N.J. Democrats' Mafia Perks.
January 13, 2011 at 3:46 P.M. During the time when my computer was disabled, New Jersey hackers inserted "errors' in multiple essays with the goal of exhausting me. Thus far, I am able to cope from public computers.
January 7, 2011 at 1:10 P.M. A number of "errors" were inserted overnight in the list of sources. I have corrected them until next time.
January 5, 2011 at 5:01 P.M. I received a call from 502-000-9912, "NAME UNAVAILABLE." Death threats should be e-mailed to me directly. I suspect N.J.'s KKK police factions are involved in this intimidation effort. Mr. Sweeney? Mr. Menendez? Mr. Codey? Paula Dow, does this situation not concern you? If I am killed, after all, it could damage your future career options, Ms. Dow.
January 5, 2011 at 3:06 P.M. Another attempt to run a security scan of my computer was cut short. My computer was shut down. I am writing from a public computer. If you can help, financially, in the effort to free Mumia Abu-Jamal and many other unjustly convicted prisoners in America, contact "The Partisan Defense Committee," (I have nothing to do with this organization) at P.O. Box 99, Canal Street Sta., New York, NY 10013, (212) 406-4252 or the Southern Center for Constitutional Rights. One motivation for the insertion of "errors" in my writings is hatred of the merits found in those writings. Some persons are not permitted to be intelligent or articulate in America, or (more accurately) in New Jersey. If you are not counted when you visit these blogs, it is because you are not counted as a person in the world by American power. ("Americas's Holocaust.")
January 4, 2011 at 5:38 P.M. This essay was posted from a public computer. Continuing computer crime obstructs my security scans and has shut down my computer several times today. I will struggle to continue writing from public computers against New Jersey's censorship effort. ("How Censorship Works in America.")
Michael Gartland, "Exiting Dems Fill Over 100 Posts," in The Record, January 2, 2011, at p. A-1.
As usual in New Jersey the Democrats' electoral machine and patronage mill is handing out jobs and money -- as rewards to loyal soldiers -- even as politicians are leaving office. For a depressing list of examples of New Jersey's criminally corrupt exploitation of public resources in the new year, please see the sources that I will post at the conclusion of this essay.
"The Bergen County government that left office Friday approved more than 100 appointments to county positions and a retroactive raise for political appointees after the November 2 election, when voters sent five Democrat incumbents packing and replaced them with Republicans." ("New Jersey is the Home of the Living Dead" and "New Jersey's Office of Attorney Ethics.")
This typical "appointment spree" (other states call this "stealing") is an attempt to undermine the voters' mandate by retaining control of state and county governments through the continued presence of Democrat-mafia soldiers in key posts, even as Republicans have been elected to top positions in government to reform precisely this flagrant political corruption. ("Law and Ethics in the Soprano State" and "Corrupt Law Firms, Senator Bob, and New Jersey Ethics.")
Disdain for legality and brazen contempt for rules and tribunals -- lawyers urinating on the state constitution and much-soiled New Jersey Supreme Court -- is "business as usual" for the Garden State's "connected" or mob Democrats. ("Does Senator Menendez Have Mafia Friends?" and "Richard J. Codey, Esq. Immortalized on Canvas at Taxpayers' Expense.")
Allegations of additional corruption at New Jersey's Supreme Court with reference to the eternal education law catastrophe called the Abbott case are forthcoming. How many Trenton justices are on the take is also a matter for speculation. In a tribunal with seven members -- where any of nine so-called justices may hear matters -- will any decision be legitimate? I doubt it. Litigants have a built-in appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court no matter what the Trenton court decides in any of the cases pending before that tribunal. ("New Jersey Supreme Court's Implosion" and "New Jersey's Failed Judiciary.")
I further doubt that federal courts would deem N.J. tactics and appointments Constitutional. Whether state courts will approve of this move -- 11th hour partisan appointments -- depends on the political affiliation of the judge hearing the case in New Jersey's discredited Superior Court.
Mr. Rivera-Soto's anounced departure in June, 2011 when his term expires is motivated by continuing hostility and prejudice among the courts' members: Rabner's unconstitutional usurpation of the appointment power, Virginia's disdain for the "little people," Jaynee's affiliation with the mob, allegedly, and Mr. Wallace's rumored fondness for marijuana -- all of these "erratic behaviors" are indicators of serious emotional troubles for these "justices." Perhaps a hypnosis session with "Dr." Tuchin and "Therapist" Riccioli would help them? ("Terry Tuchin, Diana Lisa Riccioli, and New Jersey's Agency of Torture" and "New Jersey's Feces-Covered Supreme Court.")
