Question:
corrupt judges?
gee
2007-05-10 07:42:14 UTC
Mitchell K. Shick of at the Coles County Court House in charleston Illinois Commits specific violations concerning general assembly law 14.5(a) Illinois law, and constitutunal laws, which violates his oath of office, and is considered an act of treason; My question is, why is it when you have un-disputable proof of this on paper, no one in the government will take action against this kind of crime. Are judges above the law? and if so, why have laws in the first place.
Six answers:
Gunny T
2007-05-10 08:09:18 UTC
Judges and prosecutors are in fact above the law, and answer to no one when they commit crimes against the people. It has become a national disgrace, with over 35% of those convicted victims of judicial and or prosecutorial fraud.

The best thing to do is support J.A.I.L. (the Judicial Accountability Initiative Law), J.A.I.L., is a single-issue national grassroots movement designed to end the rampant and pervasive judicial corruption in the legal system of the United States.

They need some very serious support, after the failure of their North Dakota ballot measure when the N.D. Atty General wrote the voter pamphlet, totally mis-stating the goals of the initiative. Judicial crime at the highest level..

In the State of Washington a victim of a crooked judge can file a complaint with the Commission on Judicial Conduct, they slap HARD, and publish their findings.
RŠµdisca
2007-05-10 14:47:46 UTC
If you have a problem with this judge, contact the local judiciary ethics committee or the chief administrative judge. That's the way you get the government involved. Be careful if you are an attorney, though -- waging a smearing campaign against a judge can get you sanctioned, or worse.



Much worse than the abuses of corrupt judges in this country is the broad assault on the judiciary -- which, I believe, is the single worst and most overlooked problem in the United States today. The US Constitution has designed the judicial branch to be independent, recognizing that the administration of justice sometimes entails handing down a decision that the public is just going to hate; and not pandering to the feelings and sentiments of the majority or powerful interest groups (we have the legislative branch for that). In fact, a judge who never pisses anybody off probably isn't doing his job. Make the judge "accountable" by subjecting him to retaliation from a powerful litigant or the public, and you might as well abolish courts and have the mob try cases. Just like the presumption of innocence, which sometimes lets a guilty person walk away from punishment, judicial independence is something whose benefits outweigh the costs. Take that away, and you can kiss YOUR constitutional rights good-bye. (Because, who do you think will give a judge more reason to be afraid of the consequences of his decision -- you or Halliburton? If you are wrongly accused of a crime, whose satisfaction will be more important to a dependent judge -- yours or the district attorney's?)
masterplumber75
2007-05-10 14:49:24 UTC
First you have to look at our Government, it would take too long to list the violations of Law, Constitution, Bill Of Rights, National Laws, International Laws that the past several Presidents, and Government has committed, you can look know farther than Washington D.C. for answers as to why corrupt officials and leaders get away with so much. HONOR AMONG THIEVES, AND MURDERERS. The sad thing is Bush has taken breaking laws to a whole new level of evil, and some Americans think of him as a Savior. That is very disturbing that there is so many people that share his view, on anything.
anonymous
2007-05-10 14:46:55 UTC
If a judge is violating his duty, you have a right to report it to the judicial oversight board in your state. If the allegation is sufficiently serious, you can contact the FBI to report public corruption. If you are just pissed off at the judge and want to irritate him by reporting him, your complaint will not likely go very far. First place to start is your judicial oversight board. Good luck -
Brian
2007-05-11 21:42:50 UTC
It's all a conspiracy, man! It's the aliens, man! And the oil companies! I'm tellin' ya, man!
anonymous
2007-05-10 14:45:56 UTC
well, the president sure as hell can't fire them, or we will be tied up in hearings about why he fired them for years!


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