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PERRIN LOVETT

~ Deo Vindice

PERRIN LOVETT

Tag Archives: justice

Tin Foil Hat Land: Those CRAZY Conspiracy Theories

30 Monday Oct 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

≈ Comments Off on Tin Foil Hat Land: Those CRAZY Conspiracy Theories

Tags

civil liberties, conspiracy, crime, government, justice, law, Mueller

You see, according to the statists, any independent thinking about or criticism of anything coming from the government constitutes a conspiracy theory. Such is synonymous with insane nuttery. All utterances about anything from the government are the literal God’s honest truth (Nature’s truth, whatever).

It works like this:

Crazy Conspiracy Theory:

Mueller and the Government may have (may have) violated Paul Manafort’s civil rights:

Ex-campaign adviser Paul Manafort turned himself into the FBI on Monday after being indicted for money laundering, and a slew of other financial crimes. The feds alleged he illegally funneled millions of dollars of payments into offshore bank accounts in order to avoid detection by U.S. authorities as it related to his work on behalf of former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych. While the indictment containing Manfort’s alleged criminal activities is very detailed, and well-documented, there is one area that could hurt Mueller’s investigation. Mueller’s team may have obtained evidence in the raid of Paul Manafort’s home that was not covered by the search warrant. That could be problematic.

In a surprise raid on July 26th, FBI agents busted into Manafort’s home in Alexandria, Virginia to collect documents and other materials related to the FBI probe into whether the Trump campaign colluded with the Russians. At the time, Manafort’s attorney raised concerns about how the raid was conducted. In order for the feds to obtain a warrant, a federal judge would have to determine that probable cause existed that a crime was committed. As part of the warrant, investigators attached an affidavit which contained a list of items that FBI agents hoped to collect. That’s where the trouble appears to be in Manafort’s case.

As a legal website, we were immediately drawn to the revelation that evidence was collected that may not have been covered by the warrant. That’s a serious development, and one that Manafort’s attorneys will no doubt seize upon. But, is it necessarily illegal? Did the agents do anything wrong? It’s not clear. It certainly could raise some serious constitutional issues that could taint the investigation.

Not a Crazy Conspiracy Theory:

That Manafort, et al, Conspired Against the Government….

Manafort and Gates were charged in a 12-count indictment with conspiracy to launder money, making false statements and other charges. They are expected to make their first court appearance before U.S. Magistrate Judge Deborah A. Robinson at 1:30 p.m.

The charges against Manafort and Gates did not reference the Trump campaign, a point President Trump noted on Twitter Monday. “Sorry, but this is years ago, before Paul Manafort was part of the Trump campaign. But why aren’t Crooked Hillary & the Dems the focus?????” Trump wrote.

Read the Indictment.

nimbus-image-1509384639108

Dept. of Justice [SIC].

There you have it. The government concocts a 31-page narrative of allegedly suspicious behavior – a conspiracy against it (not the normal other way around). That’s perfectly reasonable and lawful; might as well dispense with the formality of a trial. Done deal. No conspiracy craziness here.

On the other hand, if you dare to mention that … what’s it called again? That Constitution, those rights people supposedly have in a free country, then you are a nut. In fact, any outside, critical thinking is evidence of insanity. Call the men in the white coats. You should be ashamed of yourself. Many of your liberal and conservative friends will point this out to you. Get it straight.

Something about the goose and the gander…

Small Victories: For Drones and for Julian Assange

19 Friday May 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns, News and Notes

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Tags

drones, Julian Assange, justice, Lady Gaga, Pamela Anderson, Wikileaks

Drones and Assange kind of go together in a sad way as one must sometimes fearfully look over his shoulder for the other. Tonight there’s some good news for both.

Droning On: You’re Not a Criminal Tonight

Have a drone? Kids have a drone? So many people have drones as toys, real estate cams, or hottie-next-door spying tools it isn’t funny? I bet you have one or know someone who does, right? Did you register it with the FAA when you bought it? No. Then you’re a criminal. Or you were.

A federal court just struck down the FAA’s idiotic 2015 reg that recreational drones must be registered. Justice for you and your voyeurism toy…

Julian Assange is Really a Jerk…

The Empire, bluster aside, has made no known moves to prosecute Assange for anything – likely because he did not break any laws. Likewise, Swedish prosecutors have dropped their fake rape case against him. And, Ecuador is pressing the UK to grant Assange safe passage out of their embassy in London.