As they say in Hackensack, "somebody should have a hook in the judge." Jersey Boys usually do have "hooks" in state judges. Women or "boys," drugs, cash -- all produce the desired outcomes in New Jersey courts. The Democrats will find a judge who is their "boy." Republicans will try to find a judge who will be their "girl." ("Neil M. Cohen, Esq. and Conduct Unbecoming to the Legislature in New Jersey" and "Deborah T. Poritz and Conduct Unbecoming to the Judiciary in New Jersey.")
"The appointments range from relatively symbolic advisory positions to significant management positions in which new hires will oversee hundreds of employess and millions of dollars in government assets."
The goal is not only control, but theft of more pension moneys for crooks with several state pension funds claims at a time when these funds are mysteriously "short" $46 BILLION. Make that $54 BILLION. ("New Jersey Pension Funds 'Short' $46 Billion" and "Say Goodbye to Your State Pension in New Jersey.")
"Aside from providing politically-connected officials with jobs, the appointments also serve to keep people vested in the state pension system." ("Da Jersey Code" and "Cement is Gold.")
These appointments violate the law and should be rescinded by incoming Republicans. Among Democrat shysters still on New Jersey's legal "tit" are the following well-known "usual suspects":
Robert Laux, who will get $145,000.00 as Director of the Bergen County Utilities Authority, which is only one (no doubt) of his government positions.
Mathew McHale, appointed Executive Director of Bergen County's Improvement Authority for a measly $85,000.00, in addition to any law earnings or other perks for this "made man" of the organization.
Marco [a.k.a. "The Sauce Man"] Ragusseo gets $85,000.00 as "Assistant Director" of "something, we don't know what." I am sure that Mr. Ragusseo denies Gambino family affiliations. ("Mafia Influence in New Jersey Law and Politics" and "Does Senator Menendez Have Mafia Friends?")
Many other so-called "ethical" lawyers at New Jersey's thieving OAE as well as tainted judiciary grifters will be sucking the public tit while residents of the Garden State experience severe hardships and unemployment because of decades of stealing by a corrupt political-legal establishment. This would be a good time to insert more "errors," boys. Mr. Torricelli? ("Senator Bob, the Babe, and the Big Bucks" and "New Jersey's 'Ethical' Legal System.")
These are my self-proclaimed "ethical superiors" whose massive thefts from the public treasury have brought incalculable suffering to millions of people and who have -- there is no other way to say this, defecated -- on the Constitution of the United States of America, especially the Bill of Rights. ("Law and Ethics in the Soprano State" and "More Mafia Members Arrested in New Jersey.")
Each time that you see an "error" inserted in one of these texts, please think of the men and women dying for freedom of speech and privacy rights violated by New Jersey's mafia thieves. ("Jaynee LaVecchia and Conduct Unbecoming to the Judiciary in New Jersey" and "No More Cover-Ups and Lies, Chief Justice Rabner!" then "New Jersey's Politically Connected Lawyers on the Tit.")
Have you no sense of shame, Mr. Rabner? Ms. Dow? Mr. Christie? ("Jim Florio and the Mafia in Atlantic City.")
Sources:
New York and the World:
Eric Schmidt, "Disappearances Tied to Pakistan Are Worry to U.S. -- New Tension for Allies," in The New York Times, December 30, 2010, at p. A1. (U.S. blames Pakistan; Pakistan blames U.S. for "disappeared" Taliban prisoners, some of whom have probably been murdered and others released depending on their ability to pay extortion fees.)
John Leland, "A Police Commander in Iraq Killed by Suicide Bombers," in The New York Times, December 30, 2010, at p. A6. (Is this "progress" in Iraq?)
Steven Loher, "Computers That See You, Read You and Even Tell You to Wash," in The New York Times, January 2, 2011, at p. A1. (Allegedly, computers have been designed to "recognize" behavior and "react" appropriately. Good Luck.)
Stephen Lee Myers, "After Ravages of Time and War, Triage to Save Ruins of Babylon," in The New York Times, January 3, 2011, at p. A1. (In addition to destroying the infrastructure of Iraq, looting and blasting ancient Babylonian ruins have resulted from the war.)
