Medicare scandals and Elder Cleansing
Attorney Schwager,
Take a look at the Philip Esformes indictment, the Alice Gore case, the Mary Sykes case, and the host of Florida cases that Dr. Sugar has been exposing. The sale of the elderly for health care cash is exactly the problem we face and that miscreants and public officials such as Jerome Larkin (administrator of the Illinois Attorney Disciplinary Commission = IARDC) have been covering up.
Indeed, Mr. Esformes stole a billion dollars ($1,000,000,000) using his nursing home operation in Florida. We do not know how much was stolen from the victims thereselves and the insurance companies - all we do know is the fact that the same (or amazingly similar) enterprise is going on in Illinois by his partners/associates and the public officials who cover up for them and so far there has been no prosecution.
The cover-up in Illinois ans enveloped some of the Illinois Political peope and is so entrenched that any lawyer who takes his oath of office, Rule 8.3 or 18 USCA 4 seriously is destined to be suspended or disbarred. Mr. Larkin in documents filed before the Supreme Court of Illinois disgraced himself by actually telling the Court that the MarySSykes blog exposing judicial corruption was akin to "yelling fire in a crowded theater!" Mr. Larkin's lack of a moral conscience and his breach of the public trust does not end at that juncture. In the very same document he misrepresents the Alvarez case. Of course when the Justice Courts are 'fixed' the cancer quickly become metastatic. No wonder Illinois is on the verge of Bankruptcy!
Illinois is not alone in the perfidy exposed by the WAR ON THE ELDERLY AND DISABLED. To the miscreants the elderly are a commodity and when one of us is deemed vulnerable it is open season for these infamous co-conspirators to isolate us so that our estates can be pillaged and our wealth redistributed. So ingrained and accepted is elder cleansing that the Federal and State Income taxes due jointly and severally from each of the co-conspirators (including Jerome Larkin) is ignored. It matters not that Illinois is on the verge of bankruptcy -
Thus, Larkin is free to use public funds to protect his co-conspirators in their retro=active abortion of targeted elderly and disabled victims. Very Sad!
Ken Ditkowsky
From: > Sent: Wednesday, February 8, 2017 10:20 PM Subject: Kids for Cash? Money follows the person...see Ciaravella -no immunity Pennsylvania
An expert I subpoenaed gave me this and I am thinking it kind of tells me they are selling elderly rich people because money follows the person so that’s why they have t make prisoners of them? Maybe I am off base?
Federal Court in Ciavarella “Kids For Cash” Case Issues Groundbreaking Ruling: State Court Judge’s Acts Not Immune from Civil Conspiracy Causing Constitutional Violations
January 13, 2014–A Federal District Court Judge in Pennsylvania ruled last Friday that “Kids for Cash” Pennsylvania State Juvenile Court Judge Mark Ciavarella’s actions in causing juveniles to be sentenced under a “zero tolerance” policy to further a civil conspiracy are not protected by judicial immunity. United States District Judge A. Richard Caputo on Thursday issued a decision in favor of plaintiffs in that case, holding that Judge Mark Ciavarella’s acts in participating in a conspiracy to deprive children of a right to a fair trial in order to send the children to juvenile detention facilities which Ciavarella helped develop are not “judicial acts” entitled to judicial immunity.
California Coalition’s Demonstrative Video Clips from Kids For Cash Describe the Racketeering EnterpriseWhat It Means for Parents and Children
“This decision will profoundly impact parents’ ability to pursue Family Court judges for civil rights violations based on judicial conduct occurring outside of the courtroom, which causes injury inside the courtroom.” says Colbern Stuart, President of California Coalition for Families and Children. “Every parent should take a close look at the judge, psychologist, and attorneys in their cases to see if they were involved in any out-of-court activity such as court policy-making committees, legal or judicial professional organizations, “CLE” for judges or attorneys, “think tanks” and “technical assistance” organizations that set or influence judicial policies, non-profits, and other “policy-level” groups that attempt to influence the administration of justice. Those activities are now clearly suspect if they result in constitutional injury.” Says Stuart. “Illegal policies or guidance, or unethical conduct and business dealings that led to a decision inside of court that deprives a litigant or their family of civil rights can be the basis for civil liability that is not immunized by the in-court act.” “If a parent or child has been deprived of civil rights or otherwise damaged by such policies or illegal dealings, they may have recourse against the Family Court judge, psychologist, or attorney acting illegally outside of court.” Says Stuart.
California Coalition’s DDICE RICO Lawsuit
California Coalition has sued San Diego Family Court judges for conspiring with attorneys, psychologists, and the county bar association to deprive families of civil rights. “This is exactly the type of conduct we’ve found in San Diego. Judges and private professionals self-dealing for private advantage, making policy to stoke that advantage, then working the policy in court to fuel their private fire with parents’ and children’s college funds. It’s now clear those judges may be liable despite the fact that part of the transaction occurred in court. Parents in every state should closely re-examine their cases to see if similar facts exist in their case.”
