SENATOR AL FRANKEN: CONSTITUTIONAL CON MAN

Lumi

LOKI
Forum Member
Aug 30, 2002
21,104
58
0
58
In the shadows
SENATOR AL FRANKEN: CONSTITUTIONAL CON MAN

THE NEW SENATOR FROM MINNESOTA BRAZENLY QUESTIONS THE GOVERNMENT?S SURVEILLANCE SUBTERFUGE BUT CAVES AT CRUNCH TIME.
by Nat Hentoff
From HUSTLER MAGAZINE March 2010

I was not a fan of Al Franken?s comic turns, much preferring those instigators who went deeper into our hypocrisies, namely Lenny Bruce, Dick Gregory and Richard Pryor. But Franken has suddenly begun his career in the U.S. Senate as a mentor on the Constitution?s rule of law?a dim memory, if that, for many of his colleagues.
To his surprise, and mine, Franken won a seat on the Senate Judiciary Committee even though he is not a lawyer. But unlike many lawyers in the Senate, Franken has deeply researched the largely un-American USA PATRIOT Act. Rushed into law soon after 9/11 before most members of Congress had a chance to even read it all, its draconian provisos remain almost entirely intact.
On September 29, 2009, David Kris?assistant attorney general of the Justice Department?s National Security Division?appeared before the Senate Judiciary Committee. Kris was pitching to renew a section of the PATRIOT Act that permits the FBI to obtain a warrant from the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which does not allow appeals from us mere citizens, thus totally repealing the Fourth Amendment in the Bill of Rights.
These are ?John Doe? warrants that do not denote the suspect?s name, nor the specific location of the phone, e-mail or any other device the suspect may use. It could also be a pay phone in any neighborhood.
If this unnamed suspect uses a phone in your office, a bar you frequent or a social club or nearby pay phone, the FBI tap on those phones will pick up all conversations, including yours. And these are national wiretaps; the FBI doesn?t have to get a warrant from any city or state jurisdiction. We?re all immediately covered. Neither President Obama nor his attorney general, Eric Holder, has expressed any objection to this torpedoing of the Fourth Amendment.
When the Justice Department?s David Kris was telling the Senate Judiciary Committee how vital these roving tools against terrorism are, Franken startled him and, I expect, most of the rest of the committee. The freshman senator announced that after taking his seat, he was given a copy of the Constitution?and by gum he actually read it!
Franken then read aloud the actual Fourth Amendment to the Justice Department official who had been extolling roving wiretaps: ?No warrants shall issue but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.?
Looking at this representative of our Justice Department, Franken said, ?That?s pretty explicit language.? So how can roving wiretaps be within the rule of law if they don?t particularly name the targeted suspect or the particular place to be tapped?
Assistant Attorney General David Kris fumbled and sputtered, ?This is surreal.?
It sure is! How many times since the Bill of Rights was ratified in 1791 has a member of Congress, an attorney general or a President asked a law-enforcement agent or a prosecutor to define any part of the Bill of Rights and then justify a law that turns the Founders? language upside down?
Senator Franken?s target, the man from the National Security Division, finally said that the courts had ruled that even if the FBI didn?t name the suspect or the particular place for the wiretap, a description of the target would satisfy the Constitution.
Think about that. Just a description? How many people resemble you in a general way? Height, hair color, posture, gait, skin color, age as far as can be guessed, attire, facial characteristics?
Franken?s question that seemed so ?surreal? to government lawyer Kris has deep roots in our history as a precipitating cause of the American Revolution. The Founding Fathers gave us the Fourth Amendment because King George III?s officers in the American colonies used what they called ?a general search warrant? to invade homes and offices without going to any court. The British king?s men wrote those warrants themselves.
When Samuel Adams and the Sons of Liberty sent details of the brutal abuses of these ?general warrants? around the colonies through the Committees of Correspondence (the Internet of the time), the cumulative outrage was a significant factor in igniting the American Revolution.
But little American history is now being taught in our schools, and there have been no rallies or marches in the streets by outraged citizens protesting roving wiretaps. Congress may eventually tweak roving wiretaps a trifle if a patriotic senator has taught American values to enough of his or her colleagues. But anyway, watch what you say on the phone or on the Internet.
But why doesn?t Washington?s elite press corps ask President Obama, who purportedly once taught Constitutional law, about using wiretaps and to define the stark differences between his disregard for the separation of powers, due process, torture practices, etc., and the commands of the Bill of Rights and the rest of the Constitution?
I?d suggest you write such questions directly to the President, but affixing your name to such critical messages comes with a caveat. You might well be put in a database the FBI employs to search for ?patterns,? possibly making you a ?person of interest? not only to the FBI but also to Homeland Security and state and local police. After all, we continue to live in an ever-expanding surveillance society.
But now, guess what? Al Franken finally voted to keep roving wiretaps unchanged in the PATRIOT Act bill that the Senate Judiciary Committee recently sent to the floor for further debate. So much for Franken?s Fourth Amendment principles! Whom can we believe these days?
??????????????
Nat Hentoff is a historian of the Constitution, a jazz critic and a columnist for the Village Voice and Free Inquiry. His incisive books include The First Freedom: The Tumultuous History of Free Speech in America ; Living the Bill of Rights ; and the forthcoming Is This America?
 