Salman Masood, "Major Party Walks Out of Coalition in Pakistan: Government is Left Without a Majority," in The New York Times, January 3, 2011, at p. A4. (Government with 100 nuclear weapons may fall to fundamentalist factions with the loss of the middle class liberals.)
AP, "Insurgents Are Suspected in 5 Killings in Baghdad," in The New York Times, January 3, 2011, at p. A6. (More progress in Iraq?)
David Cole, "Chewing Gum for Terrorists," in The New York Times, January 3, 2011, at p. A21. (Op-Ed noting the U.S. Supreme Court has decided that speech that "indirectly" supports a terrorist group's illicit activity -- by the group's members or "supporters" -- could be probibited legally. None of the key terms are adequately defined this decision based on news accounts.)
New Jersey:
December 30, 2010:
John Reitmeyer, "Pro-Christie Non-Profit Reveals List of Donors: Construction Firms With Public Work Gave Big," in The Record, December 30, 2010, at p. A-1. (Quid pro cuo, Mr. Christie?)
Scott Fallon, "N.J. Gets New Hope in Cutting Pollution: EPA to Examine Coal Plant on Pa. Border," in The Record, December 30, 2010, at p. A-1. (Help for "cancer alley.")
Ben Nichols & Mathew Maharat, "Christine O'Donnell's Spending is Probed," in The Record, December 30, 2010, at p. A-10. (Ex-Senate hopeful under finance investigation. Menendez?)
Charles Stile, "Christie's 2011 Brings Issues Old and New," in The Record, December 30, 2010, at p. A-1. (Who will challenge Menendez? Codey? Control the bribe-taking judiciary? Passify the unions? Take the canolis, Mr. Christie.)
Marlene Hayes, "Suspect in 12 Year-Old's Rape is Arrested on Return to U.S.," in The Record, December 30, 2010, at p. L-1. (N.J. is America's child-porn and -prostitution capital.)
Mike Kelly, "Vacations May Haunt Christie and Guardagno," in The Record, December 30, 2010, at p. L-1. (What was the behind-the-scenes deal with Sweeney, Mr. Christie? You gave the Dems. a free shot at me, Chris?)
Zach Patberg, "Chief's $329,000 Pay Deal Killed," in The Record, December 30, 2010, at p. L-1. (Police are being fired while politically connected "chiefs" make close to half-a-million in many Garden State cities. How about all the cash from alleged bribes?)
Tiffani N. Garlic, "Small Business Still a Big Problem for New Jersey," in The Record, December 30, 2010, at p. L-9. (Survival index for small businesses in New Jersey is the worst in the country.)
"True Grit: Donovan is the New Sheriff in Town," (Editorial) in The Record, December 30, 2010, at p. A-20. (Donovan has filed a lawsuit trying to curb some of the excesses of Bergen County's mafia-Democrat machine. I hope one of your judges gets the case, Ms. Donovan.)
January 2, 2011:
Michael Gartland, "Exiting Democrats Fill Over 100 New County Execs. -- Hope for Reversals," in The Record, January 2, 2011, at p. A-1. (Everybody is "on the tit.")
"Jersey Companies Stockpile Billions," in The Record, January 2, 2011, at p. A-1. (While unemployment remains high, 23 public companies in N.J. have stockpiled $41.2 BILLION in cash -- possibly through misrepresentation to state tax officials -- even as some of these companies have received "stimulus funds." Ethical New Jersey lawyers have made all of this possible. Ms. Poritz?)
Stephen Sterling & Karl Van de Vries, "Trouble Looms for Towns Tied to 2% Tax Cap," in The Record, January 2, 2011, at p. A-3. (Essential services will be cut in New Jersey, possibly resulting in the loss of life among the old and infirm. What the hell?)
John Reitmeyer, "For Combative Christie, There's More Fun Ahead," in The Record, January 2, 2011, at p. L-2. ($46 BILLION "short" in pension funds -- give or take a billion dollars.)
January 3, 2011:
Herb Johnson, "Garrett Allies Target Spending: Say Constitution Can Curb Budgets," in The Record, January 3, 2011, at p. A-1. (Mafia or Constitution? -- you can't have both, boys and girls.)
"School Funding Set for N.J.'s Top Court," in The Record, January 3, 2011, at p. A-1. (Allegations of corruption and incompetence in connection with the Abbott case before the N.J. Supreme Court's nine justices -- not to mention Mr. Prisco, "the Godfather," who may get the deciding vote. Only five of the nine prospective justices will actually vote in this seven-member court. Do you need a scorecard?)