Supreme Court of the United States CAROL PULLIAM, Petitioner vs. USC On Petition For A Writ Of Certiorari RICHARD ISAAC FINE

“Richard I. Fine Presents the argument against paying County or Court Supplemental or Local Judicial Benefit Payments to Judges, to the US Supreme Court.”

 

 

Richard I Fine Petition to the Supreme Court of California For A Writ Of Certiorari=========================================================================================

In The
Supreme Court of the United States

——————————— ♦ ———————————
CAROL PULLIAM,
Petitioner,
vs.
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA,
Respondent.
——————————— ♦ ———————————

On Petition For A Writ Of Certiorari
To The Supreme Court Of The State Of California

——————————— ♦ ———————————

PETITION FOR WRIT OF CERTIORARI

——————————— ♦ ———————————
RICHARD ISAAC FINE, ESQ.
P.O. Box 789, 1187 Coast Village Rd., Ste. 1
Santa Barbara, CA 93102-0789
Telephone: (310) 622-6900
Email: moc.walenifdrahcirobfsctd@enifdrahcir
Counsel for Petitioner Carol Pulliam

==================================================================================================
COCKLE LEGAL BRIEFS (800) 225-6964
WWW.COCKLELEGALBRIEFS.COM

i

QUESTION PRESENTED

Do state court trial judges, court of appeal justices
and supreme court justices “war against the (United
States) Constitution” by denying state litigants Fourteenth
Amendment Constitutional due process when
each and/or all these judicial officers did not disclose
and recuse themselves as required by state law, state
Code of Judicial Ethics and/or other state or federal
requirements when he/she:

(1) currently receives or in the past received payments from:
(a) the county currently paying or paid the
Respondent for Respondent’s services; and/or
(b) an entity jointly offering services with Respondent;
(c) a partner, representative and/or affiliate
of the Respondent; and/or
(d) another county; and/or

(2) as a lawyer who personally represented
and/or his/her firm represented the county making the
payments to the judges in cases involving:
(a) the legality and/or the constitutionality of the payments; and
(b) subsequent statutes relating to the payments.

ii

LIST OF PARTIES

All parties appear in the caption of the case on the
cover page: (1) Carol Pulliam; and (2) University of Southern California.
MSS Nurses Registry was a defendant in the trial court.

 

CORPORATE DISCLOSURE STATEMENT

Nether Petitioner nor Respondent are stock corporations.
No public corporation owns 10% or more of the
shares of either Petitioner or Respondent.

RELATED CASES

No related cases exist.

iii

TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                                           Page
QUESTION PRESENTED…………………………….. i
LIST OF PARTIES ……………………………………. ii
CORPORATE DISCLOSURE STATEMENT ……….. ii
RELATED CASES …………………………………….. ii
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES ……………………………..vi
LIST OF ALL PROCEEDINGS AND DECISIONS
BELOW ……………………………………………………..1
JURISDICTION ……………………………………………. 2
CONSTITUTIONAL AND STATUTORY PROVISIONS
INVOLVED IN THE CASE ……………………………. 2
STATEMENT OF THE CASE…………………………. 3
A. Facts in Underlying Case ………………………….3
REASONS FOR GRANTING THE PETITION………..7

A. The California Supreme Court’s Denial of
the Petition for Review and the Court of
Appeal’s Denial of Petition for Rehearing
each “decided an important federal question
in a way that conflicts with relevant
decisions of this Court” …………………………………..7

B. The California Supreme Court has a Clear
and Present Pattern of Violating Cooper v.
Aaron ………………………………………………………..9

C. California has a Long History of Unlawful
“supplemental judicial benefit” Payments ………………10

WHEN AND WHERE FEDERAL QUESTIONS
SOUGHT TO BE REVIEWED WERE RAISED
AND HOW TREATED BY THE COURTS …………………..14

OTHER MATERIAL PETITIONER BELIEVES
IS ESSENTIAL TO UNDERSTAND THE PETITION
…………………………………………………………………………………..14

ARGUMENT AMPLIFYING THE REASONS
RELIED UPON FOR THE ALLOWANCE OF
THE WRIT …………………………………………………………………15
CONCLUSION ……………………………………………………………17

 

APPENDIX
Order, Supreme Court of California (Nov. 16, 2022) App. 1
Order, Court of Appeal of California (Sep. 8, 2022) App. 2
Opinion, Court of Appeal of California (Aug. 23, 2022) App. 3
Order, Superior Court of California (Dec. 11, 2020) App. 24
Judgment, Superior Court of California (Jan. 6, 2020) App. 26
Order, Superior Court of California (Jan. 23,
2019) App. 29

Petition for Rehearing, Court of Appeal of California
………………………………………………………………….App. 48
v

                                                                                  Page
Petition for Review, Supreme Court of California
…………………………………………………………. App. 68
Minute Order, Superior Court of California (Feb.
26, 2020) ………………………………………………… App. 86
Order, Superior Court of California (Feb. 26,
2020) ……………………………………………………… App. 88
vi

 

TABLE OF AUTHORITIES

                                                                                      Page
CASES
Cooper v. Aaron, 358 U.S. 1 (1958) ……………………… 7, 9
Hazel-Atlas Co. v. Hartford Co., 322 U.S. 238
(1944) ………………………………………………………………….. 15
Sturgeon v. County of Los Angeles, 167 Cal.App.4th
630 (2008) (Sturgeon I) ……………………… 6, 7, 10, 11, 12
Sturgeon v. County of Los Angeles, 191 Cal.App.4th
344 (2010) (Sturgeon II) …………………………………… 6, 12
Sturgeon v. County of Los Angeles, 242 Cal.App.4th
1437 (2015) (Sturgeon III) ……………………………. 6, 12, 13
United States v. Throckmorton, 98 U.S. 61
(1878) ……………………………………………………………..15

CONSTITUTIONAL PROVISIONS
U.S. Const. amend. XIV ………………………………………… 2
U.S. Const. art. VI ………………………………………………… 9
STATUTES
18 U.S.C. Section 1346 …………………………………… 2, 4, 7
28 U.S.C. Section 1257(a) ……………………………………… 2

 

LIST OF ALL PROCEEDINGS
AND DECISIONS BELOW

The decision of the highest state court to review
the merits was the California Supreme Court’s Denial
of the Petition for Review which appears at Appendix
1 to the Petition and is unpublished.

The decisions of the California Court of Appeal
denying the Petition for Rehearing and deciding the
appeal each appear at Appendix 2 and 3 respectively.
Each are each unpublished.

The relevant decisions of the State of California
Superior Court for the County of Los Angeles identifying
the Denial of the combined Motion for New Trial
and the Motion to Vacate the Judgment and the Judgment
each appear at Appendix 24 and 26, respectively.
Each are unpublished.

The removal from the State of California Superior
Court for the County of Los Angeles to the U.S. District
Court for the Central District of California.

The decision of the U.S. District Court for the
Central District of California.

The remand to the State of California Superior
Court for the County of Los Angeles from the U.S.
District Court for the Central District of California.
——————————— ♦ ———————————

JURISDICTION

The date on which the California Supreme Court
denied the Petition for Review was November 16, 2022.
A copy of the decision appears at Appendix 1.

The jurisdiction of this Court is invoked under 28
U.S.C. Section 1257(a).

 

——————————— ♦ ———————————

CONSTITUTIONAL AND STATUTORY
PROVISIONS INVOLVED IN THE CASE

United States Constitution and Statutes
United States Constitution, Fourteenth Amendment.
18 U.S.C. Section 1346.
Code of Conduct for United States Judges
Canons 1, 2A, 3C, 4A, D, E, G and H.
The Ethics Reform Act of 1989.
California Constitution and Statutes
California Constitution
Article 1, Section 7, Section 8, Section 24,
Section 26 and Section 28;
Article 2, Section 18;
Article 4, Section 17 and Section 18;
Article 6, Section 14, Section 16, Section 17,
Section 18, Section 19, Section 20, Section 21
and Section 22; and

Article 11, Section 10.

CCP Section 170.1(a)(6)(A)(iii).

California Code of Judicial Ethics

Canon 1, 2A, 3B, C, D, E and 4D.

——————————— ♦ ———————————

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

A. Facts in Underlying Case

Summary of relevant underlying state case facts
underscoring the Question Presented:

(1) Respondent (USC) owns, operates and staffs
hospitals;

(2) Petitioner (Carol) was a nurse employed in
one of USC’s owned and operated hospitals, USC Verdugo
Hills;
(3) USC admits and publicizes the County of Los
Angeles (LA County) currently pays USC $170 million
per year to “staff and operate” the Los Angeles
County/USC Hospital and has maintained the relationship
for over 100 years resulting in a LA County
interest in the outcome of the underlying state case as
a demonstration of USC’s operational and staffing abilities;

(4) Since the 1980s, LA County paid and currently
pays state Superior Court Judges sitting on the
California Superior Court for the County of Los Angeles
“supplemental judicial benefit” payments in addition
to their state compensation; and

(5) Such payments were held to be unconstitutional
by the California Court of Appeal, Review Denied
by the California Supreme Court, declared
criminal by California statute SBX 2 11, Section 5 and
violate 18 U.S.C. Section 1346.

The facts in the underlying case are most accurately
described in Petitioner’s Petition for Rehearing
of the California Court of Appeal’s Decision, Appendix
No. 48 and Petitioner’s Petition for Review, Appendix
No. 68.

The following is a succinct description of the relevant
facts in the underlying case disclosing:

(1) USC “admitted” its relationship with LA
County to be a joint venture of “Los Angeles County +
USC Medical Center” in the hospital business since
1885 (over 100 years) with USC also benefitting by LA
County paying “supplemental judicial benefits” to the
California Superior Court judges sitting on the Superior
Court for the County of Los Angeles ensuring USC
and LA County would win any cases against each of
them and/or jointly;

(2) the actions by USC to “cover up” its failure as
a hospital administrator through USC’s retaliation
against Carol for her refusal to cooperate in the
suppression of the cause of the death of a patient in a
USC hospital (USC Verdugo Hills) by:

(a) forging Carol’s signature on the “incident
report” blaming the other nurse for the incident (death
of the patient);

(b) inventing and spreading a story that
Carol “removed” drugs from the hospital’s drug vending
machine, which was proven to be false when it was
shown USC claimed the removal occurred on a day
Carol did not work at the hospital;

(c) spreading a story the DEA was investigating
Carol while knowing such story was untrue;

(d) sending out a “do not hire” notice relating
to Carol to nurse staffing agencies and others based
upon the above false stories; and

(e) presenting these false stories to both the
federal and California courts as part of the scheme to
prevail on summary judgment motions, a jury trial, an
appeal, a petition for rehearing and a petition for review
in addition to the “supplemental judicial benefits”
USC’s joint venture partner (LA County) currently
paid to Superior Court Judges Lu and Martin and previously
paid to Court of Appeal Justices Ashman-Gerst
and Chavez when each of them was sitting as a Superior
Court Judge for the County of Los Angeles as determined
from their “Judicial Biographies” the years
each were Superior Court judges and the years LA
County made the “supplemental judicial benefit” payments
to the Superior Court judges;

(3) the refusal of Judges Lu and Martin, Justices
Ashmann-Gerst and Chavez to disclose these LA
County payments in violation of Canon 3E (2) of the
California Code of Judicial Ethics and the refusal of
each to disqualify herself pursuant to Canon 3E (1) and
CCP Section 170.1(a)(6)(A)(iii);

(4) the refusal of Justice Liu to recuse himself
despite the fact he was the lead counsel for the
County of Los Angeles in Sturgeon v. County of Los
Angeles, 167 Cal.App.4th 630, 635 (2008) (Review Denied
12/23/2008) (Sturgeon I), Sturgeon v. County of
Los Angeles, 191 Cal.App.4th 344 (2010) (Sturgeon II)
and Sturgeon v. County of Los Angeles, 242 Cal.App.4th
1437 (2015) (Sturgeon III);

(5) the refusal of California Supreme Court Chief
Justice Tani Gorre Cantil-Sakaue, who denied the Petition
for Review, to disclose the “supplemental judicial
benefit” payments she received from Sacramento
County when she was a Superior Court Judge sitting
on the Superior Court for the County of Sacramento in
violation of Canon 3E (2) of the California Code of Judicial
Ethics and disqualify herself pursuant to Canon
3E(1) and CCP Section 170.1(a)(6)(A)(iii) as determined
from the years she was a Superior Court judge
from her “Judicial Biography” and the years Sacramento
County made the “supplemental judicial benefit”
payments to the Superior Court judges;

(6) The “supplemental judicial benefit” payments
were:
(a) held to be unconstitutional under
Article 6, Section 19 of the California
Constitution in the decision of Sturgeon I;

(b) denoted as criminal in SBX 2 11,
Section 5 giving retroactive immunity
from criminal prosecution, civil liability
and disciplinary action as of July 1, 2008
to the judges who received the “supplemental
judicial benefit” payments and the
governments and employees who paid
them; and

(c) violated 18 U.S.C. Section 1346 (the
intangible right to honest services.

