oped: Would someone please tell this 'Beauty School Dropout' there is no 'Sharia Law' in the United States of America...and that he is more than welcome to pack his bags and move to Saudi Arabia,Libya or Iran to practice his 7th Century Law! Just another Obama MB appointee akin to CIA Chief John Brennan
by: Jerome R. Corsi
The U.S. attorney who warned last week that “inflammatory speech” against Islam could violate civil-rights laws was the prosecutor who brought firearms charges against a Navy veteran who challenged the validity of President Obama’s birth certificate.
William Killian, the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Tennessee, made the warning in a slide presentation June 4 in Manchester, Tenn.
The Navy veteran, Darren Huff, came on the federal government’s radar
in 2010 when he and another Navy veteran living in Tennessee, Walt
Fitzpatrick, filed civil actions in court charging President Obama with
treason. The veterans claimed Obama assumed the presidency while
refusing to prove he was born in Hawaii by presenting to the American
public a 1961 original long-form Hawaii birth certificate that could be
independently authenticated by court-recognized document experts.
According to the Department of Justice website, Huff, on April 20, 2010, traveled from his home in Dallas, Ga., to Madisonville, Tenn., upset at the refusal of the grand jury in Monroe County, Tenn., to indict Obama for treason. He allegedly carried with him a .45 caliber handgun and an AK-47 with ammunition for both weapons and subsequently was arrested.
“Huff told people that day that he had 300-400 rounds of ammunition with the AK-47,” the DOJ website said. “During a traffic stop by a Tennessee State Trooper on his way to Madisonville, Huff stated, ‘I’ve got my .45 because ain’t no government official gonna go peacefully.’”
Huff was sentenced in U.S. District court to serve four years in prison following a criminal conviction for transporting firearms across state lines with the intent to cause a civil disorder. He currently has currently some 22 months of his prison sentence.
Sharon Rondeau, editor of The Post and Email, who has reported on the case since 2010, contends Huff was framed.
“Huff was stopped by the Tennessee state police trooper for allegedly running a stop sign on his way to Madisonville on April 20, 2010, and was allowed to continue on his way after locking his legally-owned firearms in his truck toolbox,” Rondeau argued in an email to WND.
“Huff arrived in Madisonville unarmed and had lunch at a restaurant, then returned home uneventfully. No one was arrested or named as having carried a gun into town that day. Surprisingly, he was arrested ten days later on two federal firearms charges. There has been no police footage showing that Huff was doing anything wrong. There were no plots or accomplices. It was all fabricated by the government.”
In a statement on the DOJ website, Killian explained the rationale for Huff’s conviction:
In a separate legal case, Fitzpatrick was convicted in a local court of tampering with government evidence by stealing a grand jury member list in December 2011. He was given a suspended sentence of 240 hours community service.
Rondeau asserts the charges against Fitzpatrick also were fabricated.
“Walt has five sworn and 12 total statements from eyewitnesses in Madisonville that day who said that no one was carrying guns, in direct contradiction to the FBI agent’s affidavit,” she said.
Subsequent to being convicted and sentenced, Fitzpatrick was notified he suffered a two-thirds cut in his Navy pension which his military representative claimed resulted from the IRS garnishing his checks, even though he never received an IRS request to pay back taxes.
Obots attack
Radical Obama supporters known by their critics as “Obots,” or “Obama Robots,” bragged that some of their colleagues had worked behind the scene to inflame the Huff case. The operatives fed to law enforcement authorities concerns that Fitzgerald and Huff were not patriotic veterans concerned about the Constitution, but right-wing radicals who aimed to incite armed rebellion or acts of violence against the government.
In June 2011, WND reported that William L. Bryan, posting under the username “PJ Foggy,” had created the pro-Obama website Fogbow.com. On the site, various Obots bragged that they promoted Obama birth certificate documents known to be fraudulent.
They also boasted they were responsible for having some 100 armed law enforcement officers, including FBI and DHS agents along with state and local police, present in Madisonville, Tenn., on April 20, 2010, prepared to imagine Fitzgerald and Huff were arriving to implement an armed insurrection.
P.J. Foggy posted on the Fogbow.com website a self-introduction in which he claimed, “We’re the ones who got more than 100 cops ready for Cdr. Walt Fitzpatrick, when he showed up on April 20 with a group of armed men who thought they’d take over the Monroe County courthouse.
Rondeau said Huff “was framed by an FBI agent’s affidavit which was based only on hearsay evidence emanating from unnamed Monroe County officials; by members of The Fogbow, who called in false threats to the Madisonville mayor that Huff had planned to ‘take over the courthouse’ on April 20, 2010; and a massive deployment of FBI, local police, sheriffs’ departments, TBI, a SWAT team and snipers present on April 20.”
She claimed a story was created “to justify Huff’s arrest and prosecution ten days after he uneventfully returned to his home following the hearing for Fitzpatrick.”
“Contrary to local and national media reports, no one was seen carrying a gun in Madisonville that day, and no one was approached by law enforcement or arrested,” she said. “While the FBI affidavit claimed that at least ‘a dozen’ people were carrying guns that day, none of them has ever been identified.”
