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To: B4Ranch

Uh oh. I just read his daughter is an editor for the Huffington Post. But I don’t care who or what his daughter is, keeping a man in jail for over a year without a trial is an outrage.

From http://www.dailynews.com/news/ci_14923238

Group gathers to urge freedom for taxpayer advocate Richard Fine
By Troy Anderson, Staff Writer
Updated: 04/20/2010 06:00:44 PM PDT

Chanting “This is America, not Russia,” about 75 people gathered Tuesday morning outside the downtown Stanley Mosk Courthouse to urge the U.S. Supreme Court to free former taxpayer advocate attorney Richard I. Fine from jail.

In Washington, D.C., about 50 people staged a similar protest on the steps of the high court, which is scheduled to meet Friday to decide whether Fine should be released.

Fine, a 70-year-old Tarzana resident and former U.S. Department of Justice attorney, has spent more than a year in Men’s Central Jail for contempt after refusing to divulge financial information. Fine was placed under “coercive confinement” following a series of cases in which he alleged judges received an extra $57,000 in pay from the county on top of their $179,000 annual state salaries. Fine alleged that these “undeclared bonuses” render judges biased in cases where the county is a defendant.

“Richard Fine has been cruelly, unjustly punished for bringing to light a judicial issue that affects each of us as Los Angeles residents and U.S. citizens,” said Chatsworth resident Janette Isaacs, co-organized of “Free Richard Fine,” a grassroots, community organization committed to ending judicial corruption in California.

“This could happen to anyone.”

Retired Sheriff’s Department Sgt. Richard Valdemar, who served as the “jailer” in the case of Los Angeles Herald-Examiner reporter William Farr who was held in jail in 1972 for contempt for refusing to divulge sources relating to the Charles Manson case, said a person has a right to actually be charged with a crime if they are held in jail for more than a year.

“We don’t even house our misdemeanor people in jail for more than a year,” Valdemar said. “Yet Mr. Fine is being held longer and it’s not like Mr. Fine is a kook or something. This is a man who is an expert on the law and is trying to do the right thing. He’s basically a whistleblower and he’s being punished for that.”

In a letter to the Supreme Court, Fine’s daughter, Victoria Fine, an editor with The Huffington Post, asked the justices to release her father “from the horror he and my family have endured during the last 13 months of our lives.”

“He has raised me to trust in our country’s justice system to uphold freedom, democracy and moral right,” she wrote. “I admit that as today, as my father sits in solitary confinement, I have very little faith left in our American system. But now, as I write to you, I place that faith in your hands to make the decision that will free my father and send him home to my mother and me.”


6 posted on 04/20/2010 8:48:04 PM PDT by Auntie Mame (Fear not tomorrow. God is already there.)
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To: Auntie Mame

>>But I don’t care who or what his daughter is,<<

Me neither

>>keeping a man in jail for over a year without a trial is an outrage.<<

I tend to believe that all FReepers believe this. I know that I do.


8 posted on 04/20/2010 8:55:01 PM PDT by B4Ranch (Should people be questioning their government? Yes and "Where's the birth certificate?")
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