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Does President Bush Seek UN Jurisdiction Over the USA?
Renew America ^ | November 23, 2007 | Jim Kouri, CPP

Posted on 11/24/2007 5:14:29 AM PST by fweingart

In several speeches he gave across the country, former US Ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton revealed that President George W. Bush and his administration are buckling under pressure from this nation's Internationalists in the current controversy over Mexico and the International Court of Justice.

The Mexican government is attempting to save an illegal alien convicted of participating in the savage rape and murder two teenage girls from being executed in Texas for his crimes.

Death penalty opponents in both the US and Mexico are trying to place this nation under the control of a world court, according to critics of the Bush White House.

"[President George Bush's position is] a bad mistake, but one of many mistakes, I'm sad to say, the administration has made recently," Bolton told syndicated radio talk show host Laura Ingraham.

Bolton believes that President Bush is helping Mexico and the International Court block the death sentence for a Mexican rapist-murderer. He called Bush's actions "ridiculous."

"Bolton is a true patriot. That is why the liberals in the Democrat Party and the phony conservatives in the GOP were so eager to remove him from his seat at the UN. Bolton believes the UN is corrupt and he's opposed to placing the United States under the jurisdiction of any international entity," claims conservative political consultant Michael Baker.

"When it comes to US sovereignty, Americans would be better served listening to Ambassador Bolton rather than our closet Internationalist President," he added.

Baker points to phony conservatives such as Ohio's Senator George Voinovich who shed tears during Senate confirmation hearings for Bolton to serve at the United Nations. "Voinovich feared Bolton's anti-UN positions would hamper US involvement in the New World Order," claims Baker.

In early October, the US Supreme Court heard arguments regarding the impending execution of Jose Medellin, who confessed to police in 1993 to raping and murdering two Houston, Texas, teenagers -- Jennifer Ertman and Elizabeth Pena. The girls were sodomized and strangled with their own shoe laces, according to court records and police reports.

According to Houston Police detectives' reports, Medellin boasted that he kept one victim's Mickey Mouse watch as a souvenir of his heinous crime. Medellin and four other attackers were convicted of capital murder and are awaiting execution on death row.

The intervention in the case by the Bush administration comes after the International Court of Justice in the Hague found Medellin -- who entered the United States illegally -- was not informed of his right to contact the Mexican Consulate for legal assistance.

"Bush's support of the World Court decision jeopardizes the cases of about 50 Mexican Nationals sitting on death row," said former NYPD Det. Sidney Francis.

"Once again, President Bush is stabbing law enforcement officers -- and the people they serve -- in their backs," said Francis.

Det. Francis points to the erosion of the enormous support of law enforcement officials and organizations enjoyed by President Bush in the 2004 election.

"President Bush was endorsed by the nation's largest police organizations including the 350,000-member Fraternal Order of Police, the Police Benevolent Association and other law enforcement and security organizations and unions," said Michael Baker.

"Now his popularity among cops has hit bottom because of his refusal to protect the US from illegal aliens who cross our borders at will," he said.

Ambassador Bolton told talk host Laura Ingraham that the U.S. has no obligation to the world court in this case.

"It is ridiculous," he said. "The Vienna Convention on consular relations does not create rights personal to the individual. It's a state-to-state agreement."

Lawmakers in Washington, DC, who signed the treaty, did not believe they were creating a way for criminals on death row to "get around our judicial system," Bolton explained to Ingraham. "They haven't had enough due process? They've had the full panoply of constitutional protection, and now they're trying to create something else."

The Bush Administration became involved in the Medellin case in 2003 when President Vicente Fox's government sued the US over the consular issue in the UN's world court.

The court ruled in Mexico's favor in late 2004 and ordered the US to reconsider the Mexican inmates' murder convictions and death sentences. In February 2005, Bush announced that while he disagreed with the decision, the US would comply. He ordered courts in Texas and elsewhere to review the cases.

The Supreme Court, which had agreed to hear Medellin's case, dismissed it in order to allow the case to play out in Texas. Then in November 2006, the all-Republican Texas Court of Criminal Appeals balked at the president's order, saying Bush had overstepped his authority.

The Texas court ruled that the judicial branch -- not the White House -- should decide how to resolve the Mexican cases. It also said Medellin wasn't entitled to a new hearing because he failed to complain at his original trial about any violation of his consular rights and had therefore waived them.

Then Medellin's defense attorney appealed again to the US Supreme Court, which announced last May it would hear the case. His lawyer, Donald Donovan of New York, argued that Bush was correct when he took action to comply with the world court's decision.

Recently, for his achievements in both international arbitration and international human rights, Donovan was awarded the Premio Nacional de Jurisprudencia by the Mexican Bar Association, the first non-Mexican so honored.

What the U.S. government wants in the Medellin murder case is "bizarrely grotesque," according to a statement by the chief counsel for the Alliance Defense Fund.

The warning from ADF Chief Counsel Benjamin Bull notes that the case, being pursued by President Bush through the Department of Justice, could result in US laws being subjugated to UN resolutions and rules to the point that local police officers will have to spend more time studying international law than catching criminals.

(Suggested Reading: The Beast on the East River »» The U.N. Threat to America's ...In The Beast on the East River, Nathan Tabor offers a unique perspective on the United Nations vis-à-vis its relationship with the United States, ... www.nathantabor.com)


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: bush; immigration; jorgeboosh; marines; mexico; un
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Mr. President: call your office. You nation needed you.
1 posted on 11/24/2007 5:14:29 AM PST by fweingart
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To: All

You=your.


2 posted on 11/24/2007 5:25:36 AM PST by fweingart (Life's a bitch. So why vote for one?)
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To: fweingart

No kidding.


