December 9, 2012

Heading Towards WWIII ~ This Is The Plan Of The Ruling Elite

 

We can avert this fate of humanity by the renewal of the Glass-Steagall Act. The passage of Glass-Steagall is as a pivotal turning point in moving America in a new direction towards the development of all nation states globally. If we don’t renew the Glass-Steagall Act then we (humanity) will meet the catastrophic event of WWIII head on … how would you like that instead?

Wake-Up-America !!

So far in my videos discussing the economic collapse of the U.S. I have left out one important element:

World War Three.

WWIII is not going to be an accident. It will not be caused by an unfortunate chain events that the U.S. struggles to avoid. It is a goal, a specific objective that must be reached in order to force a cultural shift that the population would otherwise never accept.

It is only from this context that the events unfolding in the world right now make any sense. - StormCloudsGathering

US Military A Prime ‘Target’ For Home-Grown Terrorists

WASHINGTON (AFP) - The US military is under threat in its own country as homegrown Islamic extremists, including “radicalized troops,” are treating military installations here as prime targets, US officials warned Congress Wednesday.

The only deadly terror strikes on US soil since those of September 11, 2001 have been against the military, with three separate attacks that left 17 people dead, most of them soldiers, according to a report released Wednesday at the first joint House-Senate hearing on homegrown terrorism.

US military installations since 9/11 have been the target of at least 33 “threats, plots and strikes,” more than half of the 54 homegrown jihadist plots and attacks that have occurred or been uncovered over the past decade, the report said.

“A particularly insidious aspect of the homegrown terror threat remains radicalized troops who target their fellow brothers and sisters in arms, without regard to their faith,” it said.

Republican Representative Peter King, who as head of the House Homeland Security Committee has chaired a series of hearings this year on Islamist extremism threat, lamented the “growing security threat from radicalization both internally within the military, as well as externally toward military personnel and their families residing in the United States.”

The threat by radicalized members of the US armed forces “is persistent and enduring,” he said in an opening statement to the hearing.

Paul Stockton, the assistant secretary of defense for homeland defense, pointed to the recent “increased numbers of American citizens or residents inspired by Al-Qaeda’s ideology — and the Department of Defense has become their target of choice.”

“The primary threat to (homeland) security comes from Al-Qaeda and its affiliates,” he added.

Independent Senator Joseph Lieberman said “the enemy is not a vague catchall of violent extremism, but a specific violent Islamist extremism, an exploitation and corruption, I would say, of the religion of Islam” that leaves military personnel and their families as direct targets in the United States.

Some attackers are “lone wolves” independent of any terrorist organization, while others “become radicalized in the army,” said Lieutenant Colonel Reid Sawyer, director of the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point military academy.

The US Army has emerged as a preferred target for Al-Qaeda inspired individuals in the United States, in part because “the military presents a qualitatively different target when attacked at home than when engaged in combat abroad,” he said.

In November 2009 a US Army psychiatrist went on a shooting rampage at a military base in Fort Hood, Texas, killing 13 people and wounding 32 others in what King has described as the worst homegrown terror attack in the United States since 9/11.

The suspect, Major Nidal Hasan, is being investigated for links to Islamic extremism, including his contacts with a radical cleric who blessed the killing spree.

 

Source: https://www.activistpost.com/2011/12/us-military-prime-target-for-home-grown.html

MTV Warns Martial Law In America 1

Will Obama And Clinton Testify For Manning?

By rt.com on December 9, 2011

As the defense attorneys for alleged WikiLeaks aide PFC Bradley Manning prepare for a pre-trial hearing, the US government is trying to shut down all of the nearly 50 witnesses they’ve asked to testify, including Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton.

Manning has been under strict and severe military custody for nearly two years for his suspected involvement in WikiLeaks, Julian Assange’s whistleblower site that the government says is detrimental to the security of the nation. Attorneys for Manning, however, believe that they have a strong case to support their client, though are now encountering a new road block with the government giving them the run around.

David E Coombs, attorney for Manning, has asked for both President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to testify during the Article 32 hearing scheduled to begin next week. Slated to start December 16, the hearing will serve as precursor to further judicial action and will determine if Manning’s case will be fit for a full-scale court martial hearing. Coombs hopes that by grilling the president over remarks he made earlier this year, he will be able to show that the commander-in-chief was out of place by what he says was an expression of “unlawful command influence.”

Back in April, Obama remarked on Manning publically, saying that the soldier had “broke the law.” Such a statement, says Coombs, can cause the case to collapse, noting in a recent court filing that a “superior officer in the chain of command is prohibited from saying or doing anything that could influence any decision by a subordinate in how to handle a military justice matter.”

