N.J.'s Joe Ferreiro is a Repeat Offender.
February 25, 2011 at 11:12 P.M. At any time the various computer attacks and harassments may prevent me from writing further, especially when a new essay focusing on continuing arrests of mafia figures in New Jersey may be expected. If more than two days pass without a new comment from me, then my silence is not voluntary. I will do my best to write from some location, every day.
Posted from a public computer on February 25, 2011 at 3:01 P.M.:
February 25, 2011 at 9:35 A.M. This morning my security system was disconnected, again, requiring me to reboot my computer. As of this time, my security system has not been and cannot be reconnected. I will continue to try to make use of my home computer. If I am unable to restore my service, I will write from public computers to the best of my ability.
Mafia figures continue to be arrested in New Jersey. Tell your friends in law enforcement about this fascinating situation. I hoped to review "The Constant Gardener" and "Harry Brown." This will not be possible in light of the disabling of my security system. I will focus on New Jersey corruption issues and the Cuba issue for the time being. ("Time to End the Embargo Against Cuba" and "Havana Nights and C.I.A. Tapes.")
New investigations of Mr. Ferreiro and several others are rumored to be in the works. Was it Menendez who approached you, Joe Ferreiro, or was it Terry Tuchin? Perhaps a member of the Rose law firm in Bergen county asked for your help against me? No speak English, Joe? ("Terry Tuchin, Diana Lisa Riccioli, and New Jersey's Agency of Torture.")
Mr. Christie, this continuing computer crime reflects poorly on your administration and may adversely affect your presidential aspirations. Ms. Dow, the A.G.'s office and OAE should not be used to commit crimes of any kind. ("New Jersey's 'Ethical' Legal System" and "New Jersey's Office of Attorney Ethics.")
February 24, 2011 at 8:09 P.M. "Errors" inserted since this morning were corrected.
February 24, 2011 at 11:09 A.M. "Errors" are usually inserted in new essays for several days after their initial posting, especially if I have been lucky enough to strike a nerve. Other computer wars are always expected. I will "move on" to public computers later today.
Mike Kelly, "Distressing End to Bizarre Political Fraud," in The Record, February 21, 2011, at p. L-1.
"A disturbing event took place in a Bergen County courtroom last week."
This can be said most weeks in the home of the mafia -- Hackensack, New Jersey.
"A judge gazed down from his bench at a defendant in a criminal case -- looked her 'right in the eye,' as he put it -- and indicated that he felt she was guilty."
"Then he let her walk free. Such was the bizarre and ridiculous ending to what has become known as the Bergenfield forgery."
"To understand the importance of this case and why it is so disturbing, you need to know this was no simple forgery -- not a case of someone stealing a credit card or a checkbook and then illegally signing someone's else's name. What happened in Bergenfield in 2005 was nothing short of a blatant attempt to rig an election with forged signatures." ("New Jersey is Lucky Luciano's Havana" and "Is Union City, New Jersey Meyer Lansky's Whore House?")
"At the center of this scam was the Bergen County Democratic Organization, [BCDO] then led by its now disgraced chief, Joe Ferreiro."
Mr. Ferreiro, was a New Jersey attorney who (mysteriously) served on the Bergen County Legal Ethics Committee at one point in his Manohla Dargis-like "checkered" career. Joe Ferreiro is the proverbial black cat of New Jersey's legal-political world, a "behind-the-back" man (like Bobby Menendez) with more than nine lives, a man who may have played a hidden role in my life-story. I will know soon enough. ("New Jersey's 'Ethical' Legal System.")
Several attempts to lock-up Ferreiro, permanently, have been only partly successful -- several more such efforts to convict Bergen's Godfather are said to be in the works. ("Mafia Influence in New Jersey Courts and Politics" and "The Gang's All Here!")
Ferreiro's recent exit from prison on a technicality, alleged violations of Constitutional rights -- rights that are ignored when the defendant is someone like Kristen Riordan -- along with his continued alleged mafia "affiliations" further disgrace New Jersey politics, if such a thing is possible. ("Abuse and Exploitation of Women in New Jersey" and "Joe Ferreiro is Bergen's Godfather.")
"It needs to be said that the BCDO has not been formally implicated in the forgery. But Ferreiro's group barely broke a sweat in trying to determine who the culprits were. Indeed, as we learned in court, these original forgeries were somehow 'misplaced' by a Ferreiro loyalist before investigators could obtain them as evidence." (Again and fortissimo: "New Jersey's 'Ethical' Legal System" and "New Jersey's Office of Attorney Ethics.")
All of these shenanigans are part of Ferreiro's continuing efforts to control New Jersey's Democratic politics -- at least in the north of the state -- in an unholy alliance with Menendez and the Union City politician's troops of stupid, Right-wing Cuban-American foot soldiers. ("Does Senator Menendez Have Mafia Friends?" and "Is Senator Menendez a Suspect in Mafia-Political Murder in New Jersey?")
