William Windsor Everyman’s Hero

William Windsor

Politicians, bureaucrats and the mainstream media like to praise the policies, theories and accomplishments of the so-called experts who feel they are best qualified to lead the rest of us.  Their major flaw however, is they are secretly and safely embedded in the self-serving Disney-like reality which they perpetuate.

Bill Windsor is no super hero. He is just an ordinary American like millions of others who is trying to do good in a system gone terribly bad. After his own personal experience with judicial corruption, Read more of this post

Patel Deficiencies Tied To Grand Jury Investigation In San Diego

Patel

Network CEO Phil Stimac is asking U.S.

Toxics From SF Court Corruption Case Spill Into San Diego Shoreline Near Wallace's Office

Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy to investigate ex parte communications between the Hon. Marylin Patel, district or circuit judges in San Francisco and judges, magistrates or Justice Department lawyers in San Diego in connection with a federal lawsuit fixed by the Hon. Irma Gonzalez.

“I previously informed Justice Kennedy that when the door Read more of this post

Stimac Asks Kennedy To Compel Kozinski To Honor His Oath Of Office

Hon. Alex Kozinski

Network CEO Phil Stimac has filed an emergency writ asking U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony M. Kennedy to compel Alex Kozinski, Chief Judge of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals to honor his oath of office.

“I will not,” Stimac said, “let my great respect for the Hon. James Browning and other 9th Circuit Court judges stop me from exposing the fact that Judge Kozinski fixed my appeal to cover-up wrongdoing by his friends and colleagues.

“Nor shall I let the honor of his title as Chief Judge blind the members of the United States Supreme Court from the enormity of the fraud he continues to perpetuate against them Read more of this post

Gideon Showed Landmark Cases Are Made By Society’s Losers, Not Winners

Clarence Gideon

The story of Clarence Earl Gideon always

City Hall Survived S.F. Earthquake

brings to mind fond memories of my first few weeks as a lawyer. As a young boy growing up in Gilroy, California, I used to enjoy watching the criminal cases which were held at the Old City Hall Building located at the corner of Monterey and Sixth Streets. At that time in the early 1960′s, the municipal court, mayor’s office, city council chambers, water department and jail Read more of this post

Kennedy Doctrine’s Separate But Equal “Has No Place” In Roberts Court

CJ Vinson delivered opinions in Sweatt and McLaurin

A major prong in the Supreme Court’s Kennedy

Thurgood Marshall, Counsel In Brown

Doctrine is that the treatment the rest of America receives under the Constitution is “separate but equal” to that of members of the federal judiciary.

In Sweatt vs. Painter [339 U.S. 629 (1950)]; McLauren vs. Oklahoma State Regents [339 U.S. 637 (1950)] and Brown vs. Topeaka School Board [347 U.S. 483 (1954)], the Supreme Court struck down the doctrine of separate but equal.

Nevertheless, Justice Anthony M. Kennedy and his longtime pal John Clifford Wallace breathed life into Separate But Equal II Read more of this post

Do Court Documents Suggest Patel Suffers From Mental As Well As Moral Deficiencies?

Hon. Marylin Patel

San Francisco District Judge Marylin Patel is not the only member of the federal judiciary who might possibily give a reasonable man or woman sitting on a state or federal grand jury the propensity to conclude [based on evidence all federal lawyers are required to submit to federal grand juries pursuant to 18 USCA 3332 [a], inferences can be drawn about her state of mind.

By 1795, when President George Washington appointed John Rutledge to the U.S. Supreme Court, his journey to madness had rendered him to be a “raving lunatic.” Forced to surrender his seat after five short months on the job, Rutledge attempted suicide by jumping Read more of this post

Supreme Court Engaged In Ex Parte Communications In Rosenberg Case

The Rosenbergs

In 1953, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg died in the electric chair after being convicted of transmitting secrets about the atomic bomb to the Soviet Union.

Although Mrs. Rosenberg’s role was limited to typing handwritten notes at the request of her husband, the government sought the death penalty for her in hopes it would induce his confession. 

Based on questionable information supplied by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, Read more of this post

Kennedy Doctrine Case National Disgrace

Dershowitz

In 1968, author and sociologist Dr.

Holder

Benjamin Spock was prosecuted for  conspiracy for his anti-war activities along with four other defendants he had never met.

Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz and other constitutional experts contend it was a politically motivated Read more of this post