 

——————————— ♦ ———————————

REASONS FOR GRANTING THE PETITION

 

A. The California Supreme Court’s Denial
of the Petition for Review and the
Court of Appeal’s Denial of Petition for
Rehearing each “decided an important
federal question in a way that conflicts
with relevant decisions of this Court.”

The California Supreme Court’s Denial of the Petition
for Review, App. 1 and the California Court of
Appeal’s Denial of the Petition for Rehearing, App. 2
each “decided an important federal question in a way
that conflicts with relevant decisions of this Court.”

The U.S. Supreme Court decision is Cooper v. Aaron,
358 U.S. 1 (1958) stating at page 18 in relevant part:

“Article VI of the Constitution makes the
Constitution the “supreme Law of the
Land.” In 1803, Chief Justice Marshall,
speaking for a unanimous Court, referring
to the Constitution as “the fundamental
and paramount law of the
nation,” declared in the notable case of
Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch 137, 177,
that “It is emphatically the province and
duty of the judicial department to say
what the law is.” This decision declared
the basic principle that the federal judiciary
is supreme in the exposition of the
law of the Constitution, and that principle
has ever since been respected by this
Court and the Country as a permanent
and indispensable feature of our constitutional
system. It follows that the interpretation
of the Fourteenth Amendment
enunciated by this Court in the Brown
case is the supreme law of the land, and
Art. VI of the Constitution makes it of
binding effect on the States “any Thing
in the Constitution or Laws of any State
to the Contrary notwithstanding.” Every
state legislator and executive and judicial
officer is solemnly committed by
oath taken pursuant to Art. VI, cl. 3, “to
support this Constitution.” Chief Justice
Taney, speaking for a unanimous Court
in 1859, said that this requirement reflected
the framers’ “anxiety to preserve
it [the Constitution] in full force, in all its
powers, and to guard against resistance
to or evasion of its authority, on the part
of a State. . . .” Ableman v. Booth, 21 How.
506, 524.

No state legislator or executive or judicial
officer can war against the Constitution
without violating his undertaking to
support it.” (Emphasis added.)

B. The California Supreme Court has a
Clear and Present Pattern of Violating
Cooper v. Aaron.

The California Supreme Court violated Cooper v.
Aaron, supra, on three occasions since 2021 establishing
a clear and present pattern to violate Article VI of
the Constitution and deny the California citizens’ and
residents’ due process.

The previous two denials were:

(1) The Third Appellate District appeal in RYAN
CLIFFORD v. ALPHA EPSILON PI FRATERNTY,
INC., Appeal No. CO87528, Petition for Review Denied
Supreme Court No. S274222 (06/15/2022); and

(2) The Sixth Appellate District appeal in
PETRA MARTINEZ, STANLEY ATKINSON v. U4RIC
INVESTMENTS, LLC, Appeal No.H049626, Petition
for Transfer of Writ of Error Coram Nobis Denied, Supreme
Court No. S273818 (6/01/2022).

This clear and present pattern suggests the Court
reaffirm Cooper v. Aaron, supra, either by:

(a) granting the Petition for Writ of Certiorari
by accepting the case for a full
hearing; or reversing the California
Supreme Court and Court of Appeal
Denials, Per Curiam and voiding all
decisions of the judicial officers who
refused to disclose and recuse themselves.

(b) Either alternative will send the underlying
case back to an unbiased
trial court, if one exists in California,
or sending the case to a U.S. District
Court judge who had not accepted
“supplemental judicial benefit” payments.

C. California has a Long History of Unlawful
“supplemental judicial benefit” Payments.

 

Sturgeon I showed the “supplemental judicial benefit”
payments began in the 1980s. The payments were
justified by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors
with argument the payments were necessary to
“attract and retain qualified people to serve as judges
on the LA Superior Court.”

No evidence was given to support the argument.

The LA County Supervisors did not disclose Article
II, Section 4 of the Los Angeles County Charter allowed
the LA County Supervisors to receive the same
compensation as “that now or hereafter prescribed
by law for a judge of the Superior Court in and
for the County of Los Angeles” (Emphasis added.)

By 2007, LA County had paid out approximately
$400 million to approximately 437 Superior Court
judges and simultaneously raised the compensation to
the LA County Supervisors.

Other counties followed LA County.

A report ordered in SBX 211, Section 6 entitled
“Report Prepared by the Administrative Office of the
Courts, Judicial Council of California: Historical Analysis
of Disparities in Judicial Benefits: Report to the
Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review, the
Assembly Committee on Budget, and the Senate and
Assembly Committees on Judiciary (Dec. 15, 2009)”
(Report) at Appendix D Supplemental Judicial Benefits
in FY 2007-2008 and showed at page 1 approximately
90% of California’s approximate 1,600 Superior
Court judges received “supplemental judicial benefit”
payments.

The Report also showed at page 12, the judges
worked to overturn Sturgeon I, using public money of
the Superior Court of Los Angeles and the Administrative
Office of the Courts as follows:

“In response to the Sturgeon case, the California
Judges Association, the Superior Court of
Los Angeles County, several judicial leaders,
and the Administrative Office of the Courts
worked together to propose legislation that
would adequately prescribe supplemental
benefits.”

SBX 2 11 shows Darryl Steinberg, the then-President
Pro Tempore of the California State Senate “pushed
through” SBX 2 11 in three days.

In addition to Section 5, SBX 2 11 reinstated the
“supplemental judicial benefit” payments in Section 2,
which was codified as Govt. Code 68220 (a) allowing
the counties to keep paying the sitting judges the monies
they paid them on July 1, 2008 “on the same terms
and conditions as were in effect on that date.”

This provision was held to be constitutional as an
interim revenue measure in Sturgeon II in which the
Court also affirmed Sturgeon I.

The Sturgeon II Court concluded that since judicial
compensation is a state and not a county responsibility,
it expected the Legislature to adopt a uniform
statewide system of judicial compensation.

This did not occur. In Sturgeon III, the Court extended
the payments to all judges sitting in a court in
which judges received county payments on July 1,
2008, stating at 1450 in relevant part:

“The bottom line: Section 68220 subdivision
(a) plainly requires any county paying its
judges supplemental benefits as of July 1,
2008 to continue to pay its judges supplemental
benefits, including all judges who took
office after July 1, 2008 – albeit subject to the
right of the county in the first two sentences
of subdivision (b) to terminate those benefits
after specified notice. The county has no
choice and no discretion to “fix” judicial
compensation, which has thus been prescribed
by the Legislature. The opt-out provisions
of the first two sentences of subdivision
(b) provide the only choice a county has in that
situation, and even then there’s no fixing of
compensation, just a choice to pay the
prescribed amount or not to pay any supplemental
compensation at all. The last
sentence of subdivision (b) is unconstitutional
surplusage.” (Emphasis added.)

The Court in Sturgeon III again called for the Legislature
to solve the problem.

The Legislature has not acted to this day.

During this entire time, none of the California
judges or justices were, or are, disclosing the payments
in cases in which the county was a party, was a part of
a joint venture or had an interest in the outcome of the
case as shown in the underlying case.

The result was, and is, as shown in the underlying
case, California’s citizens’ and residents’ constitutional
rights were violated in every type of case from civil,
civil rights, criminal, dependency, eminent domain,
family law, injury, probate, property, etc.

In essence, the entire California judicial system
was and is corrupted by the judges and justices committing
“war against the (United States) Constitution.”

A further result of the judges’ and justices’ “war
against the (United States) Constitution” should be
rendering their decisions legally void due to Fraud

Upon the Court by a judicial officer, who concealed
his/her plan to refuse to obey the law and disclose
he/she was receiving illegal “supplemental judicial
benefit” payments.

——————————— ♦ ———————————

WHEN AND WHERE FEDERAL QUESTIONS
SOUGHT TO BE REVIEWED WERE RAISED
AND HOW TREATED BY THE COURTS

 

The Federal Questions sought to be reviewed were
raised in the Court of Appeal Petition for Rehearing,
Appendix 48, Denied by the Court of Appeal, Appendix
2; and the California Supreme Court Petition for Review,
Appendix 68, Denied by the California Supreme
Court, Appendix 1.
——————————— ♦ ———————————

OTHER MATERIAL PETITIONER
BELIEVES IS ESSENTIAL TO
UNDERSTAND THE PETITION

1. Report Prepared by the Administrative
Office of the Courts, Judicial Council of
California: Historical Analysis of Disparities
in Judicial Benefits: Report to the
Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal
Review, the Assembly Committee on
Budget, and the Senate and Assembly
Committees on Judiciary (Dec. 15, 2009).
2. SBX 2 11.
——————————— ♦ ———————————

ARGUMENT AMPLIFYING THE
REASONS RELIED UPON FOR THE
ALLOWANCE OF THE WRIT

 

California’s population is 39 million people according
to Census Bureau estimates.

It will reach 41.372 by July 1, 2023, and accounts
for 12% of the population of the United States according
to 2023 Population USA.

The socio-economic effect of 12% of the population
of the United States being denied United States Constitutional
due process because California’s judicial officers
are at “war against the (United States)
Constitution” mandates the Court accept the Petition
for Writ of Certiorari or reverse the California Courts
Per Curiam with an order voiding their decisions in
which the judicial officers did not disclose their conflict
of interest and did not mandatorily recuse themselves.

The precedent of United States v. Throckmorton,
98 U.S. 61, 65-66 (1878) was cited to the California
Court of Appeal in the Petition for Rehearing, Appendix 63.

The Court is respectfully invited to review the
holding of Hazel-Atlas Co. v. Hartford Co., 322 U.S. 238,
247-248 (1944) stating equitable relief is available to
overturn judgments obtained by fraud in relevant part:

“We have, then, a case in which undisputed
evidence filed with the Circuit Court of Appeals
in a bill of review proceeding reveals
such fraud on that Court as demands, under
settled equitable principles, the interposition
of equity to devitalize the 1932 judgment despite
the expiration of the term at which that
judgment was finally entered. Did the Circuit
Court have the power to set aside its own 1932
judgment and to direct the District Court likewise
to vacate the 1932 decree which it entered
pursuant to the mandate based upon
the Circuit Court’s judgment? Counsel for
Hartford contend not. They concede that the
District Court has the power upon proper
proof of fraud to set aside its 1932 decree in a
bill of review proceeding, but nevertheless
deny that the Circuit Court possesses a similar
power for the reason that the term during
which its 1932 judgment was entered had expired.
The question, then, is not whether relief
can be granted, but which court can grant it.

Equitable relief against fraudulent judgments
is not of statutory creation. It is a judicially
devised remedy fashioned to relieve
hardships which, from time to time, arise from
a hard and fast adherence to another courtmade
rule, the general rule that judgments
should not be disturbed after the term of their
entry has expired. Created to avert the
evils of archaic rigidity, this equitable
procedure has always been characterized
by flexibility which enables it to
meet new situations which demand equitable
intervention, and to accord all the
relief necessary to correct the particular
injustices involved in these situations.”
(Emphasis added.)

