Corrupt Computers in the California Courts Los Angeles, March 15 - the Los Angeles Times reported today a dispute among the California judges regarding the implementation of an ongoing long-term project of replacing multiple court computer systems with a unified California Case Management System (CCMS). In response, Human rights Alert (NGO) and Joseph Zernik, PhD, released correspondence in that regard, including an expert opinion letter in support of his claims of Fraud in SUSTAIN, the existing Los Angeles Superior Court case management system.
SUSTAIN, originally developed in Los Angeles County around 1985, has been implemented in numerous state courts in the United States since then.
Dr Zernik further alleges that "Sustain is the enabling tool of the routine Fraud in the Los Angeles Superior Court, and the defining element of the LA-JR (alleged Los Angeles Judiciary Racket) as we know it today."
"Fraud in foreclosure procedures in courts across the United States by financial institutions, large law firms, and judges, are at the heart of the current financial crisis" said Dr Zernik, "and fraud in court records enables such conduct". __________________
Below: 1) Email message by Joseph Zernik: Alternative view of CCMS - the California Case Management System. 2) Email message by X: They are eating their own... 3) LA Times: Clash of the courts: Dissident judges challenge California chief justice's power __________________ 1) Email message: Alternative view of CCMS - the California Case Management System. __________________ Let me offer an alternative view of CCMS - the California Case Management System: This is a power struggle in a white collar network.... Whoever controls the case management system, is on top of the operations... Control, Command, Collect! With Ronald George's departure, resistance to such system is increasing.
However, it is not necessarily good news. It only means that the current business model is staying in place, with Los Angeles County, Ventura County, San Bernardino County, Riverside County Superior Courts, etc, each running their own loosely organized operations... The Clerk of the Court in each case the point man, who is actually on top of it all, but there is no central control from Sacramento. In Los Angeles County, for example, I consider JOHN A CLARKE (Clerk of the Court), FREDERIC BENNETT (Court Counsel), and JACQUELINE CONNOR (Judge) the key figures of the LA-JR, and not Presiding Judge of the Court CHARLES MCCOY.
I believe that Ronald George, while in leadership positions in the Los Angeles Superior Court around 1985, was the brains who conceived Sustain. (See expert opinion letter, linked in [1], below) The system was developed and is maintained to this date by Sustain Technologies, a subsidiary of the Daily Journal (the largest legal newspaper in California, said to be controlled by the California Bar, an arm of the California courts), and by now is implemented in some 11 states in the US. Sustain is the enabling tool of the routine Fraud in the Los Angeles Superior Court, and the defining element of the LA-JR (alleged Los Angeles Judiciary Racket) as we know it today.
Later, Ronald George moved on to bigger and better things... As Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court and Chair of the California Judiciary Council he conceived a unifying CCMS - California Case Management System.
Today, the Superior Courts of California operate over 70 different case management systems, independently developed or modified with no public supervision at all in various court houses. The couple that I inspected (Los Angeles and Ventura County), are herein again opined as Fraud.
Had Ronald George managed to unify the case management systems throughout California under his control, as planned, it would have been an unprecedented concentration of power.
That is the reason that the various courts have been objecting to the CCMS. They prefer to maintain the current business model - loosely organized operations, typical of white collar crime networks... each with large degree of independence and flexibility. They would not like to be under constant monitoring by the Big Brother, even if he is one of their own...
That is also the reason why there are such difficulties in completing the system. CCMS is most likely a system, similar to Sustain in its nature: A system that was not developed as implementation of specifications founded in the California law and regulations. Instead, it is most likely, like Sustain, a system that is supposed to create the pretense of compliance with the law and regulations, while allowing to undermine them.
It is not an easy task to define for project managers and programmers the nature of their job under such circumstances... It is like telling an engineer to plan something that would look like a drinking water pump, but would be able to intermittently pump water and/or sewage, appearing as drinking water... It is also not an easy task to reach consensus among the main players on defining such project. Primarily, since none of them would trust the other. Whoever is the one who is directly paying the programmers, would have access to all the back doors and other "special features".
