Anonymous ID: 11e692 Dec. 17, 2024, 5:20 a.m. No.22180353   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0695 >>1122 >>1307

Judge in Hunter Biden case sued over underage drinking party, alleged beating

 

he federal judge in Los Angeles who presided over Hunter Biden's criminal tax fraud case has been sued over a party at his home where “significant” underage drinking allegedly led to a guest being assaulted and later hospitalized.

 

The injured guest, Alex Wilson, filed the suit against U.S. District Judge Mark Scarsi and his wife, Laura Scarsi, alleging that they were negligent in allowing teens from “various schools, including Loyola High School and St. Francis High School,” to consume alcohol without proper supervision.

 

The party occurred sometime in 2023 — the lawsuit offers two conflicting dates — at the Scarsis' gated Pasadena mansion. While the festivities were underway, a fight among “heavily intoxicated underage minors” erupted in front of the Scarsis' home and on their property, according to the suit, which was filed Thursday in Los Angeles Superior Court and first reported by Law360.

 

Wilson alleges that one of the guests, Jackson Dorlarque, assaulted him and struck “his head and body on a curb on the Scarsi property.” From the beating, Wilson lost consciousness, sustained a traumatic brain injury, and had to be hospitalized for more than two weeks, according to the lawsuit. The suit contends that a “major” cut to Wilson’s face has left permanent scarring that "will require" plastic surgery.

 

Wilson's age, background and educational status are unclear, with the lawsuit offering just one detail: He is a resident of L.A. County. Wilson's attorney, James Orland, did not respond to multiple messages seeking comment.

 

In addition to the physical injuries, Wilson alleges he has suffered emotional trauma and social anxiety in the wake of the incident.

 

Wilson is seeking unspecified damages, arguing that the Scarsis did not properly supervise or secure the party and that they are liable “if they knowingly provide alcohol to minors or allow underage drinking to occur on their property

 

Wilson also brought an assault and battery claim against Dorlarque and his parents, Aaron Dorlarque and Jessica Brumfiel, arguing that the parents are liable for their son’s alleged conduct.

 

It's unclear whether Scarsi and his wife were present during the alleged party or beating. Scarsi did not respond to requests for comment, including an email sent to the judge's chambers. Dorlarque and his parents did not respond to messages seeking comment.

Then-President Trump appointed Scarsi, 59, to the federal bench in 2020. Before assuming his lifetime appointment, Scarsi was a prominent patent and intellectual property attorney.

 

From his courtroom in downtown L.A., he has presided over high-profile matters, including two cases brought by special counsel David Weiss: the prosecution of Hunter Biden and a separate prosecution of a former FBI informant, Alexander Smirnov.

 

Recently, Scarsi gained national attention after he penned a rebuke of President Biden’s reasons for issuing a “full and complete” pardon of his son, Hunter.

 

Scarsi was scheduled to sentence Hunter Biden, probably to prison, after Biden pleaded guilty to tax offenses. In Delaware, Biden had been convicted of illegally purchasing a gun, but the pardon wiped both convictions away.

 

Scarsi excoriated the president for asserting in a news release that his son was treated unfairly because of his last name. After also criticizing the president for offering an incomplete version of his son's criminal case, Scarsi tartly noted that the president enjoyed “broad authority to grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the United States … but nowhere does the Constitution give the President the authority to rewrite history.”

 

Smirnov pleaded guilty Monday to lying to a federal agent about a fake bribery scheme involving the Bidens, along with tax evasion. Scarsi is scheduled to sentence Smirnov next month; prosecutors have agreed to seek four to six years in prison.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/judge-hunter-biden-case-sued-110058729.html

Anonymous ID: 11e692 Dec. 17, 2024, 6:17 a.m. No.22180670   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0771

Kinda tired of the Shock and Awe titles but…

 

🚨BREAKING: "Biden Is Dead" - White House Official's Secret Recording Confirms Everyone's Worst Fears

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ipdDJQVh9Mg

Anonymous ID: 11e692 Dec. 17, 2024, 6:44 a.m. No.22180798   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0808 >>0830

Spoopy Connections.

