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THE PEOPLE v. THE STATE OF OREGON [CORRUPTION IN ECOTOPIA]
Liberty Magazine | October 2001 | William E. Merritt

Posted on 10/17/2001 10:00:53 PM PDT by Benighted

Oregon voters amended their constitution to stop the state from stealing their land. But then the state’s powerful elite took the case to court. The result: A sordid tale of corruption, bribery, and abuse of power in which the will of the people was subverted and the losing attorney was elevated to a judgeship.


It’s been said that if the Bill of Rights were put to a vote of the people, it would be defeated. Last November, the citizens of Oregon had an opportunity to vote on one of the least popular aspects of the Bill of Rights: the final twelve words of the Fifth Amendment that specify “nor shall private property be taken for public use without just compensation.”

For those who advocate greater government power, this “takings” clause is a serious problem because when government regulates the use of land, it plainly takes its utility and value; and the “takings” clause requires that the government pay the owner “just compensation.” In recent years, as governments have begun to regulate land on a vast scale, the cost of providing that “just compensation” would be huge. So legislators have done what legislators do, and passed regulations on the cheap by ignoring the “takings” clause. And courts have done what courts do and provided elaborate rationales explaining that the Fifth Amendment doesn’t mean what it says, in much the same fashion that legislatures ignored the First Amendment’s prohibition of regulation of speech in the 19th and early 20th centuries and courts worked up elaborate explanations of the First Amendment not meaning what it plainly says.

So a group of Oregon citizens proposed an amendment to the state constitution that “requires state, local governments pay landowner amount of reduction in market value if law, regulation reduces property value.”

The estimated direct financial impact, as set out in the Oregon Voters’ Pamphlet, is $1.6 billion for the state, and $3.8 billion for local governments—every year, if governments want to keep regulating at the same level. Of course, this just means that governments will have to start picking up the tab. The cost is still $5.4 billion a year, only now it is the landowners who have to pay.

Oregon voters took advantage of this rare opportunity to protect the Bill of Rights from legislators and the courts. The measure passed comfortably, with about 54% of the votes cast.

This didn’t sit well with the politicians in power. Having lost at the ballot box, they did just what you’d expect—they filed a pair of lawsuits challenging its constitutionality. The challenges were brought by the widow of a popular former governor, along with a consortium of local governments and government officials that reads like a lobbyist’s private Rolodex of movers and shakers. Because they asked for the same relief from the same defendants, the court combined the challenges into a single case before the trail. [sic]

For Christ’s Sake

At the time they were brought, these challenges didn’t seem like much more than the typical stunts people in power pull when democracy threatens to intrude into their prerogatives. In hindsight, they seem much worse. Once the trial court declared Measure 7 unconstitutional and his side had won, Thomas M. Christ, the lawyer who challenged Measure 7 in court, was entitled to be paid his attorney’s fees by the state. So, he sent in an affidavit setting out the details of just what he’d done. Taken along with rumors that had been circulating through the Oregon legal community about less-than-competent arguments in court, unexplained meetings between the people challenging Measure 7 and those entrusted to defend it, political payoffs, and the anti-ballot-measure bias of the lawyer heading the defense, the entries in Christ’s time record suggest something went very wrong in the way the state government handled the challenge to Measure 7.

After carefully reviewing what happened, it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that the governor and various attorneys conspired to have the measure undone in the courts and, when they succeeded, the governor rewarded the deputy attorney general who botched the defense with an appointment to the Oregon Court of Appeals.

Conflict of Interest?

One of the weaknesses of Oregon’s initiative system is that the duty to defend ballot measures in court falls primarily upon government officials. So when a ballot measure is enacted that limits the power of government officials, those same government officials are charged with defending the measure in the courts.

This is how Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber found himself in the curious position of being the lead defendant in a proceeding he wanted to lose. The state is required by law to defend with vigor ballot measures once they have been passed. As chief executive of the state, Kitzhaber was thus required to defend the measure. But as the state’s most powerful politician, Kitzhaber had led the campaign to defeat Measure 7, asserting that it would bankrupt the state.

On a Portland radio show, Attorney General Hardy Myers stated that he did not see any ethical problems with defending Measure 7. When I asked him to walk me through his reasoning, he told me that the Measure 7 scenario is typical of situations in which his office is called upon to defend a ballot measure. Kristen Grainger, spokeswoman for the attorney general’s office, elaborated a bit by saying that whatever the governor may personally feel on the matter is irrelevant because “the state is the Department of Justice’s only client” and “there is no conflict.”

But the governor is the named defendant when a ballot measure is challenged and his presence has to be accounted for. Together, these facts appear to create a conflict of interest for the lawyers at the attorney general’s office. Under the Bar Association’s Disciplinary Rule 5-105(A)(I): “An ‘actual conflict of interest’ exists when the lawyer has a duty to contend for something on behalf of one client that the lawyer has the duty to oppose on behalf of another client.”

