Anonymous ID: 943747 July 27, 2022, 4:07 p.m. No.16856700   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>16855839

By the time the Coca-Cola case got started a year later, City of Chicago Commissioner of Water, John Bolden, was targeted for federal criminal prosecution in "Silver Shovel". His and the soda pop case were both pending before Judge Manning. Commissioner Bolden's defense attorney, James Montgomery, was reportedly a close crony of Judge Manning. It was obvious to savvy sorts what might happen.

 

 

Montgomery reportedly had ties of some sort over the years with Nevada gambling casino gangsters. Reportedly part of the crime cartel and a big-time owner of gambling casinos, William F. Cellini reportedly had bought the federal judgeship for Manning, paying some one million dollars through then U.S. Senator Carol Moseley-Braun [D., Ill.].

 

John DeCamp, in a position reportedly to understand a few things about Coca-Cola and the CIA and the Chicago federal judges, withdrew from the newly started case against Coke, in July, 1997. A few weeks later, started the federal criminal trial USA vs. John Bolden. Same Judge.

 

Anyone knowing a lot about court knows that even trials by jury can be "fixed" or sabotaged by the trial Judge. Such as, by the Judge keeping out key evidence as being "inadmissible", by manipulating the dates and circumstances of the jury procedures. By slanting the court procedures against the prosecutors and in favor of the criminal defendant. By scheduling the jury under peculiar circumstances.

 

 

In September, 1997, the jury in the Bolden case came back with a split verdict. Guilty on tax evasion, wherein Bolden could get, at most, six months in prison. They acquitted Bolden on the more serious charges of extortion.

 

John Bolden was a bigshot making as much as 90 thousand dollars a year as Commissioner of Water for City of Chicago. [And perhaps much more as pay-offs to influence his official position.]

 

 

He was a big fish. The team that helped put together the charges against Bolden were and are livid. Why? They contend that Judge Manning, to go easy on Water Commissioner Bolden, got a financial benefit that some might construe as a bribe.

 

 

The team, in plain language, grumbles loud enough for others to hear, that U.S. District Judge Blanche M. Manning is a crook, whose chair reportedly was bought for her by a crook, and that she belongs in prison, along with the one who bought her the Judgeship.

 

To understand this story fully, you have to understand the realities of political and financial power. Those who put together criminal charges are most often NOT concerned about bribes to Judges in CIVIL cases. So, if Judge Manning had been bribed or corruptly influenced or blackmailed in the CIVIL case, the one against Coca-Cola, well, the team is NOT concerned.

 

 

In the Water Commissioner's case, Judge Manning made the same mistake, however, as Chicago Federal Appeals Judge Otto Kerner, Jr., in 1969. He had reportedly taken a huge bribe in a CIVIL case, involving a five million dollar claim regarding a pet food company. The matter, however, that instigated the federal criminal charges against Judge Kerner was that he had been corrupted to turn loose the Silver-Hi-Jacking Gang, an important federal CRIMINAL case.

 

A federal judge is a fool to counter the prosecutors in a federal criminal case. A federal judge who takes bribes or financial benefits or is corruptly influenced or blackmailed, in a CIVIL case, most likely stays peacefully and quietly on the bench until he or she retires or croaks.

 

pt 20

 

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Anonymous ID: 943747 July 27, 2022, 4:09 p.m. No.16857215   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>7261 >>7561

>>16856570

it's time to take back the culture

and the way that's done is shaming degenerate behavior across the board

be louder than they are

shaming degenerate behavior, when done on a large, nationwide scale, works because well, that's how they got their agendas pushed to begin with

start calling them what they are - mentally ill degenerate heterophobes

flip the script back on those faggots

 

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Anonymous ID: 943747 July 27, 2022, 4:10 p.m. No.16857244   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>16856015

 

I used to think like you. They figured out they only need about 500 Million. They prefer the docile unarmed versions of us. Too dangerous to let some of us stick around. The masses are killing their vibe, so they have to go too.

 

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Anonymous ID: 943747 July 27, 2022, 4:10 p.m. No.16857309   🗄️.is đź”—kun

Did trump mention this?

Has anyone w/ a platform mentioned this?

if so, SAUCE pls. Otherwise, TRUST NO ONE, clearly.

 

"What is this? Controlled demolition of America?

 

This is very concerning…

 

What’s going on?

