Speaking as one who did not support Joe Biernat for reelection, I have
not been overly impressed so far by the seriousness of the charges
against Joe Biernat.  $2,700 in free services?  Let's see, some stores
triple the cost of the products they sell.  If such a markup prevailed
here it would be $900 of service, marked up to retail value of $2,700. 
$900.  Is this in the felony range?  (I'm asking.  I don't know.)

And then the article in the Stribe today talks about mail fraud, because
a union official sent a false invoice through the mails.  (Memo to
padded-billers: use FedEx.)  Seems like a stretch to me, like making a
robbery a federal case if Tom Thumb robber fled on federal highway
I-35.  (Hummm.  Maybe if US currency is involved in a payoff then it is
automatically a federal case.  Memo to politicians--take payoffs in
liras or fracs.)

Anyway, this case, at least as it pertains to Joe Biernat, hasn't seemed
too strong.  Can they show the appointment to the Examining Board was a
quid pro quo?  It's probably as likely Joe was pro-union and felt this
guy fit the bill for the Board job.  Did Joe know anyone was being paid
for the work done on his house--or could it have been friends helping
friends, or doing each other favors.  

I know people who help each other out, giving services at cost or for
free.  For free I helped a friend two days ago explore job postings on
the Internet, and I raked my wife's aunt's front yard a couple weeks ago
in Superior.  I know of people with trucks who plow their neighbors'
drives every time it snows.  I hate to see the criminalization of
friends helping friends (and acquientances).  I prefer to presume
innocence instead of guilt in an ambigious case.  

Maybe the feds have more on Joe than I am aware of.  But this case seems
to be limping.

I don't like it when the state has so many laws governing so many facets
of our lives that, in effect, all of us are guilty of something or
other, so it becomes the perogative of the people in power to decide who
they will prosecute and who they will leave alone (for now).

Alan Shilepsky
Downtown
libertarian statement--a country with too many laws is like a country
with no laws--in both cases those in power can decide the rules.
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