The California judicial officer’s fraud is clear and
manifestly demonstrated in this Petition for Writ of
Certiorari.

——————————— ♦ ———————————

CONCLUSION

Petitioner respectfully submits for the above reasons
Certiorari be granted or a Per Curiam decision be
issued: (1) reversing the California Supreme Court and
Court of Appeal Denials, and (2) voiding all decisions
of the judicial officers who received county “supplemental
judicial benefit” payments and refused to disclose
such payments and recuse themselves.

Dated: February 14, 2023

Respectfully submitted,

RICHARD ISAAC FINE, ESQ.
P.O. Box 789, 1187 Coast Village Rd., Ste. 1
Santa Barbara, CA 93102-0789
Telephone: (310) 622-6900
Email: moc.walenifdrahcirobfsctd@enifdrahcir
Counsel for Petitioner Carol Pulliam

Download the PDF Document HERE


HELP SHARE AND SUPPORT THE NATIONAL COURT VICTIM DATABASE: Share with your Family, Friends and Anyone affected by Judicial Abuse

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Richard I. Fine, Doctor of Law, Ph.D. Law (International Law), Chmn. Campaign for Judicial Integrity; Co Chmn. Judicial Reform Comm., DivorceCorp. explains: “Since the mid 1980s, California counties and Superior Courts have paid approximately 90% of the California Superior Court judges “supplemental or local judicial benefits” in addition to the judges State compensation. These payments are over $400 million. The Superior Court judges receiving the payments became California Court of Appeal and California Supreme Court justices corrupting the entire California judicial system.”

Fine continued: “In 2008 the California Courts held the payments violated Article 6, Section 19 of the California Constitution. The judges responded by hiring a lobbyist who engineered the enactment of SBX 2 11. SBX 211 made the payments temporally legal and gave California retroactive immunity from criminal prosecution, civil liability and disciplinary action to the judges who received the payments and the counties, county supervisors and employees who made the payments.”

Fine further stated: “The Superior Court judges are disqualified but sit on cases. Examples are: (1) child custody and family law cases; (2) class action cases; (3) conservator and elder cases; (4) constitutional cases; (5) contract cases; (6) criminal cases; (7) death, estate, and probate cases; (8) eminent domain cases; (9) environmental cases; (10) personal injury cases; (11) property cases; (12) regulation cases; (13) tax cases; (14) traffic cases; (15) trust cases; and (16) zoning cases, amongst others.”

Fine concluded: “The Campaign for Judicial Integrity with the cooperation of others drafted legislation which: (1) establishes a permanent independent state commission to oversee the judiciary and compensate the victims of judicial misconduct and judicial abuse of power; (2) establishes judicial term limits of 24 years; (3) requires all judges seeking re-election to appear on the ballot, even if unopposed; and (4) prevents judges who accepted illegal payments from further becoming judges or justices, amongst other things.”

TODAY OUR CHOICE IS: (1) VOTE “NO”; or
(2) CONTINUE TO LIVE UNDER A CORRUPT JUDICIAL SYSTEM!


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End California’s Judicial Corruption before the November 8, 2022 General Election. Here’s How!

Help pass Los Angeles California Dr Richard I Fine bill amend SBX 2 11 Help stop the corruption

The History and Effect of California’s Judicial Corruption

In 1985, Los Angeles County started paying California Superior Court Judges sitting on the State of California Superior Court for the County of Los Angeles “supplemental judicial benefits” in addition to the judges’ State of California Compensation.

In 1988, Los Angeles County Supervisors justified the payments stating they were necessary to “attract and retain qualified people to serve as judges on the LA Superior Court.”

On its face, such explanation doesn’t make sense. Paying a sitting judge, a “supplemental judicial benefit” will not retain him/her in office as he/she must face an election to retain his/her judicial office. It will not recruit a judge as the judge is already in office.

Nor does it appear that over time the Los Angeles County “Supplemental Judicial Benefits” attracted more successful, experienced private lawyers to apply to be politically appointed for judgeships or to run for judgeships more than the usual government lawyers such as deputy district attorneys, deputy public defenders, county counsels and state employees.

The real reason for the Los Angeles County “Supplemental Judicial Benefits” payments was to increase the compensation of the individual members of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors.

Article II, Section 4 of the Los Angeles County Charter states in relevant part: “They [Board of Supervisors] shall each receive as compensation for their services a salary, payable monthly from the County Treasury, which shall be the same as that now or hereafter prescribed by law for a judge of the Superior Court in and for the County of Los Angeles,”.

Other counties and Superior Courts followed Los Angeles County.

In 2008, such payments were held to be unconstitutional under Article VI, Section 19 of the California Constitution, in the case of Sturgeon v. County of Los Angeles, 167 Cal.App.4th 630 (2008) Review Denied 12/23/2008 [Sturgeon I].

A 2009 Report from the Administrative Office of the Courts, Judicial Council of California showed approximately 90% of California’s approximate 1,600 Superior Court Judges received the unconstitutional payments as follows: Of California’s 58 counties and Superior Courts: (1) 837 judges received supplemental benefits from 11 counties alone; (2) 334 judges received supplemental benefits from counties and Superior Courts for a combined total of 1,129 judges; (3) 334 judges received supplemental benefits from only courts; and (4) 151 judges did not receive any supplemental benefits from 23 counties.

Since 2009, no updated Report has been published. After Sturgeon I, two counties ceased paying the “supplemental or local judicial benefits”, but the increase in the number of judges in the counties paying such has made up the difference.

In response to Sturgeon I, the Legislature passed, and Governor Schwarzenegger signed SBX 2 11.

Section 2 of SBX 2 11 codified as Govt. Code 68220 (a) allowed the counties to keep paying the sitting judges the monies they paid them on July 1, 2008 “on the same terms and conditions as were in effect on that date.”

This provision was held to be constitutional as an interim revenue measure in Sturgeon v. County of Los Angeles, 191 Cal.App.4th 344 (2011) [Sturgeon II] in which the Court affirmed Sturgeon I. The Court concluded that since judicial compensation is a state and not a county responsibility, it expected the Legislature to adopt a uniform statewide system of judicial compensation.

This did not occur. In Sturgeon v. County of Los Angeles, 242 Cal.App.4th 1437 (2015) [Sturgeon III], the Court extended the payments to all judges sitting in a court in which judges received county payments on July 1, 2008. The court again called for the Legislature to fix the problem.

Section 5 of SBX 2 11gave the “governmental entity, or officer or employee of a governmental entity”who paid the “supplemental or local judicial benefits” to the judges and the judges who received such retroactive immunity from civil liability, criminal prosecution and disciplinary action as of May 20, 2009 (the effective date of SBX 2 11.)

SBX 2 11 passed each chamber of the California Legislature by over a 2/3 vote, effectively “impeaching” and “convicting” the judges who received the county payments of “Misconduct in Office” under California Constitution, Article 4, Section 18, which required the judges’ removal from office. SBX 2 11 did not remove these judges from office. California judges commit “Misconduct in Office” by taking “criminal” payments and violating their oath to uphold the U.S. and California Constitutions and laws each day they remain in office. Further, they committed fraud when taking the oath, without intending to perform the duties of upholding the Constitution and law.

Enacting Section 5 of SBX 2 11, the California Legislators and Governor each violated the federal criminal law of Misprision of Felony (18 U.S.C. Section 4) by concealing and not reporting the judges’ violation of the federal criminal law of the intangible right to honest services (18 U.S.C. Section 1346) and each violated his/her oath of office.

The U.S. Supreme Court held in Cooper v. Aaron, 358 U.S. 1, 18 (1958): ” No state legislator or executive or judicial officer can war against the Constitution without violating his undertaking to support it.”

U.S. judges knew of the California judges’ criminal activity through the enactment of SBX 2 11, its citation in briefs before them and because California judges were appointed to the U.S. District Courts in California and the 9th Circuit. U.S. judges through the U.S. Supreme Court violated constitutional precedent by refusing to disqualify the California judges from cases and violated the federal criminal law of Misprision of Felony by concealing the criminal acts and refusing to report the California judges for violating 18 U.S.C. Section 1346.

U.S. judges’ actions protecting California’s judges destroyed our constitutional rights to access to the courts, due process and a fair trial and the U.S. judicial system.

Since 2009, each California Governor and Legislature has done nothing to cure the judicial corruption.

The result is: (1) Citizens’ constitutional rights were violated in every case from family law to dependency to criminal to probate to eminent domain. In essence, every case in which the county was a party or had an interest in the outcome of the case was corrupted; (2) For over 35 plus years, the California judicial system has been corrupted by county supervisors who wanted to enhance their salaries by paying unlawful “Supplemental Judicial Benefits” to judges, and judges who accepted such payments from counties and courts knowing such were both unlawful and criminal as shown by Sturgeon I and SBX 2 11, Section 5; (3) Approximately $500 million of taxpayer monies which could have been used for hospitals, infrastructure and benefitting society was wasted and is still being wasted on this unlawful conduct; and (4) but for SBX 2 11, Sections 2 and 5: (a) approximately 90% of the present California Superior Court Judges are guilty of “misconduct in office” and should have been impeached, removed from office or criminally prosecuted; (b) approximately a majority of the present California Court of Appeal Justices are within such approximate 90%; and (c) four of the present California Supreme Court Justices are within such approximate 90%: Chief Justice Cantil-Sakauye, appointed by Governor Schwarzenegger who recently announced her retirement; Governor Newsom’s newly appointed Chief Justice Guerrero and whom he also appointed as an Associate Supreme Court Justice; Governor Newsom’s appointed Associate Supreme Court Justice Jenkins; and Governor Schwarzenegger’s appointed Associate Supreme Court Justice Corrigan.

How to End California’s Judicial Corruption before the November 8, 2022 General Election

(1) Email California Governor Newsom at: CONTACT GOVERNOR NEWSOM; CLICK NEED HELP; CLICK OTHER; Fill in the Message Box (6,000 characters maximum); Press Submit.

State in the email: I respectively request you end California’s 35 plus year Judicial Corruption Crisis and restore an honest judicial system to the citizens by CALLING AN EMERGENCY SESSION OF THE STATE LEGISLATURE BEFORE THE NOVEMBER 8, 2022 GENERAL ELECTION AND STATING YOU RECOMMEND THE LEGISLATURE ENACT THE FOLLOWING BILL WHICH YOU WILL SIGN: “Omnibus Judiciary Bill: (1) Amending SBX 2 11 and related Government Code Sections; (2) Establishing Permanent State of California Commission on Judicial Oversight and Victims Compensation for Judicial Misconduct and Judicial Abuse of Power; (3) Amending AB 2960 Establishing Judicial Term Limits; and (4) Amending AB 2960 Requiring Retention Elections for Unopposed Superior Court Judges Seeking Re-Election”, Drafted by Richard I. Fine, Doctor of Law, Ph.D. (Law-International Law);

(2) Call Governor Newsom at: (916) 445-2841and leave the same message as above;

(3) Email your own, and each current California Legislator, and state in the email: “I request you end California’s 35 plus year Judicial Corruption Crisis and restore an honest judicial system to the citizens by emailing or calling Governor Newsom, requesting he CALL AN EMERGENCY SESSION OF THE STATE LEGISLATURE BEFORE THE NOVEMBER 8, 2022 GENERAL ELECTION AND STATING HE RECOMMENDS THE LEGISLATURE ENACT THE FOLLOWING BILL WHICH YOU AS A STATE LEGISLATOR SUPPORT: “Omnibus Judiciary Bill: (1) Amending SBX 2 11 and related Government Code Sections; (2) Establishing Permanent State of California Commission on Judicial Oversight and Victims Compensation for Judicial Misconduct and Judicial Abuse of Power; (3) Amending AB 2960 Establishing Judicial Term Limits; and (4) Amending AB 2960 Requiring Retention Elections for Unopposed Superior Court Judges Seeking Re-Election”, Drafted by Richard I. Fine, Doctor of Law, Ph.D. (Law-International Law);

