I am not paid to make these recommendations to the public, nor did any of the authors or their representatives ask me to recommend such books, it is my personal initiative, since I think these books are deserving of public attention.
No
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Author
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Name
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Date of publication
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About the book and its author
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1
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Barbara C. Johnson
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Behind the black robes – failed
justice
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August 24, 2009
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A personal story by an attorney
disbarred for, apparently, whistleblowing regarding judicial misconduct and
attempt to run for governor on a platform to clean the courts of the State of
Massachusetts of corruption
Includes great analysis of federal
civil rights litigation, including the Rooker-Feldman doctrine, the No. 1
tool of federal courts to clean their dockets of civil rights cases
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2
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John F. Molloy
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The Fraternity: Lawyers and Judges in Collusion
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June 14, 2011
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Late retired judge, describes mechanisms of collusion and
connections between influential attorneys and judges
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3
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William Ecenbarger
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Kids for Cash: Two Judges, Thousands of Children, and a $2.6
Million Kickback Scheme
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October 23, 2012
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A Pulitzer Prize winner, former
editor and reporter for the Philadelphia Inquirer describes the corruption
scandal in Pennsylvania where two judges were sentencing juveniles to detention
in exchange for bribes from a privately run juvenile detention facility.
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4
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Carrol D. Kilgore
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Judicial Tyranny: On the Integrity of the Federal Judiciary
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November 11, 2012
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Retired attorney with over 40 years of experience, former
federal prosecutor analyzes in detail unlawful actions of federal courts
committed systematically, as a matter of policy
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5
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Susan Settenbrino
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Unchecked Power Guide: The New York
State Court System: A Look at the Entrenched Power, Politics, & Over $2
Billion of NY State Funding - Compromising JUSTICE - for "JUST US"
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June 6, 2014
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A whistleblower attorney, a former
prosecutor, exposes corruption in judicial elections in New York, naming
names and episodes of corruption
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6
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Robert Grundstein
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Bad Minds, High Places
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January 29, 2015
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A whistleblower attorney disbarred for retaliation
describes his ordeal, and gives a precise analysis of various ways in which
courts in states of Ohio, Washington and (to a lesser degree) Vermont violate
litigants’ rights based on partisan connections and collusion with local
favored attorneys, political contributors to judges.
Great analysis of unconstitutionality of anti-filing
injunctions which are increasingly imposed by courts throughout the U.S. upon
pro se litigants.
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