 

Zero Hedge has more:

 

While the fire seems insignificant, it’s part of a much larger issue of a spate of “accidental fires,” one by one, taking out America’s food supply chain over the past year (source of the list via the Gateway Pundit):

 

1/11/21 A fire that destroyed 75,000-square-foot processing plant in Fayetteville

 

4/30/21 A fire ignited inside the Smithfield Foods pork processing plant in Monmouth, IL

 

7/25/21 Three-alarm fire at Kellogg plant in Memphis, 170 emergency personnel responded to the call

 

7/30/21 Firefighters on Friday battled a large fire at Tyson’s River Valley Ingredients plant in Hanceville, Alabama

 

8/23/21 Fire crews were called to the Patak Meat Production company on Ewing Road in Austell

 

9/13/21 A fire at the JBS beef plant in Grand Island, Neb., on Sunday night forced a halt to slaughter and fabrication lines

 

10/13/21 A five-alarm fire ripped through the Darigold butter production plant in Caldwell, ID

 

11/15/21 A woman is in custody following a fire at the Garrard County Food Pantry

 

11/29/21 A fire broke out around 5:30 p.m. at the Maid-Rite Steak Company meat processing plant

 

12/13/21 West Side food processing plant in San Antonio left with smoke damage after a fire

 

1/7/22 Damage to a poultry processing plant on Hamilton’s Mountain following an overnight fire

 

1/13/22 Firefighters worked for 12 hours to put a fire out at the Cargill-Nutrena plant in Lecompte, LA

 

1/31/22 a fertilizer plant with 600 tons of ammonium nitrate inside caught on fire on Cherry Street in Winston-Salem

 

2/3/22 A massive fire swept through Wisconsin River Meats in Mauston

 

2/3/22 At least 130 cows were killed in a fire at Percy Farm in Stowe

 

2/15/22 Bonanza Meat Company goes up in flames in El Paso, Texas

 

2/15/22 Nearly a week after the fire destroyed most of the Shearer’s Foods plant in Hermiston

 

2/16/22 A fire had broken at US largest soybean processing and biodiesel plant in Claypool, Indiana

 

2/18/22 An early morning fire tore through the milk parlor at Bess View Farm

 

2/19/22 Three people were injured, and one was hospitalized, after an ammonia leak at Lincoln Premium Poultry in Fremont

 

2/22/22 The Shearer’s Foods plant in Hermiston caught fire after a propane boiler exploded

 

2/28/22 A smoldering pile of sulfur quickly became a raging chemical fire at Nutrien Ag Solutions

 

2/28/22 A man was hurt after a fire broke out at the Shadow Brook Farm and Dutch Girl Creamery

 

3/4/22 294,800 chickens destroyed at farm in Stoddard, Missouri

 

3/4/22 644,000 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Cecil, Maryland

 

3/8/22 243,900 chickens destroyed at egg farm in New Castle, Delaware

 

3/10/22 663,400 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Cecil, MD

 

3/10/22 915,900 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Taylor, IA

 

3/14/22 The blaze at 244 Meadow Drive was discovered shortly after 5 p.m. by farm owner Wayne Hoover

 

3/14/22 2,750,700 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Jefferson, Wisconsin

 

3/16/22 A fire at a Walmart warehouse distribution center has cast a large plume of smoke visible throughout Indianapolis.

 

3/16/22 Nestle Food Plant extensively damaged in fire and new production destroyed Jonesboro, Arkansas

 

3/17/22 5,347,500 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Buena Vista, Iowa

 

3/17/22 147,600 chickens destroyed at farm in Kent, Delaware

 

3/18/22 315,400 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Cecil, Maryland

 

3/22/22 172,000 Turkeys destroyed on farms in South Dakota

 

3/22/22 570,000 chickens destroyed at farm in Butler, Nebraska

 

3/24/22 Fire fighters from numerous towns are battling a major fire at the McCrum potato processing facility in Belfast.

 

3/24/22 418,500 chickens destroyed at farm in Butler, Nebraska

 

3/25/22 250,300 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Franklin, Iowa

 

3/26/22 311,000 Turkeys destroyed in Minnesota

 

3/27/22 126,300 Turkeys destroyed in South Dakota

 

3/28/22 1,460,000 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Guthrie, Iowa

 

3/29/22 A massive fire burned 40,000 pounds of food meant to feed people in a food desert near Maricopa

 

3/31/22 A structure fire caused significant damage to a large portion of key fresh onion packing facilities in south Texas

 

3/31/22 76,400 Turkeys destroyed in Osceola, Iowa

 

3/31/22 5,011,700 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Osceola, Iowa

 

4/6/22 281,600 chickens destroyed at farm in Wayne, North Carolina

 

4/9/22 76,400 Turkeys destroyed in Minnesota

 

4/9/22 208,900 Turkeys destroyed in Minnesota

 

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