Wednesday, May 28, 2008

New Jersey is Lucky Luciano's Havana.

June 1, 2008 at 5:10 P.M. It is not possible to update my system, scans are ineffective. I will continue to try to receive new updates and run security scans. "Errors" may be inserted in essays and other vandalism is always expected.

May 31, 2008 at 12:12 P.M. I discovered new "errors" inserted in a number of essays. I hope to correct all of these inserted "errors" and defacements of my works in the days and weeks ahead. I am still unable to update my security system. However, I will continue to try to do so. Please see "Law and Ethics in the Soprano State" and "What is it like to be tortured?" as well as "New Jersey's 'Ethical' Legal System."

May 30, 2008 at 6:03 P.M., after four scans, I am unable to update my security system. I will continue to struggle to do so. I am blocking:

http://ad.doubleclick.net/adj/N3753.msn/B27104952=728x90;ord;... (NJ)
http://ad.doubleclick.net/activity;src.f1652865;met=...
http://ad.doubleclick.net/activity;src.f1652865;met=...
http://ad.doubleclick.net/activity;src.f1652865;met=...

This usually means that "errors" are about to be inserted in my work. I'll keep you posted.

May 30, 2008 at 1:39 P.M. after two scans, I cannot update my security system at this time. "Errors" were inserted in a number of my essays yesterday. I will do my best to make corrections today. Calls received from "Anonymous" and 918-468-2338. My printer was disabled yesterday, preventing my child from printing her homework. At 1:51 P.M. today, I attempted to print my essay, "Carlos Fuentes and Multiculturalism" from Critique. I received a blank page with "728x90_edit" on the upper left corner and the following address at the bottom of the page:

http://view.atdmt.com/iview/msnnkhac001728x90xWBCBRB00110msn/direct;wi.728;hi.90/01

I wonder why it says "edit"? Could someone be in the process of inserting "errors" in my texts? (See "What is it like to be tortured?")

May 28, 2008 at 10:37 A.M. I was unable to run a scan after attacks against my security system. I will spend the rest of the day trying to do so, then I will try again tomorrow. I am blocking:

http://view.atdmt/com/MON/iview/msnnkssc12200... ("Atlas"? Is "Atlas" The New York Times?)

At 7:38 P.M. on May 27, 2008 I received calls from: 866-590-4640; at 3:10 P.M. on May 28, 2008 I received calls from: 517-931-2212; and at 2:55 P.M. from 213-537-1800; and at 2:25 P.M. from 888-343-7033; at 6:28 P.M. from 213-537-1800; at 7:35 P.M. from 213-537-1800. When I answered the calls from 213-537-1800, there was no response.

What a coincidence that I am on so many computerized marketing call lists? At least four other calls were received from 213-537-1800 and, again, there was no answer or response from the caller. "Anonymous" also called to say hello. See the essays in the General section at my msn group, http://Crtitique@groups.msn.com/ .


Mission Statement of New Jersey's Judiciary:

"We are an independent branch of government constitutionally ENTRUSTED with the fair and just resolution of disputes in order to preserve the rule of law and to protect the rights and liberties guaranteed by the Constitution and laws of the United States and this State."

Bob Ingle & Sandy McClure, "The Soviet Socialist Republic of New Jersey," in The Soprano State: New Jersey's Culture of Corruption (New York: St. Martin's Press, 2008), pp. 271-287.


I have tried to understand the bizarre and flagrant criminality of New Jersey's powerful politicians and government officials. I have achieved only limited success in this effort. Everyone can see that the state is "run" by the various mobs determining judicial appointments and political elections. No one seems capable of doing anything about this corruption. Anne Milgram's belated attempts to jump on the federal prosecution bandwagon with the after-the-fact charges against the likes of Mims Hackett is humiliating and pathetic. Ms. Milgram is clearly irrelevant to real power in the state.

The salt on the wound for many victims of this evil -- there is no other word for what these N.J. mobsters are! -- is the hideous, obfuscating jargon that has enveloped this explicit criminality. Mobsters, extortionists, murderers -- these people get to embody and define "ethics" for the rest of us in a twist of fate worthy of George Orwell -- by presuming to explain "goodness" to the electorate or legal profession.