From Judge Caputo’s January 9, 2014 Memorandum in the Ciavarella case:
Family Court Implications
Judge Caputo’s decision is a significant development for parents and children victims of Family Court. First, it clarifies the existing law that out-of-court actions by a judge are not protected by judicial immunity. This was pre-existing law, but in some cases has been challenged by those asserting immunity, especially where an in-court act is involved in the chain of causation or pieces of the conspiracy leading to injury. Parents should examine closely their family court judges out-of-court activities such as bar association meetings, business dealings, political activity, and other behavior not conducted inside the courtroom, but which may impact judicial behavior nonetheless.
Administrative and Policy-Making Decisions Not Immune
Second, the decision clarifies that administrative “supervisory” and “policy-making” acts by a judge, even those deemed essential to operation of the court, are administrative, and not judicial, and therefore not entitled to absolute judicial immunity. Administrative actions include oversight of other justice system officials such as court administrative staff or law enforcement, and may include direct “supervisory” oversight such as instructing law enforcement or staff, or from policy-making roles such as setting rules for how staff or employees treat litigants. In the Ciavarella case, this included direct oversight of juvenile system probation officers and detention facility personnel, and setting a “zero tolerance” policy for law enforcement apprehending juvenile offenders assuring that more offenders would end up in court.
In the family court context, judicial officers have many such roles, including overseeing law enforcement for illegal “pro-arrest” or “zero tolerance removal” policies in domestic violence cases, equal protection violations against domestic couples, families, or a gender, guiding attorneys and custody evaluators in how to manage litigants, and guidance over the “forensic psychologists”, supervisors, and other court-related personnel who, though “essential” to the business of the court, are not judicial officers. Because these functions are administrative, the judge’s role in them is not protected by judicial immunity. Social workers, too, will not be shielded from such liability.
Parents should be suspicious of any statement by an attorney, supervisor, social worker, child services worker, court staff, law-enforcement, or other government official claiming to act under a “policy,” judicial instruction, or “that’s how we do things in Family Court.” Such “policies”, if not consistent with valid law, may be illegal, and may give rise to a judicial or other government official’s liability. Judicial officers (or any other government official’s) role in enacting such “policies” are not protected by judicial immunity.
Judges Liable for In-Court Injury
Perhaps most earth-shaking, the Pennsylvania District Court explicitly found Judge Ciavarella liable for acts outside his courtroom which “set in motion” acts inside his courtroom which caused deprivation of civil rights. Some have argued that acts by a judge outside the courtroom are protected by immunity when the “direct act” causing the constitutional injury occurs inside the courtroom—such as a judge’s depriving juveniles of a fair trial.
“This decision establishes that reasoning is wrong.” Says Stuart. “Judge Caputo held that a judge performing a non-judicial act outside the courtroom which “sets in motion” a judicial act causing injury inside the courtroom is not protected simply because the second act occurred inside the courtroom.” California families in Family Court often face similar scenarios, though they or their attorneys may not be aware of it. Family Court judges, like judge Ciavarella, regularly establish policies and practices outside of courtrooms which cause injury inside the courtroom. This ruling makes clear that the judge may still be liable for those “outside the courtroom” illegal acts “setting in motion” judicial acts inside the courtroom. The Pennsylvania court relied on a recent case from the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals which has jurisdiction over California State Court judicial officers, making the case directly relevant to California state court judges.
A judge engaging in “out-of-court” activities that would impact his impartiality, breach duties of disclosure and create conflicts of interest may be subject to liability if those acts lead to injury inside the courtroom. Policies relating to use of unqualified, biased, or unethical custody evaluators, guardians, or other experts fall into this category. Even activity which would otherwise be legal—such as business dealings, professional activities with attorneys, activities on rule or lawmaking bodies, or other indirectly related legal, professional, or business activity—may be problematic in the context of a judge’s duties under the judicial code of ethics, fiduciary duties, oaths of office, or constitutional restrictions on judicial behavior. If such activity leads to in-court injury, the judge may face liability even though the litigant’s harm was inflicted in court.
“This is huge.” says Stuart. “Judges previously thought themselves insulated from all liability so long as the injury occurred inside the courtroom. That’s no longer a safe bet.”
California Coalition’s DDICE RICO lawsuit engages several family court judges on precisely these theories. “The case is a vindication of what we’ve been telling parents, judges, and family law attorneys all along—illegal acts are illegal no matter where they occur or who performs them. Judge Caputo’s decision makes it clear that such acts are not shielded by immunity just because they cause injury inside a courtroom. A judge, social worker, psychologist, attorney—all may be held liable civilly as well as criminally for their illegal acts outside of court leading to injury anywhere” says Stuart.
California Coalition filed its First Amended Complaint on similar theories on January 9, 2014. A Case Management Conference is scheduled for February 26, 2014 in United States District Court for the Southern District of California.
A documentary describing the making of Kids For Cash the movie
Regards,
Candice L Schwager
SCHWAGER LAW FIRM T: (832) 315-8489 F: (832) 514-4738 candiceschwager@icloud.com http://timlahrmanfoundation. |
Sunday, February 12, 2017
Medicare scandals and Elder Cleansing
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you for commenting.
Your comment will be held for approval by the blog owner.