Roman Polansky RAPED Semantha Geimer Orally, Analy and Vaginally - TRAUMA for victim is so much that she wants it to be out of sight from her
Full Court Declaration of ROMAN POLANSKY http://www.netlexfrance.net/29/09/2009/roman-polanski-a-respected-fugitive-case-n%C2%B0-a-334139/ http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/polanskib12.html On Jun 26, 9:41 pm, small Pox <smallpox...@gmail.com> wrote: > How Non-Torah Zionist Rabbi Sholom Rubashkin, a former vice president > of Agriprocessors Inc became so rich and EARNED 27 years in JAIL ? > Most Jew Lawyers are LIARS !!! > > Former slaughterhouse exec gets 27 years for fraud > By MICHAEL J. CRUMB (AP) – 4 days ago > > CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa — A former Iowa kosher slaughterhouse executive was > sentenced Tuesday to 27 years in prison for financial fraud, a > sentence legal experts called severe but not necessarily surprising as > judges take tough stances on white-collar crime. > > Sholom Rubashkin, a former vice president of Agriprocessors Inc., also > was ordered to pay $27 million in restitution by Chief U.S. District > Court Judge Linda R. Reade, who had released a memorandum outlining > the sentence a day earlier. > > A jury convicted Rubashkin last fall of 86 federal financial fraud > charges. Defense attorney Guy Cook said he plans to appeal. About 100 > supporters gathered outside the courthouse Tuesday, some holding signs > reading "We want fair & equal justice." > > Prosecutors had sought a 25-year sentence, but called the slightly > longer punishment "entirely appropriate." > > "It is a lengthy sentence, but he earned it by everything he did," U.S > attorney spokesman Bob Teig said. > > Rubashkin oversaw the plant in Postville, Iowa, that gained attention > in 2008 after a large-scale immigration raid in which authorities > detained 389 illegal immigrants. The plant eventually filed for > bankruptcy and was later sold. > > After an investigation by a court-appointed trustee, prosecutors > alleged Rubashkin intentionally deceived the company's lender and > directed employees to create fake invoices in order to show St. Louis- > based First Bank the plant had more money flowing in than it did. Cook > tried to portray Rubashkin as a bumbling businessman who never even > read the loan agreement with First Bank. > > Rubashkin also faced 72 charges for allegedly allowing illegal > immigrants to work at the plant but Reade dismissed those charges and > a jury acquitted Rubashkin of state child labor charges earlier this > month. > > Stanford University law professor Robert Weisberg called Rubashkin's > 27-year sentence "dubious" even though severe sentences are > increasingly common in the wake of major fraud cases, such as that > against Enron. The energy company's 2001 collapse cost thousands of > jobs and billions of dollars. > > Weisberg contended Rubashkin's case does not rise to such a level. > > "I don't understand why it was a longer sentence than what the > prosecution asked for, especially when the prosecution asked for a > sentence that was already pretty severe," Weisberg said. > > But Robert Rigg, a law professor at Drake University in Des Moines, > said the slaughterhouse case is by no means small, "especially for > Iowa." > > He said the raid's economic impact and disruption the case caused in > Postville likely factored into Reade's sentencing. > > "There is a lot of collateral damage here and you can understand why a > judge would take the facts and the circumstances of the case as an > aggravating factor," Rigg said. > > Defense attorneys argue Reade improperly considered other factors, > such as the raid and immigration case, in sentencing for the fraud > conviction. The judge did not specifically address her reasoning for > the lengthy sentence, but her 52-page memorandum handed down Monday > leaned heavily on documents submitted by prosecutors. > > "Here, the record establishes Defendant committed an unprecedented > amount of criminal conduct which has not entered into the > determination of the advisory (sentencing) guidelines," Reade said. > > Teig agreed that information about illegal immigrants working at the > slaughterhouse was an integral part of the fraud investigation. > > "The jury found the defendant knew illegal immigrants were being > harbored at the plant and lied to the bank about that, so clearly it > was part of the fraud charges that the defendant was involved in the > hiring of illegal immigrants," Teig said. > > Rigg, the Drake professor, said he had tried cases before Reade when > she was a state court judge and called her a "stickler." He said she > is a "harsher sentencer than most," but not the most harsh he's seen. > > "Does she take a bite out of your client? Yes," Rigg said. "You better > be prepared if you go in asking Judge Reade for leniency. I would not > envy a lawyer who has to go in and argue a case before Judge Reade > that has a vast impact." > > Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list