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I made this comment in [this Connecticut Politics Post]:
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What is happening in the Connecticut Judicial Branch and Legislature regarding the Gay Marriage issue show how well organized, well funded, and powerful their lobby really is.
I have attended a Judicial Hearing on the Judicial Branch. A Judicial Employee blew the whistle on felonies being committed within the branch. The public testimony was then sealed from the public, and she was retaliated against for just touching on the subject of judicial corruption:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=3535602784263432352Rep. Michael Lawlor is on the Judiciary Committee. He is an advocate for Gay Marriage. He does not seem to be an advocate for telling the truth and for helping victims of judicial misconduct:
http://thegetjusticecoalition.blogspot.com/2008/09/scourge-of-lying-lawyers.htmlThere is a hearing on Oversight of the Judiciary at the Legislature this coming Thursday, will Lawlor and others address this?:
http://judicialmisconduct.blogspot.com/2008/06/nepotism-and-corruption-in-connecticut.htmlThe same conditions that allowed “Gay Bashing”:
http://starkravingviking.blogspot.com/2006/11/blast-from-wwwfreespeechcom-past.html
within the ranks of the Connecticut State Police still exist. If they still treat each other this bad, we the people can get it even worse. What is Lawlor doing about that? Answer: nothing.
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CT News Junkie Post on the Gay Marriage issue [found here]
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Nepotism and Cronyism Central
[previous post] where the cat is out of the bag on the Connecticut Judiciary with comments in a newspaper forum showing up, and then, for some reason, getting deleted ...[click here] for the possible solution to the Connecticut public corruption in all 3 branches of government:
Connecticut Constitution Convention Campaign
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State's Probate Court Administrator Submits Resignation
By CHRISTOPHER KEATING And KIM MARTINEAU | Courant Staff Writers
July 15, 2008
Probate court administrator James J. Lawlor, who has been locked in trench warfare with the state's small-town probate judges for years, has lost his battle.
He submitted his resignation Monday in a heavily detailed, five-page letter that outlined his attempts to reform the state's 117 probate courts, which have been [more]
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[click here] for:
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