Actually, after reviewing Christ’s time records, the suggestion that the attorney general’s office faced a potential conflict of interest seems like a major understatement. Nine days after Measure 7 passed, Gov. Kitzhaber kicked off the very suit in which he was named as a defendant by having his staff attorney, Chip Lazenby, call Tom Christ to set up a meeting.

You can see how strange this looks. Defendants don’t ordinarily initiate things—especially when they don’t have any reason to believe they are going to be defendants. In explanation, Lazenby said that he called Christ because the governor needed to know how the Measure 7 challenge was going to be handled in order to begin working on a legislative response.

Although this may explain the initial contact—assuming Lazenby had some way of knowing that a legal challenge was going to be filed and that Christ would be the lawyer filing it—it does not address the purpose of the meeting. At the time, Christ had not begun preparing his case—which meant he couldn’t have had anything to tell the governor. And a two-and-a-half-hour meeting does not sound like the kind of formal get-together in which a lawyer lays out his position. What it sounds like is a strategy conference in which the participants take off their jackets, kick back, and work out how to solve a mutual problem.

When the meeting was over, Christ returned to his office and began working on the complaint. Again, this makes it look very much like he, Lazenby, and the governor all participated in deciding how the complaint was to be framed. And once the meeting was over, Christ rushed back to his office filled with fire and vinegar and missionary zeal to prosecute the case.

Three days later, on Nov. 20, Lazenby called Christ a second time—to discuss “TIMING OF SUIT AND VENUE,” as Christ’s time sheet puts it. Again, this is a highly unusual, if not unheard-of, thing for a plaintiff’s attorney to discuss with the defense. Again, this suggests the two were collaborating on a mutually agreeable strategy for handling the challenge to Measure 7.

Fox in a Hen House

Of course, the governor isn’t expected to actually show up in court and defend something like Measure 7 himself. In the first place, he wouldn’t be very good at it. He’s a doctor, after all, not a lawyer. In the second place, he’s got a perfectly good attorney general’s office to do that for him. In the case of Measure 7, the defense was personally conducted by Deputy Attorney General David Schuman.

The fact that Schuman personally defended the ballot measure was somewhat unusual. As deputy attorney general, he was responsible for managing, coordinating, and overseeing all the legal work of the department’s 200 lawyers. Ordinarily, a court appearance would have been handled by one of the many fine career litigators in his shop. Moreover, Schuman’s expertise is not in litigation at all, but in theory. Prior to coming to the attorney general’s office, he was an associate professor of law at the University of Oregon. As such, he had well-formed opinions on many legal issues. Among those were his ideas about ballot measures in general. He is on record as opposing the entire initiative process. In 1994, he wrote in the Temple Law Review that:

Today the most obvious use of the initiative is to disempower, to marginalize, to create an economic and political elite, be it through term limits which restrict voters’ options, workfare programs, anti-homosexual amendments. . .
He used the article to express his belief that the U.S. Supreme Court should outlaw the initiative system entirely on the grounds that it interferes with the “republican form of government” guaranteed by the Constitution. If you are incline to have thoughts about foxes in henhouses, Schuman is the king fox of our time, let loose among 750,000 chickens who voted for Measure 7. At the very least, David Schuman doesn’t sound like the kind of guy you’d want to defend an initiative from legal attack.

Had Schuman been inclined to bag the defense of Measure 7, the governor had the power to encourage him. On Nov. 7, 2000, Oregonians didn’t just pass Ballot Measure 7. They voted on all sorts of things, including whom they wanted to fill a vacancy on the Oregon Supreme Court. The Supreme Court job went to Judge Paul DeMuniz who had, until then, served on the Court of Appeals. This meant that during the entire time Schuman was conducting his defense of Measure 7, the governor was waiting to fill a vacancy on the Oregon Court of Appeals.

The Best Prosecution Is a Bad Defense

In light of all this, it’s interesting to look at how Schuman actually handled the defense. The initial hearing did not concern the constitutionality of Measure 7 but whether plaintiffs should be granted a preliminary injunction to prevent the secretary of state from certifying the votes on Measure 7 and the governor from proclaiming the results. According to Kelly Clark, an experienced Portland trial lawyer, any attorney asking for a preliminary injunction must show the court that his clients (1) will be irreparably harmed if the injunction isn’t issued and (2) are likely to prevail at trial on the underlying issue. This means that the arguments defense lawyers make are equally predictable: that plaintiffs won’t be harmed and that they aren’t likely to prevail at trial. In the case of the Measure 7 defense, these arguments should have been easy to make.

The irreparable harm argument is as close to a slam dunk as any attorney ever gets. All that will happen—all that could possibly happen under Measure 7—is that a government body will have to pay somebody some money. Paying people money is what Measure 7 is all about. But, since injunctions can only be issued to prevent something from happening that can’t be fixed with money, there simply was no basis to issue one. Past that, it’s hard to see how any government body could possibly be damaged by having to obey the Constitution.

