August 25, 2014 at 2:55 P.M. additional sources will be added to this text in the days ahead. Any response received to my various letters to U.S. officials will be posted online.
I do not expect a response of any kind from government officials at this time.
Salvador Rizzo, "High Court Gets Tough On Bomb Threats: Reinstates first-degree convictions, ruling presence of explosives not necessary," The Star Ledger, August 12, 2014, p. 11. (New Jersey courtrooms have been marked not only by crooked proceedings taking place within them, but also by defacements -- including feces on walls -- and threats of bombings on a regular basis. If legal systems cannot deal with their obvious failures and lingering catastrophes, "self-help" will become inevitable for victims who do not share my commitment to non-violence. Those of us who believe in due process of law can only hope that Mr. Rabner and N.J. legal professionals, generally, will see the wisdom in dealing, honestly, with the problems in N.J. law and ethics. "No More Cover-Ups and Lies, Chief Justice Rabner!")
Anthony G. Atrino, "South Amboy: Man Accused of Contact With a Minor," The Star Ledger, August 12, 2014, p. 14. (Joseph Waresk is charged with aggravated sexual assault of a 16 year-old girl. The Polish-Israeli Mr. Waresk is 72 years-old. "New Jersey Rabbi Faces Child Porn Charges.")
Dan Ivers, "Man Faces Charges for Alleged Groping," The Star Ledger, August 12, 2014, p. 13. (An airplane passenger Euen Jong Lee, 47, was taken into custody at Newark airport because, after a young woman fell asleep in the seat next to him on his flight in from Japan, Mr. Lee "groped" the woman. Mr. Lee learned the technique from Bob Menendez, perhaps.)
Stephanie Akin, "Christie Fighting Records Requests: More Than 20 Lawsuits Seeking Public Documents," The Record, August 13, 2014, p. A-1. (Mr. Christie's model of "cover-up-and-deny" when confronted with state secrecy is reflective of National Security State policies. It is likely that Christie will lose in the courts. Something to hide, Chris?)
Kibret Marcos, "Courts Rely On Retirees: As Vacancies Persist, Ex-Judges Often Fill-In," The Record, August 13, 2014, p. A-1. (Senile or semi-senile and/or comatose judges napping through complex proceedings are nothing new in the Garden State.)
Jack Guillem, "NSA's Automatic Cyberwar Weapon: Report Details Risky Un-Manned Attacks," The Record, August 14, 2014, p. A-11. ("The National Security Agency SECRETLY planned a cyberwarfare program that could automatically fire back at cyberattacks from foreign countries without any human involvement ...")
Sharon Cohen, "In Ferguson Peace Process Elusive Goal: Tactics change seemingly by the day but fail to quell the race-tinged unrest," The Star Ledger, August 20, 2014, p. 1. (There are periodic glimpses at the divisions in America that explain so many of our troubles. About half of the nation regards the other half as sub-human with much hypocrisy and lying on the surface to conceal the reality. Much of the hostility to Mr. Obama is visibly racist. No wonder we find it difficult to "move on" after events like the Ferguson shooting.)
Susie Graziano, "Man Accused of Sex Acts With Minor," The Star Ledger, August 20, 2014, p. 16. (David C. Hardy, 33, charged with sexual contact with a minor under 16 years-old. Again, this individual, evidently, is part of a network of fellow enthusiasts in New Jersey.)
Alan Feuer, "Macy's to Repay $650,000 to Resolve Bias Inquiry," The New York Times, August 20, 2014, p. A19. ("Taking My Business Elsewhere.")
Nikita Stewart, "Injury Claims Against City's Correction Dept. Doubled in 5 Years," The New York Times, August 20, 2014, p. A19. (Physical and psychological tortures in U.S. prisons and jails almost always target African-American or Latino defendants and inmates: "Foucault, Rose, Davis and the Meanings of Prison" and "Psychological Torture in the American Legal System.")
Stephanie Clifford, "Exonerated Man Reaches $10 MILLION Deal With the City," The New York Times, August 20, 2014, p. A19. ("Louis C. Taylor Serves 42 Years as an Innocent Man" and "Aaron Schwartz, Freedom, and American Law.")
"After three years of litigation, JABBAR COLLINS, a man who spent 16 years in prison for a murder he did not commit, has reached a [total] $10 million settlement with New York."
An epidemic of expensive and damaging abuse cases continue to underline the racism and inhumanity, frequent disdain for the dignity of persons and due process of law, that too often characterize law enforcement efforts in America. ("So Black and So Blue in Prison" and "Justice For Mumia Abu-Jamal" then "Larry Peterson Cleared by DNA.")
New York is far better than most places and, under the current administration, deals with and resolves these controversies (speedily and fairly) when they come up.
New Jersey's lying and covering-up approach, on the other hand, allows criminal obstructions and denials of justice to fester and contaminate the system on a permanent basis. ("Terry Tuchin, Diana Lisa Riccioli, and New Jersey's Agency of Torture" and "New Jersey's 'Ethical' Legal System.")
