![]() 010 10-04-19 Definitive New Evidence Produced of Los Angeles False Imprisonment of Richard FineRichard Fine, 70 yo former US Prosecutor is held under solitary confinement in a hospital room in Los Angeles for over a year, under false claim of conviction for Contempt. Fine expose and denounced taking of "not permitted" payments by judges.
By: Human Rights Alert, NGO An October 28, 2009 letter [3] by Court Counsel Frederick Bennett to Dr Zernik claimed that the microfilm judgment archive served, since 1974, as the effective Book of Judgment at the Los Angeles Superior Court. Entry of any judgment of the Court into a Book of Judgment was required by California law to make the judgment effectual for any purpose. The Court Counsels letter came in response to a series of September-October 2009 letters, [4] in which Dr Zernik noticed the Los Angeles Superior Court Presiding Judge Charles McCoy, and Clerk of the Court John A Clarke, of alleged widespread wrongdoing in the operations of the Los Angeles Superior Court. Already in 2008 complaint filed with FBI and then US Attorney General Michael Mukasey, Dr Zernik alleged that a key to enabling alleged widespread perversion of justice at the Los Angeles Superior Court was the failure of the Court, for over a quarter century to publish honest Local Rules of Court, in which the Due Process procedures employed by the Court for Entry of Judgment were explicitly and honestly stated. In his October 2009 notices to Presiding Judge McCoy, Dr Zernik provided a list of cases as examples of the alleged wrongdoing. The false March 4, 2009 Judgment for Contempt RE: Fine in Marina v LA County (BS109420) was alleged as an instrument for the perpetration of false imprisonment on Fine. Also listed were two false Judgments by Justice James A Richman in Sturgeon v Los Angeles County (BC351286) - a case that held in the balance the prospect of any future honest court services in Los Angeles County for years to come. Two other cases were listed - Galdjie v Darwish (SC052737) and Samaan v Zernik (SC087400) in which false judgments were instruments for opined or alleged real estate fraud by judges and attorneys under the guise of civil litigations. In his 2009 notices, Dr Zernik requested that Presiding Judge McCoy initiate corrective actions, including, but not limited to the disclosure of the true Local Rules of Court in re: Entry of Judgment, and publication of such rules, as required by law. The October 28, 2009 response by Court Counsel Bennett claimed that the entry in the microfilm judgment archive substituted since 1974 the use of the traditional paper-based Books of Judgments. However, to this date, the Local Rules of Court were never updated to reflect such key procedures. In the April 16, 2010 visit to the Courts microfilm judgment archives, [2] a total of nine judgments and/or appealable orders were searched from the cases which were listed in Dr Zerniks 2009 letters. The searches were conducted by a clerk offices staff member and the supervisor of the judgment microfilm archive in Dr Zerniks presence. Only one of the nine records was found entered in the microfilm records June 2, 2008 Judgment by Judge David Yaffe in Marina v LA County (BS109420) pertaining to the petition for injunction regarding development in Marina del Rey. None of the other records was found entered in the microfilm judgment archives of the Court. Such findings provided conclusive evidence that there was no valid and effectual record to provide the legal foundation for the holding of Fine by the Sheriff. Therefore, Zernik requested in his papers that the US Supreme Court find that Fine was entitled to his immediate release. The corruption alleged by Dr Zernik extended far beyond the Los Angeles Superior Court. The cases, which were subject of Dr Zerniks investigation, involved actions by California Courts of Appeals. Such appeals from judgments, which had never been entered, was alleged as founded in fraud as well. Moreover, Dr Zernik noted that in review of the public access systems of the California Court of Appeals, none of the Districts provided any field for recording the Date of Entry of Judgment data, which was critical for establishing the validity and timeliness of any appeal. Furthermore, Dr Zernik noted, that California Chief1 Justice Ronald George served in various leadership positions in the Los Angeles County Superior Court during the years in which the Court failed to publish honest Local Rules of Court pertaining to Entry of Judgment. Accordingly, in papers submitted on April 18, 2010 on behalf of Human Rights Alert to the United Nations and the US State Department, [5] widespread corruption and racketeering in the justice system were alleged as the cause of widespread abuse of the Human Rights of the 10 million residents of Los Angeles County, California. Dr Zernik called for international monitoring of the California and the US justice systems. Absent international monitoring, Dr Zernik opined that it was unlikely that any improvement would be likely in the justice system and the Human Rights conditions of the people of Los Angeles County, California. Dr Zerniks submission was part of the pending November 2010 first ever review of the Human Rights record of the US by the United Nations. The case of Fine v Sheriff (09-A827) is scheduled for conference of the US Supreme Court on April 23, 2010. LINKS: [1] April 18, 2010 Dr Zerniks amended papers served on parties in Fine v Sheriff (09-A827) http://www.scribd.com/ http://www.scribd.com/ http://www.scribd.com/ http://www.scribd.com/ http://www.scribd.com/ [2] Zernik Declaration regarding April 16, 2010 visit to the microfilm judgment archives of the Los Angeles Superior Court: http://www.scribd.com/ [3] October 28, 2009 letter by Court Counsel Bennett to Zernik, in response to the October 16, 2009 letters to Presiding Judge McCoy, stating that the microfilm archive served as an equivalent of Books of Judgments. http://www.scribd.com/ [4] October 16, 2009 letters by Dr Zernik to Presiding Judge McCoy, alleging criminality in court operations, and requesting disclosure of Local Rules of Court in re: Entry of Judgment into Judgment Books, as required by law. http://www.scribd.com/ [5] April 18, 2010 Human Rights Alert submission for the 2010 UPR (Universal Periodic Review) of the US by the United Nations. http://www.scribd.com/ http://www.scribd.com/ # # # Human Rights Alert, a Los Angeles County, California, NGO, is committed to monitoring Human Rights violations by the US government, and reporting such violations, including, but not limited to the 2010 Universal Periodic Review of the US by the UN. 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