Move along, folks... Nothing to be found here.

"There's a pathology that society has to deal with. There are people who want to display their prowess in Internet technology -- but they screw up ... [big time."] ~Judge A. Howard Matz

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MAYDAY IN AMERICA! c c c
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Instead of being convicted for breaking a law, Americans are being tried for Breaking a "Theory."


My name is Steven Sutcliffe, A.K.A. killercop, I was convicted under a "theory," too. The theory is that 18 U.S.C. 1028(a) was legal. It was not. It wasn't even lawful.

 

Can you assist in over-turning my unjust and illegal conviction and sentence? I am innocent, no matter what the "defense" says about the facts of the case to the appeals judge.

 

He was another court jester who forcefully appointed to entertain the pervert.

 

He was just one of many conflicted attorneys within the district.

 

But we don't need an expert to explain that to you. Unless you are nutzzzzzz.

 

$PECIAL REWARD$ FOR THESE COP$

OUTSIDE IT'S AMERICA

A QUESTION FOR AMERICA:

Is "pretty good" pretty much like "pretty clear?" Because I'm "pretty sure" it is not.

I know, it's complex. (.pdf)

But then again, I'm officially nutzzzzzz, until certified un-nutzzzzzz in a competent court of the law. So I am waiting on the law, and the certificate required by the law.

STUPID DEMONS

But I'm no expert.(.pdf) Anyone see ours, yet? He has our certificate required by the law and I need it to be officially un-nutzzzzzz. And that's a fact!

Drew’s misdemeanor convictions for the violation of MySpace’s “terms of service” is a “Novel theory that renders millions Americans felons for their everyday conduct.”


12:13 PM | May 18, 2009

A Missouri mother convicted of committing a hoax on the social networking site MySpace that led to the suicide of a 13-year-old girl is scheduled to be sentenced this afternoon in federal court in downtown Los Angeles.

A jury convicted Lori Drew, 50, of three misdemeanor computer crimes last November, but deadlocked on a felony conspiracy charge that carried a sentence of up to 20 years in prison.

The mixed verdict was a blow to prosecutors in Los Angeles who indicted Drew on controversial legal grounds after prosecutors in Missouri declined to file criminal charges.

Drew became the object of widespread public criticism after the death of eighth-grader Megan Meier, a friend of Drew’s daughter.

Drew, her daughter, and an 18-year-old employee who worked for Drew used a fake profile of a teenage boy to flirt and communicate with Megan on-line via Beverly Hills-based MySpace. Megan hung herself with a belt after the fictitious boy sent her a message telling her “the world would be a better place without you.”

In court papers this month, prosecutors asked U.S. District judge George H. Wu to impose a sentence of three years, one year for each of the misdemeanor convictions.

They wrote that Drew deserved a harsher sentence than the probation office’s recommendation of probation because she knew of Megan’s history of depression and mental problems, attempted to cover up her crimes, and used minors in the crime.

Defense attorneys for Drew vehemently criticized the prosecution in court filings, calling the prosecution’s argument in seeking a three-year prison term “shocking” and “utterly absurd.”

Drew’s misdemeanor convictions for the violation of MySpace’s “terms of service” is a “novel theory that renders millions Americans felons for their everyday conduct,” attorney Dean Steward wrote.

The government has created a fiction that Lori Drew somehow caused [Megan]’s death, and it wants a long prison sentence to make its fiction seem real,” Steward wrote. “Fortunately, this is a court of law, not a television drama.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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