THE EVOLUTION OF JUDICIAL TYRANNY IN THE UNITED STATES:

"If the judges interpret the laws themselves, and suffer none else to interpret, they may easily make, of the laws, [a shredded] shipman's hose!" - King James I of England, around 1616.

“No class of the community ought to be allowed freer scope in the expression or publication of opinions as to the capacity, impartiality or integrity of judges than members of the bar. They have the best opportunities of observing and forming a correct judgment. They are in constant attendance on the courts. Hundreds of those who are called on to vote never enter a court-house, or if they do, it is only at intervals as jurors, witnesses or parties. To say that an attorney can only act or speak on this subject under liability to be called to account and to be deprived of his profession and livelihood by the very judge or judges whom he may consider it his duty to attack and expose, is a position too monstrous to be entertained for a moment under our present system,” Justice Sharwood in Ex Parte Steinman and Hensel, 95 Pa 220, 238-39 (1880).

“This case illustrates to me the serious consequences to the Bar itself of not affording the full protections of the First Amendment to its applicants for admission. For this record shows that [the rejected attorney candidate] has many of the qualities that are needed in the American Bar. It shows not only that [the rejected attorney candidate] has followed a high moral, ethical and patriotic course in all of the activities of his life, but also that he combines these more common virtues with the uncommon virtue of courage to stand by his principles at any cost.

It is such men as these who have most greatly honored the profession of the law. The legal profession will lose much of its nobility and its glory if it is not constantly replenished with lawyers like these. To force the Bar to become a group of thoroughly orthodox, time-serving, government-fearing individuals is to humiliate and degrade it.” In Re Anastaplo, 18 Ill. 2d 182, 163 N.E.2d 429 (1959), cert. granted, 362 U.S. 968 (1960), affirmed over strong dissent, 366 U.S. 82 (1961), Justice Black, Chief Justice Douglas and Justice Brennan, dissenting.

" I do not believe that the practice of law is a "privilege" which empowers Government to deny lawyers their constitutional rights. The mere fact that a lawyer has important responsibilities in society does not require or even permit the State to deprive him of those protections of freedom set out in the Bill of Rights for the precise purpose of insuring the independence of the individual against the Government and those acting for the Government”. Lathrop v Donohue, 367 US 820 (1961), Justice Black, dissenting.

"The legal profession must take great care not to emulate the many occupational groups that have managed to convert licensure from a sharp weapon of public defense into blunt instrument of self-enrichment". Walter Gellhorn, "The Abuse of Occupational Licensing", University of Chicago Law Review, Volume 44 Issue 1, September of 1976.

“Because the law requires that judges no matter how corrupt, who do not act in the clear absence of jurisdiction while performing a judicial act, are immune from suit, former Judge Ciavarella will escape liability for the vast majority of his conduct in this action. This is, to be sure, against the popular will, but it is the very oath which he is alleged to have so indecently, cavalierly, baselessly and willfully violated for personal gain that requires this Court to find him immune from suit”, District Judge A. Richard Caputo in H.T., et al, v. Ciavarella, Jr, et al, Case No. 3:09-cv-00286-ARC in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, Document 336, page 18, November 20, 2009. This is about judges who were sentencing kids to juvenile detention for kickbacks.


Monday, December 3, 2018

The 10th Amendment, its reach, its consequences and how it is played by state and federal governments.

Donald Trump's presidency has stirred to life interest to law and Constitutional Amendments which did not previously draw much public attention.

One of the previously obscure Constitutional Amendments that the public did not feel attracted to is the 10th Amendment, one of the main bases of separation of powers between the state and federal government.

The text of the 10th Amendment is as follows:

Amendment X

The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.

Let's look at it once again, in a more structured format:

The powers 
  • not delegated to the United States by the Constitution
  • nor prohibited by it to the states, are 
  • reserved to the states respectively, or 
  • to the people.

It is quite peculiar how the 10th Amendment is - is not - mentioned and is - and is not - litigated nowadays, and how the public mislead as to is meaning, which is quite plain and unambiguous.

Let's look at the recent and not-so-recent judicial decisions regarding interpretation of the 10th Amendment.

The 10th Amendment is often equated with the so-called "police power" - of the states, not the federal government.

==
Quote:

The authority for use of police power under American Constitutional law has its roots in English and European common law traditions.[2] Even more fundamentally, use of police power draws on two (Latin) principles, sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedas ("use that which is yours so as not to injure others"), and salus populi suprema lex esto ("the welfare of the people shall be the supreme law"), to justify restriction of individual liberties in order to protect the general welfare.[2] The concept of police power in America was further expanded in a series of notable court cases in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries, including the landmark 1851 Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court case Commonwealth v. Alger, and the 1905 Supreme Court case Jacobson v. Massachusetts

Unquote

=======


So, here are some "police power cases" that have been made by American courts - as an example of laws "made" by courts in the U.S. - completely at a whim, of courts, or those politically and financially powerful forces that make courts tick.  



Vaccination decisions by the U.S. Supreme Court: 
the 10th Amendment is alive (1905), and the 10th Amendment is dead (2011)

Jacobson v. Massachusetts, 197 U.S. 11 (1905), a 1905 case, 

is a case challenging mandatory smallpox vaccination in the state of Massachusetts as a violation of individual 14th Amendment rights.

The U.S. Supreme Court refused to find a 14th Amendment violation in mandatory smallpox vaccination and pointed out that mandatory smallpox vaccination, as protection of public health, is within lawful police power of the state of Massachussetts.


The court did point out that



"if a statute purporting to have been enacted to protect the public health, the public morals, or the public safety has no real or substantial relation to those objects, or is, beyond all question, a plain, palpable invasion of rights secured by the fundamental law, it is the duty of the courts to so adjudge, and thereby give effect to the Constitution."

Mugler v. Kansas, 123 U. S. 623, 123 U. S. 661; Minnesota v. Barber, 136 U. S. 313, 136 U. S. 320; Atkin v. Kansas, 191 U. S. 207, 191 U. S. 223.