(4) California’s 2022 State Assemblymember’s Personal Emails

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@yrruc-riuiga.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@zeravla.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@alubmara.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nahak-reuab.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@ttenneb.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@namreb.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@wolegib.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@moolb.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@htavrohrenreob.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@atnob.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nayrb.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@noredlac.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@ollirrac.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@setnavrec.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nehc.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@iohc.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@yelooc.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@repooc.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@mahgninnuc.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@elhad.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@ylad.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@seivad.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@arolf.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@gnof.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@gnof.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@namdeirf.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@leirbag.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@rehgallag.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@aicrag.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@aicrag.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nospig.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@yarg.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nosyarg.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@yenah.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nedloh.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@niwri.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@reywas-senoj.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@alrak.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@yelik.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@yekcal.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@eel.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@enivel.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@wol.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@niehcsneiam.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@sihtam.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@seyam.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@ytraccm.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@ronnikcm.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@anidem.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nillum.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@ihcustarum.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nairazan.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@neyugn.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@llennodo.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nosrettap.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@sirron-eirtep.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@kriuq.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@avlis-kriuq.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@somar.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nodner.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@seyer.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@savir.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@savir.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@zeugirdor.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@oibur.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@salas.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@ogaitnas.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@otrayes.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@htims.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@enots.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@gnit.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@seradallav.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@audupalliv.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@lepeov.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nordlaw.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@draw.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@rebew.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@skciw.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nosliw.rebmemylbmessa

vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@doow.rebmemylbmessa

(5) California’s 2022 State Senator’s Personal Emails

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@nella.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@ateluhcra.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@snikta.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@setab.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@rekceb.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@hgob-aohco.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@saegrob.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@drofdarb.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@orellabac.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@esetroc.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@elhad.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@ddod.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@ozarud.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@namgge.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@rezalg.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@zelaznog.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@evorg.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@grebztreh.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@oseuh.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@odatruh.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@senoj.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@regalmak.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@drial.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@avyel.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@nomil.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@eriugcm.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@zednelem.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@nim.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@namwen.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@neslein.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@nap.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@onitnatrop.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@htor.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@oibur.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@renniks.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@nrets.rotanes

vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@grebmu.rotanes;

(6) For telephone numbers of California Assembly Members please go to assembly.ca.gov;

(7) For telephone numbers of California State Senators please go to senate.ca.gov; “Senate Roster”;

(8) Please post this article or a summary on your FaceBook, Instagram and/or Twitter pages;

(9) Please pass this article on to ten (10) or more of your family, friends and associates: (a) request each of them to contact Governor Newsom, the State Assembly Members and the State Senators irrespective of whether they are California citizens or residents; (b) request each of them to post this article or a summary on their FaceBook, Instagram and/or Twitter pages; and (c) request each of them to pass this article on to ten (10) or more of their family, friends and associates with the same requests.

CALIFORNIA HAS JUST SENT ITS BALLOTS OUT FOR THE NOVEMBER 8, 2022 GENERAL ELECTION. THE VOTERS ARE NOW THINKING OF THE ELECTION.

GOVERNOR NEWSOM IS UP FOR RE-ELECTION.

100% OF THE STATE ASSEMBLY IS UP FOR RE-ELECTION OR ELECTION.

50% OF THE STATE SENATE IS UP FOR RE-ELECTION OR ELECTION.

NOW IS THE ONLY TIME THE POLITICIANS CONSIDER THE VOTERS.

THE POLITICIANS NEED THE VOTERS TO GET ELECTED.

NOW IS THE TIME TO EXERCISE VOTER POWER AND END THE CORRUPTION IN THE CALIFORNIA JUDICIAL SYSTEM.

THE “FINE” CALIFORNIA LEGISLATION IS A MODEL FOR JUDICIAL CORRUPTION REFORM LEGISLATION THAT CAN BE ADOPTED IN EVERY STATE AS CIRCUMSTANCES REQUIRE.

THIS METHOD OF EMERGENCY LEGISLATION BEFORE AN ELECTION IS SUPERIOR TO WAITING YEARS FOR AN UNRESPONSIVE GOVERNOR AND LEGISLATURE TO EVEN CONSIDER ANTI-CORRUPTION LEGISLATION.

A VICTORY IN CALIFORNIA TODAY, DEMONSTRATES VOTERS HAVE, CAN AND WILL EXERCISE THEIR POWER TO END JUDICIAL AND OTHER CORRUPTION WHEN POLITICIANS REFUSE TO ACT!

Richard I. Fine, B.S.; Doctor of Law; Ph.D. (Law-International Law); Chmn., Campaign for Judicial Integrity; Co-Chmn., Judicial Reform Comm., DivorceCorp.


 

Dr Richard I Fines Los Angeles California Campaign for judicial Integrity

Help pass Richard I Fine Amend SBX 2 11

Find out who your state representatives are

GO TO: Find Your Rep.legislature.ca.gov/

1. Enter your address
2. Use the “Contact form” on your representatives website
3. Select “Other”
4. Copy and enter the following in the box on your representative’s contact form

Click Copy to Clipboard Below:


Dear representative: California has the most corrupt judicial system in the nation. At present, approximately 90% of the California Superior Court judges receive the illegal payments from counties or courts, and most of the higher court justices received such when they were Superior Court judges.

I demand YOU sponsor and support the Dr. Richard I. Fine Bill “Amending SBX2 11 and Related Government Code Sections; Establishing a State of California Commission on Judicial Oversight and Victims Compensation for Judicial Misconduct and Judicial Abuse of Power”. Passing the “Fine Bill” solves the “Corruption Problem”.

The reason is: In 2010, the Court held the Legislature was responsible to permanently resolve the problem created by the enactment of SBX 2 11. The Court held SBX 2 11 was interim legislation. SBX 2 11 was enacted in response to the Court holding “supplemental or local judicial benefits” paid to California State Superior Court judges by counties and/or courts was unconstitutional under California Constitution Article 6, Section 19. The payments were and under SBX 2 11 also are criminal under California and federal law. A 2009 Judicial Council Report to the Legislature showed as of 2008, 90% of the California Superior Court judges received the illegal payments. A copy of “Amend SBX 2 11” is located at: https://courtvictim.com/justicebill

Dear representative: California has the most corrupt judicial system in the nation. At present, approximately 90% of the California Superior Court judges receive the illegal payments from counties or courts, and most of the higher court justices received such when they were Superior Court judges.

I demand YOU sponsor and support the Dr. Richard I. Fine Bill "Amending SBX2 11 and Related Government Code Sections; Establishing a State of California Commission on Judicial Oversight and Victims Compensation for Judicial Misconduct and Judicial Abuse of Power”. Passing the “Fine Bill” solves the "Corruption Problem”.

The reason is: In 2010, the Court held the Legislature was responsible to permanently resolve the problem created by the enactment of SBX 2 11. The Court held SBX 2 11 was interim legislation. SBX 2 11 was enacted in response to the Court holding “supplemental or local judicial benefits” paid to California State Superior Court judges by counties and/or courts was unconstitutional under California Constitution Article 6, Section 19. The payments were and under SBX 2 11 also are criminal under California and federal law. A 2009 Judicial Council Report to the Legislature showed as of 2008, 90% of the California Superior Court judges received the illegal payments. A copy of "Amend SBX 2 11" is located at: https://courtvictim.com/justicebill

 

GET PRIORITY AND TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE BILL BY SHOWING YOU HELPED:
Take a photo or screen shot of your submission to your representative’s and keep it where you can refer to it at a later time.
The reason for this is the creators of the bill want to reward those who supported it and helped get it passed. Those victims will be allowed to file for restitution first and will need
to supply proof they’ve done so. Click on the button below to send your snapshot and info:

What happened when you contacted your represenative

A copy of the Bill can be found HERE

Richard I. Fine drafted the bill

FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)

1. Am I a candidate to get restitution via this Bill?
YES if you’ve been victimized by a California Judge.

2. Does this apply to victims going back how many years?
To the mid 1980’s

3. Besides restitution for my abuse what else does the Bill do to stop Judicial abuse?
A Commission is established to oversee the judiciary

4. What will stop the deep corruption from using the court system once again to ignore the bill or change it once implemented?
The Commission functions to stop all judicial corruption

5. Who is Richard I. Fine?
Richard I. Fine, (Doctor of Law; Ph.D Law-International Law). He is a patriot and lawyer (presently qualified to practice before the United States Supreme Court). He was disbarred from California and “unlawfully incarcerated in solitary coercive confinement without charges being made” for 18 months in the Los Angeles County jail in retaliation for exposing (Dishonorable) Judge David Paul Yafee #29399 and all of the Los Angeles County Superior court judges for accepting unlawful payments/bribes from the county. These payments resulted in literally no one winning a case against the county when a judge made the decision.

Dr. Richard I. Fine FULL BIO

[kaya_qrcode title=”How to Contact Your CA Legislator to Pass “Dr. Richard I. Fine Bill” to End Judicial Corruption” title_align=”alignnone” ecclevel=”L” align=”alignnone”]

MORE
MORE INFO ABOUT RICHARD I. FINE’S EXPERIENCE
INFO ABOUT RICHARD I. FINE’S CAMPAIGN FOR JUDICIAL INTEGRITY

Dr Richard I Fines Bill Amend SBX 2 11 California Los Angeles County Superior Court Help Stop Judicial Corruption


MORE ON DR. RICHARD I. FINE AND AMEND SBX 2 11

    If you don't know Los Angeles California Dr Richard I Fine Patriot lawyer former DOJ Prosecutor you should


    [subpages]

    HELP SHARE AND SUPPORT THE NATIONAL COURT VICTIM DATABASE: Share with your Family, Friends and Anyone affected by Judicial Abuse

    California Has a $97.5 Billion Budget Surplus and Refuses to Compensate Its Victims of Judicial Misconduct and Judicial Abuse of Power

    Los Angeles California Dr Richard I Fine bill amend SBX 2 11 anyone who does not support this bill is part of the corruption
    Introduction.

    California is in a Judicial Corruption Crisis, and has been, since the mid to late 1980s when Los Angeles County began paying “supplemental or local judicial benefits” to California State Superior judges sitting on the California State Superior Court for the County of Los Angeles.

    This crisis has been exasperated by the California Legislature’s failure to resolve the crisis despite the Court’s ruling it was the Legislature’s constitutional responsibility on two occasions in 2011 and 2015.

    This 2022 California legislative session, the California Legislature was presented with: (1) a draft Bill Amending SBX 2 11 and related Government Code Sections; Establishing State of California Commission on Judicial Oversight and Victims Compensation for Judicial Misconduct and Judicial Abuse of Power; and (2) an immediate method to enact the Legislation by “Floor Amendment”.

    The Legislature refused to act prior to the 2022 session ending on August 31, 2022.

    This article will discuss: (1) The Historic Judicial Corruption Problem created by County and Court Payments to California State Superior Court Judges; (2) The Present State of California’s Judicial Corruption; (3) The Failure of the California Legislature to Resolve the Judicial Corruption Problem despite the Court’s Ruling on two Occasions in 2011 and 2015; (4) The Immediate Proposed Legislative Solution to the Judicial Corruption Problem; (5) An Immediate Method to Enact the Legislation by “Floor Amendment”; and (6) The Voters’ Solution if the Present Legislature Continues to Refuse to Enact the Immediate Solution in the Extended Legislative Session.

    II. The Historic Corruption Problem created by County and Court Payments to California State Superior Court Judges.

    Article VI, Section 19 of the California Constitution states in relevant part:

    “The Legislature shall prescribe compensation for judges of courts of record.”

    Commencing in the mid to late 1980’s, the County of Los Angeles (LA County) commenced paying California State Superior Court judges sitting on the California State Superior Court for the County of Los Angeles “supplemental or local judicial benefits” in addition to their compensation “prescribed” by the State Legislature pursuant to Article VI, Section 19 of the California Constitution.