Additionally, the defense had hoped to question Secretary Clinton on whether the documents Manning had allegedly leaked actually posed any threat to America’s security. Administration officials had earlier expressed that the papers Manning supposedly sent to WikiLeaks were of “rather benign nature” and of no real damage to national security.

The court has called Obama and Clinton “too important” to stand trial, says Coombs, to which the attorney writes is a blow to not just his case but to the judicial system as well.

“The government seems to argue that in matters of justice, if you have too important of a position, you should not be bothered,” Coombs writes. “Military justice should not be controlled by the importance of your duty position.”

Coombs has asked for 50 defense witnesses to take the stand during the Article 32 hearing, but the government seeks to reject all of them sans those that they are also calling as witnesses. If the 48 witnesses the defense has asked for, they will thus be left with only ten.

Specifically, says Coombs in an official filing released to the media, the government has opposed testimonies from witnesses that the defense believes will show a deterioration in Manning’s mental health, which could have led to a lessening of any punishment brought before the private. The government insists that reading written statements will suffice for the sake of the trial, but Coombs responds, “Simply reading the sworn statements of some of these witnesses and hearing from a few others will not allow either party or the Investigating Officer to explore the relevant information.”

“The listed witnesses need to be questioned personally and individually about what they saw, heard, and experienced if there is to be a thorough and impartial investigation,” adds the attorney.

 

Source: https://rt.com/usa/news/obama-manning-wikileaks-government-447/

Thought Crime In Washington

Federal employees are the only ones who know what’s happening inside the government and their voices are being silenced.

Here’s the First Amendment, in full:

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”

Those beautiful words, almost haiku-like, are the sparse poetry of the American democratic experiment. The Founders purposely wrote the First Amendment to read broadly, and not like a snippet of tax code, in order to emphasise that it should encompass everything from shouted religious rantings to eloquent political criticism. Go ahead, re-read it aloud at this moment when the government seems to be carving out an exception to it large enough to drive a tank through.

As the occupiers of Zuccotti Park, like those pepper-sprayed at UC Davis or the Marine veteran shot in Oakland, recently found out, the government’s ability to limit free speech, to stopper the First Amendment, to undercut the right to peaceably assemble and petition for redress of grievances, is perhaps the most critical issue our republic can face.

If you were to write the history of the last decade in Washington, it might well be a story of how, issue by issue, the government freed itself from legal and constitutional bounds when it came to torture, the assassination of US citizens, the holding of prisoners without trial or access to a court of law, the illegal surveillance of American citizens, and so on. In the process, it has entrenched itself in a comfortable shadowland of ever more impenetrable secrecy, while going after any whistleblower who might shine a light in.

Now, it also seems to be chipping away at the most basic American right of all, the right of free speech, starting with that of its own employees. As is often said, the easiest book to stop is the one that is never written; the easiest voice to staunch is the one that is never raised.

It’s true that, over the years, government in its many forms has tried to claim that you lose your free speech rights when you, for example, work for a public school, or join the military. In dealing with school administrators who sought to silence a teacher for complaining publicly that not enough money was being spent on academics versus athletics, or generals who wanted to stop enlisted men and women from blogging, the courts have found that any loss of rights must be limited and specific.

As Jim Webb wrote when still Secretary of the Navy, “A citizen does not give up his First Amendment right to free speech when he puts on a military uniform, with small exceptions.”

Free speech is considered so basic that the courts have been wary of imposing any limits at all. The famous warning by Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes about not falsely shouting “Fire!” in a crowded theatre shows just how extreme a situation must be for the Supreme Court to limit speech. As Holmes put it in his definition: “The question in every case is whether the words used… are of such a nature as to create a clear and present danger that they will bring about the substantive evils that Congress has a right to prevent.” That’s a high bar indeed.

The government versus Morris Davis

Does a newspaper article from November 2009, a few hundred well-reasoned words that appeared in the conservativeWall Street Journal, concluding with these mild sentences, meet Justice Holmes’ high mark?

“Double standards don’t play well in Peoria. They won’t play well in Peshawar or Palembang either. We need to work to change the negative perceptions that exist about Guantanamo and our commitment to the law. Formally establishing a legal double standard will only reinforce them.”

