POS Holder Steps Down

One of the good ones. Not political...... fair and ethical.





On April 1, 2009, Holder announced that he had ordered the dismissal of the indictment against former Senator Ted Stevens on corruption charges. Stevens had been found guilty, but hadn't been sentenced; Holder's action effectively vacated Stevens' conviction. Holder was reportedly very angry that the prosecutors had withheld potentially exculpatory evidence from Stevens' attorneys. After the prosecutors had been held in contempt of court for failing to turn over required documents, Holder replaced the entire trial team. Soon afterward, the Justice Department discovered a previously undocumented interview with Bill Allen, the prosecution's star witness. In this interview, Allen gave statements that directly contradicted his testimony at trial, including a claim that he'd been asked to get a note for a repair bill on his house. By nearly all accounts, Holder wanted to send a message that he would not tolerate any behavior he deemed to be prosecutorial misconduct.[69]
 
OK FC, here's what your "good man" did. He knowing and with intent facilitated thousands of weapons to flow into Mexico. Into the hands of drug cartels to be specific. He wanted and expected these weapons to show up at crime scenes. This was done for purely political purposes as part of his and the Obama administrations assault on the 2nd amendment. As a result a Border Patrol agent was killed with one of these weapons. Hundreds, probably thousands of Mexicans were killed with these weapons. Holder himself has admitted that these weapons will continue to be used for years to come. This is not conjecture, it's fact.
So let me ask you something FC. If I sell a gun a person I know is a criminal, say some Latin King gangbanger, and then that same gun is used to kill a person, what do you think the prosecutor will think of my involvement in the crime? Yeah, that's right, I'm guilty as hell.
Holder a good guy? The motherfucker is an accomplice to murder. Hundreds of murders if you count the Mexicans.



bullshit
 
bullshit

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This issue of imbedding left wing activists in the career civil service is a huge problem. When republicans are doing the hiring, every hiring decision is watched closely and if they seem to favor conservatives, a shitstorm ensues. When the shoe is on the other foot, silence. Then they can turn around and say "well nonpolitical career employees decided to do x, y or z...nothing political here folks." Career nonpolitical people like the despicable Lois Lerner.
 
This issue of imbedding left wing activists in the career civil service is a huge problem. When republicans are doing the hiring, every hiring decision is watched closely and if they seem to favor conservatives, a shitstorm ensues. When the shoe is on the other foot, silence. Then they can turn around and say "well nonpolitical career employees decided to do x, y or z...nothing political here folks." Career nonpolitical people like the despicable Lois Lerner.

Speaking of Lerner I saw the other day she's getting a pension of $100,000 or more and whining about her legal bills never mind her husband is supposedly an attorney and partner at his firm. Guess she'll apply for food stamps next and maybe section 8 housing.
 

They left this one out:

Under the 1965 Voting Rights Act, the Department of Justice (DOJ) brought a voter intimidation case against the Black Panthers that occurred during the 2008 election. Led by Samir Shabazz, the Black Panthers violated the section of the Voting Rights Act that prohibits intimidation, coercion or threats against any person for voting or attempting to vote, according to the complaint filed by the feds in January 2009 (two weeks before the Bush administration left office) in U.S. District Court in Philadelphia against 4 defendants. The DOJ also pursued an injunction preventing any future deployment of or display of weapons by Black Panther members at the entrance of a polling location. In April 2009 Bartie Bull, a former civil rights lawyer who was serving as a poll watcher at the polling station where the incident occurred, submitted an affidavit at Justice's request supporting the lawsuit, stating that he considered it to have been the most severe instance of voter intimidation he had ever encountered

But a few months later the Obama DOJ quietly dropped the charges and it all disappeared like a bad dream. Judicial Watch investigated and after suing the DOJ, obtained explosive documents that show Obama political appointees, including former deputy attorney general David Ogden, Associate Attorney General Thomas Perrelli and attorney general Eric Holder, were intimately involved in the decision to dismiss the voter intimidation case against the Black Panthers. The documents directly contradict sworn testimony by Obama’s Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division, Thomas Perez, that no political leadership was involved in the decision.

Adding to the scandal, a veteran DOJ civil rights attorney who worked on the Black Panther case accused the agency of racial bias for dropping charges against the group and resigned over the “corrupt nature of the dismissal.” During testimony before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, the whistleblower, J. Christian Adams, said there’s a pervasive and open hostility towards equal enforcement of the law in the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division.
 
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