"The Joint Legislative Committee on Ethical Standards originally consisted of only lawmakers hearing ethics complaints about fellow lawmakers, so the outcome was predictable."

Things were fixed for the boys and girls in Trenton, just as they are for most of the real crooked lawyers in New Jersey. The uncrooked lawyers tend to have problems with Ethics Committees and New Jersey's Supreme Court, where Jaynee LaVecchia still can't find those $300 MILLION that disappeared during the HIP deal. What the hell? ... Forget about it, Jaynee.

"One critic said [the lawmakers' ethics committee] should be named the 'damage control committee.' Legislators didn't take it too seriously either."

Among lawyers serving on county ethics committees, political connections mean everything. Phone calls take care of problems for members of the "club," whereas those outside the club are targeted for destruction. Payoffs are said to work wonders with judges and committee members. Refusing to provide a payoff is "not cooperating." This is, probably, an ethics offense in New Jersey. Right, John? What does your rule book say? Does $25,000 in political contributions still buy a judgeship?

"[The Committee's] Chairman, Assemblyman Anthony Impreveduto, told Gannett's Tom Baldwin in 2003 that the complaints heard by the committee -- which reprimanded only two members and fined a fourth $200 in ONE HUNDRED ELEVEN cases it handled since 1972 -- generally didn't amount to 'donkey dust.' One time the committee, under Impreveduto, claimed that it dropped an ethics complaint because it couldn't find the accuser, an individual that a Gannett reporter found with ease."

"Ethics watchdog Impreveduto, a Democrat who represented corrupt Hudson County in the legislature for seventeen years while double-dipping as a teacher and administrator at Secaucus High School for thirty-three years, resigned from the assembly and was forced to pay a $10,000 fine in a 2004 bargain with the attorney general after he was caught spending $50,000 in campaign donations on personal items such as wedding, travel, eyeglasses, a hearing aid, and sports memorabilia. He could have been sentenced to five years in jail and fined $25,000."

Those attorneys who do not dip into the trust account receive the ultimate penalty in New Jersey, as a kind of ass covering move by the OAE. Get rid of potential "exposers of corruption and criminality on the part of government lawyers," right John? How's Terry (or Stacy?) Tuchin doing these days? Diana? Still interrogating people under hypnosis or drugging in the presence of government lawyers to extract information that is used against victims, Terry? Just say you got it some place else, fellas. Then you hide the real discovery, right John?

As for Albio Sires, "the New Jersey town hall where he was mayor for more than a decade -- West New York -- was handed subpoenas in April 2007 as part of the federal probe into the way discretionary state grants are handed out when lawmakers' votes are needed to pass the state budget. The subpoenas were served after the Jersey Journal reported that the lion's share of Hudson County grants, $7.2 MILLION, went to West New York in 2005 while Sires was both its mayor and assembly speaker." (emphasis added)

Did "pappa" get to wet his beak, Albio? I will treasure our conversations, Albio, and mutual friendships with Municipal Court "judges" and pals -- who can all be trusted to do a "favor for the people in Trenton." Right, boys? How's the babe, "BobbyM"? How are things at the old law office, Bob? Still keep the old records?

"Impreveduto, incidentally" -- like quite a few of these crooks in judicial robes and political whores -- in addition to his teacher's pension of "$40,000," will get his legislator's pension when he turns sixty -- and it will be six figures or close to it, despite the guilty plea. Many other political and legal convicts in New Jersey can say the same. Maybe they have to take care of Stuart Rabner. Otherwise, they're home free and can laugh all the way to the bank. (An essay dealing with good old Stuart Rabner is coming up.)

I do not want a "little something" in order to go away. I wish to see the persons who tortured me for a little chat. Questions, boys? How about some more cyberwarfare?

"The new supposedly non-political head of the ethics committee, Bramucci, prompted a call for his resignation when he said ethics complaints against lawmakers using the budget process to benefit their family members or employers amounted to just New Jersey doing what New Jersey does." (emphasis added -- and how!)

Ethics is a matter of such concern that celebrity so-called "philosophers" teach the subject, allegedly, at local universities. " ... Kean University" -- a very good school with excellent philosophy, history and political science departments -- hired "former governor McGreevey, whose administration was one of the most ethically challenged [and who resigned in disgrace!] to teach ethics part-time for $17,500. In doing so, McGreevey was jumping on to the bandwagon of college patronage jobs, as former governor Jim Florio, was already teaching one course one day a week at Rutgers for $96,632.00 a year." (How much are tenured faculty paid per course?)

