It Was Johnson
Judeo Masonry is the vilest Satanic criminal organization there is.
Freemasonry's Connection To The Homosexual Movement
Albert Pike was a Freemason highly esteemed by fellow Masons. In honor of Pike they have erected a monument to him, named an Albert Pike Consistory after him, dedicated an imposing Masonic lodge to him (the Albert Pike Memorial Temple in Little Rock, Arkansas), and richly praised him in some of their books. Pike, who reached the highest level of Scottish Rite Freemasonry (the 33rd degree), was himself a prolific author of numerous works on Freemasonry. Various quotes from one of his books, Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry, probably Pike's magnum opus, will be featured in this composition.
(Note: Even though Pike is widely acknowledged to be the author of this book by both Masons and non-Masons alike, there is no mention of an author on the title page of the 1921 edition of the work I possess and from which I quote. Instead of an author's name, the page reads: "Prepared for the Supreme Council of the Thirty-Third Degree for the Southern Jurisdiction of the United States and Published by its Authority." The next page following the title page does contain these words: "Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1871, by Albert Pike, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.")
The esoteric all-male group known as Freemasonry (or Masonry) has been controversial for many many years, and has been connected to the homosexual movement for many years by a number of researchers.
"Why?" you may ask.
Like other esoteric groups and some fraternities, the Masons have secret doctrines and initiations. Now, as Pike mysteriously put it, Freemasonry "conceals its secrets from all except the Adepts and Sages, or the Elect, and uses false explanations and misinterpretations of its symbols to mislead those who deserve only to be misled; to conceal the Truth, which it calls Light, from them, and to draw them away from it. Truth is not for those who are unworthy or unable to receive it, or would pervert it."1
Instead of Masons explicitly spelling out their secrets, they only obliquely impart them. Pike states: "What the Chiefs of the Order really believed and taught, is indicated to the Adepts by the hints contained in the high degrees of Free-masonry."2 Pike again: "The symbols and ceremonies of Masonry have more than one meaning. They rather conceal than disclose the Truth. They hint it only."3 More: "We have hints, and not details,"4 "hints of the true objects and purposes of the Mysteries."5 (The "Mysteries" are secret Masonic "Truths" and secret initiatory rituals.)
Pike is wont to speaking in enigmas because he can only hint at Masonic secrets. Masons take oaths not to reveal the group's secrets.
Upper-level Masons even keep secrets from lower-level Masons. According to Pike, a lower-level Mason "is intentionally misled by false interpretations [of Masonic symbols]. It is not intended that he shall understand them [the symbols]; but it is intended that he shall imagine he understands them. Their true explication is reserved for the Adepts, the Princes of Masonry."6 Lower-level Masons are just dupes being used by the upper-level ones, the so-called "Princes of Masonry."
Now, to direct our attention to the connection between Masonry and homosexuality: Are Masons using their power and influence to try to spread homosexual "values"? In the following enigmatic words, Pike seems to be saying that Masons engage in homosexual oral sex. He states that an initiate "commemorates in sacramental observance this mysterious passion {homosexual}; and while partaking of the raw flesh of the victim {ritual canabalism of the murdered victim - since the days of the Black Mass in the 17th century French Court and even before that, a young child is the victim - the origin of this dates back to the Graeco-Roman/Graeco Egyptian "immaculate children" and their murder/sacrifice as well as a huge number of other examples throughout the ancient world including Moloch/Chemosh/Melkart-Hercules worship and Hermes Trismegistus phallic worship}, seems to be invigorated by a fresh draught from the fountain of universal life....Hence the significance of the phallus."7 As is his wont, Pike does not explain these words. For example, he does not spell out what he means by "this mysterious passion." But elsewhere in the book he twice notes that phallic worship is a part of their "Ancient Mysteries."8
Not only does homosexual sex apparently play a role in Masonry, but homosexual orgies evidently do too.
Pike, speaking in general of a newly initiated member, says: "he mingles with the crowd of Initiates, and, crowned with flowers, celebrates with them the holy orgies."9 Needless to say, Pike does not define "holy orgy." In at least two other locations in his book he mentions that orgies are associated with Masonic initiations.10
A noteworthy characteristic shared by Masonry and the homosexual movement, which points to a possible connection between the two, is the prevalence of sexist attitudes amongst the members of both groups.
(It is understandable that homosexuals can develop negative feelings for the opposite sex because every time a, say, male homosexual sees a woman he is reminded of his abnormality, of his impotency with women, of his heterophobia. Moreover, if, say, a male homosexual lets himself have warm feelings for a woman he may begin to wonder about his sexual identity. [One homosexual author, Dennis Altman, admits: "Undoubtedly for many homosexuals there is something threatening in the idea of intimacy with the other sex."11] Also, homosexuals clearly have little use for the opposite sex, generally speaking.