As if that’s not good enough news for old J.A., he is now the subject of interest of both Pam Anderson AND Lady Gaga. Some guys…

111205654_Pamela_Anderson_Julian_Assange-NEWS-large_trans_NvBQzQNjv4BqXgrBd0P19THPvf9738yRPQNKpBVlLF-OCUflfputUyg

 Ben A.Pruchnie/Getty/The Telegram.

I need to hang out in the Ecuadorian embassy some.

A whole lot more is happening but it will have to wait….

-P

Department of Justice [SIC] to Charge Julian Assange … with Something

21 Friday Apr 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

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Tags

America, crime, DOJ, government, Julian Assange, justice, Wikileaks

The U.S. government is known by two hallmarks: absolute power over everything on Earth, and; a complete aversion to the truth. Naturally, it wants to prosecute Julian Assange of Wikileaks.

US authorities have prepared charges to seek the arrest of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, US officials familiar with the matter tell CNN.

The Justice Department investigation of Assange and WikiLeaks dates to at least 2010, when the site first gained wide attention for posting thousands of files stolen by the former US Army intelligence analyst now known as Chelsea Manning.
Prosecutors have struggled with whether the First Amendment precluded the prosecution of Assange, but now believe they have found a way to move forward.

During President Barack Obama’s administration, Attorney General Eric Holder and officials at the Justice Department determined it would be difficult to bring charges against Assange because WikiLeaks wasn’t alone in publishing documents stolen by Manning. Several newspapers, including The New York Times, did as well. The investigation continued, but any possible charges were put on hold, according to US officials involved in the process then.

…

But Ben Wizner, director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s Speech, Privacy and Technology Project, argued that US prosecution of Assange sets a dangerous precedent.

“Never in the history of this country has a publisher been prosecuted for presenting truthful information to the public,” Wizner told CNN. “Any prosecution of WikiLeaks for publishing government secrets would set a dangerous precedent that the Trump administration would surely use to target other news organizations.”

160205033303-julian-assange-ruling-elbagir-lok-00014718-medium-plus-169

CNN.

There’s a pattern, here, as old as government corruption itself: government commits evil; someone exposes the evil; the evil-doers visit upon the exposing party.

A great opportunity for the advancement of human freedom is missed. Washington could acknowledge it’s many faults, as exposed by Wikileaks, and vow to fix them. It could stop spying on everyone, wasting money, bombing without cause, and generally mind its own damned business. They might actually thank Assange and Co. for their work.

That’s not going to happen. Dangerous precedents from dangerous people.

The Best Pizza Money Can Buy

21 Tuesday Mar 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns, News and Notes

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Tags

Alex Acosta, America, Congress, crime, degeneracy, DOJ, filth, Jeff Filthstein, justice, Pizzagate, The Millstone

PizzaGate returns to the news in most bizarre fashion. One really can’t make this stuff up. Were one to write a novel about an international child sex ring, political machinations, and American apathy, the script couldn’t get much better than what we’ve seen in the news the past 6 months. Now this: someone, a likely Democrat, is making hay out of Alex Acosta’s lenient treatment of Jeffery “Sex Criminal” Epstein:

“That wasn’t an appropriate resolution of this matter,” Reiter said, arguing that the charges leveled against Epstein were “very minor,” compared with what the facts called for. In a letter to parents of Epstein’s victims, Reiter said justice had not been served.

Prosecutors in Acosta’s Miami office who had joined the FBI in the investigation concluded, according to documents produced by the U.S. attorney’s office, that Epstein, working through several female assistants, “would recruit underage females to travel to his home in Palm Beach to engage in lewd conduct in exchange for money. . . . Some went there as much as 100 times or more. Some of the women’s conduct was limited to performing a topless or nude massage while Mr. Epstein masturbated himself. For other women, the conduct escalated to full sexual intercourse.”

Epstein has a near-legendary reputation in New York financial circles as a money manager who made many millions for his clients. Although he never graduated from college, he taught advanced math at the Dalton School, one of the city’s top private schools, and went on to be a successful trader at Bear Stearns before starting his own firm, J. Epstein & Co., which managed the finances of clients who had a minimum of $1 billion in assets.

