Anonymous ID: 5ce6c6 May 14, 2020, 7:33 a.m. No.9168712   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8907

PB

>>9168096 How George Soros packed the European Court of Human Rights and Pushed Its Open Border Policies

 

Read this notable and thought Soros buying the justice system. Sounds like what's happening to General Flynn. Wonder how long it would take to find aConnection between Emmet Sullivan and Soros

It took about 3 minutes and 3 internet searches. roughly 6 clicks total

 

>Search for Emmet Sullivan board of directors

<Find bio of Emmet Sullivan Judicial nomination bragging about "accomplishments"

Judge Sullivan is a former member of the Board of Directors and Executive Committee of the Council for Court Excellence

 

These fags are so fucking obvious

>Search Council for Court Excellence find mission statement

< CCE’s mission is to enhance the justice system in the District of Columbia to serve the public equitably.

(((equitably)))

 

this shit is going to be easy

>search for Council for Court Excellence and open society

<first fucking hit

AcknowledgmentsThe report that follows is the work of theCouncil for Court Excellence’s School Discipline Project Committee. This Commit-tee was chaired by Administrative Law Judge Arabella Teal, Officeof Administrative Hearings, from January 2012 to April 2013, thenby Magistrate Judge Diane Brenneman, Superior Court of the District of Columbia, beginning in April 2013 to the present. Itsactive members have included: CCE Board Directors BruceBerger, Hollingsworth, LLP; Senior Judge Arthur Burnett (Ret.), DCSuperior Court; Dr. Ramona Edelin, DC Association of CharteredPublic Schools; Andrew Glass, Politico; Victor Long, Regan, Zambri & Long, PC; Tyrone Parker, Alliance of Concerned Men; Diana Savit, Savit & Szymkowicz, LLP; and John McNulty,Hollingsworth, LLP; as well asAllison Brown, Open Society Foundations;David Rosenthal, DC Office of the Attorney General;Oliver Sloman formerly with Steptoe & Johnson, LLP; and Professor Joseph Tulman, University of the District of ColumbiaDavid A. Clarke School of Law.

Anonymous ID: 5ce6c6 May 14, 2020, 7:52 a.m. No.9168907   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9168712

Goodbye to Pete Willner

 

July 3, 2014 marked Pete Willner’s last day at CCE, after nearly 17 years. “CCE has been where I’ve spent most of my professional life and it’s been the perfect job for me,” Pete said. “Every day is different and every project has been challenging and rewarding. The projects attract and engage a wide variety of talented and committed people.”

 

Pete arrived at CCE as an intern while pursuing his Master of Public Administration at American University. His assignment was to assist Dr. Richard Seltzer on a study of why people didn’t respond to DC jury summonses, as part of CCE’s 1998 DC Jury Project. Dr. Seltzer received from the DC Superior Court a listing of every person that didn’t respond to a jury summons over a certain time period; Pete staffed a phone bank that called the non-responders after a “reverse look-up” of phone numbers based on address. After this, Pete was hired to work on both administrative and program issues.

 

Early in his CCE career, Pete worked with the Finance Committee. He also staffed the committee that conducted three separate community-based observations of the local and federal courts in DC. But, during most of his time at CCE, Pete staffed a range of projects mainly relating to criminal, civil and administrative justice. In the area of criminal justice, Pete worked on CCE’s Criminal Caseflow Project, leading to the creation of DC Superior Court’s community court, sentencing reform, including white papers about the sentencing implications of the Revitalization Act, and several projects that involved the publishing of reports and legislative reform including the Expungement, Disorderly Conduct, Post-Arrest Process, and Reentry Projects. In the area of court improvements, Pete worked on the Civil Caseflow Project, the Probate Task Force, and the Journalists’ Handbook and Bench-Bar-Media Dialogue Project. He also spent a number of years engaged in the Administrative Hearings Project leading to the establishment of the Office of Administrative Hearings.

 

Pete has also been active in the community, serving in the past on the DC Commission that hired administrative law judges as well as the DC Commission on Reentry. He has worked on several different reentry-related task forces, including the Reentry Task Force, the Criminal Justice Coordinating Council’s employment work group,and the Open Society’s DC reentry work group, among others.

 

Pete and his family are moving back to their roots in the Syracuse, NY region to be close to parents and relatives. His new career is with InterFaith Works as Director of their newly created Center for Dialogue. The Center will address and reduce intercultural and interracial conflict in central New York.

 

CCE thanks Pete for his many contributions and wishes him and his family all the best as they embark on the next chapter. We also thank Mark Flanagan and McKenna Long & Aldridge for generously hosting Pete's farewell at which he received an appreciation award presented by Board Chair Jay Brozost (pictured above).