The circumstances of Fitzpatrick’s arrest can be seen in a YouTube video indicating he was unarmed during the incident:
by: Jerome R. Corsi
The U.S. attorney who warned last week that “inflammatory speech” against Islam could violate civil-rights laws was the prosecutor who brought firearms charges against a Navy veteran who challenged the validity of President Obama’s birth certificate.
William Killian, the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Tennessee, made the warning in a slide presentation June 4 in Manchester, Tenn.
According to the Department of Justice website, Huff, on April 20, 2010, traveled from his home in Dallas, Ga., to Madisonville, Tenn., upset at the refusal of the grand jury in Monroe County, Tenn., to indict Obama for treason. He allegedly carried with him a .45 caliber handgun and an AK-47 with ammunition for both weapons and subsequently was arrested.
“Huff told people that day that he had 300-400 rounds of ammunition with the AK-47,” the DOJ website said. “During a traffic stop by a Tennessee State Trooper on his way to Madisonville, Huff stated, ‘I’ve got my .45 because ain’t no government official gonna go peacefully.’”
Huff was sentenced in U.S. District court to serve four years in prison following a criminal conviction for transporting firearms across state lines with the intent to cause a civil disorder. He currently has currently some 22 months of his prison sentence.
Sharon Rondeau, editor of The Post and Email, who has reported on the case since 2010, contends Huff was framed.
“Huff was stopped by the Tennessee state police trooper for allegedly running a stop sign on his way to Madisonville on April 20, 2010, and was allowed to continue on his way after locking his legally-owned firearms in his truck toolbox,” Rondeau argued in an email to WND.
“Huff arrived in Madisonville unarmed and had lunch at a restaurant, then returned home uneventfully. No one was arrested or named as having carried a gun into town that day. Surprisingly, he was arrested ten days later on two federal firearms charges. There has been no police footage showing that Huff was doing anything wrong. There were no plots or accomplices. It was all fabricated by the government.”
In a statement on the DOJ website, Killian explained the rationale for Huff’s conviction:
This sentence will send a strong message to those who attempt to take the law into their own hands. Under our federal Constitution and statutes Mr. Huff and others like him can talk or write about their anti-government views. They cannot arm themselves and make threats to arrest public officials and take over government buildings. The core of our democratic system is to allow peaceful protest, but prohibit armed threats to those who serve our government.
In a separate legal case, Fitzpatrick was convicted in a local court of tampering with government evidence by stealing a grand jury member list in December 2011. He was given a suspended sentence of 240 hours community service.
Rondeau asserts the charges against Fitzpatrick also were fabricated.
“Walt has five sworn and 12 total statements from eyewitnesses in Madisonville that day who said that no one was carrying guns, in direct contradiction to the FBI agent’s affidavit,” she said.
Subsequent to being convicted and sentenced, Fitzpatrick was notified he suffered a two-thirds cut in his Navy pension which his military representative claimed resulted from the IRS garnishing his checks, even though he never received an IRS request to pay back taxes.
Obots attack
Radical Obama supporters known by their critics as “Obots,” or “Obama Robots,” bragged that some of their colleagues had worked behind the scene to inflame the Huff case. The operatives fed to law enforcement authorities concerns that Fitzgerald and Huff were not patriotic veterans concerned about the Constitution, but right-wing radicals who aimed to incite armed rebellion or acts of violence against the government.
In June 2011, WND reported that William L. Bryan, posting under the username “PJ Foggy,” had created the pro-Obama website Fogbow.com. On the site, various Obots bragged that they promoted Obama birth certificate documents known to be fraudulent.
They also boasted they were responsible for having some 100 armed law enforcement officers, including FBI and DHS agents along with state and local police, present in Madisonville, Tenn., on April 20, 2010, prepared to imagine Fitzgerald and Huff were arriving to implement an armed insurrection.
P.J. Foggy posted on the Fogbow.com website a self-introduction in which he claimed, “We’re the ones who got more than 100 cops ready for Cdr. Walt Fitzpatrick, when he showed up on April 20 with a group of armed men who thought they’d take over the Monroe County courthouse.
Rondeau said Huff “was framed by an FBI agent’s affidavit which was based only on hearsay evidence emanating from unnamed Monroe County officials; by members of The Fogbow, who called in false threats to the Madisonville mayor that Huff had planned to ‘take over the courthouse’ on April 20, 2010; and a massive deployment of FBI, local police, sheriffs’ departments, TBI, a SWAT team and snipers present on April 20.”
She claimed a story was created “to justify Huff’s arrest and prosecution ten days after he uneventfully returned to his home following the hearing for Fitzpatrick.”
“Contrary to local and national media reports, no one was seen carrying a gun in Madisonville that day, and no one was approached by law enforcement or arrested,” she said. “While the FBI affidavit claimed that at least ‘a dozen’ people were carrying guns that day, none of them has ever been identified.”
The circumstances of Fitzpatrick’s arrest can be seen in a YouTube video indicating he was unarmed during the incident:
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