3 posted on 11/24/2007 5:29:35 AM PST by NurdlyPeon (Thompson / Hunter in 2008)
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To: fweingart

I have reviewed the case. If the SOB wanted to avoid the death penalty, he shouldn’t have killed someone in Texas. Next.

P.S. - Mr. Medellin, the Mexican Consulate called and left a message: “You’re gonna fry.”


4 posted on 11/24/2007 5:34:43 AM PST by Gil4 ("There is no room in this country for hyphenated Americanism" - Teddy Roosevelt)
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To: fweingart
The Mexican government is attempting to save an illegal alien convicted of participating in the savage rape and murder two teenage girls from being executed in Texas for his crimes.

A reversal in this case could then impact some 50 other cases of Mexicans (aka, illegal aliens) on death row in the US for crimes committed in the US against US citizens.

This case could have long term ramifications.
5 posted on 11/24/2007 5:34:49 AM PST by TomGuy
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To: fweingart

Condolences to the families and friends of Jennifer Ertman and Elizabeth Pena.


6 posted on 11/24/2007 5:41:00 AM PST by PGalt
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To: fweingart

words fail...


7 posted on 11/24/2007 5:43:21 AM PST by mtbopfuyn (I think the border is kind of an artificial barrier - San Antonio councilwoman Patti Radle)
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To: fweingart

>>>In several speeches he gave across the country, former US Ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton revealed that President George W. Bush and his administration are buckling under pressure from this nation’s Internationalists in the current controversy over Mexico and the International Court of Justice.<<<

“[President George Bush’s position is] a bad mistake, but one of many mistakes, I’m sad to say, the administration has made recently,” Bolton told syndicated radio talk show host Laura Ingraham.

That is the quote to support ‘several speeches’?

It looks out of context too to support ‘buckling’.


8 posted on 11/24/2007 5:45:44 AM PST by Calpernia (Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
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To: Calpernia
I'm not certain I understand your comment.

In my opinion, the administration on many key issues that involve the deliberate erosion of American sovereignty, instead of buckling, have just laid down in the middle of the road.

9 posted on 11/24/2007 5:50:42 AM PST by fweingart (Life's a bitch. So why vote for one?)
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To: fweingart

I’m saying the quote used to support the premise of the opening paragraph doesn’t support the opinion.


10 posted on 11/24/2007 5:52:22 AM PST by Calpernia (Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
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To: Calpernia

I personally believe the mexican elite could care less about the death penalty. all the poverty is sent to the USA.

Not many rich people being executed these days, or for that matter, never have.
Mexico is just a big joke!
The mexican elite thinks this makes them look good in the eyes of the international community.


11 posted on 11/24/2007 5:54:42 AM PST by Mojohemi
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To: fweingart

A particularly nasty hit piece on the President by a Paulinista
http://www.newswithviews.com/NWV-News/news17.htm


12 posted on 11/24/2007 5:58:25 AM PST by A.Hun (Common sense is no longer common.)
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To: Mojohemi

>>>>I personally believe the mexican elite could care less about the death penalty. all the poverty is sent to the USA.

Very true.

I think the politicians in Mexico City like the open border because it is a pressure release valve for them. If they don’t take care of their people if they don’t provide economic opportunity, and they don’t, than instead of their voters throwing them out of office they want people to vote with their feet and just leave the country. And that is what they do. They vote with their feet and leave the country and come to the United States.
- Duncan Hunter


13 posted on 11/24/2007 5:59:02 AM PST by Calpernia (Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
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To: fweingart

In principle, allowing someone accused of a crime to contact their home country consulate for assistance is very important.

How many times have Americans been accused of crimes while abroad and were released when the US Consulate would become involved? Numerous.

Extending that right to non-citizens is OK with me.

However, in this case, the defense never requested such assistance. The International Court is making a straw argument.

In other words, fry him.


14 posted on 11/24/2007 6:00:29 AM PST by Erik Latranyi (The Democratic Party will not exist in a few years....we are watching history unfold before us.)
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To: Gil4
...he shouldn’t have killed someone in Texas. Next.

In the immortal words of Ron White "Most states are abolishing the death penalty. Mine is putting in an express lane. In Texas, if you kill somebody, we kill you back"

15 posted on 11/24/2007 6:03:19 AM PST by Thermalseeker (Thinking of voting Democrat? Wake up and smell the Socialism!)
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To: fweingart

“President George W. Bush and his administration are buckling under pressure from this nation’s Internationalists”

LOL! Who’s kidding who here?


16 posted on 11/24/2007 6:21:29 AM PST by wolfcreek (The Status Quo Sucks!)
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To: fweingart

This totally sucks, but I’m glad Bolton is speaking out.


17 posted on 11/24/2007 6:27:09 AM PST by stevio ((NRA))
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To: Thermalseeker

I love Ron White........


18 posted on 11/24/2007 6:30:06 AM PST by tioga (Black Friday........yes, I went shopping and spent some $ today.)
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Comment #19 Removed by Moderator

To: A.Hun
HUH?? Here is the only mention of Bush in your so-called "particularly nasty hit piece on the President by a Paulinista."

The 30-49 demographic has been a key indicator in recent elections, and one in which Republicans tend to fare well in hotly-contested elections. In 2004, exit polls reveal that George Bush beat John Kerry 53% to 46% among 30-44 year olds, and all accounts indicate that this will be the most instrumental demographic in the 2008 presidential election as well.


You Paul-a-phobes are really getting desperate.
20 posted on 11/24/2007 6:34:55 AM PST by Iwo Jima ("Close the border. Then we'll talk.")
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