Friday, July 9, 2010

Justice Department whistleblower alleging racial bias, corruption, testifies today (shocking video)

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Former Justice Department attorney, J. Christian Adams, will testify today before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, as to why the department dropped a case against the Black Panthers, in what some have called the most clear case of voter intimidation since the Civil Rights era.

Adams, who resigned last month over the case, claims it was dropped for purely racial reasons, alleging bias and corruption.

Last year, Attorney General Eric Holder dropped charges against three Black Panthers, who were caught on video, trying to intimidate voters outside of a Philadelphia polling location on Election Day 2008.

The three, Minister King Samir Shabazz, Malik Zulu Shabazz and Jerry Jackson were all charged during the final days of the Bush administration with violating the Voting Rights Act by using coercion, threats and intimidation.

Shabazz held a nightstick, pointing it at people. Prosecutors said he “supports racially motivated violence against non-blacks and Jews.”

Charges were brought against the Black Panthers by the Bush administration. However, the Obama administration dropped them in May 2009, settling instead, for an agreement with Shabazz to not carry a “deadly weapon” into or near a polling place until 2012.

The Justice Department actually bragged about the action.

At the time of the incident, poll watcher Bartle Bull provided a sworn affidavit to the crime saying: “I watched the two uniformed men confront voters and attempt to intimidate voters. They were positioned in a location that forced every voter to pass in close proximity to them. The weapon was openly displayed and brandished in plain sight of voters.”

Bull also claimed that the Black Panthers tried to "interfere with the work of other poll observers ... whom the uniformed men apparently believed did not share their preferences politically.” He said that one of the black panthers told a white poll worker “you are about to be ruled by the black man, cracker.”

Recently, Bull spoke out on the event again, telling Fox News: “I find it deeply offensive. I know people who died over these issues, like Bobby Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr. If we can't defend their legacy, it's shameful to us and this administration.”

He continued: “If Americans can't vote honestly, and the government doesn't protect their right to vote, we don't live in a democracy. Last year Obama complained when the government in Afghanistan did not run the election properly. What about Pennsylvania?”

In not prosecuting the Black Panthers, Bull says Obama “violated his oath of office.”

It should be noted that Bartle Bull, a longtime Democrat, was a civil rights lawyer in the 1960’s as well as a campaign manager for Robert F. Kennedy.

In June 2009, during testimony before a Senate panel considering new hate crimes legislation, Attorney General Eric Holder clearly suggested that any new laws passed would only apply to non-white victims. When Sen. Jeff Sessions pressed Holder into saying exactly who would be protected under such laws, Holder gave his opinion that only those who have been subjected to “the unfortunate history of our nation,” should receive the added protection.


 


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