"The case is notable because it exposed questionable policies under the former Brooklyn district attorney, Charles J. Hynes. Along the way, Mr. Collins' lawyer, Joel B. Rudin, deposed Mr. Hynes and his top assistants, providing a rare look at how a powerful district attorney ran his office." ("John McGill, Esq., the OAE, and New Jersey Corruption.")
A "Fort Apache" mentality can become popular and pervasive with self-styled "law enforcers" who become law breakers because they see themselves as the ONLY representatives of virtue anointed by the Lord to root-out all forms of unworthy conduct associated with "others," never themselves. The "others" are usually minority group members. ("New Jersey's Unethical Judiciary.")
This "we-are-the-good-guys" attitude can result in a view of the very citizens that police and prosecutors are meant to protect as "evil" -- unless they are cops. ("New Jersey's Office of Attorney Ethics" and "An Open Letter to My Torturers in New Jersey, Terry Tuchin and Diana Lisa Riccioli.")
New Jersey's Office of Attorney Ethics (OAE) is responsible for unethical and criminal actions that are "fine," it seems -- in their own estimation anyway -- if they result in damaging the lives of attorneys "disliked" by higher-ups, but not if they explode in the faces of those who like or make use of such tactics.
It is not a lawyer's job to be popular. It is sometimes necessary to confront the system with its failures and judges with their abuses of citizens' rights. I am not required to support someone for political office on the basis of ethnicity if that person is dishonest, or incompetent, or a front-man for unsavory elements. ("Jay Romano and Conduct Unbecoming to the Judiciary in New Jersey" and "Sexual Favors For New Jersey Judges" then "Marilyn Straus Was Right!" and "Is Menendez For Sale?" and "Diana's Friend Goes to Prison!" and "Deborah T. Poritz and Conduct Unbecoming to the Judiciary in New Jersey.")
Ms. Poritz as well as Mr. Rabner and Mr. Hynes were all "friends," perhaps they still are, along with Solomon Dwek and Bernie Madoff. ("Have you no shame, Mr. Rabner?" then "No More Cover-Ups and Lies, Chief Justice Rabner!" and "Stuart Rabner's Selective Sense of Justice.")
"Mr. Rudin accused the [Hynes] office of detaining reluctant witnesses in hotel rooms until they agreed to testify, and of advising its lawyers not to take notes when prosecution witnesses gave inconsistent statements to avoid potentially exculpatory evidence. The city's lawyers have challenged these claims." ("Prosecutorial Misconduct" and "Is America's Legal Ethics a Lie?")
Are these policies of the former chief prosecutor in Brooklyn "ethical"? ("American Lawyers in the Torture Debate.")
The OAE does not deny, as far as I can tell, threatening or bribing people to lie about me, or having my family members inform against me on penalty of being fired from their public jobs, altering or fabricating "evidence" against me, tampering with witnesses and obstructing justice, serious crimes, committed in (so far) unsuccessful efforts to frame me for something and/or to deem me "unethical." Criminal conduct by OAE lawyers seems "unethical," to me, to say nothing of frauds upon what purports to be New Jersey's Supreme Court. ("New Jersey's Feces-Covered Supreme Court" and "New Jersey's Legal System is a Whore House.")
Members of the state's failed judiciary have referred to its courts as "feces-covered" and to the legal system as a "whore house." I will be delighted to name judges and lawyers who have said such things or worse, often publicly, in the good old courthouse cafeteria. ("Christie Attacks New Jersey's Corrupt Judges" and "New Jersey's Failed Judiciary.")
New Jersey's OAE has interrogated witnesses in a drugged state and under hypnosis as well as exploiting opportunities for sex with such impaired persons: Right Estela De La Cruz? Lilian Munoz? Diana Lisa Riccioli? Mary Anne Kriko? Nydia Hernandez? ("Jennifer Velez is a Dyke Magnet!" and "Trenton's Nasty Lesbian Love-Fest.")
After participating in such unethical conduct I find it somewhat ludicrous that OAE attorneys and/or judges in New Jersey presume to comment on my ethics, or to engage in computer crime and/or censorship efforts against me -- even attempts to steal my watch! -- while stone-walling, lying, covering-up in response to persistent requests for the truth from me and others, in America and elsewhere. ("Diana's Friend Goes to Prison!" and "New Jersey Supreme Court's Implosion" and "New Jersey's Judges Disgrace America.")
" ... Mr. Collins also found that a prosecutor did not turn over exculpatory evidence."
This is routine behavior from prosecutors and OAE lawyers today:
"The wrongful conviction settlement is one of several the city has reached this year, including a $6.4 MILLION settlement for David Ranta, a man who spent nearly 23 years in prison for a murder he did not commit."
Mr. Hynes is currently under investigation for misappropriation of funds; OAE matters are also under federal investigation, allegedly and finally. None of these persons will go to prison, however, unless they are African-Americans or Latinos:
"Mr. Collins settled with the state under the Unjust Conviction Act for [in part] $3 million [in immediate payment]." ("So Black and So Blue in Prison.")
Perhaps Stuart Rabner has my Invicta watch? ("The Invicta Watch Company" and "The Invicta Watch Company Caper.")