Wayne Bryant should get twice that much to teach a course in political corruption for fun and profit.

"Carolanne Kane-Cavaiola [at the Department of Human Services, was] accused in a report the state inspector general issued ... of steering $7.7 MILLION in state grants to a group she's CONNECTED with, circumventing public bidding laws and eliminating financial oversight for how the money was spent -- or misspent, as [state inspector] Mary Jane Cooper alleges." (emphasis added)

That's your money being sucked away. How do you like being a chump? "Connected," Carolanne? To whom? Not too many people in New Jersey politics and courts are "unaffiliated" with at least one of several "family-like" organizations in politics. Right, Diana? No wonder Hudson County Prosecutor Ed De Fazio was unwilling (or unable) to indict Lt. Andriani from Hoboken on charges of corruption and misuse of authority.

Does this N.J. legal sewer seem like a tempting model for other countries? It doesn't to me. Do you think that the judgments concerning my "ethics" on the part of such people keep me up at night? As for elections, Brendan Byrne said that when he died he wanted to be buried in Hudson County, New Jersey, so he could continue to take part in the electoral process. In New Jersey the dead not only vote, they receive government paychecks and (perhaps) will be appointed to the judiciary:

"... an estimated 13,000 deceased people remained on voter registration lists and at least 4,755 of the more civic-minded corpses voted in November 2003" -- and, apparently, they also voted in subsequent elections. Mysteriously, all of them are Democrats. Many undead voters are expected to turn out in the forthcoming presidential elections, which makes Florida's "chits" look good by comparison. (See "New Jersey is the Home of the Living Dead" and "New Jersey's 'Ethical' Legal System.")

Make a few of the corpses judges, George E. Norcross, III. I guarantee you that they will be better than many of the judges now serving in the Garden State. Smarter, for sure. Some corpses will also be more honest and steal less money that current New Jersey officials, while dead people are at least as ethical as several judges I know in Jersey City.

These are New Jersey's Democrat "political whores." No one in Hollywood will make a documentary about these shenanigans. There will be no editorial expressing outrage in the Times. I say this as a democratic socialist. No wonder my computer was frozen this morning. Attacks on my work continue on a daily basis. I will respond with further analysis of mafia involvement in New Jersey politics, corruption, and incompetence among New Jersey lawyers and judges.

Wherever Cuban-American and mob relationships flourish -- as in New Jersey -- democracy is sure to succeed. Irony? Right, Senator Bob? What would be your attitude to such people deciding that you are "unethical," the same people trying to destroy or obstruct your writings on a daily basis, stealing from you, slandering you and destroying your relationships for years? Do you think that the "ethical" views of such persons should be a matter of burning concern for any reasonable person? Do you speak to me of "ethics"? Is New Jersey and its befouled Supreme Court capable of doing the right thing or judging anyone without provoking the laughter of intelligent observers from all over the world? I doubt it. My torture-journey is from 1988 to 2009. How are you doing, Terry? Adjust and go to a gym for displacement purposes, right? Where are those reports, Terry? Videos? Audio tapes? How much did you steal from me, Terry? Diana?

Future posts will focus on specific questionable associations and money transfers between developers and other interests "connected" to New Jersey politicians as well as legal officials, mob activity in New Jersey, Cuban-American criminality in the Garden State, along with corruption of legal proceedings at the most fundamental level through a brazen disregard for the U.S. Constitution's protections of the rights of persons and grotesque incompetence on the part of judges.

I expect that battalions of coopted minority lawyers will be trotted out by New Jersey to "counter-spin" this nightmare for the system. This will help the tumor to grow, as I devote years to further documenting the evils of New Jersey law. An "error" was inserted and corrected in the foregoing paragraph. More such actions must be expected, as new evidence of corruption as well as indictments are anounced. I will continue to struggle. "Christmas Tree Items," Brian? Shame on you people.

Unless I am framed for something or experience an unfortunate accident, I will devote many years to highlighting these legal realities and profiling the persons responsible for this heinous criminality. "New Jersey -- come see for yourself!"