Friday, April 02, 2010

Tainted New Jersey State Troopers Get Off the Hook!

April 3, 2010 at 9:15 A.M. The measure of hits at my blog is frozen, again. The obstructions that prevented efforts to write yesterday may have resulted in further vandalisms of writings. I will try to discover and correct any newly-inserted "errors."

April 2, 2010 at 6:00 P.M. I was obstructed from accessing or posting at these blogs earlier today. I have gone to a public computer. I hope that I will be able to post my revisions here.

April 2, 2010 at 10:40 A.M. On "Good Friday," the religious observances of many persons who are deemed "laughable" -- as I am laughed at in New Jersey -- produces the following advertisement attached to these blogs without my consent, illegally, and falsely attributed to "Ads by Google":


"The AntiChrist: Free Book, Rapture/Revelation/666/2nd Coming: What John's Disciples Knew (& Lost). http://www.VoiceElijah.org/Prophecy "

It is "very funny," right Alex Booth? Anne Milgram? OAE? ("Is it rational to believe in God?")

"A Disgrace: Troopers Should Have Faced Punishment," (Editorial) in The Star Ledger, April 1, 2010, at p. 18.

The troubles in New Jersey's fatally contaminated legal system center on influence by organized crime and proceedings unfolding outside the boundaries of legality. There is a public set of rules and statutes. There appears to be a normal legal system in the state that is comparable to what is found elsewhere in America.

There is also an unwritten code of rules (and non-rules) for insiders of the corrupt Trenton political culture: women and children are often sexually exploited or traded for favors; money is stolen not only from public funds, but also in law cases (especially drug cases), which pisses off organizations like the Latin Kings, who are the moral equals of many Hudson County Democrats; "peccadillos" are excused or forgiven for those who are "insiders." I wonder who gets all of that stolen loot? Rabner? ("Stuart Rabner and Conduct Unbecoming to the Judiciary in New Jersey.")

New Jersey cops, especially the besmirched New Jersey State Troopers, do favors for politicians. In turn, politicians take care of dirty cops when they're caught "doing a little something for the boss." I do not mean Bruce Springstein. ("Organized Crime Group in New Jersey's State Police" and "Driving While Black [DWB] in New Jersey.")

"The parties can't agree on what happened that December night in 2007, when seven state troopers met a Rider University student at a Trenton nightclub, brought her to the Ewing home of one of the troopers and had sex with her."

"She says it was rape; they insist the sex was consensual. She says they gave her alcohol and she was drunk; the troopers say she wasn't. [New Jersey is one of the centers for the use of notorious 'date rape' drugs.] And the troopers' lawyers say there is suppressed DNA evidence that proves she had sex with another man after the troopers."

After the troopers what? Do you mean that after the troopers had sex with the victim, someone else -- maybe one of their friends -- also had sex with this probably unconscious woman? I believe it.

Are lawyers ethically permitted to refer to suppressed evidence, publicly? I do not think so. In New Jersey's contaminated ethics proceedings (thanks to the bribed OAE), nothing will happen to these people. Do you think I am worried about what these people think of my ethics? They should worry about me. ("New Jersey's KKK Police Shocker" and "New Jersey's Office of Attorney Ethics.")

"After a seven-month investigation, county prosecutors decided not to present a case to the grand jury and no charges were filed [against the troopers.]"

The victim better move out of the state because troopers have a habit of going after such complainants, usually making use of behind-the-back tactics to make her life miserable and/or to destroy all aspects of her career as well as relationships for presuming to insist on her rights. If you happen to love a woman abused in such ways, how would you feel? ("Terry Tuchin, Diana Lisa Riccioli, and New Jersey's Agency of Torture" and "What is it like to be tortured?")

"But one fact is clear: Seven state troopers put themselves in a compromising position that, in the end, disgraced the uniform and the state. At best, this was a trooper orgy, each officer taking his turn with a co-ed [18?] of questionable impairment."

John, you have brought disgrace to the OAE. Why not surrender your license? Cooperate fully. It's the ethical thing to do, John.

"Rape or no rape, former attorney general [sic.] Anne Milgram was right in trying to get the troopers fired. [Probably because Anne was not invited to join the sexual festivities.] But a stunning deal with the new attorney general's [Paula Dow's] office -- which declined comment -- will allow the sexual tag-team members to keep their jobs."

"The trooper's attorneys argue that the state can't regulate off-duty sex, but the state can -- and should -- draw a line on appropriate behavior for its most prestigious law enforcement agency."

"The troopers should have been fired."

The troopers should have been INDICTED. Ms. Dow, time to supply the torture files to all victims, especially all videos and recordings pointing to rape or other sexual assaults of victims, like me, in New Jersey. Face-to-face, Ms. Dow.

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