Judges Hiding abuse for profit

Judge Les Hayes once sentenced a single mother to 496 days behind bars for failing to pay traffic tickets. The sentence was so stiff it exceeded the jail time Alabama allows for negligent homicide. Marquita Johnson, who was locked up in April 2012, says the impact of her time in jail endures today. Johnson’s three children were cast into foster care while she was incarcerated. One daughter was molested, state records show. Another was physically abused. “Judge Hayes took away my life and didn’t care how my children suffered,” said Johnson, now 36. “My girls will never be the same.” Fellow inmates found her sentence hard to believe. “They had a nickname for me: The Woman with All the Days,” Johnson said. “That’s what they called me: The Woman with All the Days. There were people who had committed real crimes who got out before me.” In 2016, the state agency that oversees judges charged Hayes with violating Alabama’s code of judicial conduct. According to the Judicial Inquiry Commission, Hayes broke state and federal laws by jailing Johnson and hundreds of other Montgomery residents too poor to pay fines. Among those jailed: a plumber struggling to make rent, a mother who skipped meals to cover the medical bills of her disabled son, and a hotel housekeeper working her way through college. Hayes, a judge since 2000, admitted in court documents to violating 10 different parts of the state’s judicial conduct code. One of the counts was a breach of a judge’s most essential duty: failing to “respect and comply with the law.” FULL STORY Read More

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Swedish Whistleblower Plans Hunger Strike Outside White House To Protest Global Financial Fraud

When an injustice is so massive, yet so concealed, it can drive anyone to madness. Most people can’t bear to face corruption head-on when the stakes are so high. But a Swedish financial insider named Victor X is sacrificing everything to uncover the truth. Is this man the key to exposing what could be the largest money laundering and financial fraud scheme in world history? Before becoming Victor X, he was Victor Carlstrom, a top money broker in Sweden. Although he rose up the ranks quickly, he was thrown down even further and faster. Carlstrom was effectively criminalized after raising concerns over suspicious financial activity in 2015. The numerous investigations for tax violations turned up nothing, but they were just the beginning. Death threats and even apparent assassination plots hit very close to home, even if home was a hotel room in a foreign country. After fleeing Sweden for the Netherlands, then relocating to the United Arab Emirates and finally the United States of America, his family could no longer take the constant runaway lifestyle hopping from hotel room to hotel room. He is now estranged from his ex-wife and their two kids. That’s why he dropped his last name in August 2020, a symbolic act signifying the great personal losses he endures to this day as a whistleblower against the elites he used to do business with. X may be on the rebound, however. He certainly is far from done fighting. His $4.2 billion RICO (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization Act) lawsuit against some of the biggest players in global finance is now before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, just one layer below the U.S. Supreme Court. It was first filed in December 2019 in… Read More

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