N.J.'s Joan Davis Murdered by the Mafia!
August 22, 2010 at 2:50 P.M. My updating feature of my security protection was blocked again from New Jersey's government computers. I will struggle to restore that protection and to run a new security scan. It appears that the investigation of Richard J. Codey, Esq.'s brother is expanding to include other suspects in Trenton. Hey, is Codey still president of the New Jersey Bar Association? If so, this "presidency" may explain the continuing cover-up of matters pertaining to me.
Simon Romero, "American Ordered to Return to Prison in Peru," in The New York Times, August 19, 2010, at p. A11. (The only way this bizarre reversal by Peruvian courts makes sense is as a result of behind-the-scenes lobbying by Cuban-American Right-wing activists, possibly ex-CIA types.)
Tom Shamberg, "Wikipedia and Pentagon Disagree About Talks," in The New York Times, August 19, 2010, at p. A10. (Behind-the-scenes effort to generate criminal accusations against Wikipedia founder "peter out," as it were.)
Monica Davey & Emma Graves Fitzimons, "A State Unconvinced That Its Culture of Corruption Will Ever Fade," in The New York Times, August 19, 2010, at p. A19. (N.J. makes Illinois look like Switzerland.)
Christopher Lehman-Haupt, "Frank Kermode, 90, A Critic Who Wrote With Style, Is Dead," in The New York Times, August 19, 2010, at p. A25. (One of the greatest critics of English literature in the world dies, as the decline in reading skills worsens along with "reviewing" at the Times. "Frank Kermode and the Man in the McIntosh.")
Joseph Ax & Deena Yellin, "Grisly Discovery: Teanek Fire Was the Cover for Homicide," in The Record, August 19, 2010, at p. A-1. (Ms. Davis was investigating corruption and disappearing funds in connection with the Xanadu mall, when she committed "suicide" by tying her hands behind her back and then hitting herself on the head.)
Howard Kurtz, "$1 MILLION Gift to GOP Draws Fire," in The Record, August 19, 2010, at p. A-5. ($1 MILLION to Fox News from Republican governors for "independent" coverage of events. "We report, you decide.")
Carla Salazar, "Activist Back in Peru Prison: Court Strikes Down Decision Granting Berenson Parole," in The Record, August 19, 2010, at p. A-12. (Corruption? Ms. Berenson and her one-year-old son, Salvador, return to prison. Residents of Lima can rest easily tonight in light of this absurdity?)
William K. Rashbaum, "Inquiry Into Ex-Sheriff's Motor Pool: New Jersey Officials Said to Focus [on] Repairs for Campaign Donors," in The New York Times, August 20, 2010, at p. A16. (Sheriff Speziale may have "repaired" vehicles for contributors, some of these vehicles may have been involved in mafia activity prior to being "cared for" in the police automobile repair shop.)
Trymaine Lee, "Killing of a Local Gadfly Puzzles a New Jersey Town," in The New York Times, August 20, 2010, at p. A16. (Possible murder of citizen activist and blogger, I believe, probably by N.J.'s political mafia.)
Richard Perez Pena, "Behind Fraud Charges, New Jersey's Deep Crisis," in The New York Times, August 20, 2010, at p. A17. (Mafia government in an American state is bringing about an economic catastrophe with national and international implications.)
"Not everyone in town knew Joan Davis, but it seemed that way. Her never-failing presence at various township meetings was the stuff of local lore."
It is amazing the parallels that have emerged between the harassments to which Ms. Davis was subjected and the computer harassment that I struggle against, every day. Please feel free to contact the media or law enforcement in your area to tell them about this interesting situation.
Paul Fishman, New Jersey's U.S. Attorney, was quoted to say that the Garden State is not necessarily "the worst jurisdiction or the most corrupt in the country." This is high praise from a man who wants to be a District Court Judge, I guess. (Rabner, Poritz, Cohen, Milgram and Fishman may go bowling together with Mr. Margolis at the U.S. Justice Department.)
"Not everyone liked Joan Davis; her inevitable five-minute harangues were also well-known. And now it seems, someone wanted her dead."
Allegations that Ms. Davis was looking into the Xanadu expenditures remain unexplored by police investigators who may rule the homicide "accidental," especially if Mr. Molinelli is the investigating prosecutor. ("New Jersey's Xanadu Mess.")