Morris Davis got fired from his research job at the Library of Congress for writing that article and a similar letter to the editor of the Washington Post. (The irony of being fired for exercising free speech while employed at Thomas Jefferson’s library evidently escaped his bosses.) With the help of the ACLU, Davis demanded his job back. On January 8, 2010, the ACLU filed a lawsuit against the Library of Congress on his behalf. In March 2011, a federal court ruled that the suit could go forward.

It’s the millions of lower-ranks, unelected federal employees who decide… how laws are carried out and the Constitution upheld.

The case is being heard this month. Someday, it will likely define the free speech rights of federal employees and so determine the quality of people who will make up our government. We citizens vote for the big names, but it’s the millions of lower-ranked, unelected federal employees who decide by their actions how the laws are carried out (or ignored) and the Constitution upheld (or disregarded).

Morris Davis is not some dour civil servant. Prior to joining the Library of Congress, he spent more than 25 years as an Air Force colonel. He was, in fact, the chief military prosecutor at Guantanamo and showed enormous courage in October 2007 when he resigned from that position and left the Air Force. Davis had stated he would not use evidence obtained through torture back in 2005. When a torture advocate was named his boss in 2007, Davis quit rather than face the inevitable order to reverse his position.

In December 2008, Davis went to work as a researcher at the Library of Congress in the Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Division. None of his work was related to Guantanamo. He was not a spokesperson for, or a public face of, the library. He was respected at work. Even the people who fired him do not contest that he did his “day job” as a researcher well.

On November 12, 2009, the day after his op-ed and letter appeared, Davis was told by his boss that the pieces had caused the library concern over his “poor judgment and suitability to serve… not consistent with ‘acceptable service’” - as the letter of admonishment he received put the matter. It referred only to his op-ed and Washington Post letter, and said nothing about his work performance as a researcher. One week later, Davis was fired.

But shouldn’t he have known better than to write something political?

The courts have consistently supported the rights of the Ku Klux Klan to use extreme and hateful words, of the burners of books and of those who desecrate the American flag. All of that is considered “protected speech”. A commitment to real free speech means accepting the toughest cases, the most offensive things people can conceive of, as the price of a free society.

The Library of Congress does not restrict its employees from writing or speaking, so Davis broke no rules. Nor, theoretically at least, do other government agencies like the CIA and the State Department restrict employees from writing or speaking, even on matters of official concern, although they do demand prior review for such things as the possible misuse of classified material.

Clearly, such agency review processes have sometimes been used as a de facto method of prior restraint. The CIA, for example, has been accused of using indefinite security reviews to effectively prevent a book from being published. The Department of Defence has also wielded exaggerated claims of classified material to block books.

Since at least 1968, there has, however, been no broad prohibition against government employees writing about political matters or matters of public concern. In 1968, the Supreme Court decided a seminal public employee First Amendment case, Pickering versus Board of Education. It ruled that school officials had violated the First Amendment rights of teacher Marvin Pickering when they fired him for writing a letter to his local paper criticising the allocation of money between academics and athletics.

A thought crime

Morris Davis was fired by the Library of Congress not because of his work performance, but because he wrote thatWall Street Journal op-ed on his own time, using his own computer, as a private citizen, never mentioning his (unrelated) federal job.

The government just did not like what he wrote. Perhaps his bosses were embarrassed by his words, or felt offended by them. Certainly, in the present atmosphere in Washington, they felt they had an open path to stopping their own employee from saying what he did, or at least for punishing him for doing so.

It’s not, of course, that federal employees don’t write and speak publicly. As long as they don’t step on toes, they do, in startling numbers, on matters of official concern, on hobbies, on subjects of all sorts, through what must be an untold number of blogs, Facebook pages, Tweets, op-eds and letters to the editor. The government picked Davis out for selective, vindictive prosecution.

The simple act of speaking out on a subject at odds with an official government position was the real grounds for his firing.

More significantly, Davis was fired prospectively - not for poor attendance or too much time idling at the water cooler, but because his boss believed Davis’ writing showed that the quality of his judgment might make him an unsuitable employee at some future moment. The simple act of speaking out on a subject at odds with an official government position was the real grounds for his firing. That, and that alone, was enough for termination.

As any devoted fan of George Orwell, Ray Bradbury or Philip K Dick would know, Davis committed a thought crime.

As some readers may also know, I evidently did the same thing. Because of my book, We Meant Well: How I Helped Lose the Battle for the Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi People, about my experiences as a State Department official in Iraq, and the articles, op-eds and blog posts I have written, I first had my security clearance suspended by the Department of State and then was suspended from my job there.