Federal prosecutors detailed their findings in an 82-page prosecution memo and a 53-page indictment, but Epstein was never indicted. In 2007, Acosta signed a non-prosecution deal in which he agreed not to pursue federal charges against Epstein or four women who the government said procured girls for him. In exchange, Epstein agreed to plead guilty to a solicitation charge in state court, accept a 13-month sentence, register as a sex offender and pay restitution to the victims identified in the federal investigation.

“This agreement will not be made part of any public record,” the deal between Epstein and Acosta says. The document was unsealed by a federal judge in a civil lawsuit in 2015.

Reiter said in the 2009 deposition that federal prosecutors in Miami told him “that typically these kinds of cases with one victim would end up in a ten-year sentence.” Reiter said he was surprised not only by the decision to pull back from prosecuting the case, but also by the light sentence and liberal privileges granted to Epstein during his jail term.

Money and power buy “justice” in Amerika. Epstein had (has) both. The following is a short list of people he jetted to and from his private “Lolita” island: Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Ehud Barak, Tony Blair, Mick Jagger, Michael Jackson, and Jimmy Buffett. That’s a very short list. It seems none wish to be associated with him now and with good reason. Epstein’s case touched on an international racket which has seen hundreds if not thousands arrested in the past decade (and that is probably the tip of the iceberg).

Wikileaks attempted to shed light on this and related matters late last year. America’s supposed affections for children aside, no one seemed to care.

They likely won’t care now, with squeaky shoe ball in full swing and all.

More interestingly, given the far-reaching implications of this case and all “pizza” related business in D.C., NYC, the Seaboard, and allied Europe, who in their right minds would bring up this as a charge against Acosta?! We’re taking about the Wa-Po and Congress, but still… One would think they would leave this as quiet as possible.

How’s that hearing going to go?

Senator X: “Mr. Acosta, why didn’t you fully prosecute Epstein and protect our vulnerable children?”

Acosta: “Well, Senator, we had constraints. We didn’t go after a lot of leads in that case. You, for instance…”

Senator “red-face” X: “Um. Uh… Russian hackers?”

All this to the Wa-Po, Carlos Slim’s blog, etc. was just “fake news” a few months ago. Now, with the ability to derail Team Trump, it suddenly matters. Huh?

An aside: anyone seen or heard from John Podesta lately???

pedogate

Renegade Broadcasting.

There’s no doubt justice was not served in Florida. The fact Epstein is still alive testifies to that. He’s still free and so are 10,000 other perverts. I have no idea how this will affect Acosta’s nomination. I honestly don’t care. Maybe, just maybe, this pitiful political theater will shed a little more light on a few of those other cockroaches. Play fool games with fire, get burned.

Let justice be done, though the millstone falls.

Selective “Justice”: Chelsea Manning’s Sentence Commuted

17 Tuesday Jan 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

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Tags

America, Constitution, crime, Donald Trump, government, justice, law, taxes, treason

Bradley Chelsea Manning had his her sentence pardoned commuted by the outgoing President Sotoro Obama. (Damn Darn).

President Obama on Tuesday commuted all but four months of the remaining prison sentence of Chelsea Manning, the army intelligence analyst convicted of a 2010 leak that revealed American military and diplomatic activities across the world, disrupted his administration and brought global prominence to WikiLeaks, the recipient of those disclosures.

The decision by Mr. Obama rescued Ms. Manning, who twice tried to kill herself last year, from an uncertain future as a transgender woman incarcerated at the men’s military prison at Fort Leavenworth, Kan. She has been jailed for nearly seven years, and her 35-year sentence was by far the longest punishment ever imposed in the United States for a leak conviction.

At the same time that Mr. Obama commuted the sentence of Ms. Manning, a low-ranking enlisted soldier at the time of her leaks, he also pardoned Gen. James E. Cartwright, the former vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff who pleaded guilty to lying about his conversations with reporters to F.B.I. agents investigating a leak of classified information about cyberattacks on Iran’s nuclear program.

Make of this what you will. I have a head neck ache…

Obama also pardon some drug dealers.

No pardon, yet, for the still-male Edward Snowden. Carlos Slim’s blog seems to think he should face “justice” in U.S. courts first. Of course, Snowden has offered to return from Russia if the government will only guarantee him a fair trial. That, they will not do as fair trials went out of fashion in 1945. It’s either a pardon or life in Russia (which apparently ain’t so bad).

Some get relief. Some do not.

The treasonous rats of D.C. scurry about the Congressional sewer, almost panicked, in their frenzy to grant amnesty to illegal aliens, welfarians, and terrorists. Fitting.

