Cracking the Wall, Part 1
Defense Lawyers Lambaste Federal Taxes and Judicial/Prosecutorial
Misconduct
The Income Tax and Judicial & Prosecutorial Misconduct Panel delved
into the significant and on-going abuses of the federal Judiciary and
the Department of Justice in their goal of further sustaining the faltering
federal income tax fraud.
The panel consisted primarily of attorneys bringing forth details of
the constitutional abuses inside courtroom where the general public, as
well as grand and trial juries, are virtually ignorant of the acts of
tyranny perpetrated those entrusted to fairly execute our trials and prosecute
our criminals with fairness and Due Process.
A central topic to the several hour discussion was the recent criminal
tax trial of employer Dick Simkanin who was convicted in January, 2004
on 29 of 31 felony counts stemming from his justifiable decision to stop
withholding and filing.
Simkanin Attorney Arch McColl and constitutional attorney Larry Becraft
review the Simkanin and other criminal tax cases in detail and go into
extensive discussion of the how our government officials systemically
violate the public trust and deny Due Process in criminal tax trials and
what the People can do to thwart these abuses using education, preparation,
and well executed courtroom and legal tactics.
In short - this content of this panel should be required viewing for
anyone in the Truth-in-Taxation Movement and should be mandatory for anyone
engaged with directly confronting the IRS.
- Clay Conrad, Attorney and Chairman of the Fully Informed Jury Association
addressed the conference regarding jury nullification, and jury education.
He also prosecuted the Judicial Misconduct case against Texas federal
judge John McBryde who presided over employer Dick Simkanin's trial)
- Mark Lane, Attorney talked about his perceptions of the system's problems
and potential ways to improve the current judicial process.
- Attorney James Ostrowski, talked further about the abuses and internal
conflicts of interest inherent in our current state of judicial process.
- Paul Chappell, former IRS Office of Counsel attorney talked about
the Supreme Court's refusal to uphold the Constitution as related to
tax law, tax administration or the prosecution of tax crimes.
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