jersey. I will continue to update this story. Mr. Vance? NYPD? Mr. Holder? Any good news?

I wonder how many officials in New Jersey RAPED Marilyn Straus? Diana Lisa Riccioli? 

Sadly, the events in Utah may be even more sinister because, I believe, they resulted in murder. Other than powerless young women, who else would make a good victim for these cops? Guess:

"Advocates of Hispanic residents were jarred by one detail: in 93 of 114 cases dismissed [as bogus] by the district attorney, the defendants had Latino last names. City officials say that reflected a reality of how drugs are traded and trafficked in Central Utah; activists said it indicated bias."

What these statistics "indicate" is that -- like vulnerable young women -- "Hispanics" are convenient victims of police criminality because many are illegals, afraid of the police, who will not complain of being stolen from by the authorities, especially if they are from New Jersey where such thefts are routine. ("Law and Ethics in the Soprano State.")

Being forced to associate with a person who has acted to harm me from behind my back, incidentally, will not change my mind about that person. Such a social event will make things much worse for everyone.