The likelihood of prevailing at trial is a closer question. Exactly how far the law controlling the case goes is still up in the air. It may well be that, given favorable rulings at both the appellate level and at the Oregon Supreme Court, plaintiffs would have prevailed. But it may well have shown that they wouldn’t have, and it’s up to plaintiffs to show that they would have. At the very least, this was an obvious—if not mandatory—point for the defense to raise.

So, these being the arguments, how did they fare? It turns out they didn’t fare at all because Schuman never raised them.

Not only did he fail to raise the question of irreparable harm, he did the opposite. He briefed the court that, “It cannot be disputed that the implementation of Measure 7 will have immediate, substantial effects in Oregon that will be difficult, if not impossible, to undo. . . . Measure 7 . . . would immediately cause far-reaching and probably irremediable consequences in the State of Oregon.” This remarkable statement was treated as a concession by the plaintiff’s attorney throughout all subsequent hearings, and was referred to as such by the court.

As to the likelihood of winning at trial, Schuman informed the judge that the plaintiffs had a “moderate to high” chance of prevailing on the merits. This had two immediate and devastating consequences in the case.

The first, of course, is that it handed the preliminary injunction to the plaintiffs. The second was much worse. With the defense on record as believing that plaintiffs would prevail at the trial on the unconstitutionality of Measure 7, the attorney general could no longer argue they wouldn’t. In other words, not only did Schuman give away the preliminary injunction, he made it impossible for his office to defend the challenge to the constitutionality of the measure.

As Donald Joe Willis, an attorney for a pair of private landowners who tried to join in the defense of Measure 7, said in a petition he later filed with the Oregon Supreme Court, “it is clear from these proceedings that the Attorney General is not going to provide any substantive defense of Ballot Measure 7. . .”

When I asked Tom Christ about Schuman’s unusual defense, Christ, whose clients had the most to gain if Schuman lost, claimed that it did not make any difference how Schuman defended the preliminary injunction because the fact that the plaintiffs prevailed at trial proved the injunction was proper.

This is an odd argument.

In the first place, it suggests that an attorney is, somehow, relieved of his duty to zealously represent a client as long as he loses the case in the end.

More important, it ignores the obstacle that losing the injunction put in the way of winning the underlying case. Since injunctions deprive real people of real rights, before he issues one, a judge has to satisfy himself that plaintiffs really are likely to win. Then, having issued the injunction, the judge is committed to that view of the case and it’s difficult for him to rule defendants right—and himself wrong—later.

There’s a third argument Schuman did not raise—and it’s important because Judge Lipscomb gave every appearance he would have taken it very seriously. Schuman should have questioned what difference stopping the votes from being certified would have made. Under the Oregon Constitution, ballot measures go into effect 30 days after being passed by the voters. The Constitution doesn’t say word one about having to wait around for votes to be certified—which means it’s quite possible that Ballot Measure 7 has been in effect for months, and the injunction stopping the votes from being counted didn’t mean anything—which would be embarrassing. Something courts try never to do is issue meaningless orders. That kind of thing undermines their authority.

A fair reading of the transcript of the preliminary injunction hearing shows Judge Lipscomb fairly crying out to the deputy attorney general to raise this argument. Time after time he asks about the propriety of issuing an injunction. Time after time David Schuman fails to suggest there is a problem. At the conclusion of the hearing, Judge Lipscomb is still concerned about this question and refuses to give any indication of how he plans to rule on the injunction. Instead, he tells the lawyers he will issue a ruling six days later.

Shady Deals

The day after the hearing—five days before the lawyers had any way to know how Judge Lipscomb would rule—Christ made the strangest entry of all in his time records: “TELEPHONE CALL FROM STATE’S ATTORNEY RE FORM OF PROPOSED ORDER GRANTING MOTION (TWO CALLS).”

Forms of proposed orders are what lawyers present a judge once the judge rules in their favor. You cannot write a proposed order in advance when you cannot predict the terms of a ruling. Yet Christ, and his counterpart in the attorney general’s office, discussed this very thing almost a week before Judge Lipscomb ruled on the motion.

To reiterate: It looks very much as if someone at the A.G.’s office called Christ to discuss what to put in the order granting the motion the attorney general was supposed to oppose—at a time neither could have known what the order would be. At the very least, both sides were so confident the judge would rule in favor of the plaintiffs—and that they knew the exact terms of that ruling—that they were already collaborating on the language of the order. This course of action seems absolutely inexplicable to anybody familiar with the way hearings are conducted.

In the end, as he almost had to do in the circumstances, Judge Lipscomb ruled Measure 7 unconstitutional. A few weeks later, Gov. Kitzhaber appointed David Schuman to the vacant seat on the Oregon Court of Appeals.

Now you’d think after something like this Oregon would be flooded with federal prosecutors, local district attorneys trying to make names for themselves, and Dan Rather in his tailored, Great-White-Hunter khakis. But none of these characters has shown up, yet. The reason is pretty clear. This is a scandal that threatens the people sitting on the lid. And they have been piling on harder and harder to keep their goings-on away from public notice. And they’ve done it pretty well, so far.