Of course (as a side note), the same U.S. Supreme Court, 20 years after deciding this case, has asked the U.S. Congress for a "right" to pick and choose whether to exercise such a duty and whether to give effect to the Constitution - and the U.S. Congress did give the U.S. Supreme Court a "right" to pick and choose its cases on a whim, so, after 1925, we have in the United States a discretionary enforcement of the U.S. Constitution, and, as a result a discretionary Constitution, and a super-powerful U.S. Supreme Court acting as a super-legislature - which is confirmed by the recent circus of judicial appointments and attempts for judicial appointments to that court:



  • "the stolen seat" of Merrick Garland;
  • the nomination of Neil Gorsuch by President Trump; and especially
  • the nomination of Brett Kavanaugh by President Trump, and
  • the recent #ribsforruth not-so-much-of-a-joke campaign when Ruth Ginsburg, a 85-year-old judge of the court who broke 3 ribs after a "fall in her office" (drunk, asleep or out of it on medication or due to physical frailty or dementia - we do not know since the court refuses to release its judges' medical records, and we are reduced to being force-fed ads about her workouts and interviews with her paid trainer of many years) - the public went so far as openly stating that it will accept a "stuffed Ruth" (I preserved a scan), so far as there is an appearance of a filled seat, the "stuffed Ruth", or her law clerks, rule against Trump, and Trump does not get to appoint a 3rd judge. Note that Ginsburg, by rules of judicial ethics, should be nowhere near Trump's cases - because of her public hostility towards Trump - yet, she sticks to these cases like glue, refuses to recuse, rules against Trump in dissents and is glorified for her obvious judicial misconduct by a large portion of the American public.

Had the court not turned itself into a super-legislature, lamentations that death or retirement of a single person, a judge of any court, would change, for decades, the law of a 345-million country positioning itself as a democracy and a leader in defense of human rights would not have been possible.


But - back to the 1905 vaccination case, one of the main cases on the subject of the state police power in the United States.

Here is what the U.S. Supreme Court has said in that case:

"The police power of a State embraces such reasonable regulations relating to matters completely within its territory, and not affecting the people of other States, established directly by legislative enactment, as will protect the public health and safety.


While a local regulation, even if based on the acknowledged police power of a State, must always yield in case of conflict with the exercise by the General Government of any power it possesses under the Constitution, the mode or manner of exercising its police power is wholly within the discretion of the State so long as the Constitution of the United States is not contravened, or any right granted or secured thereby is not infringed, or not exercised in such an arbitrary and oppressive manner as to justify the interference of the courts to prevent wrong and oppression.


The liberty secured by the Constitution of the United States does not import an absolute right in each person to be at all times, and in all circumstances, wholly freed from restraint, nor is it an element in such liberty that one person, or a minority of persons residing in any community and enjoying the benefits of its local government, should have power to dominate the majority when supported in their action by the authority of the State.


It is within the police power of a State to enact a compulsory vaccination law, and it is for the legislature, and not for the courts, to determine in the first instance whether vaccination is or is not the best mode for the prevention of smallpox and the protection of the public health."

So, mandatory vaccination is within the state police powers and does not violate individual 14th Amendment rights - according to the U.S. Supreme Court, as of 1905.

According to the same U.S. Supreme Court, as of 2011, 106 years after Jacobson v Massachussets, 


  • states have mandatory police powers to order vaccination as a public health issue, 

BUT



One decision is in direct contradiction to the other.

If it is a state decision to order vaccinations, within the state police power to provide general protection of public health, safety and morals, it is also the state police power to secure access to state courts for victims of such vaccinations.

There is no bar to file a lawsuit in state court against a manufacturer of any medicine other than vaccine and for anybody but a child injured or killed by such a vaccine.

In other words, an adult injured or killed by the vaccine (the adult's legal representative in this case) is allowed to sue the vaccine manufacturer - but a child is not.

And, an adult or a child injured or killed by any medicine other than a vaccine is allowed to sue the medicine manufacturer in state court.

If that is so, then, protection of individuals who were injured or killed by vaccination is within the state power.

Regulation of access to state courts, for state-recognized "causes of action", actionable/legal wrongs - is also within state powers, and neither the U.S. Congress, nor the U.S. Supreme Court could deem it somehow a federal right to regulate.

Yet, we have, from the same U.S. Supreme Court, two cases, both on the issue of vaccination, decided 105 years apart, both still "on the books", one saying that mandatory vaccination is within the state police power to protect general public welfare (health, safety and/or morals), and the other - saying that blocking access to child victims of vaccination to state courts seeking state-recognized remedies for state-recognized legal wrongs (negligence, products liability) is somehow a federal issue and federal government may forego the 10th Amendment, 14th Amendment and 1st Amendment Petitions Clause mandate and to simply forbid children injured or killed by negligently manufactured or applied vaccines from having any legal remedy in state court, while allowing adults to have such a remedy and while allowing children and adults to have such a remedy if injured by any other medicine.

Bruesewitz v Wyeth, a 2011 case, is the 10th Amendment put on its head.

The case was decided 7 years ago, and I do not see any significant coverage of this case in the press, especially now, when the campaign to vaccinate children has descended into the gutter and where anybody opposing vaccination of children regarding a particular vaccine, based on particular grounds of the vaccine's dangerousness, becomes the target of finger-pointing, ridicule and accusations of being a brainless "anti-vaxxer" and child abuser.

So, you are a brainless "anti-vaxxer" and child abuser if you do not vaccinate your child and, as per the U.S. Congress and the U.S. Supreme Court, your child is not entitled to access to court if he/she is injured or killed by that supposedly "safe and effective" vaccine.

That is one bizarre aspect of mis-application of the 10th Amendment.

In fact, the 10th Amendment has been killed in the case Bruesewitz v Wyeth, for the benefit of vaccine manufacturers who craved a captive market (children) for the product with an extremely short shelf life, and received it - from the federal government.

Yet, there was absolutely no grounds for the federal government to legislate under the state police power regarding access to court of victims of negligence of doctors or vaccine manufacturers, where acts of negligence occurred within states and had nothing to do with any powers reserved to the federal government.

In this case, power and money overpowered reason and "the rule of law" - and children's right to health, life and at least for being compensated for the loss of either or both.

So, here both the 10th Amendment and the children lost to money and power.


Female genital mutilation

I've seen a lot of angry comments to the recent decision of a federal judge declaring unconstitutional federal criminal law where the U.S. Congress has made female genital mutilation a crime.



And that is true - but it is also true that, in vaccination cases, there is nothing commercial or economic in a child being injured, permanently disabled or die from application of a vaccine.

The judge was correct, though, that making FGM a crime is a matter for state legislatures.


And, state legislatures - I bet - will not make FGM a crime, because it will be immediately challenged on grounds of gender discrimination and equal protection, and making genital mutilation a crime without regard to the child's gender will cause an uproar in Jewish and Muslim communities where male genital mutilation (circumcision for religious reasons) is routinely practiced and is considered a requirement of the faith.


So, here the 10th Amendment won, but the female children lost.



Occupational licensing of illegal aliens


New York State, California and, likely, other states by now, have begun issuing occupational licenses (law, medical etc.) to illegal aliens back during the President Obama's presidency, with President Obama's opposition.

And here there is an interesting trick of the law that does not often - or at all - get discussed in the mainstream media or in the mainstream legal scholarship in the United States.

