Thursday, May 13, 2010

Get Rid of Wallace to Start Reforms.

May 15, 2010 at 8:46 P.M. "Errors" inserted and corrected, probably by Debbie Portiz's carpet-munching friends. Let's see if they keep it up.

May 13, 2010 at 7:54 P.M. A notice on my building informs me that no mail will be delivered to anyone in my building because of a single broken mailbox, which is functional. This is very strange and the decision was made without warning to anyone. I imagine that a great deal of mail will be lost. Hence, any letters from New Jersey should be sent in a secure manner. How strange?

May 13, 2010 at 9:48 A.M. An advertisement falsely attributed to "Ads by Google" was, again, attached to this blog. This is New Jersey's level of response to allegations of corruption and organized crime's influence in state government:

"Adult Depression Study, Living With Physical Pain Caused by Depression. Take Part in our study. http://www.painedbydepression.com/ "

Depression in New Jersey is largely the result of receiving property tax bills that are astronomically high because of massive amounts of theft and waste of public funds under Democrats, like McGreevey and Corzine. Mr. Christie is hoping to ease this depression problem by making necessary cuts in the budget, eliminating corruption and waste, allowing for lowering of property taxes. Take two tax cuts and call me in the morning.

James Ahearn, "Christie Rushes to Purge Supreme Court," in The Record, May 12, 2010, at p. A-13.

Controversy has swirled around Mr. Christie's efforts to appoint a new state Supreme Court justice after refusing to reappoint Mr. Wallace. I agree with Christie's efforts to clean up a tribunal identified with New Jersey corruption and dirty politics from the bench. ("Stuart Rabner and Conduct Unbecoming to the Judiciary in New Jersey" and "Law and Ethics in the Soprano State.")

The problems at the New Jersey Supreme Court begin with a politically slanted view of legal questions that divides such questions in terms of Democrat interpretations (good) and all other interpretations (bad).

With the exceptions of a few nominal Republicans -- who would be called Democrats every other place -- the Trenton court is a bullpen for liberal pitchers. "We need a left hander!" In New Jersey, they always call for a "left hander."

Worse, New Jersey's Democrats are known throughought the country as "the Mafia." The partnership between organized crime and Democrat political machines in New Jersey is not seriously doubted after the nearly daily chronicle of routine and disgusting corruptions -- cash in envelopes, 13-year-olds made available for sex to political bosses or their friends, patronage and self-serving or outright thievery as a feature of "how things are done" and cooperation with drug dealers from Miami (or Mexico) are normal aspects of life in Garden State politics. Right, Senator Bob? ("New Jersey's Feces-Covered Supreme Court" and "New Jersey's 'Ethical' Legal System," then "Is Senator Menendez a Suspect in Mafia-Political Murder in New Jersey?")

" ... For the first time since the modern Constitution [sic.] was adopted in 1947, a governor has chosen to replace an incumbent justice with a candidate more to his liking: Republican and conservative, and, as it happens, white and female."

Only the federal Constitution is capitalized, not state constitutions, Mr. Ahearn.

"Her name is Anne Murray Patterson. Wallace is the only black justice of the seven current members. One of two South Jerseyeans on the bench and a Harvard Law School graduate, he is a centrist, by any reasonable definition."

An African-American judge who is a "centrist" on an activist court is what is known as a "liberal." Coffee and Orio cookies?

Wallace is an intellectual mediocrity, in my opnion, who is relatively harmless -- but the controversy in Trenton's Supreme Court appointment process goes deeper.

The institutional morality of the state's highest tribunal and, indeed, of the Garden State's judiciary as a whole is at issue. The power-structure of a state where politics is pervasive has entered the courtrooms of a jurisdiction tainted by organized crime's influence and "way of doing things" where far too much takes place outside the boundaries of law, ignoring the Constitution's protections of civil liberties. For example, the censorship and destruction of writings at these blogs instigated by N.J. legal officials, in my opinion. ("Judges Protect Child Molesters in Bayonne, New Jersey" and "Corrupt Law Firms, Senator Bob, and New Jersey Ethics" then "More Democrats Arrested in New Jersey.")

When all that matters is a phone call from a political boss and not the laws on the books, when you have to worry about who are the "friends" of this particular litigant or judge (or adversary), as opposed to the applicable provisions of law and guarantees under the fundamental law of the land, then we have replaced a legal system with a medieval system of barter for favors -- that's what Christie wants to change in Trenton.

I am not -- not at all! -- a Republican. However, I sure hope that Mr. Christie succeeds in his efforts. Only one "error" inserted since this morning is not too bad. If Christie does not succeed, then New Jersey will remain an embarassment to the United States of America as the primary example of mafia corruption in government.

Governor Christie can only make that change in a "culture of corruption" by replacing people who have "grown-up" in the corrupt judicial ethos which has dominated the state's politics and law. Christie's nominee is a civil defense lawyer -- an evil breed condemned to walk the night -- but, at least, someone who exists outside the system of favors and deals, ass-kissing to bosses, and favor-mongering for mafiosos. At least 50% of N.J. judges are corrupt in one way or another -- sometimes in multiple ways.

"The governor ... campaigned for election promising to bring change to New Jersey, ... Wallace was part of a Supreme Court that had intruded on legislative and executive prerogatives, and ... the time had come for corrective action."

Each day that the cover-up continues, Mr. Rabner and Mr. Christie, is a further DEFECATION on the Constitution for which men and women are dying every day. The same holds true for each "error" inserted in these writings by N.J.'s hackers: They are trashing your Constitution when they violate my copyright protection.

This has nothing to do with whether you agree with any of my opinions, whether you like or dislike me, nor whether you approve of my methods. Twenty-one years of a conspiracy to commit crimes and to cover them up with the assistance of a corrupt judiciary is too long even for New Jersey. ("Terry Tuchin, Diana Lisa Riccioli, and New Jersey's Agency of Torture" and "What is it like to be tortured?")

New Jersey's legal and ethics enforcement system has committed great crimes against me, also against others, and sought to cover-up those crimes -- even hoping and trying to get me to commit a crime that will provide "ass-cover" for atrocities committed by them under color of law -- and they have escaped all liability for their great and monstrous evils in Trenton, so far. ("New Jersey's Office of Attorney Ethics" and "New Jersey is the Home of Child Molesters" then "More Lethal Poisons Found in New Jersey.")

Talk of ethics on the lips of OAE officials, N.J. Supreme Court justices -- who are part of this cover-up -- or "contaminated" officials (like Jaynee LaVecchia, who should have resigned ages ago) is not simply mistaken or erroneous, such talk is laughably absurd. And so is the New Jersey Supreme Court. It is time to change that situation in New Jersey. Have you no sense of shame, Mr. Rabner?

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