The failure to implement it may also be behind Ronald George's decision to retire. With Ronald George's departure, the local courts feel stronger, and are increasing their opposition to implementation of the system. I doubt that the system, as originally conceived, would ever be implemented.
Joseph Zernik, PhD Human Rights Alert (NGO)
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Chinese companies may soon find the back door to a Canadian stock listing slammed shut, as regulators weigh tougher rules on a fast-track approach to going public taken by Sino-Forest and other fallen angels.
A growing list of suspect Chinese companies listed in Canada has prompted the country's main securities regulator to initiate a review that could lead to tighter norms for listing a foreign company and stringent accounting rules for those that make the grade.
The Mackenzie pipeline project finally won federal approval this year, following years of study into the project's potential impacts in Canada's North.
Shell, which has been backing the Mackenzie project since 2004
Shell, which has been backing the Mackenzie project since 2004, does not plan to withdraw from it until June 2012. Those who want to bid on Shell's assets have until Aug. 31.
Death knell for pipeline, says critic Even if Shell does find a buyer for its share in the project, there is no guarantee that the pipeline will be built. The consortium has until December 2013 to decide whether it actually wants to proceed with construction.
Kevin O'Reilly, of the Yellowknife-based social justice group Alternatives North, said Shell's decision is not a good sign for the project overall.
"I think it's really the death knell, perhaps, of the Mackenzie gas project," O'Reilly said on Friday.
"If one of the world's biggest oil and gas companies, Shell, if they don't think they can make money there and they're pulling out, what does that say about this project? I think it says that they're not interested in investing in it."
Imperial Oil said on Friday that it remains fully committed to seeing the pipeline go ahead. The company would not comment on Shell's business decision.
shell-pulls-the-pin-on-mackenzie-delta
The Hidden Dangers of The Rainbow SOLD OUT - $12.95 + $6.00 S/H 268 p. Paper Back #25
ByConstance Cumbey This book exposes the New Age movement and our coming age of Barbarism.
The New Age Movement uses Rainbows to signify their building of the Rainbow Bridge between man and Lucifer. New Agers place small rainbow decals on their automobiles and book stores as a signal to others in the Movement. Some people, of course, use the rainbow as a decoration, unaware of the growing popular acceptance of its occult meaning and the hidden dangers.
The War Begins. Alexander McSween had been Murphy’s lawyer and knew about the precarious financial status of The House. He decided to compete and contacted Chisum, who was looking for investments, as well as John J. Tunstall, a twenty-four-year-old Englishman full of romantic notions about the American West. The three men pooled their resources and opened a general merchandise store under Tunstall’s management in Lincoln, the county seat. In the ensuing conflict, many farmers and small ranchers became caught in the middle. While some resented Chisum for his monopoly on cattle, others detested The House for its harsh credit terms. The spark that ignited the war occurred when “the Boys,” a group of rustlers led by Jesse Evans and allied to the Murphy-Dolan-Riley faction, stole some of Tunstall’s horses. Sheriff William Brady, a House ally, reluctantly arrested Evans and his gang, but they quickly “escaped” from the county jail.
Smugness risky By J.r. Kenny, Calgary Herald July 12, 2011 Re: "Long Liberal era over: PM," July 10.
I was very interested in Stephen Harper's remark regarding the Liberals, "The Liberal party's long grip on Canada's political culture has weakened, and voters are more aligned with the values of the Conservative party. . . . We are moving Canada in a Conservative direction, and Canadians are moving in that direction with us."
Sounds like "mission accomplished." But George Bush said that also.
the House of Commons Any Member of Parliament can request the Ethics Commissioner consider an inquiry into the conduct of another Member if the requesting Member has reasonable grounds to believe the subject Member has violated the Code. After receiving the request, the Commissioner must forward it to the subject member who then has 30 days to respond.