(For all those reasons, we should not be surprised to find sexist attitudes rampant amongst homosexuals. And indeed we do find that---though this fact is studiously ignored or censored by the dominant, pro-homosexual, biased, liberal media. Various lesbian and male homosexual authors have drawn attention to that sexism: e.g., lesbian authors Virginia E. Vida,12 Molly McGarry,13, and Lillian Faderman,14 plus male homosexual authors Simon LeVay,15 Martin Duberman,16 Dennis Altman,17 and Eric Marcus.18
(In 1997, two lesbian groups got so fed up with the sexist behavior of male homosexuals that they boycotted the North Side Gay and Lesbian Pride Parade in Chicago "because they say gay men among the spectators harassed them verbally and physically in the past,"19 as reported by a Chicago Sun-Times journalist, Ernest Tucker, in his article "Girlcott hits sexism at gay parade.")
Now to return to Masonry---which, we should keep in mind---is an all-male group, Pike provides serious evidence of organizational sexism in Masonry via these words: "The love of woman cannot die out; and it has a terrible and uncontrollable fate."20 As usual, he does not explain what he means by this startling statement (but the heterophobic meaning seems obvious enough).
Elsewhere he stated that "Christianity...gave to woman her proper rank and influence; it regulated domestic life."21
In some circles it is a common opinion, misguided or not, that Christianity, especially Catholicism, places women at a lower rank than men because women cannot become priests or bishops or cardinals or popes and because wives are supposed to be submissive or subordinate to their husbands, generally speaking.
In sum, while Pike does not explicitly declare that women are inferior to men, or that they are unworthy of love, he does seem to strongly hint at that, just like he strongly hints at other things.
Freemasonry is still a force in America and the world. The fact that this group is evidently biased against women (who cannot join the group) and biased in favor of homosexual relationships should not go unmentioned, and neither should the very real possibility that this group is using its influence to try to impose pro-homosexual "values" on the public.
We'll end this short essay with a quote from Masonic author Carl H. Claudy: "The real secrets of Masonry are never told, not even mouth to ear. For the real secret of Masonry is spoken to your heart, and from it to that of your brother [Mason]. Never the language made for tongue may speak it; it is uttered only in the language of the eye, in those manifestations of that love which a man has for his friend, which passeth all other loves, even that of woman."22 Note those last four words.
FOOTNOTES
1. Albert Pike, Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry (Richmond, VA: L.H. Jenkins, Inc., 1921), pp. 104-05.
2. Pike, p. 819.
3. Pike, p. 148.
4. Pike, p. 406.
5. Pike, p. 370.
6. Pike, p. 819.
7. Pike, p. 393.
8. Pike, pp. 427 and 656.
9. Pike, p. 403.
10. Pike, pp. 401 and 659.
11. Dennis Altman, The Homosexualization of America, the Americanization of the Homosexual (NY: St. Martin's Press, 1982), p. 222.
12. Virginia E. Vida, The New Our Right to Love, a Lesbian Resource Book (NY: Simon & Schuster, 1996), p. 125.
13. Molly McGarry and Fred Wasserman, Becoming Visible (NY: Penguin Studio, 1998), p. 186.
14. Lillian Faderman, Odd Girls and Twilight Lovers (NY: Columbia U Press, 1991), p. 212.
15. Simon LeVay, Queer Science (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 1996), p. 61.
16. Martin Duberman, About Time (NY: Gay Presses of New York, 1986), p. 336.
17. Altman, p. 222.
18. Eric Marcus, Making History (NY: Harper Collins Publishers, 1992), p. 265.
19. Ernest Tucker, "Girlcott hits sexism at gay parade," Chicago Sun-Times, June 14, 1997, p. 11.
20. Pike, pp. 93-4.
21. Pike, p. 541.
22. Carl H. Claudy (editor), Little Masonic Library (Richmond, VA: Macoy Publishing and Masonic Supply Co., Inc., 1977), Vol. 4 (of 5 Volumes), p. 22.
http://www.home60515.com/23.html
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Why Crooked Prosecutors and
Judges are Promoted in the Masonic Judicial System
It's simple. A crooked
judge is more likely not just to overlook the crimes of a fellow mason, but
also more likely to use his authority to railroad an innocent defendant under
the orders of a higher-ranking mason. Usually, it is done as a test of
loyalty, in exchange for advancement, or some other reward.
From The Chicago Tribune, January 14, 1999
Break rules, be promoted
When former prosecutors were
criticized by appeals courts for breaking the rules of a fair trial, their
careers weren't sidetracked. Instead they became judges.
By Ken Armstrong and Maurice
Possley
Tribune Staff Writers
January 14, 1999
As Cook County
prosecutors, Carol Pearce McCarthy, Kenneth Wadas and Patrick Quinn drew
scathing rebukes from the Illinois Appellate Court for failing to abide by the
rules designed to keep prosecutors honest and trials fair.
"Inexcusable," is
how the court described McCarthy's misconduct in one case. The state's lawyer
disciplinary agency agreed. It took the exceptional step of reprimanding her --
but in a way that kept her identity a secret.
"An insult to the court
and to the dignity of the trial bar," is what the court called Wadas'
trial tactics. Twice, reviewing courts suggested professional disciplinary
action might be in order to punish his conduct.
