Thousands of U.S. judges who broke laws or oaths remained on the bench

In the past dozen years, state and local judges have repeatedly escaped public accountability for misdeeds that have victimized thousands. Nine of 10 kept their jobs, a Reuters investigation found – including an Alabama judge who unlawfully jailed hundreds of poor people, many of them Black, over traffic fines. By MICHAEL BERENS and Read More

QUICK EASY SHARE OPTIONS PRESS + FOR MORE

What does government do to good people who do the right thing?

What government and law enforcement do to good people who do the right thing? What happened to Robert Ledogar happens all over America when good people speak out about bad cops or corruption. Management and government use the same tactics against victims who seek justice against a broken corrupt system. The guilty assassinate their character, lie, destroy evidence and hide like cowards behind fake images like “Serving and Protecting”. Until Whistleblower law is followed and strictly enforced nothing will change in America. Until people who speak out about corruption are respected and treated as Heroes nothing changes. It’s no different than the protection laws in Probate court that are useless because dishonorable judges ignore law. No one should be above the law or immune to prosecution. Robert Ledogar is a paladin, a heroic champion, defender, and advocate of a noble cause. He lost his career because he rose and defended a fellow United States Marshal targeted for sexual harassment, physical assault, and discriminatory behavior in the workplace. Robert Ledogar was born in Queens, New York, to a young father who had gone to Vietnam and returned to work in the sanitation department in New York. His mother was a stay-at-home mother, and there was one other child in the household, Ledogar’s sister. There were also plenty of aunts and uncles around, and family was considered the most crucial aspect of their lives. Growing up, Ledogar was athletic and played baseball, football, and hockey. He was an average student, attending St. Virgilius and Monsignor McClancy High School. Robert Ledogar loved the Pittsburgh Steelers growing up, and he and his mom loved music. As a teenager, Ledogar was enthralled with Miami Vice on television. While he and his dad watched the television… Read More

QUICK EASY SHARE OPTIONS PRESS + FOR MORE