After the response from the subject Member is received, the Commissioner has 15 working days to review both the complaint and the subject Member's response. At the conclusion of the 15 days, the Commissioner must decide whether to engage in a further inquiry and this decision must be communicated to both the requesting and subject Member.
SOVEREIGN Sinister Connections? the QUEENS"smoking gun imperial crown sovereign ponzie/pension mortgage fraud COVER UP
THANK YOU CAMPBELL RIVER CITY HALL, LEGAL SOCIETY, REALTORS, BIG CORP AND YOUR CROWN SOVERIEGN PONZIE MASON BROTHERS FOR DESTROYING MY IRISH CULTURE AND FOR WIPING OUT MY DOLAN DNA IN ORDER TO KEEP THE PONZIE ALIVE.
If a victim complains about the abuse it may become worse; the bully will draw co-workers around them and a 'mobbing' situation can develop
As a heir to the SOVEREIGNS odious ESTATE debts , like hell am I going to sit back and let them get away with it,
Members of the Sovereigns Alliance openly advocated killing police officers; its leader is in jail on federal charges of fraud
I have been denied any investigation to date as the POLICE can't see the smoking gun .
I don't blame them,it's a MERS (mortgage electronic registration system) nightmare, it's to risky and messy for anyone to undertake.
The Constitutional Common Law Court of Ippolito and Mokdad was not the only such "sovereign" group in central Florida; indeed, it was merely at the center of a web of such activity.
Now someone in Higher places is experiencing what my family has been experiencing for over a decade
Gordon Brown Says Newspaper Hired ‘Known Criminals’ By JOHN F. BURNS, JO BECKER and ALAN COWELL Published: July 12, 2011 LONDON — Former Prime Minister Gordon Brown brought new and alarming charges on Tuesday to the broadening scandal enveloping Rupert Murdoch’s media empire in Britain, accusing one of the most prestigious newspapers in the group of employing “known criminals” to gather personal information on his bank account, legal files and tax affairs. “I’m shocked, I’m genuinely shocked, to find that this happened because of their links with criminals, known criminals, who were undertaking this activity, hired by investigators working with the Sunday Times,” Mr. Brown said.
Mr. Brown added: “I just can’t understand this — if I, with all the protection and all the defenses and all the security that a chancellor of the Exchequer or a prime minister has, am so vulnerable to unscrupulous tactics, unlawful tactics, methods that have been used in the way we have found, what about the ordinary citizen?” http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/13/world/europe/13hacking.html
Since flying to Britain over the weekend, Mr. Murdoch has assumed command of damage control efforts at his London headquarters amid a torrent of new revelations, including reports that newsroom malpractice extended far beyond The News of the World to two other newspapers in his British stable — The Sunday Times, an upmarket broadsheet, and The Sun, the country’s highest-selling daily tabloid.
On Tuesday, Mr. Brown accused The Sunday Times — owned by News International, the British subsidiary of Mr. Murdoch’s News Corporation — of employing “known criminals” to gather personal information on his bank account, legal files and “other files — documentation, tax and everything else.”
“I think that what happened pretty early on in government is that the Sunday Times appear to have got access to my building society account, they got access to my legal files, there is some question mark about what happened to other files — documentation, tax and everything else,” Mr. Brown, who was Britain’s Labour prime minister from 2007 to 2010 after serving for a decade as chancellor of the Exchequer, told the BBC on Tuesday.
“I’m shocked, I’m genuinely shocked, to find that this happened because of their links with criminals, known criminals, who were undertaking this activity, hired by investigators working with the Sunday Times,” Mr. Brown said.
Mr. Brown added: “I just can’t understand this — if I, with all the protection and all the defenses and all the security that a chancellor of the Exchequer or a prime minister has, am so vulnerable to unscrupulous tactics, unlawful tactics, methods that have been used in the way we have found, what about the ordinary citizen?” http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/13/world/europe/13hacking.html
Greenheart Group Limited, a Hong Kong-listed investment holding company in which Sino-Forest holds a controlling stake
TORONTO (Reuters) - Billionaire hedge fund manager John Paulson, the largest shareholder in Sino-Forest (TRE.TO), has sold his entire stake in the Chinese forestry company in the latest in a string of setbacks triggered by a damning short-seller's report.