Ferreiro wants to get rid of Loretta Weinberg because she is "too independent." The Democrat-mafia machine wants to control its members, rigidly, to ensure that the mechanisms of government are in the service of the state's corrupt politicians, ideally at the expense of the public. This effort may have succeeded with the Bergen County Prosecutor's Office and Hackensack Police Department that is still subject to influence (if not control) by the Zisa family and a few well-placed "others," allegedly.
Joe Ferreiro may be offered a judgeship. After all, Ferreiro certainly could have been a judge years ago -- if a judgeship was what he wanted. This should indicate the troubles with a judicial appointment system in a corrupt jurisdiction where "trouble makers" (like me), who are foolish enough to object to the "nonsense," are eliminated. Maybe this "eliminating" is not so easy in my case. $25,000 still fixes the four-way check, right? ("Terry Tuchin, Diana Lisa Riccioli, and New Jersey's Agency of Torture.")
The Bergen Prosecutor's Office is tied to Ferreiro's organization and, therefore, did not think the case "important." No investigators were assigned to the matter. Ferreiro is said to have a lot of pull at the New Jersey Attorney General's Office -- even under Chris Christie, as Governor or Paula Dow, as Attorney General -- and Joe will always get at least a "heads up" if something is coming down the pike in his direction. It is very likely that Mr. Ferreiro is privy to all kinds of inside information from New Jersey's prosecutors. ("Anne Milgram Does It Again" and "More Mafia Arrests in New Jersey and Anne Milgram is Clueless.")
"In Trenton, the Corzine administration also did its best to ignore the case. The state attorney general [sic.] assigned a lone investigator -- who was eventually pulled off." ("Anne Milgram Does it Again" and "No More Cover-Ups and Lies, Chief Justice Rabner!")
Nothing has happened to good-old Joe Ferreiro, so far. A new sheriff has arrived in town. Things look a little shaky for Big Bob Menendez and Joey Ferreiro. Indictments of both men are long overdue. Stay tuned to this station. We have yet to hear from the Menendez grand juries.
New Jersey is a cesspool of corruption that will continue to disgust people in most places in the world -- including everywhere in Europe and, also, in today's Cuba -- as the exact opposite of what a civilized legal and political system should be. New Jersey, by the criteria of basic principles of international law, may be described as a failed legal system. No wonder they keep disconnecting my security system -- and getting away with it. ("How censorship works in America.")
No country on earth wishes to emulate New Jersey's political and legal system. Most people who live in the state are embarassed by the well-deserved reputation of the Garden State as a mafia enclave. ("New Jersey is the Home of the living Dead" and "Law and Ethics in the Soprano State.")
People like Joe Ferreiro do not approve of me. I do not approve of them. A judiciary, State Assembly, Senate and N.J. Supreme Court made up of bribe-takers, child molesters, thieves, incompetents or worse is hardly in a position to judge anyone's "ethics" nor can such persons set an example for any society on earth. New Jersey's betrayal of the Constitution should sicken you.
Sources:
Deena Yellin, "Official's Arrest Stuns Clifton: Councilwoman Charged With Hitting Relative," in The Record, February 22, 2011, at p. A-1. (Councilwoman Mary Sadrakula -- possibly, a friend of Diana Lisa Riccioli -- arrested and charged.)
AP, "Suicide Victim's Mom Blasts Crooked Judge," in The Record, February 22, 2011, at p. A-8. (Former Judge Mark Ciavarella took bribes from private prison companies to send them "customers" -- one young lady, who should not have been incarcerated, committed suicide after being sent to jail by this highly ethical judge.)
"A Need for Greed: Lobbyist Takes Cake and Pension," (Editorial) in The Record, February 22, 2011, at p. A-10. (Celeste Carpiano takes greed and selfishness to a new level in New Jersey.)
Zach Patberg, "20 School Cops Cut in Paterson: Some Fear it Will Lead to More Gang Violence," in The Record, February 22, 2011, at p. L-1. (No money to pay salaries for needed workers because so much loot has been stolen for many years by politicians in the Garden State.)
John Reitmeyer, "The 'New Normal': Offers Tax Relief, School Aid, Pension Reform," in The Record, February 23, 2011, at p. A-1. (Tax cuts for business and rich people. Great.)
Samnatha Henry, "15 From N.J. Plead Not Guilty in Underworld Probe," in The Record, February 23, 2011, at p. A-3. (This case will be the topic of a future essay and is part of a continuing federal investigation with multiple branches and targets.)
Hugh R. Morly, "Business Groups Cheer $200 Million in Tax Cuts, Perks," in The Record, February 23, 2011, at p. A-6.
Zach Patberg, "159 Cops Getting Pink Slips: Paterson Proceeding With Plan After State OK," in The Record, February 23, 2011, at p. L-1.
Deena Yellin, "Clifton Councilwoman Pleads Not Guilty," in The Record, February 23, 2011, at p. L-1. (Aggravated assault and disorderly persons offenses are not unusual for New Jersey's public officials. Say hello to Diana, Mary.)