As for Quinn, the court
wrote "we can hardly imagine a more obfuscating attempt" to
characterize his misleading statements to a jury. Quinn prosecuted a sheriff's
deputy for official misconduct -- and committed misconduct himself by allowing
two witnesses to provide what he knew was misleading testimony, the appellate
court ruled.
Collectively, the three
prosecutors broke enough rules that nine defendants -- four convicted of murder
-- were granted new trials on appeal, according to court records.
But instead of having their
career prospects suffer, all three prosecutors prospered. They were promoted to
supervisor in the Cook
County state's attorney's
office. Then, on the same fall day in 1996, all three were elected
judges.
Wadas and McCarthy became
Cook County Circuit Court judges and are now responsible for enforcing the very
rules they sometimes violated. Quinn joined the Illinois Appellate Court -- the
court that reviews trial court proceedings.
Their path is well traveled.
A Tribune analysis of appellate rulings spanning the past two decades turned up
39 other Cook County prosecutors who also became
judges after cases they prosecuted were reversed because of misconduct.
That group includes former
prosecutors denounced for what the courts have deemed some of the worst kinds
of misconduct: failing to disclose evidence favorable to a defendant, allowing
witnesses to lie or discriminating against African-Americans during jury
selection.
More often, the misconduct
consisted of arguments or cross-examinations that violated a defendant's
constitutional rights. In many instances, those prosecutors who became judges
had only one reversal.
Other Cook
County prosecutors engaging in
misconduct have gone on to high-ranking positions in the Illinois attorney general's office or in
city government. Alexander Vroustouris landed his post as Chicago 's inspector general one month before
the courts threw out a murder conviction, ruling Vroustouris defied a judge's
order by making an improper argument the judge had specifically declared off
limits.
Those judges and
high-ranking state and municipal officials underscore a fundamental reason why
misconduct by prosecutors persists. In an environment where prosecutors recite
conviction rates like boxers touting won-loss records, the risks are negligible
for those who break the rules of a fair trial.
Winning a conviction can
accelerate a prosecutor's career, but getting rebuked on appeal will rarely
stall it, contributing to a culture that fosters misconduct. And the deterrents
that confront prosecutors are fearsome only in theory.
Here is what usually happens
when a prosecutor cheats:
Appellate courts uphold the
conviction, admonishing the prosecutor not to do it again. When a court does
overturn the conviction, it shields the prosecutor from embarrassment, omitting
his or her name from the opinion or releasing its ruling in a way that few eyes
ever see it.
In their rulings, appellate
justices sometimes urge lawyer disciplinary officials to punish prosecutors,
but such prompting is hollow. Courts have referred numerous prosecutors to the Illinois agency that
polices lawyers only to see investigative files get opened and closed with no
punishment levied, the Tribune found.
There is little threat of
financial penalties from a civil lawsuit because courts have granted
prosecutors immunity. Courts, though, have carved out narrow exceptions, and
some defendants have won settlements.
And only rarely are criminal
charges filed. Few prosecutors nationally have been indicted, and they were
acquitted or, at worst, convicted of a misdemeanor and fined. Three former DuPage County
prosecutors face trial next week on charges of framing former Death Row inmate
Rolando Cruz.
Shelter of anonymity
When Carol Pearce McCarthy
ran for Cook County judge in 1996, she won the
crucial endorsement of the local Democratic Party. For that, she could thank
Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley, who was once her boss as Cook County
state's attorney.
Daley sang McCarthy's
praises to his brother John, a Cook
County commissioner and a
member of the Democratic panel that slates judicial hopefuls, John Daley
recalled in an interview. McCarthy's former colleagues also lauded her, and
John Daley passed on those acclamations to the selection committee, calling
McCarthy an "outstanding" candidate.
John Daley didn't know that
appellate justices had previously expressed a dramatically different opinion of
McCarthy's work. Nor did he know that she was one of only two prosecutors
sanctioned for trial misconduct by the state's lawyer disciplinary agency,
going back to its creation in 1973.
And it would have been
difficult for him to make those discoveries. Disciplinary and court records
concerning McCarthy's conduct are layered in secrecy or buried in obscure
files. Ask disciplinary officials if McCarthy has ever been sanctioned, and
their rules prevent them from mentioning the reprimand that she received.
In 1982, McCarthy prosecuted
Willie Ray Jr. on a charge of murdering a man during a robbery at a takeout
restaurant. An eyewitness identified Ray as the killer, and two other
prosecution witnesses provided powerful corroborating evidence.
The prosecution's case
appeared to be stitched tight, but in the trial's closing act, McCarthy put on
a display that would later unravel the work of police, fellow prosecutors,
jurors and court personnel.
In her final argument,
McCarthy resorted to sly hints, unfounded accusations and misstatements of fact
and law, a court later determined. She impugned the defense attorney's
integrity and invited jurors to engage in improper speculation, intimating that
she possessed additional incriminating evidence.
"I wish I could give
you my file . . . but I'm not allowed to because that is the law,"
McCarthy told jurors.
The jury found Ray guilty,
but the verdict was overturned in 1984 by the Illinois Appellate Court, which
listed more than a half dozen ways that McCarthy committed misconduct.