Sino-Forest chief financial officer David Horsley
Muddy Waters analyst Carson Block alleges that Sino-Forest, through its “convoluted” corporate structure, has inflated its revenues and the value of its forestry assets
BILLINGS, Montana (CNN) -- Negotiations between the FBI and 10 anti-government militants dragged through a third day Wednesday with no sign of a breakthrough. The fugitives, members of the "freemen" group, are armed and are holding federal authorities at bay outside a remote farm house in Montana.
The group refuses to pay taxes or be evicted from the property, which was foreclosed upon 18 months ago. They have even posted bounties for the capture of police and judges, and threatened to shoot their neighbors' sheep and cattle.
Two members of the group were arrested Wednesday without incident, even though both were carrying loaded guns. Both were indicted a year ago on federal charges for writing bad checks and threatening a judge's life.
According to court papers filed Wednesday, an FBI sting operation led to the arrests of the two, freemen leader LeRoy Schweitzer and member Daniel Petersen. Schweitzer allegedly gave FBI agent Timothy Healy a bogus "comptroller's warrant" for $3 million, in return for the profits from selling imports bought with the $3 million. He stood to gain $1 million in cash from the operation, the FBI said.
Lavon T. Hanson was also arrested in connection with the FBI sting. He allegedly agreed to transport illegally-earned funds from Los Angeles to Montana in a conversation between Schweitzer, Healy, and Hanson on March 25. Based on that conversation, the complaint said, the FBI believed that "Hanson understood the entire scheme, including his role as pilot transporting funds."
Leader described as 'snake oil' peddler Law enforcement officials describe Schweitzer, 57, the leader of the right-wing separatist group, as an anti-government troublemaker, and say he's proud of it. The freeman movement denies the legitimacy of governments, refusing to pay United States income taxes or renew their drivers' licenses. Freemen claim to have their own laws, their own courts, and their own police force.
A high school classmate of Schweitzer, Lou Anne Biggerstaff, remembers him as a leader.
"I think a lot of people are interested in what he has to say," she said. But sources describe Schweitzer as a con man and a crook who holds crime classes. In those classes, the sources allege, he shows people how to forge government bank notes.
Steps an Owner Can Take for Additional Peace of Mind
If you still feel that your legal title to land is at risk, there are a number of steps you can take.
Through your lawyer, notary, land surveyor or registry agent, you can use the LTSA's Activity Advisory Service accessed through BC OnLine. This service will provide an e-mail notice to the lawyer, notary, land surveyor or registry agent when an application is made that may affect your title.
Registry agents can conduct title searches for homeowners wishing to check the status of their titles.
If you want to obtain a copy of your title for your personal records, for a fee your lawyer, notary, land surveyor or registry agent can apply for a State of Title Certificate, which is a certified true copy of your title. Please review the more detailed information on obtaining a State of Title Certificate.
For a less formal printout of your title, you may obtain a computer-generated 'title search print' from the Land Title Office for a nominal fee.
International Affairs
Monitors and combats global anti-Semitism and extremism and promotes the security and well being of Jewish communities around the world. Provides expertise to governments and non-government institutions worldwide.
A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE® Institute anti-bias training programs exist in Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Israel, Japan, Italy, and the Netherlands, reaching educators, and law enforcement professionals. Youth in Belgium, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Austria and the United Kingdom have participated in peer-training programs.
Maintains an office in Moscow and a representative in Italy.
The Canadian Press
Date: Saturday Jul. 16, 2011 11:28 AM CST
The St. Eugene Mining Corporation says it is reviewing an offer from Churchill Natural Resources to purchase its Tartan Lake Mine gold property.