Meanwhile, eight million decent American citizens are in trouble with the IRS: either behind on their taxes, accused of owing taxes they don’t owe, in tax repayment plans, in court, under audit, or under investigation. Their crime was producing a little wealth. Absolutely no relief for them (us) whatsoever.

taxdebt1

When the IRS says you owe something you have two options. One, you can fight it out in Tax Court. This is a show trial and the whole time penalties, interest, and possible indictment simmer. Then you lose and have to pay. Or, you can pay what they tell you and then sue them in District Court. There you get a show trial and lose, having to pay your attorney in addition to the earlier extortion tax payment.

This is not what Jefferson, Madison, and Franklin had in mind. Hamilton, maybe. Political prisoners have their fates decided politically. Dead-to-rights guilty criminals get away Scott-free with a hug and a welfare check. Hardworking, innocent Americans get treated like slaves.

We can do better than this. Therefore,

I hereby call on and beseech President Trump,

(as of Friday, noonish) to do the following:

  • Pardon all federal convicts, not convicted of Piracy, Counterfeiting, or Treason;
  • Carefully look into those three or four Americans actually convicted of those Constitutional crimes for political motivation;
  • If said motivation is found, then pardon them too;
  • Round up and deport all aliens and immigrants, ship them out, and halt all incoming immigration;
  • Abolish the Immigration Act of 1965;
  • Deport Congress;
  • Abolish the 16th Amendment and the Income Tax;
  • Abolish the Federal Reserve;
  • Abolish the IRS;
  • Declare all senior staff at the Fed, the Treasury, and the IRS enemy combatants; and
  • Appoint me to deal with the enemy combatants.

That will do for starters. Now, I have a neck back ache to attend to…

More Laws, Less Justice (Example 3,785,933,501)

14 Saturday Jan 2017

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Cicero, government, justice, law, taxes

Cicero was correct: the more laws, the less justice. The U.S. has total law, complete legislation of everything. Does that mean we have no justice at all? Martin Armstrong thinks so.

The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in California has upheld the criminal conviction of Robert Kahre, the man who tried to circumvent the IRS by paying his employees in gold coin. He relied on the face value of the gold coins being below the legal threshold that triggers withholding taxes. A $20 gold coin is legal tender for only $20 — not its gold value. Gold was never demonetized. From a strict construction perspective, Kahre was correct and should not have been charged legally. However, the IRS interprets the value of the gold, not the legal tender value. The Court held that Kahre didn’t do his duty to serve as a tax collector for the United States, for which you, as an employer, are not paid. Kahre is currently serving a 15-year sentence.

You must understand that you are dancing with the devil. There is absolutely NO RULE OF LAW whatsoever and all your constitutional rights are fictional. Your liberty and human rights are in the hands of every petty government officer because they get to do whatever they desire and it has become your burden to go to court to PROVE you have any human rights. This is what happens in all republics. Whenever you have a political class, they always exert their power against the people. There is ABSOLUTELY NO HISTORICAL EXCEPTION!

A couple of things. First, Armstrong is half right: there is a rule of law: total rule under complete legislation of everything. Second, those rights are a fiction. Every once in a while a citizen wins but it is almost always a fluke. The Soviet show trials had a better acquittal ratio. Tried to redress a grievance lately?? Lastly, Kahre was stupid (brave but stupid) to try this. It’s the government’s game and they’ll change the rules when they want to. Simple as that.

This evening I did my initial and incomplete estimations for my 2016 tax returns. I’m not feeling charitable towards the cabal on the Potomac. Wouldn’t it be grand if weasels like Paul Ryan stopped crying for 11 illegal alien criminals for a second and considered a little relief for 200,000,000 oppressed citizen taxpayers?

I’ll stop now…

I Just Heard A Rumor

24 Thursday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in News and Notes

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Tags

crime, justice, Pizzagate, rumors

Hello. I hope all of you had a terrific Thanksgiving. How are things at the mall this Black Friday Eve? While you’re fighting over that 80″ HDTV, ponder the following:

I have information from an unverifiable source (!?) that names may begin to drop tomorrow and this weekend in @PizzaGate.

If you don’t know what PizzaGate is, then you’re probably better off not knowing. If you do know, then keep reading. (If you’re part of it, remember that you’re better off with a millstone around your neck).

