From: Judicial Reform
Investigations [mailto:justice@judicialjustice.us]
Sent: Tuesday, November 01, 2005 6:23 AM
To:
justice@judicialjustice.us
Subject: America Media Coverup for Judges,
Lawyers and the System by Design:
Americans Murdering Their
Judges, and the American Crisis of Judicial Corruption
(Thanks both to
progressive national radio host Thom Hartmann of the USA for calling this
article "brilliant", and to the reform group
JAIL 4 Judges
for saying this article was "the best and most inclusive article we have
found written on the subject of the cover-up of judicial corruption.")
In the headlines are the appalling news stories of Americans carrying out
murderous attacks on judges and their families. In a matter of days, one
judge was shot and killed in his own courtroom, while another judge had
family members brutally murdered in their home. These news stories are,
however, related to another news story, which is the most taboo subject of
the American media - the expanding crisis of corruption among American
judges and lawyers. At question is whether the deepening despair of
Americans about their own legal system, is fueling some of these violent
attacks on judges.
Much is written now about how America's economy is resembling that of a
banana republic, given how America is sunk in preposterous debt, and how
the U.S. dollar currency is sinking toward a possible collapse down the
road. But there is another way that America is also like a banana
republic, in that its legal system - contrary to its Hollywood image - has
become a sinkwell of secret proceedings, the jailing of the innocent, and
political misconduct; and how it is sullied with documented corruption,
fake trials and court fraud.
These facts are not generally understood, because of how judicial
corruption is the most un-reported news story in the American landscape.
It is the category of news story which America's newspapers and media are
most afraid to report, even when clear proof is in their hands. In America
right now, judges - and lawyers who are protected by judges - can commit
felony crimes in broad delight, leave the proof lying around, and yet
avoid being prosecuted or even having their crimes be reported by the
media. The people who work in the media see a lot of material on court
misconduct, and yet they know this is the story of which they dare not
speak. The lack of media coverage, in turn, encourages more judicial
corruption, leaving millions of Americans in anger and despair.
Judicial Reform Investigations