While it is proper, under the protection of national security powers, for the federal government to regulate immigration, who does or does not work within a state is a purely state power falling within protection of the "general welfare", police power doctrine protected by the 10th Amendment.

So, the federal government is within its rights to "adjust immigration status" - issue permits to foreigners to stay within the United States, temporarily (visas) or permanently (green cards), or accepting foreigners into citizenship (naturalization).

But, the federal government oversteps its authority given to it by the U.S. Constitution by issuing work permits.


At the same time, it is, of course, bizarre when states issue, specifically, law licenses to illegal aliens - because attorneys are required to take an "oath of office", and swear their allegiance to the federal and state laws and to the federal and state Constitutions.

It is bizarre when a state accepts an oath from attorney of loyalty to the Supreme Law of the Land (which includes federal immigration laws) while knowing that that attorney is, and has been for years, violating those same laws - himself and, often, by bringing into the country and harboring his illegal alien relatives, a federal felony.

State education

I see a lot of article and comments condemning actions of Betsy DeVos, the U.S. Secretary for Education.

Commentators accuse DeVos of undermining public education in various ways.

Recently, there were a lot of accusations because of DeVos's change of federal rules of handling sexual assault of campuses.

From the point of view of a constitutional lawyer and a criminal defense attorney, DeVos actually did not go far enough - she did not forbid ANY procedures handling sex assault complaints by college administrations, as she should have, because it is a state CRIME, and states already provided for both civil and criminal procedure for addressing this issue where it is supposed to be addressed - in court.

DeVos is now vilified because - the horror! - she introduced cross-examination of the accuser (the right of the accused guaranteed in criminal proceedings by the 6th Amendment's Confrontation Clause) in "proceedings" on campus substituting the police, prosecution and state courts and handled by people who have neither training nor authority to hold such quasi-criminal proceedings, with long-reaching, life-changing consequences for the accused. 

Here would be a good time to recall the 10th Amendment.

DeVos, as a federal public official, has no duty to finance or provide for public education in the states.  That duty is squarely, under the police power, the 10th Amendment, on the shoulders of state officials - who are answerable to the public for any mishaps in that area.

And, DeVos certainly has no right to substitute criminal investigations or prosecutions - and there should be, and I am sure that there will be a lawsuit like that by the accused who would tell her that.

Under the 10th Amendment.

It is the state power to control state crime.

And states already provided for how they want that control to be handled, by state police, state prosecutors and state courts.

Not by college administrators.

But, invoking the 10th Amendment in such contexts is inconvenient - because beating federal government for state failures looks kind of stupid, don't you think?


Public safety and the new "duty" to support police power of the state by federal government while there is no duty for the states to help federal law enforcement


Unless you can earn money by that stupidity, of course.

Like New York State Acting Attorney General Barbara Underwood is doing - by engaging a political activist judge to squeeze federal taxpayers for millions of dollars in order to finance irresponsible fiscal policies of the New York State government.

Imagine.

Sooner or later, any parent has this conversation with his child:

  • Child: I am old enough to know what I want, and I want XYZ
  • Parent: you are also old enough to get a job, earn money, and buy what you want with your own money

It is a common sense approach.

In the separation of state and federal governments, it is also a constitutional, 10th Amendment approach.

The states have a right - and obligation - to secure general welfare of their residents, to enact and enforce laws that would protect general health, safety and morals of the public.

The states also have an obligation to generate money, on their own, to be able to discharge these duties. 

There is no federal law forcing the federal government to finance state needs.

Sometimes, the federal government does provide some discretionary funds (discretionary - meaning, no obligation) to the states.

Lately, this discretion of the federal government was put on its head, and the states that played fast and loose with taxpayer money and thus are not able to make ends meet to discharge its police power duties decided that the discretionary (no obligation) money have become actually the obligation of the federal government (meaning, obligation of taxpayers from other states), simply because particular states cannot put together a workable fiscal policy and to properly arrange financing of the state governments.

That challenge was brought under the pretext of "resisting Trump" by the unlikeliest of civil rights defenders - by state attorneys General.


I suggested, in 2014, for the New York State AG to be truthful and tell the voters in the election campaign exactly what he is going to do once elected - or re-elected:



FIGHTING AGAINST YOU

If you elect me as Attorney General,

  • I WILL FIGHT AGAINST YOU IN CIVIL RIGHTS LAWSUITS BROUGHT BY YOU, USING AGAINST YOU YOUR OWN HARD-EARNED TAXPAYER MONEY;
  • I WILL REPRESENT AGAINST YOU THE CORRUPT JUDGES YOU SUED AND WILL FIGHT YOU TOOTH AND CLAW TO DISMISS LAWSUITS AGAINST SUCH CORRUPT JUDGES CLAIMING THAT NO MATTER WHETHER THOSE JUDGES ARE IN FACT CORRUPT, THEY ARE ABSOLUTELY IMMUNE FROM YOUR LAWSUIT AND YOU MUST REMAIN VICTIMIZED AND WITHOUT ANY REMEDY;
  • I WILL REPRESENT GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS WHO VIOLATED YOUR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS AGAINST YOU, WHILE YOU ARE SCRAMBLING TO FIND AN ATTORNEY WHO IS NOT AFRAID TO SUE THE GOVERNMENT OR TO PAY FOR HIS SERVICES;
  • I WILL INVOKE EVERY JUDGE-CREATED DOCTRINE THERE IS ON BEHALF OF GOVERNMENTAL OFFICIALS TO PROTECT THEM FROM YOUR LAWSUIT, NO MATTER WHAT KIND OF FRAUD OR CONSTITUTIONAL VIOLATION THEY COMMITTED AGAINST YOU AND NO MATTER HOW MUCH YOU WERE HARMED BY THEM;
  • I MIGHT EVEN ASK THE COURT TO HAVE YOU PAY THE LEGAL FEES OF GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS YOU SUED FOR FRAUD AND CIVIL RIGHTS VIOLATIONS


I also published, in 2016, when Obama was President, entire lists of dockets from federal courts showing how exactly the New York State Attorney General is opposing civil rights lawsuits against New York State officials accused of violating individual constitutional rights in the state.

All of what I said in 2014, when Obama was President, is as applicable at present, when Trump is President.

State AGs, including the New York State AG, 
  • continue to OPPOSE civil rights lawsuits in court, 
  • continue to represent, at taxpayers' expense, government officials accused by citizens of misconduct and corruption, instead of prosecuting them, 
  • often seek from the court a punishment against civil rights litigants for bringing civil rights lawsuits against the government officials violating their civil rights, as well as to make them pay attorney fees - in other words, to make them BOTH finance his work as taxpayers AND as litigants, and to finance his work not to protect their civil rights, but to protect violators of their civil rights.
Only now they are pretending they are also defending civil rights of a particular part of state population - illegal aliens.