Until the second week of July, the only thing to come out of this whole, sorry swindle was a complaint for unethical conduct filed with the Oregon State Bar against Chip Lazenby, Tom Christ, and David Schuman. The governor is immune to bar complaints for the same reasons he would never personally defend a ballot measure in court. He’s a doctor, not a lawyer.

Still, he seems to take the charges seriously enough to trot out the usual dismissive slander politicians always trot out when they are found with their hands under somebody else’s wife’s skirt. As Chip Lazenby explained to me, the whole bar-complaint issue is nothing more than “one of those cynical political smears that makes it so hard for people of good will to govern these days.” The part Lazenby did not explain to me was why the man who filed the bar complaint, Bob Swift—a lawyer of almost 40 years standing and a registered Democrat—would want to make it hard form good people of his own party to govern.

None of use outsiders can tell at this point what all of this means. To me, there’s so much quacking and waddling and snuffling of bills through the water that there’s got to be a duck around, somewhere. But I don’t know for sure. And I won’t know until somebody finds out what was discussed in the private meeting between Christ, Lazenby, and the governor. And what was really going on in Schuman’s office when the defense was going down? None of us are going to have a handle on that until somebody comes in armed with a subpoena and the will to use it.

A Compromising Solution

Meanwhile, the state legislature has swung into ponderous, comical motion in a way that only a state could aspire to. The first thing they did was to try to work out a legislative “compromise” to the Measure 7 “mess.” The theory on this one was that, because the state’s minions had forgotten to campaign vigorously enough against Measure 7 to defeat it, we citizens didn’t really know what we were voting for. To protect us from the consequences of our ignorance, the legislature proposed to work out a “compromise” for us.

What nobody has explained is, in a situation where the voters have spoken, what is there to compromise? More to the point, who are the voters supposed to compromise with? Who is on the other side with other interests that the voters have to take into consideration? It used to be we had to compromise with those inbred Georges and their gaggle of power-wig fops who tried to call our shots from London—until the better angels of our nature rose up and got rid of them. Still, one supposes, present-day government people think the voters ought to compromise with the government itself to get what they want. Anybody who believes that. . . well, I’ve got a left-over gulag I can let you into for cheap.

The second way the legislature tried to deal with the problem was to try to slip by, on the closing day of the session, an obviously pre-arranged deal to make it much harder to get initiatives on the ballot in the first place.

Both of these snatch-backs would have been a lot scarier if it hadn’t been a bunch of legislators doing the snatching. But one of the glories of our system is that legislators run the legislature, and, being legislators, they’re too busy meddling to get anything done on time. In this case they became so distracted over whether Oregonians should be able to sell chickens to ruffians in other places who enjoy cockfighting, that they lost track of time and the session expired. Now with the doors to the capitol slammed shut, the rest of us are reasonably safe in our persons and property for another year and a half.

This may mean that by the time they come back into session in January of 2003, President Bush’s new federal prosecutor will have come into office, Dan Rather will be sniffing around the state capitol building, Oregon will have a new governor, the new governor will have a new staff attorney, the attorney general will have a new deputy, the Court of Appeals will have a suddenly vacated seat for the new governor to fill and, under minimum sentencing guidelines, the federal corrections system will have four new residents for a very long time to come, the rest of the government will confess their sins and retire to monasteries, and sweet reason will descend upon the land.

One can always hope.



Appendix: Text of Measure 7

Be it enacted by the People of the State of Oregon: the Constitution of the State of Oregon is amended by adding the following subsections to Section 18 of Article I:

(a) If the state, a political subdivision of the state, or a local government passes or enforces a regulation that restricts the use of private real property, and the restriction has the effect of reducing the value of a property upon which the restriction is imposed; the property owner shall be paid just compensation equal to the reduction in the fair market value of the property.

(b) For purposes of this section, adoption or enforcement of historically and commonly recognized nuisance laws shall not be deemed to have caused a reduction in the value of a property. The phrase “historically and commonly recognized nuisance laws” shall be narrowly construed in favor of a finding that just compensation is required under this section.

(c) A regulating entity may impose, to the minimum extend required, a regulation to implement a requirement of federal law without payment of compensation under this section. Nothing in this 2000 Amendment shall require compensation due to a government regulation prohibiting the use of a property for the purpose of selling pornography, performing nude dancing, selling alcoholic beverages or other controlled substances, or operating a casino or gaming parlor.

(d) Compensation shall be due the property owner if the regulation was adopted, first enforced or applied after the current owner of the property became the owner, and continues to apply to the property 90 days after the owner applies for compensation under this section.

