Supreme Court Justice Thomas signals his vote on Landmark Decision on the Constitution
ATLANTA, Nov. 22, 2010 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- On November 18, Justice Clarence Thomas may have signaled how he will vote on actions filed by William M. Windsor that seek to stop what Windsor says is widespread corruption in the federal courts.
On a simple Application for a Stay (hold on proceedings in the lower courts until the Court rules on Windsor's petitions), Justice Thomas denied the Application (Docket No. 10-633). Perhaps Justice Thomas had some valid reason for such an order, but it consisted of one word: "denied."
Windsor says Justice Thomas violated The Supreme Court's own "law" in the 2009 decision in Corcoran v. Levenhagen. Justice Thomas erred in disposing of the action "without explanation of any sort."
Windsor had this comment: "I read this to indicate how Justice Thomas will vote. I believe he is likely to vote to allow the federal judges to continue to commit crimes and violate our Constitutional rights. I look forward to apologizing to him if he votes against the corruption!"
The U.S. Supreme Court will soon issue a landmark decision on whether federal judges can disregard the Constitution of the United States. The Supreme Court will consider these questions presented by Windsor:
- Will The Supreme Court declare that the Constitution and its amendments may be voided by federal judges?
- Should federal judges be stopped from committing illegal and corrupt acts to obstruct justice and inflict bias on litigants?
- Will The Supreme Court be afraid to disclose the corruption in the federal courts?
The accused judges are Judge Orinda D. Evans, Judge William S. Duffey, Judge Joel F. Dubina, Judge J.L. Edmondson, Judge Rosemary Barkett, Judge Edward Earl Carnes, Judge Frank M. Hull, Judge Stanley Marcus, and Judge William H. Pryor, Jr., The Supreme Court has given the accused judges until December 15, 2010 to file their response to Windsor's charges.
Windsor says: "I have found that federal judges operate like a police state in which they are all-powerful, committing criminal acts from their benches and violating the Constitutional rights of parties who have the misfortune of appearing in their courts. I have been contacted by people from all over the country who have experienced unbelievable judicial abuse. It's time for someone to clean up our federal courts."
On November 23 from 5 to 6 pm EST, Windsor will be interviewed on Katherine Albrecht's nationally-syndicated radio program. Hear it at www.katherinealbrecht.com. For more information, see www.LawlessAmerica.com.
SOURCE William M. Windsor
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