That job had nothing to do with Iraq or any of the subjects I have written about. My performance reviews were good, and no one at State criticised me for my day-job work. Because we have been working under different human resources systems, Davis, as a civil servant on new-hire probation, could be fired directly. As a tenured Foreign Service Officer, I can’t, and so State has placed me on indefinite administrative leave status; that is, I’m without a job, pending action to terminate me formally through a more labourious process.

However, in removing me from my position, the document the State Department delivered to me darkly echoed what Davis’ boss at the Library of Congress said to him:

“The manner in which you have expressed yourself in some of your published material is inconsistent with the standards of behaviour expected of the Foreign Service. Some of your actions also raise questions about your overall judgment. Both good judgment and the ability to represent the Foreign Service in a way that will make the Foreign Service attractive to candidates are key requirements.”

It’s okay to blog about your fascination with knitting or to support official positions. If you happen to be Iranian or Chinese or Syrian, and not terribly fond of your government, and express yourself on the subject, the US government will support your right to do it 110 per cent of the way. However, as a federal employee, blog about your negative opinions on US policies and you’ve got a problem. In fact, we have a problem as a country if freedom of speech only holds as long as it does not offend the US government.There follows a pattern of punishing federal employees for speaking out or whistle-blowing: look at Davis, or me, or Franz Gayl or Thomas Drake. In this way, a precedent is being set for an even deeper cloud of secrecy to surround the workings of government. From Washington, in other words, no news, other than good or officially approved news, is to emerge.

The government’s statements at Davis’ trial, now underway in Washington DC, do indeed indicate that he was fired for the act of speaking out itself, as much as the content of what he said. The Justice Department lawyer representing the government said that Davis’ writings cast doubt on his discretion, judgment and ability to serve as a high-level official. (She also added that Davis’ language in the op-ed was “intemperate”. One judge on the three-member bench seemed to support the point, saying, “It’s one thing to speak at a law school or association, but it’s quite a different thing to be in The Washington Post“. The case will likely end up at the Supreme Court.

Free speech is for Iranians, not government employees

If Morris Davis loses his case, then a federal employee’s judgment and suitability may be termed insufficient for employment if he or she writes publicly in a way that offends or embarrasses the government. In other words, the very definition of good judgment, when it comes to freedom of speech, will then rest with the individual employer - that is, the US government.

Simply put, even if you as a federal employee follow your agency’s rules on publication, you can still be fired for what you write if your bosses don’t like it. If your speech offends them, then that’s bad judgment on your part and the First Amendment goes down the drain. Free speech is increasingly coming at a price in Washington: for federal employees, conscience could cost them their jobs.

In this sense, Morris Davis represents a chilling precedent. He raised his voice. If we’re not careful, the next Morris Davis may not. Federal employees are, at best, a skittish bunch, not known for their innovative, out-of-the-box thinking. Actions like those in the Davis case will only further deter any thoughts of speaking out, and will likely deter some good people from seeking federal employment.

More broadly, the Davis case threatens to give the government free rein in selecting speech by its employees it does not like and punishing it.

Morris Davis’ problem is neither unique nor isolated. Clothilde Le Coz, Washington director of Reporters without Borders, told me earlier this month, “Secrecy is taking over from free speech in the United States. While we naively thought the Obama administration would be more transparent than the previous one, it is actually the first to sue five people for being sources and speaking publicly.”

Scary, especially since this is no longer an issue of one rogue administration.

Government is different than private business. If you don’t like McDonald’s because of its policies, go to Burger King, or a soup kitchen or eat at home. You don’t get the choice of federal governments, and so the critical need for its employees to be able to speak informs the republic. We are the only ones who can tell you what is happening inside your government. It really is that important. Ask Morris Davis.

Source:

https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2011/11/2011112981630635791.html

The Media’s Blackout Of The National Defense Authorization Act Is Shameful

The broadcast media’s ignorance and unwillingness to cover the National Defense Authorization Act, a radical piece of legislation which outrageously redefines the US homeland as a “battlefield” and makes US citizens subject to military apprehension and detainment for life without access to a trial or attorney, is unacceptable.

Guys, this is far more important than Penn State’s Disgusting Creep of the Decade, or even Conrad Murray’s sentencing.

Call it what you will: a military junta, a secret invalidation of Americans’ civil rights, a Congress gone mad. Whatever it is, it needs to be covered by the press, and quickly.

Anderson Cooper, Brian Williams, Rachel Maddow, Bill O’Reilly, Sean Hannity, Neil Cavuto and the other handful of household names that mainstream America relies on for news should be talking about this non-stop.

