Thursday, July 26, 2007

New Jersey Computer Official Fired -- More Corruption Feared.

August 31, 2007 at 9:48 P.M. Access to my msn account has been denied for hours, many obstacles to working on an essay examining the ideas of Donald Davidson makes it impossible to continue working on that project. My second book is not being distributed to book sellers and cannot be downloaded at this time.

My image posting feature is blocked. July 26, 2007 at 12:14 P.M. Please see http://shalomrav.files.wordpress.com/2007/holocaust2.jpg

As of July 15, 2007 at 3:28 A.M. there were 18 intrusion attempts against my computer, main attacker 24.192.244.190; there were exactly 76,933 websites blocked over six months; many illegal connections from http://www.siruela.com/ (77.240.112.13), http: (80), from HPPAV (24.193.70.253). "Siruela" is the Spanish word for prunes. This may have been an attempt at humor. "On the one hand, but on the other hand ..." Something called http://www.filosofitis.com/ falls into the same category. The persons responsible for these crimes are saying everything I wish to say about them, all by themselves. They are providing us with their self-portraits. Miami? Or New Jersey? How you doing Senator Bob?

"Trenton: Senior State Computer Official Fired," in The New York Times, July 25, 2007, at p. B6.


"The deputy director of the state's Office of Information Technology was stripped of his post yesterday and allowed to enter a pretrial intervention program (PTI)" -- PTI allows defendants to be "spared" criminal charges -- "to resolve a charge that he submitted bogus information in applying for a $422,500 home loan, state officials said. The deputy director RAYMOND J. HAYLING, II, 32, of Englewood, had been suspended without pay since May after being charged with forgery, the state Division of Criminal Justice said. Under the program, Mr. Hayling must reimburse the loan within 60 days. The charge could be dropped if he completes a year under supervision. Besides, his information technology post, which paid $107,382 a year, Hayling also forfeited two other state posts" -- Hayling must have been "close" to New Jersey Senator Wayne R. Bryant -- "interoperability communications officer with the Office of Homeland Security and Preparedness, and special investigator with the Department of Law and Public Safety."

Gee, wouldn't it be a hoot if we find that good old Ray has been visiting my blogs and msn group? For some reason, I would not be surprised in a state where a high official of several "elite" anti-terrorism and cybercrime units engages in his own computer crimes. Ethics?

I wonder whether this incident -- and others like it that may still be hovering on the horizon -- has a little something to do with the busting up of a $500 MILLION cyber-gambling unit (what's Debbie going to do for a few laughs?) and Internet child porn services based in the Garden State, "serving" the global population.

"Remember the customer is always right!" Guess what fellas, the customer is sometimes the FBI! Ain't that a kick in the pants? I'd say so.

Good old Ray will be "spared" criminal charges and all accusations will be "dropped" -- even though he may have attempted to finagle almost HALF-A-MILLION guacamoles. But if your kid goes to the store and walks away with a CD, he'll get six months -- if he's got some bullshit priors and happens to be a minority. That's New Jersey law.

Not only will participants in the PTI program -- which is highly political, since prosecutors have discretion when it comes to recommending PTI for particular defendants -- find all charges against them dropped, but they will have no public criminal record and their names will not be posted publicly. Sweet, huh?

Some persons involved in civil litigation will find themselves smeared publicly, but not good old Ray. Furthermore, this alleged offender is someone entrusted with enforcing the law and investigating the conduct of others. Imagine a New Jersey lawyer or judge being a party to criminal interference with civil rights in violation of federal law, on a daily basis, involving the institutions of his state -- including the Supreme Court -- in such criminality, then covering up things like rape, theft, assault, kidnapping and justifying this conduct by questioning the victim's "ethics," wouldn't that be a laugh? I think so.

When asked about all this, New Jersey Chief Justice STUART RABNER spoke of the urgent need to have judges refrain from giving strangers their business cards or from smoking in public places, then probably explained that he would need to call his "bosses" for further instructions. That's good old Stu.

Shouldn't the judiciary be independent of political "bosses"?

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