Now I have no idea what kind of revelations might be coming, if any are really coming at all. The people involved and their … uh … political friends have been extremely depressed and disarranged lately. There may be some under the bus throwing. Or, this could be criminal investigation related.

pizzagate-compilation

Pizza, ping-pong, and millstones…

Rumors on that front have proven problematic lately. Of course, the NYPD and the FBI do still have open and active files. So do most agencies in the West.

Police from Canada to Norway to Haiti have been working a web of related cases for a decade. Some few of the hundreds of arrests so far have had slightly political tinges. For example, one of Obama’s (the man with NO scandals) financial supporters, “Boy Bugger” Bean, was arrested in 2014 in Oregon. Then, of course, there was Jeff Epstein. And, just damn him.

Again, there are no guarantees that this is even a story. But, if it is, then it will be extremely interesting. It will also be interesting, if it happens, to see the reaction from the MSM. Remember them? The same group that thinks Jews and Asian porn stars are white supremacists. Yeah.

Happy Thanksgiving! Grab me a Christmas tie if they’re on sale. No clip-ons, please.

PS: I wasn’t going to do an evening post but this one wrote itself. I must admit I’ve been nervously watching for ISIS. And I am THANKFUL there is nothing (direct) to report there.

Janet Reno Is Dead. Dance Party?

07 Monday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

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Tags

corruption, crime, evil, Janet Reno, justice, tyranny, Waco

A sub-chapter of one of the most sordid, lawless, murderous eras in American history ended today with the death of former Attorney General Janet Reno. Many younger people may not have ever heard of her before. Others might remember her from a stupid SNL skit. The reality is anything but funny.

 

I suppose it is wrong being tempted to gloat in someone else’s demise. So I won’t. I sincerely hope this woman found peace and redemption at the end. She certainly did not know those things in life. She never shirked gloating over misery nor inflicting it.

She gave us this:

waco_fire

NPR.

And this:

ap_elian_gonzales_raid_01_jef_150421_12x5_1600

ABC.

So very concerned about children. After these raids, near deadly and very deadly, she is best known for refusing to cooperate with Congress (to obey the law) and her dealing with child abuse and child support cases in Florida.

While State Attorney in Miami she made headlines with her tyrannical prosecution of support cases. That brand of heavy-handed, one-sided injustice lives on in a system bereft of any process or fairness for the majority of men caught in it. Her abuse cases were equally ignoble. Those prosecutions essentially dispensed with the rule of law. The result was: innocent people convicted for crimes they did not commit; wrongful convictions overturned amid multiple scandals, and; real cases weakened and real victims hurt by utterly ineffective “justice”.

Quiet the legacy. It ended today. Not that that brings closure to many of her victims. May they rest in peace, those that went on before.

The Bundy Trial: A Verdict On American Justice

07 Monday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

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America, Constitution, Courts, crime, Federal government, Georgia, injustice, jury, justice, law, nullification, Oregon

Two Thursdays ago, while I prepared to hit the road, a federal jury did an amazing thing. Herein I answer a reader request for commentary.

Ammon Bundy, Ryan Bundy, Shawna Cox, Jeff Banta, Kenneth Medenbach, David Lee Fry and Neil Wampler were charged and tried for “taking over” a remote federal facility in Oregon. On October 26th a jury found all defendant’s not guilty on all counts. Well, Ammon Bundy still faces a count of tampering for disabling a few cameras. But the long-term sentence charges were dismissed unanimously by the jury.

While the case and verdict is seen by some who seek limited government as a success, it really is just another example (although with a happy ending) of what is wrong with the justice system [SIC]. My summary of these proceedings is that they represent a fluke of judicial process and little more.

First, I find it a little funny that just about everyone on the right (to include many limited government advocates) pulled for the DOJ/FBI last week during the odd continuation of the Hillary email/corruption/pedo-pizza carnival of doom. It was the exact same outfit that prosecuted the Bundys. Now that Comey has once again closed the Clintongate files it is clear to anyone of room temperature IQ or higher that justice in America really isn’t. Unless there’s a slip and a fluke.

I have recounted before how the justice system [SIC] in general, and the federal system in particular, work. 99% of federal defendants are railroaded into court for crimes not set forth in the Constitution. Of those, around 97% enter into some kind of plea agreement. Of those remaining who demand and receive a trial, maybe 90% are convicted. So, within a margin of statistical error, nearly 100% of federal inmates and convicts are in prison for nothing.

