Nomintion for Attorney General: Judge Michael Mukasey
Contempt for Americans
and the Process of Law
On September 17, 2007, President George W. Bush selected retired U.S. district Judge Michael Mukasey to be the next U.S. attorney general, replacing Alberto Gonzales. Mukasey was presented as a law and order judge. One set of court records shows the opposite. Very serious problems were associated with Mukasey's nomination.
In the books, Blowback, 9/11 and Cover-Ups , and Unfriendly Skies: 20th & 21st Centuries, Mukasey is seen as obstructing justice, prostituting due process, and protecting criminal activities in government offices, including the government's aviation safety offices, that made possible the hijackings of four airliners on 9/11.
Very briefly, here is part of the bizarre conduct involving Judge Mukasey:
Former federal agent Rodney Stich, representing himself and a group of other former government agents, submitted a lawsuit for filing to the U.S. District Court in New York City. That lawsuit sought to report criminal activities that they had discovered as part of their official duties, and that were responsible for the conditions that enabled four groups of terrorists to hijack four airliners on September 11, 2001. These matters have been kept from the people by government hearings.
That lawsuit was filed under the federal crime reporting statute that required anyone knowing of a federal crime to report it to a federal judge or other federal officer. And under federal statute, Title 28 U.S.C. ยง 1361, that provides the right to any citizen to file a lawsuit in federal court seeking a court order requiring a federal official to perform a required duty and to halt unlawful conduct.
The lawsuit sought to report corruption and federal offenses of certain people in:
- The government's aviation safety offices, where the responsibility existed to have ordered, before 9/11, the known measures to prevent airline hijackings. There is a history of misconduct that made possible a long series of air disasters. It was in those offices that the responsibility existed to order measures to prevent hijackings; not in the FBI or CIA.
- The FBI and other Department of Justice offices, where misconduct played a role in blocking agents from acting on evidence that could have prevented the hijacking scheme from being carried out.
- The CIA, where similar misconduct as in the FBI prevented agents from acting on the evidence of the planned airline hijacking scheme.
The lawsuit also revealed the actions of other people, prior to the 9/11 hijackings, who acted to prevent this highly explosive information from being made public and from being corrected. Implicated in these acts were federal judges, a U.S. attorney, over 50 lawyers and law firms, among others.
Judge Mukasey's misconduct included:
- Illegally and corruptly blocking the filing of the lawsuit for over 12 months. That blockage constituted:
- Obstruction of justice, by blocking the reports of criminal activities, insuring the continuation of the criminal activities responsible for prior national tragedies.
- Violation of civil and constitutiohnal due process rights.
- Conversion of the courts and the judicial position into a criminal enterprise.
- Obstruction of justice, by blocking the reports of criminal activities, insuring the continuation of the criminal activities responsible for prior national tragedies.
- Civil and constitutional due process required that the lawsuit, that was in proper form, be filed when received. It was not filed until 12 months after being received, after complaints were made to each of the Justices of the U.S. Supreme Court, advising them of the latest obstruction of justice action by a federal judge over whom they had supervisory responsibilities. It was then filed.
- Within minutes of being filed, Judge Mukasey signed an order dismissing the lawsuit. That dismissal violated:
- The due process requirements of a hearing, notice of hearing, and application of due process.
- The federal crime reporting statute, that required any federal judge to receive information of a federal crime that is presented to them, as part of the judge's administrative duties.
- The due process requirements of a hearing, notice of hearing, and application of due process.
- Federal criminal statutes, including obstruction of justice, by blocking the report of federal crimes discovered by former federal agents. Federal judges, as part of their administrative duties (not judicial duties) are required under the federal crime reporting statute to receive information of a federal crime. They do not have the right to block such reports. And if they do block such reports, they are guilty of various criminal acts associated with obstruction of justice.
- Legal statutes, decisional laws, and rules of court, and constitutional due process, by blocking the filing of a lawsuit that would expose serious corruption with far-reaching consequences.
Judge Mukasey blocked a former federal agent from reporting corrupt and criminal activities in certain government offices that were responsible for conditions enabling four groups of terrorists to hijack four airliners on 9/11, which, of course, killed almost 3,000 people, and led to a series of catastrophic events seeking the 9/11 hijackings as justification.
He blocked the filing of a highly sensitive lawsuit that had far-reaching political ramifications. Federal law required that the court promptly files a lawsuit that is submitted when the filing fee is paid and the papers are in proper order.
He protected criminal acts and their perpetrators, that played an unpublicized role in the conditions that enabled terrorists to hijack four airliners on 9/11, and continued the conduct that made that and prior air disasters possible, and would continue these matters with a continuation of the prior consequences.
The lawsuit stated facts with reference to documented official documents. It did not state any ridiculous conspiracy theory. The consequences for what was stated in that lawsuit were catastrophic for many people, and for the United States. Powerful people do not want the public to know about these matters and to understand the significance.
Besides revealing a dark side to the 9/11 tragedies, by appointing retired U.S. District Judge Michael Mukasey to the attorney general's position, President Bush has assurance that there will be no meaningful investigation of any of the many corrupt activities that occurred during his presidency.
Further details are found at www.defraudingamerica.com and especially the following previously posted links:
- ,www.defraudingamerica.com/lawsuit_nyc_911_index.html.
- A letter sent to Judge Mukasey on November 1, 2002, letter. (MS Word) (Adobe PDF)
- Index to 9/11 matters.
- 9/11 secrets.

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