Is this the suspect?
http://www.thefullwiki.org/Andrew_J._O%27Connor
Arrest by the Secret Service
On February 13, 2003, Andrew J. O’Connor was arrested by the Secret Service and Santa Fe police at the St. John’s College library in Santa Fe, New Mexico for allegedly making threatening remarks about President George W. Bush. He was released after five hours and no charges were ever filed, but his arrest sparked widespread debate about the extent of the Patriot Act.[1][2][3][4]
On July 25, 2006, Mr. O’Connor filed a lawsuit under 42 USC §1983 in the District Court of New Mexico against St. John’s College and other defendants claiming deprivations of his civil liberties because of a conspiracy between defendants for warrantless and surreptitious surveillance of his private email communications under the Patriot Act in violation of the Fourth Amendment.[5] The case was dismissed on August 9, 2007. Mr. O’Connor appealed to the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals where the appeal was denied on August 18, 2008 on the grounds that it was time-barred. [6] He then appealed the case to the U.S Supreme Court, but the petition for a writ of certiorari was denied on March 9, 2009.[7]
Problems with the Florida Bar and Santa Fe Public Defender’s Office
Andrew O’Connor was admitted to the Florida Bar on November 11, 1990.[11] He was involved in an automobile accident on April 30, 1992 which incapacitated him both mentally and physically, and he was placed on the inactive list.[11]
He was hired at the Santa Fe Public Defender’s Office in July 2002. In January 2003, he filed an application for a limited law license with the Supreme Court of New Mexico representing that he was in good standing with the Florida Bar and attaching a copy of his Florida Bar card which showed his status as “inactive”. The Supreme Court of New Mexico initially issued him a limited license, but they revoked it when the discrepancy was discovered and they contacted the Florida Bar, which instituted proceedings against O’Connor. Mr. O’Connor was fired by the Santa Fe Public Defender’s Office in January 2003 after the issue came to light.[12][13]
Mr. O’Connor brought a 42 USC §1983 suit against the Florida Bar in the District Court of New Mexico, but the suit was dismissed for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. He appealed, and the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals, in a decision dated September 1, 2006, upheld the dismissal based on Eleventh Amendment immunity, because the Florida Bar is an arm of the Supreme Court of Florida.[14] The Supreme Court of Florida, in a decision dated October 19, 2006, decided not to disbar him, but imposed a one-year period of disqualification on his petition for reinstatement.[15].
Vasquez lawsuit
Andrew J. O’Connor is currently working as a law clerk and is part of the legal team that brought suit for US$1.3 million against the City of Denver on behalf of Juan Vasquez, a Hispanic teenager who was injured by Denver police officers.[16][17]. O’Connor was quoted as saying: “If this was a white kid in Boulder, it wouldn’t have gone down the way it went down”.[17] Mr. O’Connor was interviewed about the case by Denver CBS 4 reporter Jodi Brooks on May 16, 2008.[18] When the City of Denver in its response to the lawsuit stated that the police officer’s actions were “reasonable force”, Mr. O’Connor asked: “How is it self-defense when a kid is on the ground getting stomped on? And how does a kid lose a kidney with reasonable force?”[19] In October 2008, the case was settled for $885,000.[20]
Good work! Looks like you’ve detailed the history of yet another liberal mental case.
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