(e) Definitions: For purposes of this section, “regulation” shall include any law, rule, ordinance, resolution, goal, or other enforceable enactment of government; “real property” shall include any structure built or sited on the property, aggregate and other removable minerals, and any forest product or other crop grown on the property; “reduction in the fair market value” shall mean the difference in the fair market value of the property before and after application of the regulation, and shall include the net cost to the landowner of an affirmative obligation to protect, provide, or preserve wildlife habitat, natural areas, wetlands, ecosystems, scenery, open space, historical, archaeological or cultural resources, or low income housing; and “just compensation” shall include, if a claim for compensation is denied or not fully paid within 90 days of filing, reasonable attorney fees and expenses necessary to collect the compensation.

(f) If any phrase, clause, or part of this section is found to be invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction, the remaining phrases, clauses and parts shall remain in full force and effect.




William E. Merritt is a senior fellow at the Burr Institute and lives in Portland, Oregon.


For purposes of education and discussion only. Not for commercial use.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Miscellaneous
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1 posted on 10/17/2001 10:00:53 PM PDT by Benighted
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To: Benighted
Liberty is a good magazine.
2 posted on 10/17/2001 10:05:12 PM PDT by Free the USA
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To: AuntB; blackie; Jolly Rodgers; B Knotts; Bump in the night; DeSoto; Iconoclast2; ObjetD'art...
I looked, in every way that I know, for prior posting of this, and didn't find anything. (I hope and pray this isn't a duplicate.)
3 posted on 10/17/2001 10:08:26 PM PDT by Benighted
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To: Benighted
I am sure you are the first to post it.
4 posted on 10/17/2001 10:12:56 PM PDT by Free the USA
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To: Benighted; Jeff Head; MadameAxe; tex-oma; Archie Bunker on steroids; amom; 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub
Thanks for the flag. I'll look it over tomorrow.

I hope all is well with you and your family. It seems like a lifetime ago when we met at Klamath.

5 posted on 10/17/2001 10:27:14 PM PDT by nunya bidness
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To: Benighted
Interesting article. Bump for later full read.

And to all the gun-grabbing, victim disarming statist and socialist wannabe dictators and petty tyrants:

Molon Labe!

Toward FREEDOM
6 posted on 10/17/2001 10:33:54 PM PDT by Neil E. Wright
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To: Benighted
BUMP in the night...
7 posted on 10/17/2001 11:02:38 PM PDT by dandelion
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Comment #8 Removed by Moderator

To: Benighted
We've been living with this sort of thing in New York for many years. When he was governor, Mario Cuomo once said on live television that a particular method by which the State had been borrowing money -- transferring ownership of a State facility such as a prison to a non-governmental organization and then allowing the NGO to pay for it by selling State-backed bonds based on its value -- was in violation of New York's own Constitution, and then said that the State would "only do it once more."

My ear doctor assured me shortly thereafter that my hearing was in good shape.

Freedom, Wealth, and Peace,
Francis W. Porretto
Visit the Palace Of Reason: http://palaceofreason.com

9 posted on 10/18/2001 6:04:40 AM PDT by fporretto
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To: Benighted
And then they wonder why the public is becoming apathetic about voting. We are ruled by force while maintaining a very thin veneer of the illusion of constitutional restraint. By their own admission, the bastards are stealing over $5 billion worth of private property value every year in Oregon and they went into apoplexy when we passed an initiative asking them to at least do so according to both state and federal constitutional rules.
10 posted on 10/18/2001 7:41:47 AM PDT by Jolly Rodgers
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To: Benighted
Thanks for this post, which documents how the enviral clymers continue to seize private property in Oregon. If I read it correctly, about 5 billion $'s worth each year.

Each $ seized removes that property from the tax rolls and removes that property from contributing to Oregon's annual income produced in the state. Those $'s lost are lost forever.

Of course this has been Andy Kerr's agenda since the spotted owls, and he wants less jobs in Oregon, which equals less people.

This seems to have caught up with the enviral facist, Katznslobber. As he has decided not to run for in the Senate race. However, under his enviral facist anti business/anti private property reign of terror, he has trashed the Oregon economy.

We talked to our son who lives in Portland, last night. He is a recovering enviral. He woke up in 1999/2000. Now many of his enviral friends have lost their jobs or could lose their jobs. Of course they blame GW for these job losses. He will take them outside to point at one of their pro enviral bumper stickers on their vehicles, or a Gore/Clinton bumper sticker or even worse a Nader bumper sticker. Then he tells them that they are the problem with their money donated to the enviral terrorist organizations and their votes in the past. He really comes down on them if they have a Katznslobber sticker on their bumper!

I still think that a good lawyer in these cases should behind closed doors find out if the judge is pro enviral. If the judge has contributed to enviral causes and is active in their rural cleansing agenda, he/she should recuse themselves or be brought for bias charges after the trial!

Good luck up there! All 3 west coast states have enviral terrorist governors, courts, judges, state DA's and county DA's. We may not recover!