    These “supplemental or local judicial benefits” comprised annual: (1) “cafeteria plan” health benefits equal to those paid LA County employees; (2) professional development allowances; and (3) contributions to each judge’s 401K or 457 retirement plans. These “supplemental or local judicial benefits” amounted to approximately 29% of each Superior Court judge’s annual California State compensation.

    By paying the “supplemental or local judicial benefits”, the members of the LA County Board of Supervisors increased their own compensation by approximately 29%, as Article II, Section 4 of the LA County Charter compensated the members of the LA County Board of Supervisors at the same compensation as the State of California Superior Court Judges.

    Subsequently other California counties and Superior Courts followed LA County with their own “supplemental or local judicial benefits”.

    These “supplemental or local judicial benefits” payments remained secret as they were concealed under other categories in the annual budgets of the counties.

    On September 15, 2000, California Supreme Court Chief Justice Ronald M. George admitted the payments existed and called them “wrong and may be unconstitutional” in an annual meeting of the California Judges Association, which was reported in the Metropolitan News.

    The author was the first person to expose the “supplemental or local judicial benefits” payments as unlawful in an appellate brief to the California Court of Appeals in 2000-2001. The exposure continued in subsequent court cases in which LA County was a defendant.

    Subsequently, the case of Sturgeon v. County of Los Angeles, 167 Cal.App.4th 630, 635 (2008) Review Denied 12/23/2008 [Sturgeon I] held the “supplemental or local judicial benefits” payments unconstitutional stating in relevant part:

    “Section 19, article VI of the California Constitution requires that the Legislature “prescribe compensation for judges of courts of record.” The duty to prescribe judicial compensation is not delegable. Thus, the practice of the County of Los Angeles (the county) of providing Los Angeles County superior court judges with employment benefits, in addition to the compensation prescribed by the Legislature, is not permissible.” (Emphasis added.)

    In response to Sturgeon I, the California Legislature enacted SBX 2 11, 2/20/2009, effective 5/20/2009.

    SBX 2 11 passed each chamber of the California Legislature by over a 2/3 vote, effectively “impeaching” and “convicting” the judges who received the county payments of “Misconduct in Office” under California Constitution, Article 4, Section 18, which provision required the judges’ removal from office.

    California judges commit “Misconduct in Office” by taking “criminal” payments and violating their oath to uphold the U.S. and California Constitutions and laws each day they remain in office. Further, the judges committed fraud when taking the oath, without intending to perform the duties of upholding the Constitution and law.

    SBX 2 11 did not order the removal of these judges from office. Section 2 of SBX 2 11 codified as Govt. Code 68220 (a) allowed the counties to keep paying the sitting judges the monies they paid them on July 1, 2008 “on the same terms and conditions as were in effect on that date.”

    Section 2 of SBX 2 11 was held to be constitutional as an interim revenue measure in Sturgeon v. County of Los Angeles, 191 Cal.App.4th 344 (2011) [Sturgeon II] in which the Court affirmed Sturgeon I. The Court concluded that since judicial compensation is a state and not a county responsibility, it expected the Legislature to adopt a uniform statewide system of judicial compensation.

    This did not occur. In Sturgeon v. County of Los Angeles, 242 Cal.App.4th 1437, 1450 (2015) [Sturgeon III], the Court extended the payments to all judges sitting in a court in which judges received county payments on July 1, 2008 stating in relevant part:

    “The bottom line: Section 68220 subdivision (a) plainly requires any county paying its judges supplemental benefits as of July 1, 2008 to continue to pay its judges supplemental benefits, including all judges who took office after July 1, 2008—albeit subject to the right of the county in the first two sentences of subdivision (b) to terminate those benefits after specified notice. The county has no choice and no discretion to “fix” judicial compensation, which has thus been prescribed by the Legislature. The opt-out provisions of the first two sentences of subdivision (b) provide the only choice a county has in that situation, and even then, there’s no fixing of compensation, just a choice to pay the prescribed amount or not to pay any supplemental compensation at all. The last sentence of subdivision (b) is unconstitutional surplusage.” (Emphasis added.)

    The Court in Sturgeon III again called for the Legislature to solve the problem and referenced the Daily Kos article Fine, End California’s Judicial Corruption Now; Stop 2015–16 Illegal Budget Payments to Judges! (June 1, 2015) < http://dailykos.com/story/2015/06/02/1389761/-End-California-s-Judicial-Corruption> [as of Aug. 25, 2015].)

    SBX 2 11 Section 5, which was not codified into the Government Code gave the judges and the County supervisors retroactive immunity from criminal prosecution, civil liability and disciplinary action.

    SBX 11, Section 5, stated in relevant part:
    “SEC. 5. Notwithstanding any other law, no governmental entity, or officer or employee of a governmental entity, shall incur any liability or be subject to prosecution or disciplinary action because of benefits provided to a judge under the official action of a governmental entity prior to the effective date of this act on the ground that those benefits were not authorized under law.” (Emphasis added.)

    Enacting Section 5 of SBX 2 11, the California Legislators and Governor each violated the federal criminal law of Misprision of Felony (18 U.S.C. Section 4) by concealing and not reporting the judges’ violation of the federal criminal law of the intangible right to honest services (18 U.S.C. Section 1346) and each violated his/her oath of office.

    The U.S. Supreme Court held in Cooper v. Aaron, 358 U.S. 1, 18 (1958):
    “No state legislator or executive or judicial officer can war against the Constitution without violating his undertaking to support it.” (Emphasis added.)

    The U.S. judges knew of the California judges’ criminal activity through the enactment of SBX 2 11, its citation in briefs before them and because California judges were appointed to the U.S. District Courts in California and the 9th Circuit.

    The U.S. judges through the U.S. Supreme Court violated constitutional precedent by refusing to disqualify the California judges from cases and violated the federal criminal law of Misprision of Felony by concealing the criminal acts and refusing to report the California judges for violating 18 U.S.C. Section 1346.

    The U.S. judges’ actions protecting California’s judges destroyed U.S. constitutional rights to access to the courts, due process and a fair trial and the U.S. judicial system.

    90% of California’s Approximate 1,600 Plus Superior Court Judges Received Unlawful Payments

    A Report Prepared by the Administrative Office of the Courts, Judicial Council of California: Historical Analysis of Disparities in Judicial Benefits: Report to the Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review, the Assembly Committee on Budget, and the Senate and Assembly Committees on Judiciary, (Dec. 15, 2009), Appendix D Supplemental Judicial Benefits in FY 2007-2008 showed approximately 90% of California’s approximate 1,600 Superior Court judges received supplemental benefits.

    837 judges received supplemental benefits from 11 counties. 334 judges received supplemental benefits from counties and courts for a total of 1,129.

    334 judges received supplemental benefits from only courts.

    151 did not receive any supplemental benefits from 23 counties.

    High cost of living counties which did not pay benefits were Marin and Santa Barbara counties.

    Total statewide supplemental benefits paid were $33,602,542, with county supplemental benefits being $30,388,289 and court benefits being $3,214,253.

    LA County [436 judges] was the highest county with $23,482,932. Orange County [112 judges] was second with $2,436,000. San Bernardino County [78 judges] was third with $1,280,175. Santa Clara County [79 judges] was fourth with $1,181,531. San Francisco County [51 judges] was fifth with $409,831. Riverside County [64 judges] was sixth with $401, 865.

    San Diego Court [130 judges] was the highest court with $1,916,803.

    By 2009, LA County had paid out over $400 million in unlawful “supplemental or local judicial benefits” and won literally 100% of the cases against it decided by a Superior Court judge as shown by the Litigation Reports of the County Counsel.

    III. The Present State of California’s Judicial Corruption.

    The California Supreme Court and Court of Appeal justices and Superior Court judges at all times knew, and know at present, 90% of California’s Superior Court judges sit on cases in which they are disqualified under law because the county which gave them a criminal payment: (1) appears before them as a party; (2) appears as a witness; or (3) has an interest.

    Examples of the cases are: (1) child custody and family law cases; (2) class action cases; (3) conservator and elder cases; (4) constitutional cases; (5) contract cases; (6) criminal cases; (7) death, estate, and probate cases; (8) eminent domain cases; (9) environmental cases; (10) personal injury cases; (11) property cases; (12) regulation cases; (13) tax cases; (14) traffic cases; (15) trust cases; and (16) zoning cases, amongst others.

    The California Supreme Court and Court of Appeal justices and Superior Court judges know: (1) that Section 5 of SBX 2 11 made California the most corrupt judicial system in the U.S., if not the world; (2) that California is the only state where a law gives judges immunity from criminal prosecution for taking illegal payments [bribes] from parties [counties] appearing before them in cases; (3) that they were perpetuating the corruption when they upheld unconstitutional and unlawful decisions affecting peoples’ rights by 90% of California’s Superior Court judges who unlawfully did not disclose their crimes or their legislative immunity to the litigants; (4) that they were perpetuating the corruption when they refused to require the DAs to prosecute the 90% of California’s Superior Court judges and recover the illegal payments from counties plus 20% penalty which the 90% of California’s Superior Court judges received after the effective date of SBX 2 11; (5) that they needlessly ruined peoples’ lives to perpetuate California’s judicial corruption; and (6) that their actions mandate their removal because they: (a) violated the U.S. and California Constitutions and laws; (b) engaged in “misconduct in office”; and (c) engaged in “conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice that brings the judicial office into disrepute”.

    The U.S. and California Constitutions and laws are clear:

    (1) U.S. Constitution, Article 6, Clause 2 states in relevant part:
    “This Constitution, and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof; and all treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority of the United States, shall be the supreme law of the land; and the judges in every state shall be bound thereby, anything in the Constitution or laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding.” (Emphasis added.)
    (2) California Constitution Article 4, Section 18 (d) states in relevant part: “State officers elected on a statewide basis, members of the State Board of Equalization, and judges of state courts are subject to impeachment for misconduct in office.” (Emphasis added.)
    (3) California Constitution Article 6, Section 18 (d) (2) states in relevant part: “(d) Except as provided in subdivision (f), the Commission on Judicial Performance may …. (2) censure a judge or former judge or remove a judge for action occurring not more than 6 years prior to the commencement of the judge’s current term or of the former judge’s last term that constitutes willful misconduct in office, persistent failure or inability to perform the judge’s duties, ……. or conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice that brings the judicial office into disrepute”. (Emphasis added.)
    (4) California Code of Civil Procedure Section 170.1(a)(6)(A)(iii) states in relevant part: “A judge shall be disqualified if any one or more of the following are true: A person aware of the facts might reasonably entertain a doubt that the judge would be able to be impartial.” (Emphasis added.)
    (5) California Code of Judicial Ethics, Cannon 2 A states in relevant part: “A judge shall respect and comply with the law* and shall act at all times in a manner that promotes public confidence in the integrity* and impartiality* of the judiciary.” (Emphasis added.)
    (6) California Code of Judicial Ethics, Cannon 3 E states: “(1) A judge shall disqualify himself or herself in any proceeding in which disqualification is required by law.*(2) In all trial court proceedings, a judge shall disclose on the record as follows: (a) Information relevant to disqualification A judge shall disclose information that is reasonably relevant to the question of disqualification under Code of Civil Procedure section 170.1, even if the judge believes there is no actual basis for disqualification.(b)Campaign contributions in trial court elections.” (Emphasis added.)
    (7) California Code of Judicial Ethics, Cannon 4D(1) states in relevant part: “(1) A judge shall not engage in financial and business dealings that (a) may reasonably be perceived to exploit the judge’s judicial position, or (b) involve the judge in frequent transactions or continuing business relationships with lawyers or other persons likely to appear before the court on which the judge serves.” (Emphasis added.) and
    (8) California Code of Judicial Ethics, Cannon 6A states in relevant part: “Anyone who is an officer of the state judicial system and who performs judicial functions, ….. is a judge within the meaning of this code. All judges shall comply with this code except as provided below.” (Emphasis added.)

    None of the 90% of California’s Superior Court judges disclosed the illegal payments from the county, the retroactive immunity under Section 5 of SBX 2 11 and the current crime of taking the payments to litigants before them. The lawyers in the cases before such judges also concealed this information. Together, the 90% of California’s Superior Court judges and lawyers deprived the party before the judge of the opportunity to present evidence to obtain a fair trial before an unbiased judge.

