Friday, October 9, 2015

The very idea that a small group of individuals can regulate the speech of the legal profession

The very idea that a small group of individuals can regulate the speech of the legal profession (or the thought thereof) is not only obnoxious but totally unAmerican and totally unacceptable.   HOWEVER that is exactly what has happened not only in PA but in Illinois and several other states.  

The reaction is revolutionary.    However, it is too little too late!   If Lawyers cannot speak out against corruption the criminal elements win.   When that corruption is in the Courts the corruption is a metastatic cancer that threatens the entire fabric of America.

Here in Illinois we need the United States of America to do an HONEST investigation of the 18 USCA 371, 18 USCA 242 Jerome Larkin conspiracy and make an example of him by not only trying him for his felonious associations and activities, but enforcing the Federal and State income tax laws vigorously.    There are millions (possibly  billions) of tax, interest and penalties incurred by Larkin and each of his co-conspirators in pursuance of the cover=up of elder cleansing cases.   Every dime should be paid so that public officials in the future will perform their jobs for the benefit of the public and not for the benefit of criminal elements who prey on the elderly and the disabled.


Pakistani Supreme Court Backs Death Sentence in Blasphemy Slaying

 

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Mumtaz Qadri, right, is shown in a 2011 photograph in police custody for the killing of provincial governor Salmaan Taseer.
 
Associated Press
Pakistan’s Supreme Court upheld the death sentence against a former policeman who killed a politician he accused of blasphemy, in a case seen as an important test of this Muslim-majority country’s efforts to push back against religious extremism.
Lawyers for the defendant, Mumtaz Qadri, had argued he should be treated with leniency because he acted to defend the honor of the Prophet Muhammad. But the judges sided with prosecutors who said Mr. Qadri had committed a straightforward, premeditated murder.
Mr. Qadri became a hero to many Pakistanis in 2011 after he assassinated Salmaan Taseer, a provincial governor who was a vocal supporter of a Christian woman sentenced to death under Pakistan’s strict anti-blasphemy laws. The Christian woman remains in jail under the death sentence.
Backers of Mr. Qadri said they would protest the ruling.
“This is going to cause anarchy in the country, because the followers of the Prophet, peace be upon him, are very upset,” said Liaquat Ali, a local politician with religious political party Sunni Tehreek, which has championed Mr. Qadri. “They have imposed the white man’s law on us.”
 
Ken Ditkowsky

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