Thursday, October 05, 2017

War on Charlottesville’s Jason Kessler Continues: Politically Corrupt Virginia Prosecutors Seek to Imprison Him on Pathetic “Felony Perjury” Rap

By Nicholas Stix

Kevin Michael Grace just told me about this.

Jason Kessler got in a beef with a guy named James Taylor on January 23, when Kessler was getting signatures for a petition. The men cursed each other out, and Kessler, by his own admission, slugged Taylor.

Prosecutors then apparently coerced Kessler into copping a plea to simple, misdemeanor assault, under threat of his otherwise doing jail time. But as soon as he copped the plea, they upped the ante to “felony perjury,” for his original lie about what he had done to Taylor.

Kessler could get from one to ten years in prison, and a $2,500 fine, if convicted.

Here’s the problem: Blacks commit assault, assault and battery, and perjury with such frequency that if you prosecuted them the way the Albemarle County Commonwealth Attorney’s Office is prosecuting Jason Kessler, at least half of America’s blacks would be in jail or prison.

It’s not just that such a huge proportion of blacks routinely engage in violence, particularly against whites and Asians, but that “respectable” blacks routinely perjure themselves in the racist thugs’ defense. (I’ve experienced this first-hand from blacks.)

Grace brought up the O.J. Simpson murder trial. He’d seen the documentary, The People vs. O.J. Simpson.

It seems that Judge Lance Ito could have and should have declared a mistrial, based on all the black jurors who had perjured themselves during voir dire.

I was already familiar with one form of routine black juror candidate perjury. During voir dire in a death-penalty-eligible case, a prosecutor will ask each potential juror if he is willing, given certain circumstances (overwhelming aggravating circumstances vs. few or no mitigating circumstances) to vote for the death penalty. If a juror testifies that he is not willing to do so, then he is automatically excused from service.

Black potential jurors almost always testify that they are willing to vote for the death penalty, but almost always vote against it, no matter how gruesome the murder, even in mass and spree killings, but they are never prosecuted for perjury.

Grace recounted the cases of jurors who had denied that they had ever been involved in cases of domestic violence, and when caught lying, still denied it, asserting that since their boyfriend or husband hadn’t been prosecuted, it didn’t count.

This reminds me of the Midwestern lawyer who said that black witnesses being sued in civil cases routinely say whatever flies into their heads at any given moment. However, when it comes to helping out a brother, they tend to lie more consistently.

One Simpson juror, Lionel (Lon) Cryer, was a member of the cop-killing, terrorist group, the Black Panthers. (He’s always cited as a “former” member, but I don’t know what that means.) Before the verdict was read, Cryer smiled and winked at the Butcher of Brentwood, and as Cryer left after the verdict, he raised a Black Power fist in solidarity to Simpson.

And so, while blacks enjoy black privilege via de-policing and de-prosecuting, whites endure ever worse hyper-policing and hyper-prosecuting. As the case of working-class Jewish crime victim Bernard Goetz (who was prosecuted by corrupt, aristocratic, Jewish socialist Robert Morgenthau) reminds us, this has been going on for over 30 years.

Considering the violence that has been visited upon Alt-Right protesters and organizers by Communists and Anarchists, not to mention legal violence by prosecutors and the latter’s refusal to prosecute C/As,
Virginia prosecutors are clearly seeking to intimidate patriotic, pro-white forces into silence and acquiescence.

'Unite the Right' organizer Jason Kessler released on perjury charge

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (WHSV) —UPDATE (Oct. 4, 2017):

A day after the main organizer of the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville was arrested for felony perjury, he has been released on bond.

Jason Kessler made a brief appearance in Albemarle County Circuit Court Wednesday. A court clerk said he was released on bond.

Kessler did not immediately return calls seeking comment. Court records did not list an attorney for him.

The perjury charge stems from a sworn statement Kessler made in January, alleging he was punched while gathering signatures for a petition to remove a city councilman. Kessler later pleaded guilty to assaulting the man he accused.

"He and his buddy came over, they scribbled on my petition and vandalized it," said Kessler at the time. "James didn't want to have a conversation with me, he yelled you're a....and he called me a name. I felt threatened and I hit him to get him away from me."

Kessler planned the Aug. 12 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville. A woman was killed when a car plowed into a group of people at the rally, where white nationalists and counterprotesters clashed.
 


Jason Kessler, the organizer of the deadly Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, has been indicted by an Albemarle County grand jury on a felony perjury charge
 

According to court records, the charge stems from a sworn statement he made in January.

Kessler gave a statement to a magistrate on Jan. 23, 2017, claiming that he was assaulted by James Taylor on the Downtown Mall while trying to gather signatures for his petition to get Wes Bellamy removed from the Charlottesville City Council.

However, Kessler later pleaded guilty to assaulting Taylor and charges were dismissed against Taylor.

Kessler admitted to punching Taylor in the face after a confrontation over his petition.

"He and his buddy came over, they scribbled on my petition and vandalized it," said Kessler. "James didn't want to have a conversation with me, he yelled you're a....and he called me a name. I felt threatened and I hit him to get him away from me."

On the other hand, Taylor says he was simply killing time on the mall with his dog and a cup of coffee.

"He handed me his clipboard so I could read it and I handed it back to him," said Taylor. "I said what I said to him and he didn't like it."

Taylor and Kessler both say curse words were exchanged before Kessler punched Taylor in the face, busting his lip.

Kessler went on to say, "Man to man, yell in a man's face and expect to get punched in the face."

When asked in April about the dropped charges and his accusations of assault against Taylor, Kessler walked away from reporters.

"I'll admit that what I did was not legal," Kessler said earlier that day, though. "I was having a bad day. I've never done anything like this before and it will never happen again."

2 comments:

  1. It's the ol' squeeze."We don't want your kind around here."
    Sending him--and others sympathetic to his philosophical views on race--a message.
    Looks like the blacks and backers of blacks have won Charlottesville.
    --GR Anonymous

    ReplyDelete
  2. Selective prosecution with the intention of placing the man in prison where he can be assaulted and killed by hate filled negro inmates.

    ReplyDelete