"The prosecutor's
actions in this case read like a veritable hornbook of 'do nots,' " the
court wrote. ". . . The State's interest in a criminal prosecution is not
that it must win at all costs, but to assure that justice is done . .
."
Ray had to be tried again --
and again he was convicted.
Although the appellate court
was obviously upset with McCarthy, the court extended a standard courtesy that
sheltered her from embarrassment. Instead of mentioning her by name in its
opinion, the court referred to McCarthy only as "the
prosecutor."
The Illinois Attorney
Registration and Disciplinary Commission -- the Illinois Supreme Court agency
charged with policing lawyers -- followed up the appellate court's ruling with
its own investigation. In 1986, after McCarthy had already left the state's
attorney's office, the commission issued her a reprimand, its weakest
sanction.
At the time, reprimands were
issued confidentially. But the Tribune was able to determine McCarthy's
identity because the agency later issued a compendium of its private
disciplinary orders. Although all the names were removed, the Tribune matched
language from the reprimand order with the appellate ruling in the Ray case,
and an examination of the trial transcript identified McCarthy.
McCarthy declined requests
for an interview. When she appeared before the disciplinary commission, she
testified that she had insufficient time to prepare her argument. She told the
commission she believed the defense attorney's argument had been unfair and she
felt compelled to respond.
In its reprimand order, the
agency expressed wonder at the fact that McCarthy had received no internal
discipline within the state's attorney's office.
The Ray case was not the
first time the appellate court had criticized McCarthy for misconduct. A year
before Ray's conviction was reversed, the court threw out the armed robbery
convictions of two men because McCarthy and her trial partner violated the
trial judge's order forbidding them from using certain inadmissible
evidence.
In her final argument,
McCarthy disclosed the evidence to jurors and ignored the judge as he sustained
repeated defense objections and instructed jurors to disregard her words.
In reversing the
convictions, the appellate court took the unusual step of naming McCarthy but
issued the ruling in an unpublished order. Courts issue their rulings in
unpublished orders when they believe a case simply reiterates well-established
points of law. Unpublished orders are not included in law books or electronic
databases, although copies are placed in defendants' court files. Lawyer
disciplinary officials regularly read published opinions for indications of
misconduct, but not unpublished orders.
McCarthy left the office in
1984 and returned in 1987. In 1990, she was promoted to deputy chief of the
narcotics prosecutions bureau.
As a judge, she hears abuse
and neglect cases in Juvenile Court.
The misdeeds of other prosecutors
get shrouded in the same ways as McCarthy's.
Appellate courts rarely name
prosecutors or defense attorneys in their opinions, even when a lawyer is found
to have acted abominably. The granting of anonymity isn't mandated anywhere,
but instead stems from tradition and professional courtesy. The practice,
though, has generated some second-guessing within the ranks of reviewing
courts.
In a 1983 opinion, the U.S.
Supreme Court suggested identifying overzealous prosecutors as a way to
chastise them. Still, it rarely happens.
Ruth I. Abrams, a justice on
Massachusetts' highest court, has urged her colleagues to name prosecutors who
commit serious misconduct, citing the substantial costs shouldered by
taxpayers, victims and others when a case has to be retried. "We fail in
our duty to the public and the bar when we do not penalize publicly those
prosecutors who engage in egregious conduct," she wrote.
At the same time, the use of
unpublished orders has reached staggering levels. In 1996 and 1997, the most
recent years for which statistics are available, the Illinois Appellate Court
disposed of 91 percent of its criminal cases in unpublished orders.
The Tribune found eight
unpublished orders issued during the last 13 months in which Cook County
convictions were reversed because prosecutors violated the rules of a fair
trial. In two of them, prosecutors were found to have discriminated against
African-Americans during jury selection.
Moving on
In 1997, the Illinois
Appellate Court reversed the convictions in two separate cases prosecuted by
Patrick Quinn, finding that Quinn and his trial partners broke the rules of a
fair trial.
But by the time those
rulings were issued, Quinn had become a member of the appellate court
himself.
In 1994, Quinn, as an
assistant state's attorney, helped prosecute Umberto Perkins, a former Cook
County Jail guard accused of official misconduct for helping an inmate to
escape. Perkins was found guilty, but three years later the Illinois Appellate
Court reversed the convictions and assailed the prosecutors.
At trial, two prosecution
witnesses, both inmates when the escape occurred, denied receiving anything for
testifying against Perkins. In fact, the appeals court said, both had bargained
for and received reduced sentences -- a substantial benefit that could have
been used to challenge their credibility.
By not correcting testimony
that was either "substantially misleading or outright false," the
court wrote, Quinn and his trial partner violated Perkins' constitutional
rights by knowingly using perjured testimony to obtain his conviction.
Quinn did not participate in
the appellate decision.
"I have no comment on
the appellate court's ruling," Quinn said recently. "When the
appellate court speaks, it speaks."
The court's opinion didn't
name Quinn or the case's other prosecutor, Christopher Donnelly. And by the
time the opinion was issued, Donnelly had moved on as well.