THE KOD

Registered
Forum Member
Nov 16, 2001
42,561
314
83
Victory Lane
Al Franken is just the kind of change we need in Washington.

He is logical and willing to state his beliefs to people that are in power.

I respect the guy
 

THE KOD

Registered
Forum Member
Nov 16, 2001
42,561
314
83
Victory Lane
Rome couple accused of $30 million Medicare and Medicaid fraud
ShareThisPrint E-mail By Alexis Stevens


The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

While residents in their nursing homes suffered, a Rome couple is accused of using more than $30 million worth of federal funds to buy real estate and fancy cars, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office.


George D. Houser, 62, and his wife, 46-year-old Rhonda Washington Houser, were arraigned Friday on charges of conspiring to defraud the Medicare and Georgia Medicaid programs. George Houser also faces charges for allegedly failing to pay payroll taxes to the IRS and file personal income tax returns.

"These defendants are charged with spending Medicare and Medicaid money to buy cars and real estate while nursing home residents went without basic necessities such as food and medicines," U.S. Attorney Sally Quillian Yates said in a statement.

Between 2004 and 2007, the Housers managed two nursing homes in Rome and one in Brunswick, according to information presented in court. Federal and state programs paid the Housers for nearly all of the expenses for the care of the approximately 300 residents in the homes, according to Patrick Crosby, spokesman for the attorney's office.

The Housers continued to submit claims for payments and they received them, according to testimony. But the care they provided to the nursing home residents was inadequate.

Examples of the inadequate care include insufficient staffing and failure to pay vendors for various services.

"They allegedly failed to repair washing machines and dryers, water heaters, air conditioners and a leaking roof," Crosby said.

Because of continuous food shortages in the nursing homes, employees -- whose own paychecks were bouncing -- spent their money to purchase bread, milk and other groceries, Crosby said. Meanwhile, the Housers purchased Mercedes-Benz automobiles and a $1.3 million house in Atlanta, according to the indictment.

The Georgia Department of Human Resources closed all three homes in 2007 after giving the nursing homes chances to correct problems.

Additionally, George Houser allegedly failed to pay at least $806,000 to the IRS for his payroll taxes, according to the indictment. He is also charged with failing to file personal income tax returns for 2004 and 2005.
...............................................................

This is the shit we have to stop.

taking advantage of people that need help is the lowest of the low.

How can these two sleep at night.
 
Last edited:

Lumi

LOKI
Forum Member
Aug 30, 2002
21,104
58
0
58
In the shadows
There is no doubt they should be covered with honey and staked down in the woods, but what does this have to do with Stuart Smalley?
 
Bet on MyBookie
Top