And, they are defending the non-existing "right" of states to make the federal government to finance state policies of harboring illegal aliens (a federal felony) - now presented as the states' 10th Amendment power to "secure and protect public safety" - at federal taxpayers' expense.

See, for example, what acting New York State AG Barbara Underwood said in her recent public statement:



The "public safety" victory - is the supposed "right" of state governments to receive GIFTS (grants) from the federal government to do what is their duty to do (and finance, with their own means) in the first place - secure public safety.

Underwood remembers that the police power is the power separate and distinct from the federal government:



And it is true - as with any emancipated child - you earn your own money (collect your own taxes, run your own state-owned enterprises for profit), you use your earned money in any legal way you want.

But, the emancipated child has a right not only to SPEND the money, but to, in the first place, EARN it.

Here the State AG has a memory lapse:


In other words, New York, the state from which taxpayers run because of corruption of its government, high taxes and waste, forced the entire country (federal taxpayers, since the U.S. Attorney General was sued in his official capacity, representing all U.S. taxpayers) to finance its welfare programs for illegal immigrants.

In other words, the employers will get their "right" to hire illegal aliens, paying them under the table much less than the legal wage that legal residents and citizens would have been paid, New York taxpayers will foot the bill of providing for their public education, health and for policing additional crime coming from illegal immigrants (including gangs), and federal taxpayers will be forced to pony up 29 million dollars for New York State to continue its harboring of illegal aliens, once again, a federal felony.

And the person who obtained this "civil right" is Barbara Undrewood - 

  • the person who will fight your civil rights lawsuit in court, on behalf of the government;
  • who will represent every corrupt public official in court, at your expense as a taxpayer, but against you.

And, this "victory" is "won" by Underwood in judge Edgardo Ramos's court - under the 10th Amendment.

Police power.

Imagine an emancipated child who says - yes, I am old enough to earn the money, and I do earn the money, but, I have squandered my money on betting, drinking, what not - so, since you were giving me money before, you now MUST give me money for my living expenses, because now it is my right.

The 10th Amendment does not presuppose a right to rescue bankrupt state officials who cannot properly secure or manage state finances to discharge their own state duties.

And, State AGs, unless they stop opposing civil rights in court, may not call themselves civil rights defenders.

The only thing they protected was not public safety, but New York State's right to squander more federal taxpayer money on its irresponsible, and criminal, handling of the crisis of illegal immigration.

And that is very far from what the 10th Amendment allows it to do.


Is the ACLU stirring up a new civil war in the United States?



There were a lot of supporting comments to the decision of a judge blocking the Trump administration from the new rule denying asylum seeking the right to apply for asylum if they are in the United States illegally.

The media openly acknowledged that the ruling "opened doors to migrant caravan", since the ruling was made while several caravans were heading through Mexico towards the U.S. borders with the intention of crossing that border illegally.

The decision obviously encouraged illegal immigration and violence at the border - since all that is needed in order to apply for asylum is to cross the border, legally or illegally, by force and violence, does not matter.

The decision has brought about a crisis at the border, where

  • migrants overpowered the Mexican town of Tijuana, depleting its welfare resources, 
  • U.S. troops and border patrol are more-than-ever determined to not to allow illegal crossings of the border, to block mass asylum applications, and
  • migrants have already attempted two rushes (violent attempts to breach) the U.S. border, which resulted, on one occasion, in tear-gassing the rioters.

Yet, while the judicial decision, here it is, was celebrated as some kind of a victory of "the rule of law" over the Trump's administration, portrayed (as "anti-vaxxers" are) as the ultimate brainless villain, 

  1. Obama has used tear gas at the borders for the same reason at least 80 times; and
  2. the judicial decision was screamingly unlawful.

First of all, none of the plaintiffs had standing to sue - none of the plaintiffs were actual asylum-seekers, see the text of the complaint/lawsuit.

The attorneys who stirred the pot were several lawyers out of the state of New York who asked a federal district (lower) court sitting in Northern California for a "pro hac vice" (for this case only) admission, see their pro hac vice applications that I attached through links to their names and their attorney registrations:


















These 5 graduates of the best law schools:

  • Columbia;
  • New York Law School;
  • Fordham
who definitely know how to read and do understand the law and what they are doing, filed a lawsuit knowing that their clients have no standing whatsoever to file those lawsuits - because NONE of their clients were asylum seekers.

Moreover, these graduates of 3 good law schools had to know that the basis of their application:


is frivolous not only because their clients did not have standing to sue, as they were not asylum-seekers, but that this particular law that they were invoking, 8 U.S.C. 1158, specifically, in its text, provided that there is NO RIGHT OF JUDICIAL REVIEW of Attorney General's regulations regarding asylum applications, 8 U.S.C. 1158(d)(7):

(7) No private right of action
Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to create any substantive or procedural right or benefit that is legally enforceable by any party against the United States or its agencies or officers or any other person.

The lawyers knew it, the judges knew it - that's possibly why the first magistrate judge recused, and only the second gave these 5 lawyers what they wanted, a country-wide Temporary Restraining order (TRO, in a case with no standing and no right of action.


Think about it.

A bunch of lawyers out of 
  • New York go to 
  • Northern California to help thousands of foreigners breach the U.S. borders illegally in 
  • Texas - 
  • with 
    • no standing, and 
    • no right of action - and

they do find a judge willing to give them what they want, notwithstanding that it is unlawful, and the unlawful decision is celebrated in the media and in comments by many members of the public as "the rule of law", while the majority of the commenting members of the public never read the complaint, or the motion, or the judge's decision, or the underlying statute, but are determined to yell down anybody who oppose the unlawful decision as a "troll", "bot" and "Trumptard".

ACLU has already contributed greatly to polarizing the country.

ACLU ascribes its support - in the U.S. Supreme Court, obtaining a precedent for the Nazis - the Nazi march through a village of Holocaust survivors - as supposedly its "unwavering support of free speech, on principle".



2 years after Ruth Ginsburg's employer, the ACLU, secured for the Nazis the "free speech right" to harass and torment Holocaust survivors, Ruth Ginsburg was appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court and is now celebrated as a defender of human rights.

Then, the ACLU supported - in court - a neo-Nazi march in Charlottesville in 2017.  

When it resulted in death of a woman, and caused a member of ACLU Virginia Board to resign in disgust:

the ACLU capitalized on the tragedy and solicited donations from people now in opposition to the same neo-Nazis whose march they secured, and pitted opponents against them.

Now the ACLU is stirring the pot once again, capitalizing once again on the tragedy.

