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#21
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![]() Richard Riley wrote: On 16 Jan 2007 13:44:00 -0800, wrote: Was Johnson (impeached) a lawyer? Andrew? As near as I can read his biography, he was a tailor. Ah yes, I recall that too. ... Nixon was an accessory and conspirator in major felonies, including burglary, witness tampering, subornation of perjury, and obstruction of justice; And more, including conspiracies to commit burglary and arson have some out since his tapes have been published. Haven't seen that. I heard the tape played on C-span. They also played the tape where Johnson told the President of Hagar slacks that he wanted another inch in the crotch between "the bung hole and where yer nuts hang down". Hilarious. The President of the untied States is not a law enforcement officer. The head of the FBI reports to the Attorney General. The AG reports to who? The same person as does the Surgeon General. In most cities the Chief of Police reports to the mayor. The mayor, however, is seldom a law-enforcement officer and never on account of being mayor. Having supervisory authority over a person does not confer on that supervisor the authorities of those he supervises. -- FF |
#22
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Some things never change. And they won't until we put people in Congress
willing to make changes. Here's another example of the legal system being abused in an aviation context. I wrote this one in '04. The things I found while researching the material for this story left me speechless. http://www.aero-news.net/news/commbu...765A&Dynamic=1 "dpilot" wrote in message oups.com... We don't have a justice system. We have a legal system. We don't live in a democracy, we live in a republic. (and to the democracy for which it stands?) NOT JimV On Jan 14, 11:18 am, "wes marso" wrote: I have lived for sixty years in this , we call our home land .In that time I have seen much in the ways of chipping at the wall of freedom .knowledge is the first step . Morality is the second .Personal virtues falls . then the rest is easy. Lawyers are the guardian people of the constitution today .Every day people are too busy making a living to take time out of daily life to fight anymore. All the Communist and socialist of the world have converged in America and have changed our legal system to suite them . We as Christians side step these issues because we despise confrontations . We have been eaten by lions for Centuries . We are told from the pulpit to be followers and forgive , turning the other cheek . Lawyers Make the laws , Lawyers change the laws, lawyers make possible the enforcement of the laws, and it starts from the white house on down...EVERYONE FROM THE PRESIDENT TO THE TOWN Mayor IS A LAWYER . And you still wonder why our justice system is failing??? lookup the national lawyers guild and see under their subsidiaries how many lawyers belong to the socialist movement.. ALL ofthem.."jls" wrote in oglegroups.com... C J Campbell wrote: On Fri, 12 Jan 2007 12:40:10 -0800, jls wrote (in article .com): wrote: A cool thing you might not know: I got an idea you don't know much. The NTSB reports are not admissable (sic) in a brawl like this. Just as the report of a highway patrol officer or city police officer is not admissible in a court of law. Can't cross examine the NTSB, so they are out. Not exactly true. If a witness who contributes to a NTSB report appears and testifies in court, he can be cross-examined just like any other witness. Actually, NTSB reports are inadmissible by statute. This came up in a recent Cessna claim, too, and was reported by both AOPA and the Wall Street Journal. The idea was that keeping the NTSB out of court would make them more 'independent.' However, as you note, although the report is inadmissible, you certainly can introduce evidence used in the report. Thus, if NTSB has witnesses who saw an aircraft buzzing cars, as in the Cessna incident, then you should be able to subpoena those same witnesses. That Cessna's lawyers did not do that I can only attribute to gross incompetence. Leaves the plantiff to make up anything they can sell to the jury. Or someone like you to make up a lot of malarkey. Gotta remember, the goal isn't to find the truth. That's exactly what juries are for, to find the truth. BWAHAHAHA! Right. Tell me another one. Juries do a poor job of finding the truth, and everyone in the legal biz knows it (or should -- but they will not always admit to it to outsiders). Ah, then who is to find the truth, you? A judge? An LDS priest? There are so many spectacular failures of juries that one cannot even begin to catalog them all. Name some. That is some wild ranting if I ever heard it, coming from you even. You get no credit howling sweeping generalizations. You got one bad verdict, but it was cleared a bit by a verdict in Santa Monica. The other one you don't know and weren't there. Give us some more. You won't, of course. So you can't cite but one bum case to sully all the rest. Juries are typically draw from the most gullible and least informed part of society -- deliberately. Cite? Attorneys do not want people who actually know something to serve on a jury. Are you calling the American people stupid? I've seen a few stupid juries, 99% of the ones I've seen are right smart. That works great for Lizzie Borden and OJ Simpson, not so well for aircraft manufacturers and airshow organizers. Being incapable of getting fire-fighting equipment to the crash permits a jury to find whether that constituted a failure to use due care by the fly-in sponsors. *********************************** In Young v. Young, Ann Eliza Webb Young sued Brigham Young for divorce in 1873, claiming neglect, cruel treatment, and desertion (CHC 5:442-43). ...Claiming that Young was worth $8 million and had a monthly income of $40,000, she asked for $1,000 per month pending the trial, a total of $20,000 for counsel fees, and $200,000 for her maintenance. Brigham Young denied her charges and claimed to have a worth of only $600,000 and a monthly income of $6,000. More fundamentally, he pointed out the inconsistency of granting a divorce and alimony for a marriage that was not legally recognized." (Zion in the Courts-A Legal History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 1830-1900 by Firmage and Mangrum, 1988, Univ. of Ill. Press, p.249) ---- what C. J. is still smarting over, explaining some of his hatred for law and lawyers. Since lawyers came to mormondom, they have been universally hated. BTW, Eliza and a few of Brigham's other *57* wives sued and collected. Ah, the perils of statehood. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#23
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On Jan 20, 3:34 pm, "Pinkie Pendejo" wrote:
Some things never change. And they won't until we put people in Congress willing to make changes. Here's another example of the legal system being abused in an aviation context. I wrote this one in '04. The things I found while researching the material for this story left me speechless. ....too bad you can't/won't do more stories like this... you know, the kind that LEAVE YOU SPEECHLESS? |
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