Wednesday, December 29, 2010

THE VERDICT IS IN ON LT. COL LAKEN - RULE OF LAW NO LONGER APPLIES

HE HAS DONE EVERY POSSIBLE AVENUE TO AVOID THE INEVITABLE BUT HIS PEERS WOULD RATHER NOT FOLLOW OUR LAWS IN PLACE  INSTEAD CHOOSES FOR A RATHER CONVENIENT RESOLUTION.

'We no longer have republic subservient to Constitution'

Officer: Lakin case is end of 'rule of law'

Cmdr. Charles Kerchner's legal case, handled by attorney Mario Apuzzo, alleged that Congress failed its constitutional duty to examine the legitimacy of a successful candidate during the Electoral College vetting process on Capitol Hill. The Supremes ultimately decided not to hear arguments, leaving standing a lower court's dismissal.


The judge in Lakin's case, Denise Lind, ordered that Lakin could not raise the issue of Obama's eligibility, could not seek through the discovery process evidence that would support him, could not bring in evidence to the trial and could not bring in the witnesses he sought.
The conviction, then, was set up before the panel of officers deliberated the question.
And that means, Kerchner warned, "we no longer have a rule of law and a constitutional republic subservient to the fundamental law of the land, the U.S. Constitution."


The circumstances are then, he said, that, "Not even statutory laws are being obeyed; not even regulations regarding congressional inquiries from soldiers are being obeyed. It's strictly to defend one man, a phony, a fraud, the usurper-in-chief, Obama. Our whole system of government, our whole culture has been corrupted and turned upside-down and completely rotted from the inside out to protect this man. All of our laws are being subverted and ignored because they know the answer: he's not eligible."


Lakin announced nearly a year ago that he would not deploy as per Obama's orders until his eligibility to issue such orders was verified. Lakin was stripped of his duties, then court-martialed and now is imprisoned in Ft. Leavenworth for six months.


Read more: Officer: Lakin verdict is end of 'rule of law' http://www.wnd.com/?pageId=245529#ixzz19Z1Cs3ez


See also: http://henrypatrick1736.blogspot.com/2010/11/remember-lt-col-terrence-terry-lakin.html

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