Friday, September 7, 2007

"A Corruption Tour of New Jersey."

"New Jersey 'Corruption Tour' Nets 11 Public Officials," BREAKING NEWS, September 7, 2007, at http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20637957/
Elizabeth Dwoskin, "Judge Gives New Jersey a Week to Fix Voting Machines," in The New York Times, September 6, 2007, at p. B3.
Trymaine Lee, "Reputed Gambino Figure Sentenced in 92 Deaths of Mob Antagonists," in The New York Times, September 6, 2007, at p. B2.
Dvid W. Chen, "New Jersey Police Win Praise for Efforts to End Profiling," in The New York Times, September 6, 2007, at p. B1.
"Corzine Expected to Extend State Oversight of Camden," in The New York Times, September 16, 2007, at p. 32.

"... 11 public officials arrested in New Jersey Thursday -- 2 lawmakers, 2 mayors, 3 city councilmen," and others, each of them with judges in their pockets and friends in the local prosecutor's offices. This is further evidence, if any were needed, of the incompetence of Anne Milgram and the New Jersey Attorney General's office and of New Jersey's disgraced Supreme Court. Corruption, criminality, fraudulent legal proceedings, influenced or bribed judges are the norm in New Jersey. No wonder they don't want you to read these essays. U.S. Attorney, Christopher Christie said, with visible disgust (which I share):

"Today, we witnessed another example of the disease of public corruption that spread like wildfire from south to north. ... The arrests on Thursday just scratch the surface of the corruption that goes on here." (emphasis added)

Ethics? How can you even speak the word in that filthy, morally despicable turf known as New Jersey's legal-political culture? I plan to devote a longer essay to this topic, naming offenders and drawing on my own recollections of life in America's legal toilet. (I expect more attacks on my computer, anonymous slurs and slanders, threats, insults and the usual responses from persons entrusted with enforcing the Constitution.)

"TRENTON, Sept. 5 -- Eight years after New Jersey acknowledged that troopers were focusing on black and Hispanic drivers at traffic stops, federal monitors said on Wednesday that the New Jersey State Police had made so much progress [irony?] in its attempts to eliminate racial profiling that it no longer needed federal supervision." (emphasis added!)

"The monitors concluded in a report that in periodic reviews during the past eight years, the police had shown significant improvement in procedures and training."

There was nowhere to go but up.

"In a consent decree signed in 1999, the state agreed to allow the federal Department of Justice to oversee how traffic stops were conducted, along with other State Police activities."

"... Governor Jon S. Corzine appointed a 21-member committee last year to determine whether to ask the federal government if the consent decree should be lifted. This report does not eliminate the federal supervision by itself, so it is up to the state to file a request with federal officials to have it end."

Any committee of New Jersey Bar Association big wigs will conclude that New Jersey's secret torture practices, racial profiling, theft of public funds is hunky-dory. The state sanctions theft, assault, torture, rape by its house shrinks and other political whores, who probably supply judges with sexual favors or payoffs. The reason "connected lawyers" are appointed to such committees is so that they will draw predetermined convenient conclusions, then find a way to justify them. It is a political appointment -- like the ethics committees that are usually staffed by the most unethical attorneys and political bag men and women -- as corrupt as most institutions or committees in the Garden State would have to be.

How's Debbie doing? Is it true that Debbie's really "chummy" with Diana? That would explain a lot. New Jersey is a state that is so saturated with racism, mob control of government institutions, judicial incompetence and failures in law enforcement that it was necessary for the federal government to "supervise" law enforcement. Now the state "takes pride" in a committe of their own made members' suggestion that, maybe, it'll be o.k. not to police the police? Wow, that's quite a boast to make. As Anne Milgram remarked: "Totally awesome, dude!"

Hackers and insertion of "errors" in my text proves my point. As I write this, I am unable to use my printer, which has been blocked, numerous obstacles afflict my computer again. I am blocking: http://view.atdmt.com/iview/msnnkhac00172... (Senator Bob, sadly deprived of the Babe. I commiserate with you, Senator.)

Any request to terminate federal supervision of New Jersey police should be viewed with great suspicion and denied "forthwith."

"NEWARK, Sept 5 -- A New Jersey county judge in a ruling in a lawsuit on Wednesday gave the state one week to figure out how to create a paper trail for its 10,000 electronic voting machines, saying that under the current system they are vulnerable to tampering" -- probably from the same people tampering with my blogs and sites, no doubt also preventing my publication efforts -- "the state attorney general's office said."

"Penny Venetis, a Rutgers law professor who is representing the plaintiffs, said she was pleased with the ruling. 'The state was poised to spend $40 MILLION on faulty printers,' Ms. Venetis said. 'A 9 year-old could break into these machines.' ..."

That's what they want, Professor Venetis. Whatever machines they install in New Jersey, the Democrat machine will tamper with them, so as to corrupt and steal elections. And speaking of corruption and stealing, convictions in Brooklyn of a reputed Gambino crime boss are rumored to be only a small part of a massive federal investigation involving agents in several states -- including New Jersey -- that will result in additional indictments "in due course." I can't wait.

The arrests and charges of mafia figures in Orange, New Jersey -- Richard J. Codey turf -- has confirmed my expectations. I would not be surprised to see more FEDERAL arrests, including Cuban Mafia figures in Hudson County and Miami 'connected' to Trenton politicians.

"CAMDEN, N.J., Sept. 15 (AP) -- Gov. Jon S. Corzine was to sign a bill extending a state takeover of this troubled city's government during a visit on Sunday morning, according to a senior Corzine administration official."

The city's "books" were kept (and cooked) in pencil. "Its easier to steal that way," one local political veteran explained. Members of Camden's political-criminal organization are reputedly unhappy, threatening to send Mr. Corzine a horse's head or a free trip with one of their drivers on the Parkway or Turnpike. Corzine, wisely, declined both offers -- allegedly.

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