    This action of concealment is known as an “extrinsic fraud upon the court” and makes judgments void. California Code of Civil Procedure Section 473 (d) states in relevant part: “(d) The court ….. may, on motion of either party after notice to the other party, set aside any void judgment or order.”

    Today, these illegal county payments to 90% of California’s Superior Court judges still occur at the rate of approximately $30 plus million a year and still are not being disclosed to the parties appearing before the judges.

    Today the California Supreme Court and Court of Appeal justices are still perpetrating the corruption.

    No California Supreme Court or Court of Appeal justice or Superior Court judge: (1) ended the corruption; (2) ordered the county payments to the 90% of California’s judges stopped knowing that it is illegal [a bribe] for a judge to take a payment from a party appearing in a case before him/her; or (3) required the DAs to prosecute the 90% of California’s judges and recover the illegal payments plus a 20% penalty as mandated under law both before and after the passage of Section 5 of SBX 2 11.

    IV. The Failure of the California Legislature to Resolve the Judicial Corruption Problem despite the Court’s Ruling on two Occasions in 2011 and 2015

    As shown above the Court in Sturgeon II and Sturgeon III concluded it was the sole duty of the Legislature to resolve the problem of the disparity in judicial compensation creating the judicial corruption.

    The Legislature failed to act to this day.

    V. The Immediate Proposed Legislative Solution to the Judicial Corruption Problem.

    After years of urging Legislators to act through the website campaignforjudicialintegrity.org, the author drafted the Fine “Bill Amending SBX 2 11 and related Government Code Sections; Establishing State of California Commission on Judicial Oversight and Victims Compensation for Judicial Misconduct and Judicial Abuse of Power” (the Fine Legislation).

    The Fine Legislation states in relevant part:

    “THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT EMERGENCY LEGISLATION AS FOLLOWS:

    SECTION 1: The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
    This legislation addresses and responds:
    (1) to the systemic judicial crisis in California existing since approximately 1985 when individual counties and courts commenced paying State Superior Court judges sitting on State Superior Courts for their counties “supplemental or local judicial benefits” in addition to the State compensation (salary and benefits) paid to the judges by the State causing disparity in judges judicial salary and benefits, double taxation for citizens and residents in the “paying counties”, “unconstitutional (unlawful) ‘supplemental local judicial benefit payments’ ” to the judges resulting in 90% of California’s Superior Court judges receiving “bribes” under California and federal criminal laws;
    (2) to President Biden’s June 3, 2021 Memorandum declaring Corruption to be a National Security Issue stating in relevant part:
    “My Administration will lead efforts to promote good governance; bring transparency to the United States and global financial systems; prevent and combat corruption at home and abroad; and make it increasingly difficult for corrupt actors to shield their activities.” (Emphasis added.); and
    (3) to the problem of judicial misconduct and judicial abuse of power in the judicial system by:
    (a) equalizing judicial compensation to all California Superior Court judges;
    (b) establishing a “compensation of victims of judicial misconduct and judicial abuse of power in the Judicial system” procedure outside the California Judicial system with predetermined dollar amounts to be paid directly to the individual “victims” by the State Controller; and
    (c) establishing an administrative procedure outside the California Judicial system to rectify judicial misconduct and judicial abuse of power and institute oversight to prevent it from continuing or is reduced;
    (4) to the failure of SBX 2 11 to establish any means of compensation to the individual victims of judicial misconduct and judicial abuse of power in the California Judicial system:
    (a) while giving the perpetrators of unconstitutional payments to judges and the judges who received such payments in SBX 2 11, Section 5 retroactive immunity from civil liability, criminal prosecution and disciplinary action for all acts occurring prior to July 1, 2008;
    (b) to the failure of SBX 2 11 to establish any means of compensation to the individual victims of judicial misconduct and abuse of power while allowing the “illegal payments” in Section 2;
    (c) to the failure of SBX 2 11 to establish any means of compensation to the individual victims of “judicial officers” (including but not limited to temporary judges, commissioners, Superior Court judges, Court of Appeal justices and/or Supreme Court justices:
    (i) who entered orders and judgments after deemed to have consented to their disqualification under CCP Section 170.3(c)(4);
    (ii) who were disqualified under CCP Section 170.1 or 170.6; or
    (iii) who failed to disclose information required under Code of Judicial Ethics, Canon 3E(2) and failed to disqualify themselves under Canon 3E(1);
    (d) to the unlawful acts as exemplified by the egregious, examples of judicial misconduct and judicial abuse of power upon the following individuals:
    (i) Richard Lee Abrams;
    (ii) Stanley Atkinson;
    (iii) Stephan Brooks:
    (iv) Ryan Clifford:
    (v) Richard Isaac Fine:
    (vi) Gertrude Gettinger;
    (vii) Robert George Kincaid;
    (viii) Georges Marciano;
    (ix) Carol Pulliam; and
    (x) Felice Reyes;
    (5) The actions taken by the California Judiciary against victims of judicial misconduct and judicial abuse of power (as exemplified herein by actions taken against Richard Isaac Fine) violated Article 1, Sections 1, 2, 3, 7, 17 and 26 of the California Constitution;
    (6) The actions taken by the California Judiciary against victims of judicial misconduct and judicial abuse of power (as exemplified herein by actions taken against Richard Isaac Fine) violated:
    (a) United States Constitution, Fourteenth Amendment, denial of due process and equal protection; Cooper v. Aaron, 358 U.S. 1, 18 (1958)-“No state legislator or executive or judicial officer can war against the Constitution without violating his undertaking to support it.” (Emphasis added.);
    (b) California Constitution, Article 4, Section 18 (b) “misconduct in office” by engaging in conduct which punished lawyers for following their oath to uphold the Constitution and laws of the United States and the State of California; and
    (c) California Constitution, Article 6, Section 14 – “Decisions of the Supreme Court and courts of appeal that determine causes shall be in writing with reasons stated.” by deciding motions affecting the jurisdiction of the court without reasons stated;
    (7) The individual victims of judicial misconduct and judicial abuse of power cannot obtain relief from the actions taken against them by the California Judiciary as no relief is available under either California or federal law due to either:
    (a) lack of jurisdiction;
    (b) absolute judicial immunity;
    (c) the Eleventh Amendment; and/or
    (d) bias of the judiciary;
    (8) The only relief available to the individual victims of judicial misconduct and judicial abuse of power is through action of the Legislature and the Governor by amending SBX 2 11;
    (9) The emergency nature of this problem requiring immediate passage of this legislation and
    (10) It is imperative the Legislature and the Governor uphold the United States and California Constitutions, the integrity of the judicial system and underscore the commitment to never allow those who pursue the goals of such ever be punished for such pursuit.