It filed a frivolous lawsuit, had assigned a political activist judge who, despite lack of standing and lack of the right of judicial review of the ACLU's clients in that lawsuit, gave them a country-wide TRO - an impossible feat for any other civil rights lawsuit, I am telling you as a person who, as an attorney, have filed and prosecuted a number of civil rights lawsuits and know procedural pitfalls of such proceedings as an expert.

That lawsuit and that "temporary decision" has already caused violence at the border, caused people trying to rush the border in order to get to the other side by any means.

This is what you see first thing when you go to the ACLU's front page:



Everything is black, the "democracy" is in mourning, and the only thing that can help is money - your money, one-time, monthly, $35, $50, $75, $100, "other" - note that there are no buttons for puny $1, $5, $10, $20, $25 or even $30, the suggested "good" donation starts, in ACLU's view, from $35.

Yet, if you call the ACLU with, let's say, fabrication of a criminal case, or, fabrication of a CPS case against you - you now, separation of parents and children - they will turn you down.

Not the right kind of controversy, that kind of controversy may cost ACLU money, ACLU needs only controversies that MAKE money for the organization.

Why illegal immigration?

Consider that one topic has suddenly disappeared in the so-called main stream media in the United States - sweatshops.

At some point it was very fashionable for the so-called celebrities to boycott sweatshops, to the point that some human rights defenders claimed that boycotting sweatshops is "not the answer" - it actually makes people overseas, already suffering from poverty, unemployed and, possibly, starving.

With election of Trump and assault of ACLU (and "the resistance" well-funded by employers of illegal immigrants) on the government's right to control illegal immigration, the word "sweatshop" disappeared from the mainstream media.

Why?

Because illegal immigration helps create sweatshops within the U.S. 

There are a lot of people who benefit by the cheap goods produced by such sweatshops - from construction to child and adult care to landscaping to food crops to house servants for celebrities.

That is where the money is.  That is why stirring up this type of controversy is good for ACLU, while supporting parents whose children are taken away and adopted out on fabricated charges, in order for CPS to get federal funds (a Clinton era invention) - is not an attractive civil rights crisis for ACLU to step into and help.

What the ACLU is stirring - like in the Village of Skokie's case, like in Charlottseville - is violence, for its own profit.

Recall the infamous Dred Scott case of 1857.

An estimated 620,000 people have perished in a bloody civil war because of the GREED of the U.S. Supreme Court judges, many of them slave-owners, who refused to recognize that slavery is a violation of people's constitutional rights and to recognize black people as people equal to whites, with the same human rights.

In Russia, an absolute monarchy at that time, slavery was abolished in 1861, by a royal decree, without any bloodshed.

In the U.S., a constitutional democracy, because of the greed of the U.S. Supreme Court judges, slaveowners, slavery was abolished only as a result of a civil war, after the loss of 620,000, destruction and suffering visited upon half the country, by presidential proclamation in 1863, 2 years after Russia.

The Dred Scott case was presented at the time as "the rule of law" - and it incited violence.

Now, the ACLU is stirring the pot and inciting violence - for profit - based on its pushy support of illegal immigration.

Of course, U.S. judges, under Article III of the U.S. Constitution, do not have the power to legislate, it is the exclusive power of the U.S. Congress under Article I.

And, the U.S. Congress already had its say - no right of judicial review to contest the supposed human rights violations of foreigners seeking asylum, no contest in court of the U.S. Attorney General's regulations regarding asylum-seeking, 8 U.S.C. 1158(d)(7).

Yet, the ACLU lawyers obtained a precedent which creates an incentive out of the illegal crossing of the U.S. border - by all means, including violence.

Violence is already erupting.

If it goes further and erupts into a full-blown civil war, you will know who to thank for that.


Thursday, November 29, 2018

South Carolina's "Picasso-painting" way around the 5th, 6th and 14th Amendments. The wrongful conviction of #SidneyMoore

South Carolina is a death penalty state.

5th Amendment gives the accused in a criminal investigation the right to remain silent.

And, the U.S. Supreme Court required a warning about the right to remain silent and the right to an attorney in custodial interrogations by law enforcement.

Let's look, against the background of this indisputable law, at the criminal conviction - and recent denial of parole - of Sidney Moore, in South Carolina.

A young woman, Heather Elvis, has disappeared in South Carolina.  The police claim that the last location of her cell phone shows at the abandoned Peachtree Boat Landing in Socastee, South Carolina, on December 18, 2013 where her car was also discovered.

She could have left the state for her own reasons, she could drown without anybody's bad will, as an accident, she could have succumbed to sharks or alligators, there are a lot of both in South Carolina.

Why her car was where it was found - nobody knows.

But, with a public outcry and pressure, the police had to deliver a culprit, or culprits in Heather Elvis' disappearance.

No body has ever been found.

There is no evidence that Heather Elvis was killed, or that she is dead.

But, the police believes she is dead - and tried hard to prove it to appease public pressure.

They arrested a married couple, Sidney and Tammy Moore, parents of 3 young children, and charged them with kidnapping and murder of Heather Elvis.

That was in February of 2014.

In 2016, prosecutors dropped the murder charges.


Prosecutors tried to proceed for kidnapping charges against both spouses before the same judge - it is easy to convict this way, one case feeding the other in the same trial.


The case went up to the state Supreme Court, which directed separate trials under two separate judges.


Why were Sidney Moore and his wife Tammy Moore suspects in the police investigation?

Because supposedly Heather Moore was a lover of the husband, Sidney Moore, who was married with 3 children to Tammy Moore.

The wife supposedly found out and viciously exposed the affair in texts online.

The case went to a jury trial against Sidney Moore only on kidnapping charges, and the jury were unable to come up with a unanimous verdict, there was a mistrial announced.

Yet, curiously, Sidney Moore was, indeed, convicted - and sentenced to 10 years in prison.

You know for what?  For "obstruction of justice".

What evidence persuaded the jury to convict?



Now, criminal law in South Carolina, is statutory, and the jury had to find proof beyond the reasonable doubt in what prosecutors provided for them as to the following elements:



Since Sidney Moore is widely reported to have been convicted for "stalling" the police investigation into disappearance of Heather Elvis, he is charged under Section 16-9-340, Subsection (2) - "destroy, impede, or attempt to obstruct or impede the administration of justice in any court".

Remember, beyond the reasonable doubt, on all elements of the crime.

Now, since Sidney Moore was one of the two prime suspects (the married lover of the disappeared person) in a criminal investigation into a murder, a death penalty crime in South Carolina, he not only had a 5th Amendment right to remain silent, but that right was a life or death right, literally, to be treated seriously by the police.

Yet, Sidney Moore, while being interrogated, in custody, by a several law enforcement officers, one after another, he was never given a Miranda warning.