In 1994, two months after
Perkins was convicted, Donnelly was elected a Cook County Circuit Court judge
and hears delinquency petitions in Juvenile Court.
In March 1997, just months
after Quinn became a judge, the appellate court reversed another defendant's
conviction for gun charges because Quinn had unfairly presented evidence
suggesting the defendant committed other crimes. The ruling was issued in an
unpublished order that didn't name Quinn.
A third case Quinn
prosecuted was reversed in 1990, while he was still a prosecutor. The appellate
court set aside a murder conviction because Quinn engaged in improper
cross-examination and final argument.
'An insult to the
court'
In October of 1983,
then-State's Atty. Richard M. Daley promoted Kenneth Wadas to chief of the
office's narcotics unit.
That probably wasn't what
the Illinois Appellate Court had in mind when, five months before, it called
Wadas' conduct "an insult to the court and to the dignity of the trial
bar," and suggested the possibility of disciplinary action.
Wadas, a former Marine who
served in Vietnam ,
drew severe criticism from the courts in 1983. Ultimately, he would be
investigated by the state's lawyer disciplinary agency for three cases that he
prosecuted.
But Wadas wasn't
disciplined, and his career didn't suffer. He did, though, learn his lesson and
vowed not to make the same mistakes again, Wadas said in a recent
interview.
In May of 1983, the Illinois
Appellate Court ruled on the appeal of Roland Shepard, who had been convicted
of attempted murder and other charges. Without naming Wadas, the court called
his tactics "reprehensible" and "ugly."
Wadas crossed the line that
forbids prosecutors from arguing with insults instead of evidence, calling
Shepard a "lying, raping, attempt-murdering dog," and saying police
"would have done us all a favor by killing him," the court declared.
Still, the court upheld
Shepard's convictions, ruling that the evidence of guilt was so overwhelming
that Wadas' misdeeds had to be considered what the courts call "harmless
error." Loath to condone Wadas' conduct, the court suggested there might
be a way to punish him.
"Perhaps some reports
to the Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission are required to
provide an antidote for this virulent condition," the court wrote.
Ruling in a different case
in December of 1983, U.S. District Judge Milton Shadur called Wadas' conduct
"outrageous." Wadas ran afoul while trying Gilbert Crist for
attempted murder by making improper attacks on Crist and Crist's attorney,
Shadur said. The judge threw out Crist's convictions and reported Wadas to
lawyer disciplinary officials. But a year later, a higher court reinstated
Crist's convictions, saying Shadur overstated any harm done by what the court
called Wadas' "questionable comments."
Also in December of 1983,
Robert Earl Wilson's convictions for rape and deviate sexual assault were
reversed by the Illinois Appellate Court based in part upon a finding that the
prosecutors committed misconduct while arguing the case. The opinion didn't
name him, but one of the prosecutors was Wadas, according to trial
transcripts.
Before those court rulings
condemning his tactics were issued, Wadas won murder convictions in March of
1983 against two brothers, Joseph and Kenneth Beringer. But four years later
the convictions were reversed.
The appeals court took Wadas
and his trial partner to task for "brazen misconduct," which included
destroying a key witness' credibility with unsubstantiated attacks and
impugning the defense attorney's integrity.
The Illinois Attorney
Registration and Disciplinary Commission investigated Wadas for the Shepard,
Crist and Beringer cases, Wadas said recently. And even though he wasn't
disciplined, the experience was gut-wrenching, he said.
"It's terrifying. My
stomach was in knots for months until those matters were resolved," he
said.
In some instances, Wadas
said, he believes he was whipsawed by a shift in how reviewing courts treat
different kinds of arguments that prosecutors use. He said tactics that once
had passed muster or received only faint criticism became grounds for
reversal.
Wadas said that any missteps
he made while prosecuting cases were unintentional. And he said he took care
not to repeat conduct that reviewing courts found objectionable.
Wadas went into private
practice in 1986, doing mostly criminal defense work. When he ran for judge in
1996, Wadas said he told the lawyer groups that screen judicial candidates
about the disciplinary commission investigations. They found him
qualified.
"I think they probably
took into consideration that people mellow with age and reach some balance in
their lives," said Wadas, who is 53.
Wadas currently presides
over cases in Criminal Court.
'Ministers of justice'
Reviewing courts have
referred prosecutors besides Wadas to Illinois '
lawyer disciplinary commission. None was sanctioned.
Among those referrals were
13 cases where a court named the prosecutor who committed misconduct in its
opinion then either sent its opinion to the disciplinary commission or
suggested it investigate, according to a Tribune review of appellate opinions
since 1973. But not one of those prosecutors was subsequently disciplined,
according to the commission's records.
Trial judges and defense
attorneys also have referred prosecutors to the disciplinary agency without the
referrals being made public, according to disciplinary officials.
The Tribune found more than
300 published rulings in the past two decades where a state conviction was
reversed because of misconduct by prosecutors. But only McCarthy and one other
prosecutor have been sanctioned for trial misconduct, according to agency
officials and records.
In 1987, a year after
McCarthy's private reprimand, Ray Garza was censured for personal attacks upon
a defense witness and defense lawyer in a Cook County
case he prosecuted, according to commission records.