I emailed producers and on-air talent at the three major cable news networks yesterday: not one of them was willing to step up to the plate and report on this appalling legislation, which would give Americans roughly the same protections as citizens in China or Saudi Arabia.

Bloggers and the ACLU’s analysis have already made the work easy for you guys. Even an ADD segment producer can do the math:

  • Pay special attention to Section 1031 of the bill.
  • This bill violates the Posse Comitatus Act (18 U.S.C. § 1385), as it will allow federal military personnel to engage in domestic law enforcement. This is profoundly unconstitutional and scary.
  • Also read Sen. Lindsey Graham’s chilling defense of the offending provision in this bill, calling to make the homeland a “battlefield.” Has anyone told these guys that Osama bin Laden and his deputies are dead? Those still alive are running from drone strikes on a daily basis. So who exactly are we fighting against? Are you protecting us from a handful of (almost entirely peaceful) college kids at the Occupy protests? If so, martial law and throwing out 200+ years of basic civil rights seems rather excessive.
  • Finally, as the ACLU points out, you won’t have any trouble booking an expert talking head who will tell you how dangerous and counterproductive the National Defense Authorization Act is: “The Secretary of Defense, the Director of National Intelligence, the Director of the FBI and the head of the Justice Department’s National Security Division have all said that the indefinite detention provisions in the NDAA are harmful and counterproductive.” Book one of them on your program, and do it quickly. The Senate has already rejected an amendment which would have banned the indefinite detention provisions from the bill.

Please, do your jobs. This is the kind of story that wins journalism awards and makes careers. It’s the kind of story that makes viewers trust you.

 

UPDATE: To the mainstream media’s credit, Keith Olbermann of Current TV has now mentioned the NDAA’s harmful provision, and I’ve been told that Dylan Ratigan of MSNBC is drawing attention to it as well. A good start, but not nearly enough.

Source: https://www.businessinsider.com/the-medias-blackout-of-the-national-defense-authorization-act-is-shameful-2011-12

Bradley Manning: Welsh MEP’s Join Wikileaks Suspect Plea

Two Welsh MEPs have added their names to a growing list of their colleagues concerned about the alleged treatment of Wikileaks suspect Bradley Manning.

The US Army analyst, who grew up in Pembrokeshire, is due in court later this month accused of passing sensitive information to the website.

He has been in military custody in the US since May 2010, accused of making intelligence available to “the enemy”.

Plaid Cymru’s Jill Evans and Labour’s Derek Vaughan have signed the letter.

Ms Evans said US treatment of Pte Manning had become an important human rights issue.

“I think anyone who read about the conditions under which he has been held would be very disturbed… it is totally out of proportion to anything that he has been accused of”

During his detainment at a military prison at Quantico, Virginia, it is alleged that the soldier was held in solitary confinement for 23 hours a day and often made to sleep without clothing or bedding.

“I think anyone who read about the conditions under which he has been held would be very disturbed,” said Ms Evans.

“It is totally out of proportion to anything that he has been accused of.”

An open letter has now been sent to President Obama signed by more than 60 members of the European Parliament, including Ms Evans and the Welsh Labour MEP Derek Vaughan.

The letter calls on the US president to allow Pte Manning to meet the United Nation’s special rapporteur on torture, Juan Méndez.

Human rights

The signatories also state they are concerned that the soldier has been charged with the offence of ‘aiding the enemy‘, which could carry the death penalty in the US.

Ms Evans said she hoped the letter would carry added weight in America as a trial date approaches.

“Human rights is an issue that the European Parliament has always fought very hard to protect, and something we feel we have a real role in doing on the world stage,” she added.

The 23-year-old is from Oklahoma but went to Tasker Milward school in Haverfordwest, where he lived with his mother.

He is accused of passing hundreds of thousands of diplomatic cables to the whistleblowing website, detailing operational information in Iraq and Afghanistan.

After mounting concerns were raised in America about his plight behind bars, US authorities announced in April that the soldier was being transferred to another military prison in Kansas, where the custodial regime was viewed as being more relaxed.

Pre-trial case

The US government said the decision had been taken because the Quantico facility had not been designed to hold pre-trial prisoners on a long-term basis.

Pte Manning’s lawyers say they now expect a pre-trial case, called an Article 32 hearing, to go ahead on 16 December.

Proceedings are expected to last around five days, after which recommendations will be made to a general, who will decide whether to proceed to a full trial.

Pentagon officials have previously said Pte Manning is being held in appropriate conditions considering the seriousness of the charges against him.