And, when his defense attorney raised that issue at trial, you know what was the response by the "Picasso-painting" prosecutor?  The police did not have to give him the Miranda warning because at that stage "it was not even a crime", it was a missing person investigation:




"Not even a crime".


Let's go back to what Sidney Moore was convicted - and sentenced to 10 years in prison for,
"obstruction of justice":








It is an "interference into a JUDICIAL process", specifically, an "intimidation of court officials, jurors and witnesses.  It is unlawful for a person, by threat or force to destroy, impede, or attempt to obstruct or impede the administration of justice in any court".

What court?

What administration of justice - if the prosecutor herself, while "painting a Picasso" picture for the jurors, admitted that Miranda warning was not given to a capital-murder suspect because at that time "it was not a crime"?

If it was not a crime, Moorer could not be even CHARGED with obstruction of justice - because that charge presupposes interference with a JUDICIAL process, very specifically, in the text of the statute, to be proven beyond the reasonable doubt.

If the charge was a "common law obstruction of justice" (which supposedly exists in South Carolina, too, State v. Love, 275 S.C. 55, 61, 271 S.E.2d 110, 113 (1980) (former magistrate's procurement of invalid driver's license for an individual and promise to fix traffic records and “fix the prosecution” against the individual for $5,500 was sufficient evidence to establish common-law obstruction of justice), cert. denied, 449 U.S. 901, 101 S.Ct. 272, 66 L.Ed.2d 131 (1980), then the entire criminal justice system in South Carolina is unconstitutional because what constitutes a crime must be codified under the separation of powers and fair notice doctrines.

But even then, the common law "obstruction of justice" case must be related to prosecution of a crime in court - not to a missing person investigation which, at the stage when Moorer's statements were made to the police, "was not a crime", as prosecutor herself admitted in order to derail the lack of Miranda warning challenge.

So, there is no body and no proof Heather Elvis died.

The murder charges were dropped by prosecutors themselves.

Kidnapping charges resulted in a mistrial against Sidney Moore and were not retried.

Kidnapping charges against Tammy Moore, brought in 2014, were not even put up for trial in 4 years, which is in itself a constitutional violation, anybody has a right to a speedy trial.

But, the public and the family of Heather Moore demanded "justice", meaning, a conviction.

And a conviction was produced - by ringing a charge that could not be brought because, by the prosecutor's own admission, at the time when Sidney Moorer supposedly "stalled the police investigation", it was "not a crime", but a missing person investigation.

So, the obstruction of justice charge - applicable exclusively to interference with a judicial process - did not apply.

But, prosecutors still obtained a conviction, and a 10-year sentence, and appeased the family and the public - by

  • painting a "Picasso picture", as a family member of Heather Elvis admitted;
  • having hearsay testimony about cell towers and cell phones of Sidney Moore and Heather Elvis, in violation of the 6th Amendment Confrontation Clause; and
  • by presenting an immunized testimony of a person charged with another crime and supplying some "evidence" to the prosecutors in exchange for a plea bargain - a person who, despite stalling what was already a crime investigation, was never charged with purposefully "preventing, obstructing, impeding, or hindering the administration of justice":




Of course, the press claimed that Sidney Moorer's own attorney admitted that Moorer lied to the police.

How did he lie?

Here:


So, the "dishonesty and deceit" that a man is convicted for and sent to 10 years to prison for is:

being confronted with a potential capital murder investigation, and not being advised of his right to remain silent, as the police had a duty to do, he withheld information from the police ("lied"), or remained silent - which was his 5th Amendment right in the first place.

A guy is convicted for not giving to the police information in a capital murder investigation that could potentially put him on a death row.

And recently, he was denied parole for the same reason.

He was denied parole for not telling the police what happened with Heather Elvis, while there are still pending kidnapping charges against him.

Parole was denied for not talking to the police about what happened to Heather Elvis, even though kidnapping charges against him are still pending and were scheduled for trial this past October, 2018, so he had an iron-clad 5th Amendment right to remain silent on the issue.

On October 1, 2018, the top state court denied the prosecution their request to try Sidney and Tammy Moore together, to facilitate a kidnapping conviction.

In retaliation, Moore was denied parole - for not waiving his 5th Amendment right in a kidnapping case that can lead to a capital murder case.

Now, the public generally has a very difficult time with the concept of the presumption of innocence and the right to remain silent protected by the 5th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

I see that all the time when yet another criminal charge is posted in an news media article on the Internet and on Facebook.

Overwhelmingly, comments presume guilt and demand immediate punishment, often by torture and death.

This man is accused of kidnapping of Heather Elvis and is presumed innocent of that crime.

He was tried for that crime in 2016 and the jury could not come to a unanimous verdict.

The prosecution has chosen, since 2016, for 2 years, not to retry him.

He has a right to remain silent as to anything in relation to that criminal charge.

Yet, he is denied parole, conveniently, because he did waive his 5th Amendment.

He was PUNISHED by prolonged incarceration to begin with for not talking to the police - which was his right under the 5th Amendment.

And, he was punished yet again, by the board of parole, for not waiving the 5th Amendment when criminal kidnapping proceedings were pending against him.

There is no evidence what happened to Heather Elvis and whether she is now dead or alive.

And, Sidney Moore may or may not have that information.

But, as eager as the public, police and prosecution is to blame Sidney Moore for not disclosing that information, he is protected by law in not doing it.

And, convicting him for doing what the law allows him to do is unconstitutional.

You may hate Sidney Moore, but, your personal feelings notwithstanding, there is no evidence he kidnapped or murdered Heather Elvis, and he has a right not to incriminate himself given to him by the U.S. Constitution, and no matter what "Picassos" are painted by the prosecution, the prosecution cannot change that constitutional right - in fact, prosecutors are sworn to protect it and be fair rather than trying to score convictions.

Sidney Moore was protected by the 5th Amendment and could not be charged for not talking to the police or for not giving the police information in a potential kidnapping and death penalty murder case against him.

Sidney Moore could not be charged, much less convicted, for obstruction of justice at the time when, by prosecutor's own admission, "it was not a crime", and certainly not an interference with a judicial process.

And, Sidney Moore most certainly could not be denied parole for not waiving his 5th Amendment right to remain silent and not to incriminate himself during a pending kidnapping criminal proceedings.

The rule of law means - the government following the set steps to take the person's property, liberty or life.

These steps were grossly violated here.

The 5th Amendment right to remain silent and not to incriminate himself.
The 6th Amendment Confrontation Clause.
The 14th Amendment Due Process Clause to be charged and prosecuted for a crime following due process, and not to have his liberty taken without a due process of law.

Sidney Moore's conviction is a wrongful conviction.

