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To: fireman15
Now that's the THIRD Spelling of his assistant.

WHICH ONE IS CORRECT ?

Check out this little fact from TheCipher Here’s one more source: And here’s a link to a DIFFERENT SPELLING of that name:
118 posted on 11/16/2017 11:37:02 AM PST by Yosemitest (It's SIMPLE ! ... Fight, ... or Die !)
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To: Yosemitest

It would be better if sources could get the Judge’s assistant’s name correct. In the end however, it is a matter of public record that will be easily verified. The problem is that just like the false mall banning story, the mainstream media, RINOs and Democrats all are jumping on any false information that comes out and then failing to issue retractions when the stories are refuted.

We live in a time of declining morals in a system that is breaking down. Part of the problem is ever increasing and more effective methods of mass dissemination of false information through electronic means. Unfortunately leftist indoctrination from our educational system is intended to make young people more pliable by sources of information of questionable integrity.


120 posted on 11/16/2017 12:21:53 PM PST by fireman15
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To: Yosemitest
From the Chicago Tribune, 11/15/17:

"But when he was on the bench overseeing Nelson’s divorce case years later, the initials D.A. would appear at times after his name, Jauregui said. Moore had an assistant, Dilbert Adams, who sometimes used a stamp to put the judge’s signature on documents, then wrote his own initials at the end of Moore’s name."

They are quoting the lawyer. Moore might be saying it himself in a video.

When another FReeper posted a section of the divorce, I notice there was a signature, then a slash, then the initials D.A. If it represents a title, usually there is a comma connecting the signature with the title. And did I hear him say he never was the D.A.?

I don't know what the convention is now, but when I was a secretary/typist, we would put the writer's initials under the signature at the bottom, in all caps, then a slash and the sec'y/typist's initials in lower case.

RSM/da, for example. But it's not something cast in stone.

121 posted on 11/16/2017 12:24:16 PM PST by Aliska
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