Supreme Court Hearing Concerning Alaska’s Judicial Corruption July 30th at Boney Courthouse in Anchorage AK

the right of the people
Supreme Court Hearing Concerning Alaska’s Judicial Corruption
ALASKANS PLEASE ATTEND! Alaska Grand Jurors Association appreciates all respectful guests in supporting this effort.
When? July 30 at Noon (concerned Alaskans will gather and wave signs outside at noon)
Where? Boney Courthouse, 5th Floor (303 L St. Anchorage, Ak)
Why? To hear Alaska’s judicial system try to explain how it was legal and constitutional for the Alaska
Supreme Court to issue SCO 1993 to suspend Grand Jury power to investigate and make recommendations concerning the public welfare and safety – when Article 1, Section 8 of Alaska’s Constitution states:
This apparent violation of Alaska’s Constitution is even more disturbing considering
these facts:
1. The Supreme Court issued SCO 1993 in the middle of a Kenai Grand Jury investigation into evidence that the Alaska Commission on Judicial Conduct (ACJC) and its sole judge investigator are falsifying official investigations to keep corrupt judges on the bench and ruling over We-The-People. (Clearly issues “concerning the public welfare or safety”.)
2. To issue SCO 1993, the Supreme Court bypassed the established and required oversight of its own Rules Committee, even after the Rules Committee protested that they could not be bypassed as SCO 1993 concerned “important and serious changes of a constitutional nature.” (See “SCO 1993” at alaskastateofcorruption.com)
3. After investigating for nearly two years, the Kenai Grand Jury indicted a former judge (who was directly implicated in corruption that the ACJC covered up) for lying to them under oath. But a sitting judge dismissed the indictment before the former judge could be brought to trial.
4. When the Kenai Grand Jury subpoenaed the ACJC’s only judge investigator since 1989, she refused to testify. As the ACJC gets about 20 complaints against judges per month, this means she has conducted approximately 8400 judge “investigations” so far. (See the evidence against the ACJC judge investigator at alaskastateofcorruption.com)
5. Over a year ago the Kenai Grand Jury issued a report and recommendation to the public about what they found – but Alaska’s judges refuse to let the public see the report and recommendation, and now the same judge who dismissed the indictment states that the public will never see the report and recommendation.
6. The “independent prosecutor” the Kenai Grand Jury hired to help them has confirmed the Kenai Grand Jury intended for the public to see their report and recommendation. (The “independent prosecutor” also stated the Kenai Grand Jury wanted to subpoena the Alaska Supreme Court to question them about SCO 1993 and the bypassing of Rules Committee oversight.)
Additional Proof Alaskan Grand Juries Have a Right to Expose Public Officials
“The power of grand juries to inquire into the willful misconduct in office of public officers, and to find indictments in connection therewith, shall never be suspended.” Alaska Constitutional Convention, December 15, 1955.
“The grand jury is preserved, for all purposes, particularly for investigation of public officials.” Alaska Constitutional Convention Commentary on the Preamble and the Declaration of Rights, December 15, 1955.
“The grand jury can be appealed to directly, which is an invaluable right to the citizen.” Alaska Constitutional Convention transcript page 1328.
“A citizen is at liberty to apply to the Grand Jury for permission to appear before it in order to suggest or urge that a certain situation should be investigated by it… a Grand Jury may investigate how officials are conducting their public trust.” Original Alaska Grand Jury Handbook
Conclusion
The missing Kenai Grand Jury report and recommendation may confirm that the Alaska Commission on Judicial Conduct and its investigator are falsifying official investigations to keep corrupt judges on the bench. It may expose that the Alaska Supreme Court corruptly tried to stop the Kenai Grand Jury. In other words, there may be a very compelling motive for Alaskan judges (including the justices on the Supreme Court) to make sure the public never sees the report and recommendation.
What corrupt judges can do: unjustly take children from parents; frame the innocent; rig trials; cover up crime by friends or family; allow unconstitutional PFD raids or allow Alaska’s capitol to remain in Juneau after two successful ballot initiatives to move it; etc.; etc.
The potential harm to the public is nearly beyond imagination.
Please join us before the Alaska Supreme Court on July 30 at 2 PM – to protest their unconstitutional suspension of Grand Jury power and to demand that We-The-People get to see the report and recommendation that the Kenai Grand Jury intended us to see – a report and recommendation concerning evidence of corruption by Alaskan judges and by the entity charging with ensuring the integrity and honesty of Alaskan judges.
If we don’t do something, we will forever lose the right to Grand Jury oversight of government – a right which was specifically given to us by the 55 Delegates who wrote our Constitution in 1955 and 1956. A right they called “an invaluable right to the citizen”.
Exactly what would the 55 Delegates want and suggest we do in this situation? They would want us to do whatever it takes to enforce the Constitution they so carefully gave us.
Alaska Grand Jurors Association
PO Box 123
Soldotna, AK 99669
(907) 398-6403
haeg@alaska.net

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