I wonder why the American media is so silent about this spectacle of mafia corruption and censorship right here in the New York metropolitan area? Corruption, maybe? If this level of censorship is possible against me, as an independent journalist-writer, who will be the next writer harassed, threatened, censored and suppressed? ("How Censorship Works in America" and "What is it like to be censored in America?")
"Ms. Davis, 74, was found dead on Tuesday in her burning Tudor-style home ... Her yard was not unlike the well-manicured yards in the neighborhood, but for the yellow irises she grew by the curb and a sign that hung from her front door reading, 'Friends for Peace' ..."
What a "trouble maker," local politicians said. An advocate for "peace" could be a Communist or a terrorist. It is likely that smears will be disseminated in the media through journalists on the mafia payroll. Behind-the-back slanders are a specialty of the Jersey mafia. ("Terry Tuchin, Diana Lisa Riccioli, and New Jersey's Agency of Torture" and "Burn Notice.")
"But officials said Ms. Davis had died violently behind the door. They ruled her death a homicide, and a local news report citing a source in law enforcement, said her hands had been bound and her head bludgeoned. [I do not believe local police and prosecutors can investigate this matter or my own situation.] There has been no mention of any suspects."
Mr. Molinelli, Bergen County's prosecutor, has seriously considered, allegedly, a determination that Ms. Davis' death was "accidental." This conclusion in Bergen County would not surprise me. Federal investigation is desperately needed, Mr. Holder. ("John Molinelli's Ethics Problem.")
If I should experience an unfortunate accident, I can only hope that federal law enforcement will continue to investigate the matters that I have made public. Give the feds a call if you can help with any of these matters. ("Law and Ethics in the Soprano State.")
"The killing of Ms. Davis, a longtime political watchdog and gadfly" -- who was often subjected to behind-the-back slanders to friends and relatives, maybe assaults and thefts as well -- "has left residents wondering whether the attack was random or the result of a personal vendetta." (emphasis added)
As Sheriff Speziale departs for the greener fields of the Port Authority, several investigations in Passaic County are about to break:
"On Thursday morning investigators from the New Jersey Division of Criminal Justice in the office of Paula T. Dow, searched the Sheriff's department motor pool in Paterson, N.J. During the search, which was conducted with the Sheriff's Department consent, [after the Attorney General indicated that she could get a warrant and only after Mr. Speziale indicated that he was leaving the Sheriff's job vacant,] rather than under the authority of a court order, more than a dozen investigators spent about two and half hours at the garage. They appeared to examine a number of vehicles; eventually taking away a car ENGINE on a flat bed truck." (N.Y. Times.) ("North Bergen, New Jersey is the Home of 'La Cosa Nostra.'")
The engine's vehicle identification number may relate to a vehicle other than the vehicle in which this engine was "found." It is possible, for example, that this engine belongs to a vehicle involved in a mafia hit or homicide currently under investigation in another county. ("Does Senator Menendez Have Mafia Friends?" and "Is Senator Menendez a Suspect in Mafia-Political Murder in New Jersey.")
"I am for all the people," Senator Menendez said, while commenting on the release of a terrorist by the British legal system. Distraction, Bob?
Nothing any American Senatorial inquiry will determine will alter the decision of the British courts granting the humanitarian release of this convicted terrorist (who has already left the UK) nor Mr. Cameron's statement that, while he does not agree with the decision, Britain would abide by the court's judgment whatever recommendations are made by the U.S. Senate. This is exactly what Mr. Cameron's government has done.
Mr. Cameron, a Conservative, has also established a Commission of Inquiry on the torture issue to determine whether there is any British complicity in the U.S. atrocities at Abu Ghraib or Guantanamo -- atrocities which are condemned by the world as human rights violations. Torture is absolutely prohibited under British law. ("Is American Legal Ethics a Lie?" and "What is it like to be tortured?" then "An Open Letter to My Torturers in New Jersey, Terry Tuchin and Diana Lisa Riccioli.")
Mr. Menendez is wasting the taxpayers' money, which is better than stealing the taxpayers' money, I guess -- but not much better. ("Senator Bob Loves Xanadu!")
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