Confidentiality rules
prohibit disciplinary commission officials from speaking about specific cases
unless the agency has found enough evidence to file a formal complaint of its
own.
Mary Robinson, the agency's
administrator, said the agency does summon some prosecutors before it each year
and issues what the commission calls a "station-house adjustment" --
the prosecutor acknowledges making a mistake and agrees not to do it again. In return,
no formal complaint is issued.
"You don't need to be
disbarred to be worried," Robinson said. "I think most people
seriously underestimate how worried lawyers are about any contact from (the
disciplinary commission). Just getting that (notification) letter is an onerous
experience for most lawyers."
Also, agency investigators
have sought complaints against some prosecutors but were overruled by the
agency's inquiry boards, the panels that authorize formal complaints, Robinson
said.
If some crucial fact is in
dispute -- and it's a prosecutor's word against somebody else's -- inquiry
board members tend to believe the prosecutors, Robinson said.
"Prosecutors are
ministers of justice," she said, "and they get some respect for
that."
Do it by the handbook
At the Cook County
state's attorney's office, administrators can not recall a single case where a
prosecutor has been dismissed for trial misconduct. Current State 's
Atty. Dick Devine said it hasn't happened during his tenure. Nor did it occur
on the watch of his predecessors dating back to 1980 -- Jack O'Malley, Cecil
Partee and Richard M. Daley, according to interviews with former
officials.
Devine, who was elected
state's attorney in 1996, said his office is aggressive in attempting to
prevent and combat prosecutorial misconduct.
He addresses all new
prosecutors, quoting from a 1935 U.S. Supreme Court decision that describes the
prosecutor's obligation to ensure that trials are fair.
His office, which spends
between $250,000 and $300,000 a year on training, requires prosecutors to
attend classes and seminars, an aide said. Each newly sworn prosecutor is given
a handbook on trial practices that draws the lines separating fair and foul.
And when a reviewing court reverses a conviction due to the prosecution's
misconduct, supervisors review the case with the assistants who tried it,
Devine said.
The office has a
disciplinary process that is "designed to be corrective rather than simply
punitive," according to a prepared statement from Devine, and it makes a
"clear distinction" between willful acts and those attributable to
"lack of experience, an error of judgment, a change in the law" or a
need for continuing legal education. An intentional act of misconduct is
grounds for dismissal, Devine said.
The office has other
sanctions, such as written warnings, demotions and suspensions. Citing
confidentiality rules, Devine would not say if prosecutors involved in specific
cases where misconduct was found received any discipline other than dismissal.
'Harmless error'
Courts do not throw out a
conviction if a prosecutor's misconduct is what they call "harmless
error."
Some kinds of misconduct
require automatic reversal, such as a finding that prosecutors discriminated
during jury selection. But for most kinds of misconduct, courts try to
determine if the conduct affected the trial's outcome or was harmless.
Between 1993 and 1997, there
were 167 published opinions in which the Illinois Appellate Court or Illinois
Supreme Court found that prosecutors committed some form of misconduct that
could be considered harmless. In 122 of those cases -- or nearly three out of
four times -- the reviewing court affirmed the conviction, holding that the
misconduct was "harmless," the Tribune found.
The misconduct has been as
serious as concealing evidence or as juvenile as name calling. Illinois courts have
upheld convictions when prosecutors have referred to a defendant as a
"mutant from Hell" or "Mr. Mentally Retarded;" to a defense
witness as "Miss One Hundred and Fifty Dollars an Opinion;" and to a
defense attorney in this way: "She may be small, and she may be a woman,
but she's a pretty dirty trial lawyer."
When they uphold convictions
despite misconduct, the courts often take great pains to stress that their
ruling doesn't mean they condone the prosecutor's behavior.
The court's conscience
In his 18 years on the
Illinois Appellate Court, Dom Rizzi struggled to rein in those prosecutors who
trampled upon defendants' rights. And he struggled to get other justices to
help.
"Too many prosecutors
are overzealous. Too many prosecutors are more interested in getting a conviction
rather than doing justice," he said recently.
Some lawyers considered
Rizzi the court's conscience, a bold and scholarly justice who was willing, on
occasion, to rule by what he thought the law should be, not what it was. Some
prosecutors, though, derided him as a lawyer with little experience in the
trenches of criminal court.
Over the years, Rizzi tried
repeatedly to get prosecutors to try cases fairly.
In some opinions he scolded
the prosecution with acid language. In some he mentioned prosecutors by name.
During oral argument, he sometimes asked prosecutors to relay the message to
their supervisors that the appellate court was getting fed up with certain
tactics.
When Rizzi detected a
troublesome pattern, he documented it. In one trial, prosecutors said they
couldn't provide the defense with tape-recorded police interviews of a witness
because they had lost the tape. By a 2-1 vote the court upheld the conviction,
but Rizzi dissented and listed 30 other Illinois
cases -- including 23 in Cook
County -- where evidence
had been lost or improperly destroyed by prosecutors and police.