Reports state a 2nd Grader called 911 at 1057 am.

 

Q Drop 1057 eerie.

 

Who was the Columbine Sleeper Therapist?

 

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/us/wisconsin-shooting-was-natalie-rupnow-paying-tribute-to-columbine-shooter/articleshow/116402587.cms

Anonymous ID: 11e692 Dec. 17, 2024, 8:28 a.m. No.22181215   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Those you Trust the Most

 

Judge orders California Bible college to cease operations after state hearing

 

A Christian Bible school in Riverside County was ordered to cease operations after a recent state hearing into multiple allegations over failures to properly educate and maintain records.

 

Amid student accusations of forced and unpaid labor at Olivet University, which is headquartered in the high-desert town of Anza, Calif., school leaders leaders tried to protect the university’s fate against state regulators’ attempts to revoke its license.

 

Presiding Judge Debra Nye-Perkins, who presided over the Office of Administrative Hearings, ordered the school to halt the enrollment of new students and help current students figure out a plan to finish their degrees elsewhere. The decision was finalized on Dec. 10 and goes into effect on Jan. 10.

 

“The only degree of discipline that would protect the public is the revocation of respondent’s approval to operate,” she wrote in her decision, ordering the school to pay more than $64,000 for violations. Nye-Perkins had 30 days to issue her ruling after the three-day hearing in early November, Olivet said in a statement that it will appeal the judge's order and has submitted an application to continue operating in California under "religious exemption.”

 

A state investigation was launched into the private university in 2022 by the Bureau of Private and Post-Secondary Education — a unit of the California Department of Consumer Affairs — over concerns for student safety and quality of education, officers testified in November.

 

Olivet President Jonathan Park and Vice President Walker Tzeng said that the probe was racially and religiously prejudiced and was prompted by news reports from Newsweek, which university leaders claimed to be inaccurate. The media outlet is owned by former Olivet members.

 

During two unannounced visits to Olivet’s campuses outside of Riverside and San Francisco, Bureau of Private and Post-Secondary Education officers testified that few students and faculty were viewed in living quarters and in classrooms. Most classes that were observed, officers said, were attended by a handful students — sometimes five or seven — and taught via a live-stream.

 

Administrative representatives at the university’s main campus in Anza and a branch campus in Mill Valley, Calif., did not have documents readily available related to student and faculty rosters and class syllabi, officers said. Some documents lacked detail, such as how many hours quantified “full-time work” for a student and several faculty contracts were either missing or expired.

 

Joanna Murray, a senior specialist at the bureau, said that one graduate class she observed was not rigorous enough for that level of education and that there was a lack of engagement between teacher and student.

 

“It’s not what I expected from a Master class,” she said.

 

Tzeng and Park accused the bureau of playing “gotcha” with its unannounced visits and said that a true review of the university would examine graduates’ impact on ministry — the focus of the school’s training and mission. School leaders continued to argue that the bureau’s assessment was prejudiced.

 

In one tense exchange, Tzeng said that BPPE officer Ashley Cornejo’s note that he “spoke good English” during her visit reflected a racial bias against Olivet, which has a majority of students from East Asia. The officer said the note was in keeping with other documented observations she wrote when she had trouble understanding a person she interviewed.

 

“When you look at people with a different skin color, do you assume they don’t speak English well?” Tzeng asked.

 

“No, because I know what that feels like,” Cornejo, a person of color, responded.

 

Throughout the testimony, Park and Tzeng said that the university was in good standing with its accreditor, the Assn. for Biblical Higher Education. Nye-Perkins and Deputy Atty. Gen. Dionne Mochon, who represented the bureau, said that accreditation was irrelevant to the case at hand. The BPPE is responsible for giving Olivet authority to grant degrees in California.

 

The Bible college system is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that is connected with World Olivet Assembly Inc. — a nonprofit connected to ministry work. Both have reported tens of millions of dollars in revenue and assets on tax returns.

 

The university is also under federal investigation.

 

moar

https://www.yahoo.com/news/judge-orders-california-bible-college-110058953.html