He has been charged with using unauthorised software on government computers to download classified information and to make intelligence available to “the enemy”, as well as other counts related to leaking intelligence and theft of public records.

 

Source: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-16009062

Obama and the War Criminals

The Republicans and Democrats play for the same team. It is all window dressing to keep us divided cheering for our ‘Red’ team or our ‘Blue’ team when in reality, they are of the same cloth. There is no change. It is the same basic message only it is now delivered with a new eloquence. If we are to put our wedge issues aside and listen to our conscience to what is just, what is right and if we are to judge a tree by the fruit it bears we can clearly see that our government is rotting on the branch. The players of each team will never enact any accountability on each other. The people of this country must demand it.

Visit: https://www.puppetgov.com

Music by: Trillion/Jody Lloyd
https://www.trillion.co.nz/

Dan Rather Says ‘Big Money Owns Everything … Including the News’

In a recent speech, Dan Rather, once one of the few voices trusted to moderate our in-home information supply, called the current state of the news business “upside down and backwards.”

Inspired by Occupy Wall Street, Rather issued a call to get back to proper journalism, and he suggested that the job would fall to independent journalists.

 

Source: https://illuminate.new.newsvine.com/_news/2011/12/02/9169588-dan-rather-says-big-money-owns-everything-including-the-news

Foreclosure Fraud Whistleblower Found Dead

Tracy Lawrence, a 43-year-old notary who blew the whistle on the immense robo-signing scandal was found dead in her home on Monday morning after failing to appear in court.

Lawrence had plead guilty to one count of notary fraud last Monday after coming forward earlier this month and confessing to notarizing roughly 25,000 documents in a fraudulent foreclosure scheme.

The Los Angeles Times reported that Lawrence admitted to notarizing the documents for a Florida-based company used by most major banks to process home repossessions called LenderProcessing Services.

After Lawrence did not show up in court at 8:30 AM Monday for her sentencing hearing and her attorney did not speak to her for over an hour, the Senior Deputy Attorney General, Robert Giunta requested a bench warrant.

The judge denied Giunta’s request for a warrant for Lawrence’s arrest but after her lawyer voiced concern over Lawrence’s wellbeing, police were dispatched to Lawrence’s home.

Police then discovered Lawrence’s body in her home. Las Vegas Metro Homicide Detectives are now working the case.

According to local Las Vegas NBC affiliate KSNV MyNews3, it is currently unclear if Lawrence’s death was the result of a suicide or if it was due to natural causes.

Yesterday, Las Vegas Homicide Detectives said that they had ruled out homicide as a possible cause of death.

Gary Trafford and Geraldine Sheppard, title officers living in California, are allegedly responsible for the so-called robo-signing scheme which involved forging signatures on notices of default numbering in the tens of thousands between the years of 2005 and 2008.

Nevada’s Attorney General is negotiating the terms of surrender for Trafford and Shepard who are expected to surrender at some point in December.

A major red flag is raised in this case when one considers the fact that Lawrence’s charge of one count of notarizing the signature of a person not in her presence carries a sentence of up to one year of jail and a fine of up to $2,000.

Compare this with the indictments against Trafford and Sheppard which are 606 counts of offering false instruments for recording, false certification on certain instruments and notarization of the signature of a person not in the presence of a notary public.

Unless Lawrence was depressed or otherwise psychologically unstable, suicide seems like a highly unlikely explanation, although so few details have been released that it is impossible to tell and anything is pure speculation at this point.

Lender Processing Services acknowledged that the signing protocol on some of the documents was flawed and President and CEO Hugh Harris stated in an official press release dated November 17th, “I am deeply committed to ensuring that LPS meets rigorous standards of professional conduct and operating excellence.”

“I have full confidence in the ability of our leadership team and over 8,000 dedicated employees to deliver on that commitment,” Harris added.

Despite decreases in foreclosure rates, as of mid-September Nevada continued to lead the nation in foreclosures according to RealtyTrac’s U.S. Foreclosure Market Report.

In August, one in every 118 properties in Nevada was under foreclosure and August was the 56thstraight month that Nevada has dominated the top of the national list.

While it would be overly speculative to think that Lawrence’s death could have involved foul play, especially given the fact that Homicide Detectives ruled it out, I don’t think one would be illogical in questioning the legitimacy of these reports.

We all know that police can find suicide and rule out homicide in some seemingly ridiculous situations, so nothing is truly off the table.

 

Source: https://www.activistpost.com/2011/12/foreclosure-fraud-whistleblower-found.html