Friday, October 22, 2010

N.J.'s Crooked Lawyers & Loss of 20,200 Jobs.

October 22, 2010 at 1:41 P.M. A fire wall or other obstruction appears when I attempt to access blogger. I do not know whether I will be able to return to this site. It has taken me several hours to make it back here. I cannot say for how long I will be able to remain here. I will not sign out. The physical reaction to this silencing is painful; the emotional reaction is worse. I immediately created a group: http://groups.google.com./group/juan-galis-menendez?hl=en

If I am unable to write here, I will go to Google groups. I believe Cuban-American "factions," with the assistance of corrupt politicians, are responsible for these developments.

October 22, 2010 at 11:58 A.M. An advertisement was attached to this blog, against my will, since all advertisements are prohibited at this site. The advertisement is illegal and is falsely ascribed to "Ads by Google," (Miami?) as a kind of "fantasy publisher" of such commercial advertisements:

"Sherlock on Masterpiece, Holmes takes on 21st century London. Premiers Sun., Oct. 24, 9/8 P.M. on PBS. http://www.sherlockholmes.pbs.org/ "

Thank goodness this program was not a BBC production. David Cameron's budget slashing has done more harm to British thespians than Jack-the-Ripper. Perhaps Sherlock Holmes will "apprehend" Mr. Cameron before television audiences suffer further harm. ("Sherlock Holmes and the Case of the Missing Author.")

October 22, 2010 at 9:34 A.M. I experienced twenty minutes of warfare to reach my blogs today. I was required to sign-in twice, even though I was already signed-in through my Google account. I expect additional sabotage and defacements of essays as a result of these latest tactics. Is MSN still closed? At any time I may be prevented by U.S. government officials -- or persons enjoying official approval for their crimes -- from accessing the Internet.

I expect to experience obstructions in future efforts to reach blogger, just as I am unable to reach MSN on a regular basis. MSN groups remains closed to me. Efforts will be made to prevent me from accessing my blogs from public computers. No images can be posted by me at blogger. My books will not be sent to on-line booksellers. ("What is it like to be censored in America?" and "How Censorship Works in America.")

Mark Mazetti, "Officer Failed to Warn CIA Before Attack," in The New York Times, October 20, 2010, at p. A-1. (Coincidence?)
Monsy Alvarado, "Chief Zisa Hit With More Charges: Indictment Cites Pattern of Misconduct," in The Record, October 20, 2010, at p. A-1. (Allegations that additional charges will be filed are unconfirmed. Gambinos? Is Diana Lisa Riccioli a "friend," Mr. Zisa?)
Karen Rouse, "Audit Finds '$43 Million in Waste' at Turnpike," in The Record, October 20, 2010, at p. A-1. (No show jobs -- some held by deceased persons, probably.)
Joe Ryan, "Newark Screeners Allegedly Stole Cash From Travellers: TSA Supervisor Was Brazen," in The Record, October 20, 2010, at p. A-3. (Kicking back, boys? These men liked to target persons flying to India.)
Karen Rouse, "Workers Protest Loss of Tunnel Jobs," in The Record, October 20, 2010, at p. A-3. (If they give me a $100 bill -- the usual fee in Hudson County for showing up at a demonstration -- I will be happy to protest while wearing a hard hat.)
Michael Graczyk, "Execution Judge Feels Vindicated: Accused of Preventing Last-Minute Appeal," in The Record, October 20, 2010, at p. A-10. (Judge "Killer Keller" closed the courthouse doors at five sharp to prevent an appeal in a death case and was deemed "highly ethical" in Texas.)
Michael Gartland, "Firms Kept Gifts Under Wraps: Loophole Let Campaign Donations Go Un-Noticed," in The Record, October 20, 2010, at p. L-1. (Whatta-ya a trouble maker?)
Peter J. Sampson, "Closing Arguments Due in Ridgefield Mayor's Trial," in The Record, October 20, 2010, p. L-1. ("How did that money get there?")
Hugh R. Morley, "20,200 New Jersey Jobs Lost Last Month: Most Cuts Posted Since March, 2009," in The Record, October 21, 2010, at p. L-8. (Employers are anxious to flee a jurisdiction famous for cancer and corruption. No protests about those jobs lost thanks to Democrats, Senator Bob?)
John Reitmeyer, "1 in 3 Skirt Ban, Take Two Public Paychecks," in The Record, October 21, 2010, at p. A-1. (" ... one-third of New Jersey's 120 legislators hold another elected office or publicly-funded job, something most states already limit and Governor Christie wants to outlaw." I am against banning women from wearing skirts.)

"Firms with Bergen County contracts donated tens of thousands of dollars to Democratic freeholder candidates this year, but those campaign contributions didn't show up in disclosure forms that accompany freeholder resolutions awarding the contracts."

N.J.'s politically-connected lawyers have become accustomed to the government tit. ("New Jersey's Politically-Connected Lawyers on the Tit.")

Incidentally, some of these firms are in Hudson County. Lawyers know how to play the game. Find a way to get government loot in your pocket after paying politicians for the contract. If a little something comes back under the table to politicians awarding the public contracts -- well, that's even better for them. How's it going, Alex Booth?

The people of the Garden State continue to get screwed, both ways and sideways. ("New Jersey is the Home of the Living Dead" and "Law and Ethics in the Soprano State.")

"And its [it's?] all apparently legal under the state pay-to-play law."

This article was written by a Harvard Law School graduate. ("Nihilists in Disneyworld.")

"It's a loophole we're trying to close,' said Jeffrey Bundle, executive director [sic.] of the NJ Election Law Enforcement Commission. 'We think all of these things should be disclosed.' ..."

Guess who we find at the bottom of this barrel of feces, Joel T. Leyner, Esq. and the Chasan, Leyner, & Lamparello, Esqs. law firm all made contributions to something called: 'Victory 2010' -- an entity created to elect Democrats to "Freeholder" positions -- "but none of those contributions were disclosed in the Freeholder resolutions that granted the firms public contracts worth about $1.5 MILLION. ..."

What did the recipients of these contributions do for the cash? Take a wild guess:

"Caroll, Calabrese and Hagan [Democrat Freeholders in Bergen County] voted to support nearly every contract resolution for these firms that come back before them."

No, you don't say? What a shock! You think they were getting kickbacks?

" ... a candidate committee dedicated to the reelection of Democratic Freeholders" -- I wonder why they had no trouble filling that committee? -- "James Carroll and Elizabeth Calabrese and the election of John Hagan [?] received more than $30,000 in campaign contributions from contractors" -- like this shady law firm -- "whose county donations forms omit the donations."

This is a worse pile of poisonous refuse than the chemical rot in Wayne, New Jersey. It is called the New Jersey legal and political system. ("New Jersey's 'Ethical' Legal System" and "Mafia Influence in New Jersey Politics and Law" then "Corrupt Law Firms, Senator Bob, and New Jersey Ethics.")

Who is "unethical" in New Jersey's legal system, Mr. Rabner? Do you speak to me of "ethics," Big Stu? ("Stuart Rabner and Conduct Unbecoming to the Judiciary in New Jersey" and "No More Cover-Ups and Lies, Chief Justice Rabner!")

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