The State of South Carolina, by "painting a Picasso" to the jury, invented an end run around the 5th, 6th and 14th Amendments and a way to use wrongful convictions on fabricated wrongful charges to make people waive their 5th Amendment right to remain silent in a pending charge.

A young girl is missing.

And, her family is wondering where she is and is grieving.

But, that is not a good reason for wrongful convictions without due process.

Courts of law were established to replace the notoriously unfair private blood vendettas - and yet, a blood vendetta it is with Sidney Moore's conviction, and nothing more.

If you think you support such a wrongful conviction because you "believe", because Sidney Moore did not talk to police or was "evasive", he "knows something", and must be convicted for "something" for not disclosing that "something", think again.

You can be charged this way and convicted this way, too.

When the government cuts corners around the U.S. Constitution (which sets an absolute minimum, not maximum of procedural protections for everybody against government's prosecutions), it sets precedents not just against Sidney Moore, but against all of us, too.

Against you.

Sidney Moore's conviction should be overturned.












There is no cure for the stupid-in-power: Chief NYS State Judge Janet DiFiore has just undermined prison security in the state, badly

New York State Department of Corrections has invented a system of "earning good time" for prisoners.

The system is mutually beneficial.

Prisoners comply with certain requirements of DOCs - by not being involved in violent acts while in prison, following directions of prison authorities, complying with different "programs", including mental health programs, like "sex offender treatment", for example - and in return for that prisoners earn "good time", being able to be released earlier than their maximum sentences on parole.

That has just changed - because of just one stupid decision by New York State Chief Judge Janet DiFiore.

As of November 27, 2018 New York prisoners have no incentive to not be involved in violence in prison, to follow prison regulations and - for sex offenders especially - to be engaged in the so-called "sex offender treatment programs", extremely invasive harassment sessions involving polygraphs and penile polygraphs (electrode attached to the prisoner's penis while prisoner is made to watch child porn), disclosing sexual history and preferences not only of the prisoner, but of his sex partners.

All of that was holding up on the flimsy basis that prisoners hoped to get released sooner - by earning "good time".

DiFiore's decision legitimized cheating prisoners out of their good time, for no fault of the prisoners.

A convicted sex offender earned good time, 4 months of it, and was hoping to be released 4 months early.

The Department of Corrections, by law, is supposed to make an effort to help an about-to-be-released sex offender with housing.

But, convicting on coerced plea bargains and under the threat that, if a person does not plead guilty, he will be sentenced to prison, put in general population there and be tortured and killed there, and especially "treating" the untreatable sex offenders is such a lucrative industry in New York - and across the United States - that there are so many sex offenders, and so many municipalities with zoning restrictions prohibiting sex offenders to reside in close proximity with parks, schools and other places where children under the age of 18 "may congregate" (covering about the whole areas of those municipalities) that is practically impossible to find a place for a convicted sex offender to reside.

While residing within such areas may earn a convicted sex offender yet another felony conviction.

So, DOCs either did not want to look for suitable housing for Gonzalez before his release deliberately, wanting him to fail and get convicted for living where he is prohibited to live - because no other housing was available, or did not put enough effort into helping Gonzalez in finding suitable housing.

Because suitable housing was not found, DOCs simply denied Gonzalez the already earned good time and released him at his maximum sentence.

Gonzalez sued.

The case went all the way up to the New York State Court of Appeals.

DiFiore pronounced a decision that DOCs did not have to knock themselves out finding suitable housing for Gonzalez, so it was ok for DOCs to simply cheat Gonzalez out of his earned good time.

Now, DiFiore was a prosecutor all her life before coming to the bench, and for all her career did not have to think to obtain convictions.  As the former NYS Chief Judge (a convicted felon) Sol Wachtler said, one can indict a ham sandwich.  And that is true.

Moreover, one can convict a ham sandwich, too - for a sex offense especially, as long as you:

  • publish the charges on the Internet;
  • secure contamination of the jury pool - where comments in the media from the time charges are published ask for torturous death of the culprit in prison;
  • coerce a guilty plea from a person, without regard of his guilt or innocence, by showing him these comments and telling that he will be raped and killed if he gets into the prison's general population, and that he will be given a break if he "just pleas".

DiFiore, after doing all of the above for her entire prosecutorial career, did not have a need to develop any type of mental acuity, you know, like in a chess game, think about consequences of her decisions at least more than 1 step forward.

So, her no-thinking-required mentality showed, as it always shows when a person with such a mental setup becomes a judge, and the absolute majority of New York State and the country's judges are former prosecutors.

What was the legislative intent to introduce the "good time" credits in the first place?

Not just reintroduction of prisoners into society.

First and foremost - prison security.

So, what did DiFiore do with her decision?  She told prisoners that no matter how much of good time they have earned, in order to be released early from prison, no matter how much humiliation prisoner put up with in the ineffective and unconstitutional "sex offender treatment programs" where sex offenders are coerced to talk to state authorities while their appeals are pending, for example - all of that good time may be taken away, for no fault of prisoners.

In other words, there is no reason to engage in any efforts to earn good time in the first place - you may be cheated out of it anyway.

Good job, Judge DiFiore.

Let's see the next year's safety report from DOCs.  DiFiore's decision can, literally, cost lives of both prisoners and corrections officers.

And that was exactly what the law that DiFiore "applied" through her decision was trying to prevent.






Wednesday, November 14, 2018

How politically connected judges, former prosecutors, and NYS Attorney General block a legal remedy for a black wrongfully convicted prisoner. And how New York voters have been duped in elections of NYS Attorney General. Again.

Reportedly, the civil rights fighter Barbara Underwood, the NYS Acting Attorney General "won" in appellate court against 2 people who were exonerated after having been wrongfully convicted for murder and spending 23 years in prison.

The victory over victims of a wrongful conviction was that NYS AG obtained a court order proclaiming that a person who was wrongfully convicted may not sue the state for the wrongful conviction if he was also charged with something else in the same indictment - and that conviction was not overturned.

There is, of course, no logic in it.

If you committed ANOTHER crime, you have no right of access to court to sue for wrongful conviction for something else.  Even if it is proven that the conviction was wrongful, and even if you have been exonerated.

That's the logic of these 5 judges:













  • former criminal prosecutor, working hand-in-hand with Mulvey on political cases, judge Phillip Rumsey



NONE of the judges have a criminal defense attorney background.

4 out of 5 are former criminal prosecutors, and the remaining one (the presiding judge) never worked in criminal law or in private practice.

5 white judges prevented a remedy of black victims of the racist New York criminal "justice" system which disproportionately investigates and convicts people of color, including wrongful convictions.

And, mind, these judges also regulate licenses of attorneys and, through that, access of all New Yorkers to court.