That’s not justice. My thoughts on the jury system of today.

 

The Bundy bunch beat the odds here. And that is worth celebrating. From the New York Times:

PORTLAND, Ore. — Armed antigovernment protesters led by Ammon and Ryan Bundy were acquitted Thursday of federal conspiracy and weapons charges stemming from the takeover of a federally owned wildlife sanctuary in Oregon last winter.

The surprise acquittals of all seven defendants in Federal District Court were a blow to government prosecutors, who had argued that the Bundys and five of their followers used force and threats of violence to occupy the reserve. But the jury appeared swayed by the defendants’ contention that they were protesting government overreach and posed no threat to the public.

You may recall that one associate, LaVoy Finicum, was murdered by police as the others were arrested – gunned down in cold blood. Eleven others, playing the statistical game, plead guilty prior to the Bundy trial.

The government had a huge mountain of evidence. The defenses were rather maverick. And they could be as all that evidence still did not establish much. Frequently, when they don’t simply manufacture evidence and testimony from thin air, Justice [SIC] will overload a jury and hope the members become confused. Most do. Not here. In a remarkable turn of events, this jury actually paid attention and gave real thought to what they heard and saw.

Roger Roots, there in person in court, chronicled the various outrages and the unlikely outcome:

The defendants were accused of conspiring to prevent employees of the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service and Bureau of Land Management from performing their duties at the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in rural eastern Oregon. Yet federal prosecutors failed to produce a single piece of evidence of any specific threat aimed at a USFWS or BLM employee.

The U.S. Justice Department alleged in Count 1 that the seven defendants (and many others) had engaged in an “armed standoff” at the federal wildlife refuge with the intent of scaring away the various government employees who normally work there. Every defendant was utterly innocent of the allegation. Some were not even aware that federal employees normally worked there). Several defendants were also charged with firearm possession in federal facilities with the intent to commit a federal felony (the conspiracy alleged in Count 1). And two defendants, Ryan Bundy and Ken Medenbach, were accused of stealing federal property valued over a thousand dollars.

In fact, Ammon Bundy and the other defendants took a monumental (and quite daring) stand for the plain text of the Constitution when they occupied the Malheur Refuge in January of this year. They pointed to Article I, Section 8, Clause 17 of the U.S. Constitution which seems to plainly forbid the federal government from owning land inside the states unless the states agree to sell such real estate to the federal government.

Needless to say, the present reality in the American west is in sharp contrast to this piece of constitutional text. The feds claim to own and control millions of acres of land in western states—most of which (such as the Malheur Refuge area) was never purchased from state legislatures or anyone else.

The most frightening revelations from the Malheur 7 trial involved the lengths which the U.S. government went to in its prosecution. During the Bundy occupation, the FBI literally took over the tiny nearby town of Burns, Oregon and transformed it into an Orwellian dystopia. There were license plate scanners mounted on utility poles, drones throughout the skies, and military transport vehicles speeding across the countryside. FBI agents captured and monitored every phone number connected between every accused occupier. Federal and state police appeared in such numbers that their total numbers will probably never be fully tallied.

The occupation was met with a bonanza of government spending by agencies at every level. The U.S. Fish & Wildlife and BLM employees who were supposedly too frightened to go to work were put up in luxury hotels, along with their families. (In the aftermath of the occupation, the feds have spent further millions to “rebuild” the Refuge, supposedly because the occupiers tainted it; prosecutors were openly planning on asserting the inflated “bill for damages” at sentencing in the event the defendants were convicted.)

Most startling of all were the undercover government informants that were revealed in the trial. After weeks of wrangling and arguing with defense lawyers, the Justice Department finally stipulated that at least nine undercover informants were planted among the Refuge occupiers. Thus, informants outnumbered the defendants on trial. One informant was even a “bodyguard” for Ammon Bundy and drove him to his arrest. Another informant admitted he trained occupiers in shooting and combat skills.

After a week of deliberating over the evidence, the jury came back with its verdict yesterday afternoon, acquitting every defendant. (Jurors said they were divided regarding an accusation that Ryan Bundy aided and abetted the theft of government property when he and others climbed utility poles and took down two of the government’s surveillance cameras.)

There are reports that the U.S. Justice Department spent $100 million on the case. But twelve Americans saw through the government’s cloud of disinformation and dealt a mighty blow for liberty.

