Monday, April 11, 2011

N.J.'s Clifford J. Minor, Esq. Pleads Guilty.

April 12, 2011 at 3:00 P.M. "Richard Posner on Voluntary Actions and Criminal Responsibility" was altered, again, in violation of copyright and the First Amendment. I have left the text as it is for now. The reinserted "errors" in that essay have been corrected several times before. A number of other writings have had the spacing between a single set of paragraphs altered to maximize the frustration effects of such tactics. I cannot say how many writings in total have been vandalized overnight. I will try to continue repairing the harm done as best I can. "Roberto Unger's Revolutionary Legal Theory" may also have been damaged.

April 11, 2011 at 7:36 P.M. In this essay and several others, titles of cited essays have been altered and capitalized letters have been transformed into lower cases. I have repaired such damage to this work and others several times already.
The goal of induced frustration efforts is to produce a nervous breakdown in victims or to wield stress as a weapon. Evidently, new attacks have been made on "America's Holocaust" and "What is Law?" Finally, see the introduction to "Roberto Unger's Revolutionary Legal Theory."
Richard Perez-Pena, "In New Jersey, Ex-Prosecutor Pleads Guilty in Bribery Case," in The New York Times, April 6, 2011, at p. A21.
" NEWARK -- ... Clifford J. Minor [former] police officer, judge, prosecutor, defense lawyer and mayoral candidate ... added an unflattering entry to his resume: confessed felon."
"Mr. Minor admitted that he took a bribe, abetted a false confession and tried to cover his tracks by falsifying a document and lying to investigators -- all part of a scheme to help a criminal avoid a weapons charge."
"Appearing before Judge Dickingson R. Debevoise in Federal District Court here, Mr. Minor, 68, pleaded guilty to six criminal charges. His lawyer, Thomas R. Ashley, said that based on the plea agreement with federal prosecutors, 'we could expect a sentence in the range of 18 to 24 months,' but the judge is not bound by that.' ..."
Prosecutorial misconduct and breaches of legal ethics standards -- even quite heinous offenses -- are often excused or covered-up by friendly judges and fellow prosecutors, unless publicity is brought to bear upon incidents. ("One of New Jersey's Highly Ethical Attorneys Has a Problem" and "New Jersey's Legal System is a Whore House.")
New Jersey's cronyism and backscratching among officials and "connected" lawyers knows no limits. The media's willing participation in a cover-up is disgraceful. ("New Jersey's Politically Connected Lawyers On the Tit" and "Corrupt Law Firms, Senator Bob, and New Jersey Ethics.")
New Jersey's hackers have taken to lowering the capitalized letters in titles in this essay. It makes them happy. I will try to make all corrections of this inserted "error" promptly upon discovering it. Please give my regards to "Marcel" or "Muhammad" at Time/Warner. I merely prefer that all attacks be aimed at me and not at persons I love.
There is an obvious double standard at work in New Jersey's legal system as regards the criminality of clubhouse lawyers, prosecutors, even judges that must be addressed immediately. ("Stuart Rabner and Conduct Unbecoming to the Judiciary in New Jersey" and "Deborah T. Poritz and Conduct Unbecoming to the Judiciary in New Jersey" then "New Jersey Prosecutors and the Mafia.")

"The charges stemmed from the arrest in 2007 of Abdul Williams who was charged with illegal gun possession. Prosecutors said Mr. Williams, who had several prior convictions and could have faced a long sentence as a repeat offender plotted to have Jamal Muhammad, a childhood friend with a [lesser] record, confess to the crime."
This sort of thing is not unusual in New Jersey criminal court cases. No, I never did any such thing. Deals are made to go after people, like Mr. Minor, often for political reasons (Mr. Minor was a foe of Cory Booker and Chris Christie). For instance, it is not an uncommon or unknown fact that the OAE and AG tamper with transcripts and witnesses, obstruct justice, deny discoverable material and commit worse infractions -- perhaps as a favor for politicians -- regardless of the damage to innocent people's lives. ("New Jersey's Office of Attorney Ethics" and "New Jersey's 'Ethical' Legal System" then "New Jersey's Failed Legal System" and "New Jersey's Supreme Court Implosion" and "New Jersey's Feces-Covered Supreme Court.")
New Jersey's dismal legal reality is indicative of the plunge of American courts to disgusting, sewer-like levels of corruption and politics in the administration of law. I can only hope that the OAE will continue to post insults of me on-line in an increasingly desperate effort to cover-up obvious criminality in matters concerning me. I have never been accused or convicted of a crime no matter what disinformation comes from Trenton. ("Terry Tuchin, Diana Lisa Riccioli, and New Jersey's Agency of Torture.")
The very notion of "legal ethics" becomes a ludicrous farce on the part of persons discharging their responsibilities at the level of Poritz and Rabner, or their "enablers." This ridiculous hypocrisy no longer fools most persons in New Jersey, to say nothing of reactions by colleagues and other professionals elsewhere in the nation and world. New Jersey's legal reality, deservedly, sickens people. ("Law and Ethics in the Soprano State" and "Mafia Influence in New Jersey Law and Politics.")
Whatever exists in New Jersey can no longer be called a Constitutional legal system. Time to end the cover-up, Mr. Rabner. ("No More Cover-Ups and Lies, Chief Justice Rabner!" and "Jennifer Velez is a Dyke Magnet!")
Sources:
Herb Jackson, "Taxpayers Left in Limbo: Shutdown Would Force Late Change in Plans," in The Record, April 8, 2011, at p. A-1. (We're not out of the woods yet -- despite the so-called "agreement.")
Patricia Alex, "Christie Takes Fight on Schools National: Presses Reform for Evaluating Teachers," in The Record, April 8, 2011, at p. A-1. (N.J. teachers are going to make you stay after school, Mr. Christie.)
Kibret Marcos, "Two Who Dumped Body Get 7 Years," in The Record, April 8, 2011, at p. L-1. (Did they dump this body on you, Mr. McGill? They figured you were too stupid to figure it out, eh? I appreciate why they felt this way.)
Kibret Marcos, "Sexting Case Ends With a Deal: Official Misconduct for Ex-Teacher," in The Record, April 9, 2011, at p. L-3. (Teens and pre-teens are sexting each other and e-mailing homemade porn to friends with the assistance of their teachers in parts of the Garden State.)

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