11 posted on 10/18/2001 8:05:20 AM PDT by Grampa Dave
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To: Grampa Dave
Correct Grampa. I live in the Socialist Republic of WAshington state with our Red Chinese governor, Gary "I cannot accomplish a damned thing" Locke. Now saying state is going to be billions under because of the economy and wants to raise yet more taxes. We are searching for a way to get out of this hell hole ourselves. My wife has five more years to work, but I do not know if I can hang on that long. We are looking to move to Wyoming and get free of the communist and socialist liberal slime of Washington state. A beautiful state naturally, but run by Klinton/Gore communist lovers. The anti-nukers were out this morning passing out their garbage as we came off the ferry. I told Comrade bin Laden to get her garbage out of my face and to get the &#*#&@^ out of my way before I booted her ass out of the way. That drew cheers from the crowd coming off with me. We are from Bremerton, a Navy town, and lots of retired military like me and family members come to Sodom on the Sound (Seattle) to work. I hate this *#&@^ @*Y!^ *#&@)@! place.
12 posted on 10/18/2001 8:14:24 AM PDT by RetiredArmy
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To: RetiredArmy
It won't be long now, help is on the way.
13 posted on 10/18/2001 8:25:30 AM PDT by connectthedots
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To: Benighted
If the stuff in this article is verifiable, the proponents of Measure 7 have a great RICO claim against the Gov. and all his fellow conspirators. Drafting the complaint should be fairly simple. The best part is the individuals and not the state would have to personally pay the damages. Let me know if the good people of Oregon would like some help in drafting such a complaint.
14 posted on 10/18/2001 8:29:47 AM PDT by connectthedots
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To: RetiredArmy
I took early retirement 6 years ago, and being a guy who loves the outdoors and fly fishing, really thought that the Port Townsend area or one of the islands would be a great place to be!

My oldest son, who is more conservative than me had worked in the peoples republic of Wa for about one year. He warned me about what you have posted. He suggested that I take the Seattle Pravda for a few months. Then when we went to Wash. to use some questioning skills to find out how so many people in Wash. were so left wing!

After a week of Seattle Pravda, my eyes were opened. The next trip confirmed what you mention. We could not believe Seattle and the square of druggies, whores, and ? a few blocks east of where the ferry docked! Then even in Port Townsend and other areas on the penisula, the left wingers controlled the local government, news papers and were like thought control police. My son have labeled as the local Nazy Nannies, who try to control where and how we live, where we work, where we shop and how we breath and eat!

A friend had family members who had a big interest in one of Seattle's Pro Teams, bailed out due to what they called blatant commies in charge of Seattle!

When the anarchists and other eco terrorist were burning and destroying much of downtown Seattle, I got a phone call from my son. He said "Dad, turn on the tv to Fox News and see the confirmation of my wisdom a few years ago!"

We decided not move to Washington after or final trip to Port Townsend and the peninsula. We found the same cr@p rising to an untolerable level in Oregon. The radicals in Portland were controlling what was being done to the rest of the state. This article is prime proof. So we decided not to move! Of course now California has a totally out of control Facist enviral governor, Davis and a legislature like those in Oregone and Washington!

I feel for you! However, keep doing what you did to the piece of trash on the ferry! I'm doing the same here in Kalifornia!

15 posted on 10/18/2001 9:06:50 AM PDT by Grampa Dave
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To: connectthedots
I am an attorney in Oregon who has long thought the State is controlled by a braindead reactionary liberal cabal that violates the law with impunity, and I have never figured out how to nail them for it.

I would be interested to know the outlines of your RICO theory. Since the Supreme Court held that "racketeers" need not be motivated by economic interest (anti-abortion protestors can be racketeers), presumably, the statute could apply to misuse of the State as RICO "enterprise".

But what are the "predicate acts" of racketeering, and why don't doctrines of official immunity apply?

16 posted on 10/18/2001 9:23:51 AM PDT by Iconoclast2
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To: Iconoclast2
I would be interested to know the outlines of your RICO theory. Since the Supreme Court held that "racketeers" need not be motivated by economic interest (anti-abortion protestors can be racketeers), presumably, the statute could apply to misuse of the State as RICO "enterprise".

There is always an economic element in RICO cases. The defendants may not have put money directly in their pockets, but the rackeeting activity permits them to illegaly obtain or maintain control of an "enterprise". Only a deminimus economic impact need be established. In the case of those who control the Oregon courts, the mere purchasing of law books from a vendor outside the state is sufficient. If the racketeers cause economic loss to the plaintiff, that is also sufficient.

Remember that the state cannot commit a crime, but those who control/operate/manage state agencies and offices can operate them in a manner that violates Title 18 U.S.C. 1961-1968. As for the possible RICO predicate acts, refer to 18 U.S.C. 1961, which makes reference to other criminal statutes under Title 18 U.S.C.

But what are the "predicate acts" of racketeering, and why don't doctrines of official immunity apply?

See Title 18 U.S.C. 1961. The list is long. The most likely ones in this case would be Sects. 1341 - Mail Fraud, 1346 - intangible right to the honest performance of a public officials duties (based on the obvious intentional failure to raise certain defenses, the states attorney and those he report to could not have performed their duties in an honest fashion. Surprisingly this statute was ihntroduced to Congress by Sen Biden), 1503 - Obstruction of Justice (you cannot believe how broad an area this statute covers), 1951(b) - extortion (it covers more than what one would normally think.