I would call this less of a mighty blow for liberty and more of a small blow for jury nullification. John Whitehead agrees:

In finding the defendants not guilty—of conspiracy to impede federal officers, of possession of firearms in a federal facility, and of stealing a government-owned truck—the jury sent its own message to the government and those following the case: justice matters.

The Malheur occupiers were found not guilty despite the fact that they had guns in a federal facility (their lawyers argued the guns were “as much a statement of their rural culture as a cowboy hat or a pair of jeans”). They were found not guilty despite the fact that they used government vehicles (although they would argue that government property is public property available to all taxpayers). They were found not guilty despite the fact that they succeeded in occupying a government facility for six weeks, thereby preventing workers from performing their duties (as the Washington Post points out, this charge has also been used to prosecute extremist left-wingers and Earth First protesters).

Many other equally sincere activists with eloquent lawyers and ardent supporters have gone to jail for lesser offenses than those committed at the Malheur Refuge, so what made the difference here?

The jury made all the difference.

These seven Oregon protesters were found not guilty because a jury of their peers recognized the sincerity of their convictions, sympathized with the complaints against an overreaching government, and balanced the scales of justice using the only tools available to them: common sense, compassion and the power of the jury box.

Jury nullification works.

It works when it is applied by an intelligent jury. The problem is in the empaneling of such jurors. Again, here we saw a fluke. And the Bundy’s troubles are not ended. Ammon still faces the remaining federal count and the whole crew faces persecution in the Oregon state system (because Double Jeopardy is an outdated concept and the prohibition has all but vanished in America).

The odds of successfully assembling such a conscious jury elsewhere are slim at best. I always drew the jury pool analogy this way: go to any Walmart around midnight; pick out the first 12 shoppers you see; that is your jury. The results are predictable. Most juries favor whatever the government presents, truthful or lawful, or not. If they have doubts, the system is rigged in the government’s favor – rigged to obscure exculpatory evidence, limit defense arguments, and limit legal knowledge and questions from the jury.

jury-cat

This is more like it. College Humor.

It’s fortunate I had a little time to draft this up. I found an unrelated, recent, and far more typical case for comparison.

Four defendant’s in Richmond County, Georgia were charged with various counts of felony Medicaid fraud and a count of conspiracy to commit the frauds. The indictment said they defrauded the government program (itself nothing but a fraud) of more than $3 Million.

All four were acquitted last week of the underlying fraud charges. Three were acquitted entirely. The fourth, the alleged ringleader, was found guilty by the jury of the conspiracy count. He was promptly sentenced to the maximum prison term allowed, five years.

Here’s the problem here for justice. Under Georgia law, “A person commits the offense of conspiracy to commit a crime when he together with one or more persons conspires to commit any crime and any one or more of such persons does any overt act to effect the object of the conspiracy.” O.C.G.A. 16-4-8 (2010)(emphasis mine).

If all parties were on trial together and the jury acquitted all but one of them of all charges, how then could the same jury find that the lone defendant acted as part of a conspiracy? There’s that elements of the law thing that isn’t met here. The judge should have entered a directed verdict of acquittal as to the last conspiracy count, a correction of jury fallibility in the interests of justice.

Such interest is a rare as the Bundy verdict. Georgia appellate courts (and others around the nation) have ruled such inconsistencies (illegalities) are allowable. They seem to regard them as a consolation prize for the state, which isn’t suppose to lose. The overall stats for state charges and trials mirror the federal trends closely.

Of these two cases, the latter is the standard, the former a fluke. A happy fluke but just that. I don’t see any greater awakening. However, given recent developments against the establishment (Trump, BREXIT, etc.) such a movement may be launching. If so, we must do everything we can to foster and support it. If you find yourself on a jury, take the government to task.

One never knows when one will find oneself seated at the Defendant’s table. Safeguard others’ liberty today as yours might be on the line tomorrow.

Support truth, freedom, and justice.

What is Wrong? Random Facts, Figures, and Opinions on Race, Violence, Government, and Some Other Stuff

08 Friday Jul 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns, News and Notes

≈ Comments Off on What is Wrong? Random Facts, Figures, and Opinions on Race, Violence, Government, and Some Other Stuff

Tags

America, banksters, civilization, crime, firearms, freedom, government, gun control, justice, peace, police, race, society, terrorism, The People, War

Historically, I experience a summer slow-down in blog views. It’s that time of year again. I’m also tired of late and working on other things. Yesterday, I took a great little mini vacation. I had a great time.