"There appears to be a
black hole somewhere in the state's evidence vault so condensed that evidence
cannot be retrieved from its gravitational field," he wrote.
Rizzi frequently faulted
prosecutors for misconduct, and he also blamed trial judges and reviewing
courts for tolerating it.
Rizzi became particularly
incensed over what he said was a practice by prosecutors of systematically
excluding African-Americans from juries. Although considered unconstitutional,
the practice had flourished for decades because reviewing courts applied a test
from the U.S. Supreme Court that made it all but impossible to prove
discriminatory intent.
So, in a 1982 case, Rizzi
boldly fashioned a new test and decided prosecutors had flunked it. The
Illinois Supreme Court slapped him down, but four years later, the nation's
highest court abandoned its old analytical framework for one like
Rizzi's.
"The U.S. Supreme Court
should be ashamed of itself for having tolerated that policy for so long a
period of time -- and the Illinois Supreme Court also," Rizzi said.
Rizzi also bristles at other
ways in which he believes reviewing courts fail to deter misconduct by
prosecutors. Too often, he said, courts document misconduct in unpublished
orders or treat misconduct as harmless error.
"If you do not reverse
the conviction where there is prosecutorial misconduct," he said,
"there is virtually no way you can be assured that the conduct will not
repeat itself in other cases."
Rizzi retired from the
appellate court in 1996 -- the same year that McCarthy, Wadas and Quinn won
election to the bench.
·
Next
·
Up
Judeo Masonry is the vilest Satanic criminal organization there is.
Freemasonry's Connection To The Homosexual Movement
Albert Pike was a Freemason highly esteemed by fellow Masons. In honor of Pike they have erected a monument to him, named an Albert Pike Consistory after him, dedicated an imposing Masonic lodge to him (the Albert Pike Memorial Temple in Little Rock, Arkansas), and richly praised him in some of their books. Pike, who reached the highest level of Scottish Rite Freemasonry (the 33rd degree), was himself a prolific author of numerous works on Freemasonry. Various quotes from one of his books, Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry, probably Pike's magnum opus, will be featured in this composition.
(Note: Even though Pike is widely acknowledged to be the author of this book by both Masons and non-Masons alike, there is no mention of an author on the title page of the 1921 edition of the work I possess and from which I quote. Instead of an author's name, the page reads: "Prepared for the Supreme Council of the Thirty-Third Degree for the Southern Jurisdiction of the United States and Published by its Authority." The next page following the title page does contain these words: "Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1871, by Albert Pike, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.")
The esoteric all-male group known as Freemasonry (or Masonry) has been controversial for many many years, and has been connected to the homosexual movement for many years by a number of researchers.
"Why?" you may ask.
Like other esoteric groups and some fraternities, the Masons have secret doctrines and initiations. Now, as Pike mysteriously put it, Freemasonry "conceals its secrets from all except the Adepts and Sages, or the Elect, and uses false explanations and misinterpretations of its symbols to mislead those who deserve only to be misled; to conceal the Truth, which it calls Light, from them, and to draw them away from it. Truth is not for those who are unworthy or unable to receive it, or would pervert it."1
Instead of Masons explicitly spelling out their secrets, they only obliquely impart them. Pike states: "What the Chiefs of the Order really believed and taught, is indicated to the Adepts by the hints contained in the high degrees of Free-masonry."2 Pike again: "The symbols and ceremonies of Masonry have more than one meaning. They rather conceal than disclose the Truth. They hint it only."3 More: "We have hints, and not details,"4 "hints of the true objects and purposes of the Mysteries."5 (The "Mysteries" are secret Masonic "Truths" and secret initiatory rituals.)
Pike is wont to speaking in enigmas because he can only hint at Masonic secrets. Masons take oaths not to reveal the group's secrets.
Upper-level Masons even keep secrets from lower-level Masons. According to Pike, a lower-level Mason "is intentionally misled by false interpretations [of Masonic symbols]. It is not intended that he shall understand them [the symbols]; but it is intended that he shall imagine he understands them. Their true explication is reserved for the Adepts, the Princes of Masonry."6 Lower-level Masons are just dupes being used by the upper-level ones, the so-called "Princes of Masonry."
Now, to direct our attention to the connection between Masonry and homosexuality: Are Masons using their power and influence to try to spread homosexual "values"? In the following enigmatic words, Pike seems to be saying that Masons engage in homosexual oral sex. He states that an initiate "commemorates in sacramental observance this mysterious passion {homosexual}; and while partaking of the raw flesh of the victim {ritual canabalism of the murdered victim - since the days of the Black Mass in the 17th century French Court and even before that, a young child is the victim - the origin of this dates back to the Graeco-Roman/Graeco Egyptian "immaculate children" and their murder/sacrifice as well as a huge number of other examples throughout the ancient world including Moloch/Chemosh/Melkart-Hercules worship and Hermes Trismegistus phallic worship}, seems to be invigorated by a fresh draught from the fountain of universal life....Hence the significance of the phallus."7 As is his wont, Pike does not explain these words. For example, he does not spell out what he means by "this mysterious passion." But elsewhere in the book he twice notes that phallic worship is a part of their "Ancient Mysteries."8
Not only does homosexual sex apparently play a role in Masonry, but homosexual orgies evidently do too.