Churchill conditionally offered to pay $4 million cash and a one per cent net smelter return royalty for the mine near Flin Flon, Manitoba.
Earlier this week, St. Eugene said it formally terminated a previously suspended transaction with Churchill Natural Resource Partners in light of the unsolicited takeover proposal from Claude Resources Incorporated.
Claude is St. Eugene's largest shareholder and the two companies jointly own a gold project in Saskatchewan.
FRAUD
An Ensign rig crew member works on a well in Alberta. The Ensign fleet stands to grow by 30 via a deal announced Wednesday. Photograph by: Ted Jacob, Calgary Herald CALGARY — Canada’s second-biggest drilling company made a half-billion-dollar bet on the future of U.S. shale plays on Wednesday with the purchase of rigs from Houston-based Rowan Companies Inc.
Calgary-based Ensign Energy Services Inc. announced it would buy Rowan’s land-drilling division for $510 million plus working capital, identified as $30 million US in a separate Rowan news release.
If completed, the 30-rig deal will take Ensign to 340 rigs, just 19 shy of the 359 rigs sector leader Precision Drilling Corp. listed in its first quarter results.
“For us it’s never been about growth for growth’s sake or to have to most number of rigs,” said Glenn Dagenais, Ensign chief financial officer. “We just try to make deals that make sense for our shareholders. If we close the gap, that’s a secondary thing.”
He said Ensign won the assets with a closed bid and wouldn’t comment on who else was in the contest.
Dagenais described the price as “fair” to both Ensign and Rowan but, in a note to investors, Barclays Capital analyst James West said it was “substantially above our $350 million estimate.”
Ensign stock jumped $1.12 or 5.8 per cent to $20.51 at the close in Toronto. Rowan was up 88 cents to $38.44 US in New York.
Increased oil and gas exploration in both Canada and the U.S. have boosted bottom lines at drilling and oilfield services companies this year, leading some analysts to predict a consolidation period as cash-rich companies attempt to capture more of the market.
Investors have driven Ensign’s stock up 36 per cent from Jan. 1, while Precision’s shares have risen 58 per cent.
In its first-quarter results, Ensign noted a 43 per cent increase in U.S. revenue and a 54 per cent jump in Canadian revenue due to better utilization and higher day rates.
Dagenais said the second-quarter results to be released soon will show “steady” performance.
In its news release, Rowan said the sale was part of a plan to refocus the company.
“We expect that our after-tax proceeds, estimated at approximately $370 million, will be redeployed into our offshore drilling business and recently announced deepwater expansion,” said Matt Ralls, Rowan president and chief executive, in a news release.
He called Ensign “a large and well-respected operation” and said he was confident former Rowan employees would be well treated by their new employer.
Rowan has a fleet of 29 jack-up offshore drilling rigs worldwide, including the Middle East, the North Sea, Trinidad and the Gulf of Mexico, and plans to enter the high-cost ultra-deepwater market with two drillships to be delivered in late 2013 and mid 2014.
Ensign said the rigs it is buying are top quality, with half less than five years old, and well suited for extended-reach drilling in the oil and natural gas resource plays of Texas, Louisiana, Alabama and Oklahoma.
It said it would pay for the rigs through working capital, lines of credit and a new term facility of up to $400 million US from its banker, HSBC.
Dagenais said there’s very little overlap between the Rowan rigs and Ensign’s existing U.S. fleet.
“We’re pretty active in the Rocky Mountain region and we’ve got a good-sized California operation,” he said. “This is an area in the United States, and a fairly significant energy-producing area, where we really didn’t have much exposure.”
The purchase if completed as expected in about 60 days will take Ensign’s American fleet to 115. Precision has 154 U.S. rigs, according to its website.
As of the end of the first quarter, Ensign reported 307 rigs, including 166 in Canada, 82 in the United States and 59 international.
As of March 30, Precision noted 359 rigs in all, with all but three in Canada or the U.S.