On top of this, just think of all the civil rights causes of action there must be based on 42 U.S.C. 1983, 1985, 1986 (civil) and 18 U.S.C. 241, 242 (criminal). I could write paragraphs about this stuff.

As for immunity, I do not have the USSC and 9th Circuit cases at hand, but I will try to recall from memory the exact words, "It can never be a duty of a public official to commit a crime". Pretty simple, huh?

How do I know all this stuff? I currently have a $23.8 million RICO/Civil Rights action going in the USDC for Western Washington. The thug US District COurt Judge has attempted to dismiss it for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, only after I caught him committing at least 6 RICO predicate acts related to his actions in the case. I now have an appeal/Mandamus request before the 9th Circuit.

BTW, would you like to get in on a very large defamation/libel action against the Vancouver "Columbian" and a Vancouver superior court judge? I am also contemplating taking the Oregon Bar exam in February (there is no requirtment to graduate from law school in order to take the Bar exam to become an attorney in Oregon). I am possibly the citizen most feared by the Washington courts and other government officials in Clark County (this is a sure thing) and by the Gov and state AG. All of whom are defendants in my RICO/Civil Rights action. I got them cold. Should have a partial summary judgment of $1.5 million by the end of Nov/ first part of Dec.

If you are interested in how to go about going after the racketeers that control the State of Oregon, I know how to do it; let me know. I could draft the complaint and get it going for about $5,000. If you were to call the Clark County Superior Court, or the prosecutor's office and merely mention my first name and say that I am the pro se litigant, they would all know exactly who you were talking about. The same goes for the Washington Supreme Court, the Gov and the AG.

I really do know what I am doing, and I am ruthless in court. There is not even one judge in Clark County who will hear any case in which I am involved. I don't take any B.S. from any judge. They would never hold me in contempt simply because I want them to, because then there would be a trial and my list of adversarial witness would be very, very long. LOL

17 posted on 10/18/2001 12:02:32 PM PDT by connectthedots
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To: Benighted
This is awesome - you have GOT to get it to Lars Larson! He'll eat this up and do his best to drag each of these chicken-thievin' guttertrash onto his program!
18 posted on 10/18/2001 12:25:59 PM PDT by onehipdad
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To: Benighted
Be ever vigilant!!

Molon Labe!!

19 posted on 10/18/2001 12:59:07 PM PDT by blackie
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To: Benighted
BUT WAIT, IT GETS WORSE! From Brainstorm Magazine

Extreme Countermeasures

by William E. Merritt

October, 2001

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

On November 7, 2000, Oregon voters passed a ballot measure forcing state and local governments to pay landowners when one of their regulations reduced the value of property. A few weeks later, the measure was challenged as unconstitutional. "Deep-Sixing Seven," in June's BrainstormNW, described the way in which Oregon Governor John Kitzhaber gave every appearance of conspiring with a deputy attorney general and the lawyer bringing the challenge to Measure 7 in order to make sure the ballot measure lost in court.

At the time the article went to press, it was clear from public documents that:

1. Kitzhaber had campaigned vigorously against Measure 7 on the grounds that it "would bankrupt the state."

2. On November 17-before any lawsuit had been filed-Kitzhaber attended a two-and-a-half hour meeting with Tom Christ, a lawyer in private practice who would bring one of the two lawsuits against the measure. After the meeting, Christ returned to his office and began drafting the complaint.

3. Deputy Attorney General David Schuman, who defended Measure 7 in court, was an outspoken critic of ballot measures in general, believing the entire process should be declared unconstitutional by the United States Supreme Court. Schuman lost the Measure 7 case. And the arguments he relied upon when defending Measure 7 would later raise questions about whether he had conducted the defense in good faith.

A few weeks after Measure 7 was declared unconstitutional, Gov. Kitzhaber appointed Schuman to the Court of Appeals.

Until recently, the only insight into what went on at the November 17th meeting came from Tom Christ and from Chip Lazenby, the governor's staff attorney. Both claimed that the sole purpose of the meeting was to determine where matters stood in regard to Measure 7 so that Kitzhaber could plan his new budget.

Relying on documents produced in response to an Open-Records-Law request by Oregonians in Action and turned over to BrainstormNW, now we know more. The first document is a telephone message slip dated November 16, 2000.

The slip states that Jerry Lidz had called Lazenby and left word that David Schuman, Dick Townsend and the Attorney General's office wanted to meet with Lazenby and Glenn Klein.

Jerry Lidz and Glenn Klein are lawyers with the firm of Harrang, Long, Gary, Rudnick. Harrang, Long represents the City of Eugene, Oregon, which, a few days after the meeting, became one of the plaintiffs challenging the constitutionality of Measure 7.

Dick Townsend is the Executive Director of the League of Oregon Cities, also soon to become a plaintiff against Measure 7.

