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Pura irresponsabilidade e barbárie judicial, nada mais!!!

MensagemEnviado: 5/6/2007 20:45
por JOGO2007LEPRECHAUN
Este caso Libby, que já se vinha arrastando há vários anos, é a actual contrapartida da "sharia" islâmica na brutal e totalmente esquizofrénica (in)Justiça norte-americana!!!

A inacreditável figura jurídica de "obstrução de justiça" permite agora, de forma "limpa e legal", condenar quem quer que seja e sob qualquer pretexto, quando as acusações iniciais se revelam falsas, inconsistentes ou impossíveis de provar. O vergonhoso - para a pseudo-justiça, claro! - caso Martha Stewart, é outro exemplo bem recente e caricato, excepto para os envolvidos que assim são imolados ao poder judicial absoluto, logo, inevitavelmente corrompido pela sua própria ausência de limites.

Um país que assim se comporta, numa orgia de brutalidade "legal" crescente e intocável, segue a passos largos as pisadas da decadência romana e do simulacro de justiça com que o Império de Roma manchou os seus últimos séculos de existência!

Pessoalmente, até sou adepto da "honestidade radical", tanto nas relações pessoais como nas institucionais... o mais possível ou quando possível... mas 30 meses de prisão por uma mentira por certo ultrapassa qualquer pena de Talião ou as mais inumana represália da dita medieval justiça islâmica!

É que aqui, não existe sequer simulacro da dita, já que os diversos casos anteriores comprovam a pura aldrabice destes pseudo-julgamentos onde se quer fazer crer que os ricos e poderosos são tão iguais perante a lei como os pobres! Serão?! Haverá algum cidadão anónimo condenado neste tipo de justicialismo primitivo e vingativo por mentir ou ocultar provas num inquérito judicial?!

I surely doubt it, e a patética "justificação" do juiz (?!) - create a problem, ó Meretíssimo?!?! - é a confirmação cabal da inexistência de qualquer motivo sério para mais este espezinhamento do conceito de legalidade na cada vez mais desacreditada e baralhada nação americana.

Felizmente, ainda há mecanismos que permitem reverter ou, no mínimo, protestar alto e em bom som contra estas patetices. E a Net tem sido um excelente meio de denúncia e combate a injustiças e tratamentos de desigualdade, sejam eles perpetrados nos ditos países do 1º, 2º ou 3º mundo... a ignorância não escolhe lugar para singrar!!!

Shame on this no-justice, that's all one can say!!!


PS: Ancient, very ancient and beautiful wisdom forever!!!

Throw away morality and justice,
and people will do the right thing.
Throw away industry and profit,
and there won't be any thieves.
[...]
When they lose their sense of awe,
people turn to religion.
When they no longer trust themselves,
they begin to depend upon authority.
[...]
When taxes are too high,
people go hungry.
When the government is too intrusive,
people lose their spirit.

Act for the people's benefit.
Trust them; leave them alone.


Lao Tzu - "Tao Te Ching"

Libby sentenced to 30 months in prison

MensagemEnviado: 5/6/2007 19:38
por Pata-Hari
Outro exemplo de algo que nunca aconteceria por cá. FOnte: cnn

Libby sentenced to 30 months in prison
POSTED: 1:55 p.m. EDT, June 5, 2007
Story Highlights• NEW: President Bush "feels terrible" about sentence, spokeswoman says
• Judge to rule next week on whether Libby can remain free during appeal
• Lewis Libby sentenced to 30 months in jail, $250,000 fine
• Libby was convicted in March of perjury, obstruction of justice


WASHINGTON (CNN) -- I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, former chief of staff to Vice President Dick Cheney, was sentenced Tuesday to 30 months in prison for lying to investigators looking into the leak of a CIA operative's identity.

He also was fined $250,000. Libby was convicted March 6 of four counts in a five-count indictment alleging perjury, obstruction of justice and making false statements to FBI investigators.

He plans to appeal the verdict. (Watch what led up to Libby's sentence )

Federal Judge Reggie Walton said he would make a decision next Tuesday on whether to allow Libby to remain free while his lawyers file an appeal.

CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin said that under federal sentencing guidelines, Libby -- if imprisoned -- must serve at least 80 percent of his sentence, or two years.

If the judge decides Libby must start serving his sentence, it could be 45 to 60 days before he must report to prison.

Libby, standing next to his wife, bowed his head when the sentences were read.

Neither Libby nor his attorneys spoke to reporters after leaving the courthouse.

A White House spokeswoman said President Bush "felt terrible" for Libby, his wife and children.

Deputy White House Press Secretary Dana Perino told reporters that because appeals are still pending, the White House would have no further comment.

President Bush "has not intervened so far in this," Perino said.

Aides informed Bush about the sentence on board Air Force One as he flew from the Czech Republic to Germany to attend the G8 summit.

The 30-month sentence was for the obstruction of justice charge. Libby received shorter sentences on the other counts, to run concurrently.

"People who occupy these types of positions, where they have the welfare and security of the nation in their hands, have a special obligation to not do anything that might create a problem," Walton said, according to The Associated Press.

Libby was found guilty in March of lying to investigators about what he told reporters about Valerie Plame, whose identity as a CIA operative was leaked to the media in 2003.

Libby has maintained his innocence ever since he was indicted and resigned in October 2005.

Libby spoke briefly before he was sentenced, telling the judge, "I realize fully that the court must decide my punishment. It is respectfully my hope that the court will consider, along with the jury verdict, my whole life."

Libby's wife, Harriet Grant, sat in the packed courtroom with conservative commentator Mary Matalin, a former Cheney aide, the AP said. (Watch CNN legal analyst on whether Libby will get a presidential pardon )

On Tuesday, the judge released dozens of letters written to him by Libby's supporters and detractors, including former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and former U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. John Bolton.

In one letter, Robert Blackwill, who served as presidential envoy to Iraq and in several other posts under President Bush, said he has known Libby for 20 years.

"During these years at the White House, I encountered no one more driven by analytical temperament, fairness of mind and sound policy reasoning than Scooter Libby," Blackwill said.

"Mr. Libby in my judgment has been, over the decades, an exemplary public policy practitioner."

Another person, whose signature was redacted, wrote, "I am writing to urge that Scooter Libby receive the maximum possible sentence. Due to the crimes for which he was convicted, we may never know of the more substantial criminal activities for which he served as a firewall."

The case involves statements Libby made to the FBI and a grand jury during their probe into how the covert identity of CIA operative Valerie Plame was leaked. Libby was the only person charged in the probe. He was not accused of actually leaking classified material.

Plame's name became public when Robert Novak named her in his column on July 14, 2003. Her husband, former ambassador Joseph Wilson, had openly questioned the Bush administration's basis for invading Iraq. (Timeline of key events in investigation)

Former Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage has admitted he disclosed the information to a reporter. Novak pointed to another "senior administration official" -- Bush political adviser Karl Rove -- as the second source for his column.

After the jury returned its verdict against Libby on March 6, lead defense attorney Ted Wells appeared on the courthouse steps with Libby and his other attorneys and declared, "We have every confidence Mr. Libby ultimately will be vindicated." Wells said he believes his client is "totally innocent and that he did not do anything wrong."

Cheney has continued to express support and empathy for his former chief of staff, and it's possible Libby could be granted a presidential pardon before the end of President Bush's term.

CNN's Paul Courson, Brianna Keilar and Brian Todd contributed to this report.