This morning, recovering, I looked at the news; it seems like the whole world is coming unglued. It isn’t, any more than usual, but it looks very bad. I don’t know if my following list provides perspective or not, but here it is.

Neither of these men needed to be or deserved to be gunned down.

There is no war on the police, per se, though there easily could be.

“Blowback” is a real thing.

There are 14 other occupations in America more lethally dangerous than being a police officer. Some are many times more dangerous. Logging is a dangerous job.

The cops are not out to murder blacks, per se, though it certainly seems like it.

The cops kill more whites every year than blacks. It’s the percentages and perceptions that drive BLM. You really can’t blame them, though…

Statistically speaking in terms of homicides, black people represent the largest danger to other black people.

A glance and a search around the internet will reveal more than a few whites being beaten, tazed, harassed, and killed by the cops – for nothing.

Still, white people are most dangerous to other white people.

There are criminals out there but most “crime” in America shouldn’t honestly be classified as such.

There are many bad apples in the barrel but many police officers are just plain people doing a job the best they can.

Too many people, of all colors, professions, etc., are killed all the time for essentially nothing. This should really end.

A murderer is a murderer, even if he wears a special costume and a badge.

It’s wrong to murder anyone, even if they’re wearing a badge.

America is a safer place now than it has been in decades. One wouldn’t think that given all the news of murders, hatred, and terrorism. It’s the speed of the reporting and all the camera phone.

The instant and constant reporting is new to human history.Maybe it’s a good thing, maybe it will help stamp out the last vestiges of violence and stupidity.

Different peoples are different. That’s why they’re different peoples.

Most people, despite being different, are really almost all the same on a day-to-day and individual to individual level. Most get along pretty well together.

Most individuals are, all in all, fairly decent.

Groups of people start having problems.

Many (maybe even a majority of) Americans, regardless of age, sex, race, income, geographical location, etc., have a really hard time properly operating a motor vehicle.

Those groups of individuals who, as groups, start to have problems, resort to government as a solution to their problems.

Government never has any solutions.

Government, once it takes hold, gains a life of its own, a life of dominance and control.

If the government can’t find a problem to not solve, it will create one. Or a hundred.

Certain little elite numbers of people and institutions traditionally seize on government power to further their own interests.

These elites are highly effective in plotting different people (or even similar people) against each other. This creates an atmosphere of fear and chaos which greatly assists the perception that more law may be the answer. It’s a self-sustaining machine, very expensive and very dangerous.

Many turn a blind eye to all of the above (unless it directly affects them) not because they are stupid, but because they would rather concentrate on the more pleasant, even trivial aspects of life. Understandable. Some are just stupid. Others are lazy. Again, the cameras and phones may help clarify or cure some of this.

“On the street” blacks and whites tend to look and behave mostly the same to me.

Many blacks and whites “on the street” irritate the hell out of me (if I let them).

I have a lot of friends, white and black. I’m rather fond of them.

There are other colors than black and white. The same rules generally apply to them as well.

For my own trivial pursuits, I like football. It’s getting really difficult to watch the average game; I keep waiting and waiting (usually until the end of the fourth quarter) for the football to break out of the otherwise ridiculous circus side-show.

A small group of bankers long ago discovered how to completely control government. Government long ago discovered how to completely control the people. Both groups have done a remarkably good job for themselves. Kudos to them (and damn them). All of this is mostly done in the open. Oddly, the people still haven’t figured it out. Shame on them (and hopes they will yet wake up).

Mencken wrote about imaginary hobgoblins. They still don’t exist for the most part. Some, however, have actually come to life. ISIS comes to mind.

Banning guns won’t help blacks, most cops, or anyone else. These things are just tools. It makes as little sense as banning chain saws to “help” loggers.

Gun bans don’t work. Neither to wars. That is unless by “work” one means “help the government become even stronger and more dangerous”. Then, they work great.

People like James Pearce and Gersh Kuntzman denounce and blame ordinary persons for committing imaginary crimes and for being “nuts” in the criminally, nutty manner possible. This isn’t a case of the pot calling the kettle black. This is a case of psychopathic lunatics trying to project their own illnesses onto the general population. What happened to the asylums?

This rant went on a little longer than I intended. I’ll stop it now.

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Perrin Lovett

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