The message slip goes on to explain that the get-together was for the purpose of coordinating state & local response (to Measure 7).

The message slip indicates that Schuman, the person entrusted by the state to represent the three-quarters-of-a-million Oregonians who voted for Measure 7, arranged with Townsend to have Lidz (the lawyer for another of the plaintiffs planning to challenge Measure 7) set up a meeting with the governor's staff attorney. The purpose: to coordinate the upcoming challenges to Measure 7.

When the meeting was held the next day, Schuman did not attend. If he had, he would have automatically been prevented by the Oregon State Bar's Disciplinary Rules from taking any role in the defense of Measure 7. Any plan to throw the defense of Measure 7 required that an insider handle the defense personally.

Gov. Kitzhaber was at the meeting, and so was Lazenby. Bill Wyatt, Gov. Kitzhaber's Chief of Staff, Steve Marks, who worked under Wyatt, and Robin MacArthur-Phillips, Kitzhaber's Natural Resources Policy Advisor, attended as well. Tom Christ attended, as did Robert Liberty, the Executive Director of 1000 Friends of Oregon, an environmental group that had opposed Measure 7 from the beginning, and Dick Benner, the head of the Oregon Department of Land Conservation and Development, whose ability to set land-use policy was threatened by Measure 7.

The single page of notes Lazenby produced is important, not just for what it says about what went on in the meeting, but for what it does not. Despite Lazenby's and Christ's assertions to the contrary, the notes contain no mention of any discussion of budgets. What was discussed was how to make sure Measure 7 never went into effect. That is all, according to the notes, that was discussed. The upper left-hand corner sets out the subject of the meeting:

B(allot) M(easure) 7 Litigation, and the date: 11-17-00. Yet, at the time of the meeting, no litigation was in the works. What the notes show is that the strategy to overturn Measure 7 originated at this meeting.

Then, in outline form:

A) Christ -- Pre-lim Injunction 1) S(ecretary) O(f) S(tate) /Canvassing votes Gov(ernor) /not to proclaim

This section indicates that Tom Christ, after bringing suit, was to file for a preliminary injunction to prevent the Secretary of State from canvassing (officially counting) the votes, and Gov. Kitzhaber from proclaiming the results. Since Oregon's Constitution requires the governor to proclaim the results, Kitzhaber's participation in such scheme would constitute an attempt to circumvent his duties as governor.

This was to be followed by a:

B) Full Hearing on merits (leading to a) Permanent Injunction

Which is exactly what happened.

Next comes a description of the way the upcoming legal challenge would unfold:

Process -- Lawsuit in Marion Co(unty) Req(uest) P(reliminary) I(njunction) Opposition of D(epartment) O(f) J(ustice) Key If opposed -- May not get it

If the Attorney General opposed the injunction, the whole scheme could unravel.

By not attending the meeting he initiated, Schuman had preserved the right to try the case himself and make sure that the preliminary injunction was not effectively opposed.

Finally, in the lower left-hand corner, is one of the most evocative entries of all:

Abernethy, Lipscomb + Norblad, Barbur ? Leggert ~

These are judges at the Marion County Circuit Court who might be called upon to decide the lawsuit. Next to their names are what appear to be ratings. Litigants speculate about judges all the time, of course. What makes these ratings different is the fact that everybody agreed. Clearly, if Abernethy and Lipscomb were more likely to look favorably on a challenge to Measure 7 than Norblad and Barbur, then Liberty and Christ should have given them pluses, while Kitzhaber and Lazenby should have awarded minuses. It makes no sense that parties on the opposite sides of lawsuits would agree on how to rate the desirability of the judges who might handle the matter.

It seems almost impossible to make sense of what happened without concluding that:

1) After the citizens of Oregon passed Measure 7, Deputy Attorney General David Schuman and Dick Townsend, the Executive Director of the League of Oregon Cities, initiated a meeting with Gov. Kitzhaber, as well as representatives of the League of Oregon Cities, 1000 Friends of Oregon, and the City of Eugene at which plans were made to overturn Measure 7 through a sham lawsuit invalidating the measure in court, a lawsuit which from the beginning the state never intended to defend vigorously.

2) Schuman put himself in charge of the defense, then lost the case in court. Subsequently Schuman has been reported to the Oregon State Bar for failing to provide a vigorous defense.

3) A few weeks later, Gov. Kitzhaber appointed Schuman to the Court of Appeals.

If the facts add up this way--and it is hard to imagine any other way that they could add up--the citizens of Oregon were cheated out of their votes.

It is important to remember that everybody at the meeting that day, like everybody else in America, has the right to his own opinion about Measure 7. And the right to act on those feelings. Gov. Kitzhaber, Christ, or anybody else, was free to lobby against Measure 7 in the legislature, and to denounce it on the airwaves. That is legal and proper and ethical. What is not legal and proper and ethical is to use public office to deprive voters of their franchise under the cover of judicial proceedings.

20 posted on 10/18/2001 2:58:01 PM PDT by Iconoclast2
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