Brennan Takes His Case to the Terror Zone

Nathan Brennan takes his case to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals despite knowing the systematic disregard and denial of appellant reviews.
By: L. O'Riley
 
March 22, 2009 - PRLog -- Brennan Takes His Case to the Terror Zone
Nathan Brennan pleads to the Fifth Circuit for Justice

By L. O'Riley


         March 22, 2009 Jackson, Mississippi -- In an ongoing saga regarding the prosecutorial misconduct of a federal judge in the case of U.S. v. Brennan, Nathan Brennan is taking his case to the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in New Orleans, Louisiana.
         On January 23, 2009, the federal district court of Jackson, Mississippi, misconstrued a pleading submitted by Nathan Brennan in a petition submitted in November, 2008. In February, again pleading ignorance after Brennan submitted a follow up motion in an attempt to clarify his claim; the district court chose to ignore the obvious while never addressing the actual claim.
         Brennan is now appealing to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. Unfortunately, Brennan may be going from the proverbial "frying pan into the fire" by turning to the higher court.
         The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has become notorious for simply allowing the Clerk, instead of the required 3 judge panel, to arbitrarily deny appeals presented by un-counseled and imprisoned litigants. This fact pinnacled on May 21, 2007, when 55-year old Jerold Peterson - a morally divested and ethically challenged federal Clerk for the Fifth Circuit - took his own life as an assumed result of the prejudicial conduct and unethical direction of Chief Judge Edward Dufresne, Jr. In a final note by Peterson, he constructively described the overwhelming guilt assumed relating to instructions from Dufresne to systematically disregard or deny appellant brief review of un-counseled federal prisoners.
         This tragedy should have awakened the moral conscience of the federal justice system. But upon review of Brennan's recent experience in the district court of Jackson, Mississippi, when the government checks prisoners in, regardless of civil rights, actual innocence or constitutional guarantees, it becomes increasingly less likely to find fairness or integrity that allows prisoners to check out.
         Brennan has been unlawfully prosecuted for issues that he was never charged. Judge Orinda Evans of the federal district court in Atlanta, Georgia, illegally and intentionally rendered a final Judgment that was vitiated upon the Clerk entering it into record. Brennan's family continues to pray for justice.

For more information about Nathan Brennan, visit the FaceBook Group Justice for Daddy. Support and protect your constitutional rights by supporting Nathan Brennan because the very next time, it could be you. To further show your support, contact the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) at msacluoffice@msaclu.org.
End



Like PRLog?
9K2K1K
Click to Share