Pike, speaking in general of a newly initiated member, says: "he mingles with the crowd of Initiates, and, crowned with flowers, celebrates with them the holy orgies."9 Needless to say, Pike does not define "holy orgy." In at least two other locations in his book he mentions that orgies are associated with Masonic initiations.10
A noteworthy characteristic shared by Masonry and the homosexual movement, which points to a possible connection between the two, is the prevalence of sexist attitudes amongst the members of both groups.
(It is understandable that homosexuals can develop negative feelings for the opposite sex because every time a, say, male homosexual sees a woman he is reminded of his abnormality, of his impotency with women, of his heterophobia. Moreover, if, say, a male homosexual lets himself have warm feelings for a woman he may begin to wonder about his sexual identity. [One homosexual author, Dennis Altman, admits: "Undoubtedly for many homosexuals there is something threatening in the idea of intimacy with the other sex."11] Also, homosexuals clearly have little use for the opposite sex, generally speaking.
(For all those reasons, we should not be surprised to find sexist attitudes rampant amongst homosexuals. And indeed we do find that---though this fact is studiously ignored or censored by the dominant, pro-homosexual, biased, liberal media. Various lesbian and male homosexual authors have drawn attention to that sexism: e.g., lesbian authors Virginia E. Vida,12 Molly McGarry,13, and Lillian Faderman,14 plus male homosexual authors Simon LeVay,15 Martin Duberman,16 Dennis Altman,17 and Eric Marcus.18
(In 1997, two lesbian groups got so fed up with the sexist behavior of male homosexuals that they boycotted the North Side Gay and Lesbian Pride Parade in Chicago "because they say gay men among the spectators harassed them verbally and physically in the past,"19 as reported by a Chicago Sun-Times journalist, Ernest Tucker, in his article "Girlcott hits sexism at gay parade.")
Now to return to Masonry---which, we should keep in mind---is an all-male group, Pike provides serious evidence of organizational sexism in Masonry via these words: "The love of woman cannot die out; and it has a terrible and uncontrollable fate."20 As usual, he does not explain what he means by this startling statement (but the heterophobic meaning seems obvious enough).
Elsewhere he stated that "Christianity...gave to woman her proper rank and influence; it regulated domestic life."21
In some circles it is a common opinion, misguided or not, that Christianity, especially Catholicism, places women at a lower rank than men because women cannot become priests or bishops or cardinals or popes and because wives are supposed to be submissive or subordinate to their husbands, generally speaking.
In sum, while Pike does not explicitly declare that women are inferior to men, or that they are unworthy of love, he does seem to strongly hint at that, just like he strongly hints at other things.
Freemasonry is still a force in America and the world. The fact that this group is evidently biased against women (who cannot join the group) and biased in favor of homosexual relationships should not go unmentioned, and neither should the very real possibility that this group is using its influence to try to impose pro-homosexual "values" on the public.
We'll end this short essay with a quote from Masonic author Carl H. Claudy: "The real secrets of Masonry are never told, not even mouth to ear. For the real secret of Masonry is spoken to your heart, and from it to that of your brother [Mason]. Never the language made for tongue may speak it; it is uttered only in the language of the eye, in those manifestations of that love which a man has for his friend, which passeth all other loves, even that of woman."22 Note those last four words.
FOOTNOTES
1. Albert Pike, Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry (Richmond, VA: L.H. Jenkins, Inc., 1921), pp. 104-05.
2. Pike, p. 819.
3. Pike, p. 148.
4. Pike, p. 406.
5. Pike, p. 370.
6. Pike, p. 819.
7. Pike, p. 393.
8. Pike, pp. 427 and 656.
9. Pike, p. 403.
10. Pike, pp. 401 and 659.
11. Dennis Altman, The Homosexualization of America, the Americanization of the Homosexual (NY: St. Martin's Press, 1982), p. 222.
12. Virginia E. Vida, The New Our Right to Love, a Lesbian Resource Book (NY: Simon & Schuster, 1996), p. 125.
13. Molly McGarry and Fred Wasserman, Becoming Visible (NY: Penguin Studio, 1998), p. 186.
14. Lillian Faderman, Odd Girls and Twilight Lovers (NY: Columbia U Press, 1991), p. 212.
15. Simon LeVay, Queer Science (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 1996), p. 61.
16. Martin Duberman, About Time (NY: Gay Presses of New York, 1986), p. 336.
17. Altman, p. 222.
18. Eric Marcus, Making History (NY: Harper Collins Publishers, 1992), p. 265.
19. Ernest Tucker, "Girlcott hits sexism at gay parade," Chicago Sun-Times, June 14, 1997, p. 11.
20. Pike, pp. 93-4.
21. Pike, p. 541.
22. Carl H. Claudy (editor), Little Masonic Library (Richmond, VA: Macoy Publishing and Masonic Supply Co., Inc., 1977), Vol. 4 (of 5 Volumes), p. 22.
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