No logic.  No integrity.  No competency needed.

Just blunt force to "save money" for the state of New York by quashing the rights of victims of wrongful convictions.

You have just voted for a new Attorney General, New Yorkers.

In that election campaign, candidates for that position clamored to you how they will be protecting your civil rights.

Civil rights are protected only and exclusively against the government.

So, note, dear New Yorkers, which side of a civil rights lawsuit the New York State Attorney General is on.  

Definitely not the victim's side.

Defending the wrongdoers' side.

Weren't you all duped?

Again?

On the bar to access to court to disabled and injured children - Part II. New York's statute of limitations for injured chidren

In my previous blog I have started to cover bars to access to court for children - and a case where the U.S. Supreme Court have barred disabled children injured by vaccines from access to court.

Before going further into analysis of that case, I would like to cover the general principles of the "rule of law", as expected by the majority of people - in order to see whether these concepts are alive and effective in application to both adult population, children, and disabled and injured children.

The concept of the "rule of law" is not that complicated, even if there is a pretense to make it so in the United States.

It is, really, quite easy what people want.

1.  an opportunity to complain to an impartial authority about injuries;
2.  an opportunity to obtain a remedy for injuries;
3.  so that this opportunity be equal notwithstanding the social and financial standing of the complainant.

And,

4. in a federation like the United States, what is added is the separation of powers of the federal and state government, where it is the state government, under the 10th Amendment, that must handle the care and protect health and safety of its citizens.

Just 4 concepts.

The 1st, 10th and 14th Amendment.  That's it.

Whether and how the government provides effective remedies to people who have suffered harm, especially grievous harm, like permanent injury or death, is the measure of whether the country has, in reality, "the rule of law".

And, the best test of that rule of law is whether and how the government provides remedies to the least protected members of the citizenry:

  1. the poor;
  2. the disabled;
  3. the legally incompetent - including and especially, children, and especially, disabled and injured children.
And, in the United States, the government provides remedies to injured or disabled children very, very badly.

For example, in New York, the statute of limitations for children to sue for negligent or intentional harm is "tolled" by infancy - meaning that the statute of limitations cannot be used against a child until the child becomes an adult, at 18, and then the statute of limitations starts to be counted.

But, there is a big exception - all in all, the delay to sue, with infancy tolling even, cannot exceed 10 years.

Once again, the text of the statute:

208. Infancy, insanity. If a person entitled to commence an action is under a disability because of infancy or insanity at the time the cause of action accrues, and the time otherwise limited for commencing the action is three years or more and expires no later than three years after the disability ceases, or the person under the disability dies, the time within which the action must be commenced shall be extended to three years after the disability ceases or the person under the disability dies, whichever event first occurs; if the time otherwise limited is less than three years, the time shall be extended by the period of disability. The time within which the action must be commenced shall not be extended by this provision beyond ten years after the cause of action accrues, except, in any action other than for medical, dental or podiatric malpractice, where the person was under a disability due to infancy. This section shall not apply to an action to recover a penalty or forfeiture, or against a sheriff or other officer for an escape.

That means that, if a child is 8 when the injury has occurred, at the time the child becomes an adult he is barred from suing for his injury, the infancy toll does not apply to children 8 years of age and younger, those who cannot represent themselves in court because they are legally incompetent - as children - to do so.

Therefore, New York punishes children for inactivity of their legal representatives - parents and guardians - by barring them from obtaining a remedy for their injuries.

That means, for example, that children who have suffered traumas at birth due to negligence of physicians, may sue - and may not sue pro se, since they are legally incompetent, since they are minors - only until they reach 10 years old.

Meaning, they can only sue if their parent or legal guardian chooses to do that until they turn 10.

Note that the 10-year-bar is not applicable to injuries received by the child from negligence of people who are not medical professionals.

Remember that when you take your child to your kind pediatrician - that that kind pediatrician has lobbied for himself not to be subject to lawsuit of the child he provides services to, when the child becomes an adult and considers the quality of such services.

Any other service provider will be subject to your child's lawsuit after the child reaches the age of majority and becomes an adult, but not the child's physicians - if physicians in question injured your child early enough, before the child reaches the age of 8.

That is an open invitation to malpractice and experimentation on children under the age of 8 to New York physicians - especially on those in foster care.  A doctor can do ANYTHING to those children and escape liability.

Think about it.

The child is barred from making his or her own conscious decision when the child becomes an adult to sue or not to sue for her injuries - if those who injured the child are physicians.

Yet, if you do not take your child under the age of 8 to that physician and not subject your child to paid manipulations of those physicians, you will most likely be turned into CPS and ruled a bad parent by courts.

And, there are many, many case reported in the United States when parents who are not happy with the quality of services provided to their young children are turned into CPS by physicians themselves - and when CPS grabs custody of the child in order to subject the child to manipulations of physicians without parental consent, manipulations which the child cannot contest through a lawsuit and CPS, its guardian, will never do.

Apparently, the most vulnerable population injured by CPLR 208 in New York are not just children injured by medical malpractice, but children injured by medical malpractice while in foster care - because physicians in New York, as in other states, are the CPS's best friends to report what doctors think is abuse and neglect, and are, thus, the supplies of children into the CPS pipeline (funded by federal incentive money).

CPS will never shoot themselves in the foot and will never sue doctors for medical malpractice, and children under 8 injured at birth are absolutely barred from bringing a lawsuit for medical malpractice against physicians.

That is a violation of the principle of equal protection of law and access to court.  

Because an adult would be able to sue pro se without asking permission from parents or legal guardians, and no third party, but the adult will be responsible for not filing a lawsuit on time within the statute of limitations - while a child's right of access to court after a birth trauma depends entirely on decisions of third parties.

This 10-year bar, as I was explained in law school, was introduced in New York to give some fairness and finality to those who committed negligence and intentional acts that may have led to injuries, and to allow them to peacefully live their lives, not worrying that they may be sued and that their livelihood or property may be in danger.

Apparently, New York was more concerned about fairness to medical professionals - who have a powerful lobby in the legislature that passed CPLR (Civil Practice Law and Rules) 208 - than about the fate of injured children.

Moreover, even if the child's parent or guardian does sue between the child's birth and 10 years of age, there is no way to establish, before the child became at least 18, what the child is going to do in life, what kind of talents and inclinations the child may have that the injury would prevent him from developing and excelling at - and that is also the result of lobbying by doctors, aimed to block children from ever being able to get adequate damages for their injuries in such lawsuits.

And THIS is the main feature showing whether New York does or does not have the so-called "rule of law" - whether the law protects adults, and adults with powerful lobbies, or legally incompetent individuals, children, who cannot, on their own, protect themselves.

Adults won, children - and the rule of law - lost.