    SECTION 2. The following is added to the laws of the State of California:
    (1) amending SBX 2 11 by repealing Section 2 (which added Section 68220 to the Government Code), Section 3 (which added Section 68221 to the Government Code), and Section 4 (which added Section 68222 to the Government Code) to create a uniform pay schedule for California Superior Court judges;
    (2) repealing Sections 68220, 68221 and 68222 of the Government Code;
    (3) amending SBX 2 11 by adding Section 8 establishing payments to the individual victims of the unlawful payments to State Superior Court judges by counties and courts, Court of Appeal Justices, and California Supreme Court Justices who received such while they were State Superior Court judges to be made by the State Controller from the annual funds budgeted to the State Court System;
    (4) amending SBX 2 11 by adding Section 9 establishing payments to individual victims of judicial officers (Commissioners, Temporary Judges, Superior Court Judges, Court of Appeal Justices State Supreme Court Justices):
    (a) who entered orders and judgments after deemed to have consented to their disqualification under CCP Section 170.3(c)(4);
    (b) who were disqualified under CCP Sections 170.1 and/or 170.6; or
    (c) who failed to disclose information required under Code of Judicial Ethics, Canon 3E(2) and failed to disqualify themselves under Canon 3E(1);
    (5) amending SBX 2 11 by adding Section 10 which establishes payments to be made to the individuals claiming from January 1, 1985 onwards as victims of judicial misconduct and judicial abuse of power in Sections 8 and 9 by the California State Controller commencing from the effective date of this legislation from monies annually allocated to the Judicial Branch of the California State Government with a minimum of $100 million per year annually diverted to the California State Controller to establish and pay for an independent State of California Permanent Commission on Judicial Oversight and Victim Compensation for Judicial Misconduct and Judicial Abuse of Power (Commission):
    (a) composed of twelve (12) voting members (four (4) current elected officials or their designees while current, seven (7) citizen advocates and a Chair Person):
    (i) who are not, or were not members of, or employed by, the Judicial Branch of the California State Government;
    (ii) to be individually paid under the State of California system at the rate of compensation equal to the compensation for the Governor of the State of California;
    (iii) serving up to four year terms, but no greater than eight (8) years total, being:
    (aa) the then current Governor of California (serving without extra compensation) or his/her designee (serving with compensation), representing the Executive Branch of the California State Government;
    (bb) the then current State Controller of California (serving without extra compensation) or his/her designee (serving with compensation), representing the Executive Branch of the California State Government;
    (cc) the then current President Pro Tem of the California State Senate (serving without extra compensation) or his/her designee (serving with compensation), representing the Legislative Branch of the California State Government;
    (dd) the then current Speaker of the California State Assembly (serving without extra compensation) or his/her designee (serving with compensation); representing the Legislative Branch of the California State Government;
    (ee) to be determined, and successor citizen advocates for civil court reform, representing the citizens of California, for initial term of up to four (4) years;
    (ff) to be determined, and successor citizen advocates for criminal court reform, representing the citizens of California for an initial term of up to four (4) years;
    (gg) to be determined, and successor citizen advocates for family court reform, representing the citizens of California for an initial term of up to four (4) years;
    (hh) to be determined, and successor citizen advocates for juvenile court reform, representing the citizens of California for an initial term of up to four (4) years;
    (ii) Robert Gettinger, and successor citizen advocates for probate court reform, representing the citizens of California for an initial term of up to four (4) years;
    (jj) to be determined, and successor citizen advocates for appellate court and/or supreme court reform, representing the citizens of California for an initial term of up to four (4) years;
    (kk) to be determined, and successor citizen advocates for civil, elder, human, individual, property, taxpayer, tenants, veteran’s rights and/or other rights reform, representing the citizens of California for an initial term of up to four (4) years; and
    (ll) Richard Isaac Fine, Doctor of Law, Ph.D. (the California lawyer who first exposed and brought the first lawsuit against the unlawful “county payments to Superior Court judges”, the creator of this legislation, and the author of the Daily Kos article recognized in Sturgeon v. County of Los Angeles, supra, 242 Cal.App.4th at 1450 FN. 12 recognizing “groups as diverse as Judicial Watch and the Daily Kos continue to inveigh against county payments to judges.”) as Chair Person and his successor citizen advocates for judicial integrity and judicial ethical reform, for an initial and a successive term, each of four (4) years; appointing initial and successor citizen advocates for the following categories:
    (1) civil court reform;
    (2) criminal court reform;
    (3) family court reform;
    (4) juvenile court reform;
    (5) probate court reform;
    (6) appellate and/or supreme court reform; and
    (7) civil, human, individual, property, taxpayer, tenants, veterans’ and/or other rights reform;
    (b) with the Commission’s employees paid under the State of California compensation system;
    (c) with the following duties are amongst others:
    (i) to oversee the Judicial Branch of the State of California Government;
    (ii) to directly compensate the victims of judicial misconduct and judicial abuse of power through the State Controller;
    (iii) to ensure the State Controller completes the requirement to report the offending Judicial Officers to the Commission on Judicial Performance on a monthly and annual basis;
    (iv) to ensure the Commission on Judicial Performance completes the requirement to complete each investigation reported to it by the State Controller within six months after receipt of such Report and convey semi-annual Reports of the results of such investigations to the California State Auditor;
    (v) to ensure the California State Auditor:
    (aa) continuously audits the Commission on Judicial Performance to ensure the Commission on Judicial Performance is fully investigating, reviewing and making determinations as required under law on each Judicial Officer’s individual and historical misconduct as reported both by the California State Controller and independently from other sources;
    (bb) makes annual reports to the State Senate and State Assembly as to the conduct of the Commission on Judicial Performance in conducting its duties including but not limited to its successes, failures, and operational deficiencies regarding the misconduct of the Judicial Officers; and
    (cc) makes recommendations for legislation to improve the operation of the Commission on Judicial Performance to reduce the misconduct and abuse of power of the judiciary, including but not limited to the Office of the Chief Trial Counsel of the State Bar of California and the State Bar Court;
    (vi) to enforce the thirty six (36) year individual judicial term limit; and
    (vii) to perform such other acts as necessary to administer and enforce this legislation commencing upon the effective date of this legislation; under funding of $100 million annually or more provided each year through the Annual State Budget or an amendment thereto through a trailer bill for the 2021-2022 Annual State Budget and within the consecutive Annual Budgets thereafter; from monies annually allocated to the Judicial Branch of the California State Government as follows:
    (aa) $1 million tax free per year for each year from January 1, 1985 onwards for defamation (including libel) caused by judicial misconduct or judicial abuse of power which existed or continues to exist;
    (bb) $10 million tax free per year for each year from January 1, 1985 onwards for unlawful incarceration caused by judicial misconduct or judicial abuse of power which existed or continues to exist;
    (cc) $10 million tax free for fraud upon the court caused by judicial misconduct or judicial abuse of power from January 1, 1985 onwards;
    (dd) $10 million tax free for fraud caused by caused by judicial misconduct or judicial abuse of power from January 1, 1985 onwards;
    (ee) $10 million tax free for intentional interference with contract caused by judicial misconduct or judicial abuse of power from January 1, 1985 onwards;
    (ff) $10 million tax free for negligent interference with contract caused by judicial misconduct or judicial abuse of power from January 1, 1985 onwards;
    (gg) $10 million tax free for intentional interference with prospective business advantage caused by judicial misconduct or judicial abuse of power from January 1, 1985 onwards;
    (hh) $10 million tax free for negligent interference with prospective business advantage caused by judicial misconduct or judicial abuse of power from January 1, 1985 onwards;
    (ii) $10 million tax free for intentional infliction of emotional distress caused by judicial misconduct or judicial abuse of power from January 1, 1985 onwards;
    (jj) $10 million tax free for negligent infliction of emotional distress caused by judicial misconduct or judicial abuse of power from January 1, 1985 onwards;
    (kk) $10 million tax free for bias against self-represented litigants from January 1, 1985 onwards;
    (ll) $10 million tax free for bias against litigants with physical or mental disabilities from January 1, 1985 onwards;
    (mm) $10 million tax free for abuse against litigants over 65 years old (elder abuse) from January 1, 1985 onwards;
    (nn) $10 million tax free for any other cause of action not mentioned above caused by judicial misconduct or judicial abuse of power from January 1, 1985 onwards;
    (oo) $10 million tax free for any other unmentioned misconduct or abuse of power by the “Judicial Officer” (Commissioners, Temporary Judges, Superior Court Judges, Court of Appeal Justices and/or State Supreme Court Justices) from January 1, 1985 onwards; and
    (pp) additionally for attorneys who brought cases against counties or the courts of the State of California from January 1, 1985 onwards:
    (1) one third (33.33%) of damages alleged or shown in any case prior to trial dismissed by a Superior Court judge who received “supplemental or local judicial benefits” or other unlawful payment;
    (2) forty percent (40%) for any case settled or dismissed prior to trial; and
    (3) one half (50%) of damages awarded at trial and/or then denied or overturned by the California Supreme Court, any panel of a State Court of Appeal or Appellate Division of a Superior Court upon which a justice or judge who violated or is violating paragraph (2)(a)-(c) above was or is a member; and
    (6) amending SBX 2 11 by adding Sections 11-25 to directly compensate the following individual victims as egregious examples and representatives of the various categories of judicial misconduct and abuse of power upon which the California State Controller may rely as precedents for his/her awards:
    (a) Stanley Atkinson, Richard Lee Abrams, Stephan Brooks, Richard Isaac Fine, Gertrude Gettinger, Robert George Kincaid and Carol Pulliam for the category allowing County or court payments to judges to negatively control judicial decisions;
    (b) Richard Lee Abrams, Georges Marciano and Carol Pulliam for the category of antisemitism and bias against religion, race, gender or sexuality to negatively control judicial decisions;
    (c) Stanley Atkinson, Stephan Brooks, Ryan Clifford, Felice Reyes and Robert George Kincaid for the category allowing status of representation, such as self- representation before the court to negatively control judicial decisions;
    (d) Ryan Clifford for the category allowing the litigant’s physical or mental disability to negatively control judicial decisions;
    (e) Stanley Atkinson, Richard Isaac Fine and Gertrude Gettinger for the category allowing the age of the litigant being 65 years or older (Elder Abuse) to negatively control judicial decisions;
    (f) Richard Isaac Fine, Doctor of Law; Ph.D. Law (International Law) for the category of judicial and/or political retaliation by “Judicial Officers” and their “Associates and Affiliates in the Judicial Branch” (such as the State Bar of California or California State Bar, of which five of its thirteen of its Board of Governors is selected by the California Supreme Court and seven of its thirteen members are members of the State Bar of California, the Office of the Chief Trial Counsel of the State Bar of California and the State Bar Court) against lawyers and others who expose and/or challenge judicial misconduct and abuse of power, in particular:
    *****
    (g) Richard Lee Abrams, Stanley Atkinson, Stephan Brooks, Richard Isaac Fine, Gertrude Gettinger, Robert George Kincaid, Georges Marciano, Carol Pulliam and Felice Reyes for the category of judges who were disqualified under law and did not leave the case to negatively control judicial decisions; and
    (h) Richard Lee Abrams, Stanley Atkinson, Stephan Brooks, Ryan Clifford, Richard Isaac Fine, Gertrude Gettinger, Robert George Kincaid, Georges Marciano, Carol Pulliam and Felice Reyes for the category of a combination of any of the above or other unlawful factors to negatively control judicial decisions;
    ****
    (21) establishing an administrative procedure outside the court system to ensure judicial misconduct and abuse of power does not continue or is reduced as follows:
    (a) amending SBX 2 11 by adding Section 25 requiring the California Controller to report all Judicial Officers who were reported by victims of judicial misconduct or abuse of power to the Commission on Judicial Performance on a monthly and annual basis, annually funded under this legislation;
    (b) amending SBX 2 11 by adding Section 26 requiring the Commission on Judicial Performance to complete each investigation reported to it by the California State Controller within six months after receipt of such Report and convey semi-annual Reports the results of such investigations to the California State Auditor; and
    (a) amending SBX 2 11 by adding Section 27 requiring the California State Auditor:
    (i) to continuously audit the Commission on Judicial Performance to ensure the Commission on Judicial Performance is fully investigating, reviewing and making determinations as required under law on each Judicial Officer’s individual and historical misconduct as reported both by the California State Controller and independently from other sources; and
    (ii) make annual reports to the State Senate and State Assembly as to the conduct of the Commission on Judicial Performance in conducting its duties including but not limited to its successes, failures, and operational deficiencies regarding the misconduct of the Judicial Officers and recommendations for legislation to improve the operation of the Commission on Judicial Performance to reduce the misconduct and abuse of power of the judiciary, including but not limited to the Office of the Chief Trial Counsel of the State Bar of California and the State Bar Court; and
    (b) amending SBX 2 11 by adding Section 28 to establish a thirty six (36) year term limit on the members of the judiciary who received retroactive immunity from civil liability, criminal prosecution and disciplinary action under SBX 2 11, Section 5, thereby allowing any criminal action under 18 U.S.C. Section 1346 to continue unabated with those judicial officers and allowing both state and federal criminal actions to be brought against any subsequently appointed or elected judicial officers receiving “supplemental or local judicial benefits” from counties or courts. “

    VI. An Immediate Method to Enact the Fine Legislation by “Floor Amendment”.

    A copy of the Fine Legislation was emailed to the personal emails of all 40 current California State Senators and 80 California State Assembly Members requesting their sponsorship of the Fine Legislation.

    This was followed by phone calls to the offices of those State Senators and State Assembly Members who responded to the emails requesting an email to their general office email.

    Additionally, personal contact was made with certain legislators prior to the mass email contact.

    The emails showed each recipient how they could use the method of a “Floor Amendment” to amend a present Assembly Bill 2960 entitled “Judiciary Omnibus”, which encompassed the subject matter of the Fine Legislation and immediately pass the Fine Legislation to Governor Newsom for his signature.

    Using this recognized method, the Fine Legislation would be enacted during the 2022 Legislative Session ending August 31, 2022 and prior to the November General Election when all 80 State Assembly Member positions are open for election and 20 of the 40 State Senator positions are open for election.

    The Legislators did not act prior to August 31, 2022.

    VII. The Voters’ Solution if the Present Post Session of the Legislature Refuses to Enact the Immediate Solution.

    In the event the present post August 31, 2022 session of the Legislature or a present legislator refuses to enact or vote for the Fine Legislation, the Voters’ Solution is as follows:
    (1) Refuse to donate to, and suggest all others to refuse to donate to, the election campaign of any incumbent State Legislator who refused to sponsor or vote for the Fine Legislation;
    (2) Request all non-incumbent candidates for any Legislative position sign a written pledge, if elected they will sponsor, vote for and pass the Fine Legislation;
    (3) approach all individual donors to campaigns to do the same and encourage their friends and associates to do the same; and
    (4) contact all PACs and institutional donors and request they also so the same.

    Conclusion

    At present, California has a $97.5 billion budget surplus, the largest in California history. Yet the Legislature has refused to compensate the victims of Judicial Misconduct and Judicial Abuse of Power.

    The judiciary is the third institution of government and directly affects each of our freedoms and rights.

    We, individually and as a society cannot survive if it the institution of the Judiciary and/or its individual members remain corrupt.

    Richard I. Fine; Doctor of Law (The Law School; Univ. of Chicago); Ph.D. – Law (International Law) (the London School of Economics & Political Science; Univ. of London); Chmn., Campaign for Judicial Integrity; Co-Chmn., Judicial Reform Committee, DivorceCorp.


     

    Dr Richard I Fines Los Angeles California Campaign for judicial Integrity

    Help pass Richard I Fine Amend SBX 2 11

    Find out who your state representatives are

    GO TO: Find Your Rep.legislature.ca.gov/

    1. Enter your address
    2. Use the “Contact form” on your representatives website
    3. Select “Other”
    4. Copy and enter the following in the box on your representative’s contact form

    Click Copy to Clipboard Below:


    Dear representative: California has the most corrupt judicial system in the nation. At present, approximately 90% of the California Superior Court judges receive the illegal payments from counties or courts, and most of the higher court justices received such when they were Superior Court judges.

    I demand YOU sponsor and support the Dr. Richard I. Fine Bill “Amending SBX2 11 and Related Government Code Sections; Establishing a State of California Commission on Judicial Oversight and Victims Compensation for Judicial Misconduct and Judicial Abuse of Power”. Passing the “Fine Bill” solves the “Corruption Problem”.

    The reason is: In 2010, the Court held the Legislature was responsible to permanently resolve the problem created by the enactment of SBX 2 11. The Court held SBX 2 11 was interim legislation. SBX 2 11 was enacted in response to the Court holding “supplemental or local judicial benefits” paid to California State Superior Court judges by counties and/or courts was unconstitutional under California Constitution Article 6, Section 19. The payments were and under SBX 2 11 also are criminal under California and federal law. A 2009 Judicial Council Report to the Legislature showed as of 2008, 90% of the California Superior Court judges received the illegal payments. A copy of “Amend SBX 2 11” is located at: https://courtvictim.com/justicebill

    Dear representative: California has the most corrupt judicial system in the nation. At present, approximately 90% of the California Superior Court judges receive the illegal payments from counties or courts, and most of the higher court justices received such when they were Superior Court judges.
    
