Modern Show Trials
On August 22, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal sentenced Jeremiah Munsen to four months in federal prison, to be followed by one year of supervised probation and 125 hours of community service, to be followed by five more years of unsupervised probation, after he accepted a plea bargain for committing a hate crime.
We Americans like to fancy ourselves protected from such "star chamber"-type tyranny. "It couldn't happen here."
Oh, but it could, and it did. Except for the reference to the "Canadian Human Rights Tribunal," everything in my opening paragraph is true. Jeremiah Munsen was subjected to a malicious prosecution in a U.S. federal kangaroo court, by Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division Grace Chung Becker, and U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Louisiana Donald W. Washington.
On September 20, 2007 in Alexandria, Louisiana, the then-18-year-old Munson, accompanied by an under-aged friend, drove past dozens of black supporters of the Jena race hoax, with two extension cord "nooses" hanging from the back of his pickup truck.
Yeah, that guy.
U.S. Attorney Washington piled on duplicate, unconstitutional and illegal felony and misdemeanor charges such that, had the penniless, despised Munsen fought them, he would have been summarily convicted on a "felony hate crime charge of conspiring to deprive the marchers of their civil rights by using a noose to intimidate the crowd," and sentenced to up to 11 years in prison. Washington and Becker thereby coerced Munson, in April, into making a guilty plea "to a misdemeanor federal hate crime of interrupting protesters' federal rights to travel."
1 comment:
Chung and Washington. I gather both minorities.
Post a Comment