    I demand YOU sponsor and support the Dr. Richard I. Fine Bill "Amending SBX2 11 and Related Government Code Sections; Establishing a State of California Commission on Judicial Oversight and Victims Compensation for Judicial Misconduct and Judicial Abuse of Power”. Passing the “Fine Bill” solves the "Corruption Problem”.
    
    The reason is: In 2010, the Court held the Legislature was responsible to permanently resolve the problem created by the enactment of SBX 2 11. The Court held SBX 2 11 was interim legislation. SBX 2 11 was enacted in response to the Court holding “supplemental or local judicial benefits” paid to California State Superior Court judges by counties and/or courts was unconstitutional under California Constitution Article 6, Section 19. The payments were and under SBX 2 11 also are criminal under California and federal law. A 2009 Judicial Council Report to the Legislature showed as of 2008, 90% of the California Superior Court judges received the illegal payments. A copy of "Amend SBX 2 11" is located at: https://courtvictim.com/justicebill

     

    GET PRIORITY AND TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE BILL BY SHOWING YOU HELPED:
    Take a photo or screen shot of your submission to your representative’s and keep it where you can refer to it at a later time.
    The reason for this is the creators of the bill want to reward those who supported it and helped get it passed. Those victims will be allowed to file for restitution first and will need
    to supply proof they’ve done so. Click on the button below to send your snapshot and info:

    What happened when you contacted your represenative

    A copy of the Bill can be found HERE

    Richard I. Fine drafted the bill

    FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)

    1. Am I a candidate to get restitution via this Bill?
    YES if you’ve been victimized by a California Judge.

    2. Does this apply to victims going back how many years?
    To the mid 1980’s

    3. Besides restitution for my abuse what else does the Bill do to stop Judicial abuse?
    A Commission is established to oversee the judiciary

    4. What will stop the deep corruption from using the court system once again to ignore the bill or change it once implemented?
    The Commission functions to stop all judicial corruption

    5. Who is Richard I. Fine?
    Richard I. Fine, (Doctor of Law; Ph.D Law-International Law). He is a patriot and lawyer (presently qualified to practice before the United States Supreme Court). He was disbarred from California and “unlawfully incarcerated in solitary coercive confinement without charges being made” for 18 months in the Los Angeles County jail in retaliation for exposing (Dishonorable) Judge David Paul Yafee #29399 and all of the Los Angeles County Superior court judges for accepting unlawful payments/bribes from the county. These payments resulted in literally no one winning a case against the county when a judge made the decision.

    Dr. Richard I. Fine FULL BIO

    [kaya_qrcode title=”How to Contact Your CA Legislator to Pass “Dr. Richard I. Fine Bill” to End Judicial Corruption” title_align=”alignnone” ecclevel=”L” align=”alignnone”]

    MORE
    MORE INFO ABOUT RICHARD I. FINE’S EXPERIENCE
    INFO ABOUT RICHARD I. FINE’S CAMPAIGN FOR JUDICIAL INTEGRITY

    Dr Richard I Fines Bill Amend SBX 2 11 California Los Angeles County Superior Court Help Stop Judicial Corruption


    MORE ON DR. RICHARD I. FINE AND AMEND SBX 2 11

      If you don't know Los Angeles California Dr Richard I Fine Patriot lawyer former DOJ Prosecutor you should


      [subpages]

      HELP SHARE AND SUPPORT THE NATIONAL COURT VICTIM DATABASE: Share with your Family, Friends and Anyone affected by Judicial Abuse

      Your California Representative Email Address

      Dr Richard I Fines Los Angeles California Campaign for judicial Integrity

      Find-their-email-address-Help-Richard-I.-Fine-Pass-Amend-SBX-2-11

      EMAIL ADDRESSES BELOW

      Find out who your state representatives are

      GO TO: Find Your Rep.legislature.ca.gov/

      1. Enter your address
      2. Use the “Contact form” on your representatives website
      3. Select “Other”
      4. Copy and enter the following in the box on your representative’s contact form

      Click Copy to Clipboard Below:


      Dear representative: California has the most corrupt judicial system in the nation. At present, approximately 90% of the California Superior Court judges receive the illegal payments from counties or courts, and most of the higher court justices received such when they were Superior Court judges.

      I demand YOU sponsor and support the Dr. Richard I. Fine Bill “Amending SBX2 11 and Related Government Code Sections; Establishing a State of California Commission on Judicial Oversight and Victims Compensation for Judicial Misconduct and Judicial Abuse of Power”. Passing the “Fine Bill” solves the “Corruption Problem”.

      The reason is: In 2010, the Court held the Legislature was responsible to permanently resolve the problem created by the enactment of SBX 2 11. The Court held SBX 2 11 was interim legislation. SBX 2 11 was enacted in response to the Court holding “supplemental or local judicial benefits” paid to California State Superior Court judges by counties and/or courts was unconstitutional under California Constitution Article 6, Section 19. The payments were and under SBX 2 11 also are criminal under California and federal law. A 2009 Judicial Council Report to the Legislature showed as of 2008, 90% of the California Superior Court judges received the illegal payments. A copy of “Amend SBX 2 11” is located at: https://courtvictim.com/justicebill

      Dear representative: California has the most corrupt judicial system in the nation. At present, approximately 90% of the California Superior Court judges receive the illegal payments from counties or courts, and most of the higher court justices received such when they were Superior Court judges.
      
      I demand YOU sponsor and support the Dr. Richard I. Fine Bill "Amending SBX2 11 and Related Government Code Sections; Establishing a State of California Commission on Judicial Oversight and Victims Compensation for Judicial Misconduct and Judicial Abuse of Power”. Passing the “Fine Bill” solves the "Corruption Problem”.
      
      The reason is: In 2010, the Court held the Legislature was responsible to permanently resolve the problem created by the enactment of SBX 2 11. The Court held SBX 2 11 was interim legislation. SBX 2 11 was enacted in response to the Court holding “supplemental or local judicial benefits” paid to California State Superior Court judges by counties and/or courts was unconstitutional under California Constitution Article 6, Section 19. The payments were and under SBX 2 11 also are criminal under California and federal law. A 2009 Judicial Council Report to the Legislature showed as of 2008, 90% of the California Superior Court judges received the illegal payments. A copy of "Amend SBX 2 11" is located at: https://courtvictim.com/justicebill

      The following are the 2022 personal emails for the California State Assembly Members and State Senators.

      California’s 2022 State Assemblymember’s Personal Emails

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@yrruc-riuiga.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@zeravla.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@alubmara.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nahak-reuab.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@ttenneb.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@namreb.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@wolegib.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@moolb.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@htavrohrenreob.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@atnob.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nayrb.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@noredlac.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@ollirrac.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@setnavrec.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nehc.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@iohc.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@yelooc.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@repooc.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@mahgninnuc.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@elhad.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@ylad.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@seivad.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@arolf.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@gnof.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@gnof.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@namdeirf.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@leirbag.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@rehgallag.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@aicrag.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@aicrag.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nospig.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@yarg.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nosyarg.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@yenah.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nedloh.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@niwri.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@reywas-senoj.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@alrak.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@yelik.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@yekcal.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@eel.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@enivel.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@wol.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@niehcsneiam.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@sihtam.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@seyam.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@ytraccm.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@ronnikcm.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@anidem.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nillum.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@ihcustarum.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nairazan.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@neyugn.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@llennodo.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nosrettap.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@sirron-eirtep.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@kriuq.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@avlis-kriuq.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@somar.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nodner.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@seyer.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@savir.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@savir.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@zeugirdor.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@oibur.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@salas.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@ogaitnas.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@otrayes.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@htims.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@enots.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@gnit.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@seradallav.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@audupalliv.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@lepeov.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nordlaw.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@draw.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@rebew.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@skciw.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@nosliw.rebmemylbmessa

      vog.ac.ylbmessaobfsctd@doow.rebmemylbmessa

      California’s 2022 State Senator’s Personal Emails

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@nella.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@ateluhcra.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@snikta.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@setab.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@rekceb.rotanes 

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@hgob-aohco.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@saegrob.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@drofdarb.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@orellabac.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@esetroc.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@elhad.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@ddod.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@ozarud.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@namgge.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@rezalg.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@zelaznog.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@evorg.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@grebztreh.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@oseuh.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@odatruh.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@senoj.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@regalmak.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@drial.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@avyel.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@nomil.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@eriugcm.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@zednelem.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@nim.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@namwen.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@neslein.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@nap.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@onitnatrop.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@htor.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@oibur.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@renniks.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@nrets.rotanes

      vog.ac.etanesobfsctd@grebmu.rotanes


      What happened when you contacted your represenative

      Priority Restitution means you’ll be at the top of the list to have your case submitted for restitution for the abuses and violations against you which Amend SBX 2 11 addresses by taking the courts out of the solution. By taking the time to strongly suggest to you state representative to support and pass Amend SBX 2 11 means it has that much more of a chance to be passed and help thousand perhaps millions of victims. Which then can also be used in all the other US states with minor alterations. In fact the bill was written with this concept in mind.


      MORE
      MORE INFO ABOUT RICHARD I. FINE’S EXPERIENCE
      INFO ABOUT RICHARD I. FINE’S CAMPAIGN FOR JUDICIAL INTEGRITY

      Dr Richard I Fines Bill Amend SBX 2 11 California Los Angeles County Superior Court Help Stop Judicial Corruption


      MORE ON DR. RICHARD I. FINE AND AMEND SBX 2 11

        If you don't know Los Angeles California Dr Richard I Fine Patriot lawyer former DOJ Prosecutor you should


        [subpages]

        HELP SHARE AND SUPPORT THE NATIONAL COURT VICTIM DATABASE: Share with your Family, Friends and Anyone affected by Judicial Abuse

        How to Contact Your California Legislator to Pass the “Dr. Richard I. Fine Bill” to End Judicial Corruption

        Dr Richard I Fines Los Angeles California Campaign for judicial Integrity

        Help pass Richard I Fine Amend SBX 2 11

        Find out who your state representatives are

        GO TO: Find Your Rep.legislature.ca.gov/

        1. Enter your address
        2. Use the “Contact form” on your representatives website
        3. Select “Other”
        4. Copy and enter the following in the box on your representative’s contact form

        Click Copy to Clipboard Below:


        Dear representative: California has the most corrupt judicial system in the nation. At present, approximately 90% of the California Superior Court judges receive the illegal payments from counties or courts, and most of the higher court justices received such when they were Superior Court judges.

        I demand YOU sponsor and support the Dr. Richard I. Fine Bill “Amending SBX2 11 and Related Government Code Sections; Establishing a State of California Commission on Judicial Oversight and Victims Compensation for Judicial Misconduct and Judicial Abuse of Power”. Passing the “Fine Bill” solves the “Corruption Problem”.

        The reason is: In 2010, the Court held the Legislature was responsible to permanently resolve the problem created by the enactment of SBX 2 11. The Court held SBX 2 11 was interim legislation. SBX 2 11 was enacted in response to the Court holding “supplemental or local judicial benefits” paid to California State Superior Court judges by counties and/or courts was unconstitutional under California Constitution Article 6, Section 19. The payments were and under SBX 2 11 also are criminal under California and federal law. A 2009 Judicial Council Report to the Legislature showed as of 2008, 90% of the California Superior Court judges received the illegal payments. A copy of “Amend SBX 2 11” is located at: https://courtvictim.com/justicebill

         

        Dear representative: California has the most corrupt judicial system in the nation. At present, approximately 90% of the California Superior Court judges receive the illegal payments from counties or courts, and most of the higher court justices received such when they were Superior Court judges.
        
        I demand YOU sponsor and support the Dr. Richard I. Fine Bill "Amending SBX2 11 and Related Government Code Sections; Establishing a State of California Commission on Judicial Oversight and Victims Compensation for Judicial Misconduct and Judicial Abuse of Power”. Passing the “Fine Bill” solves the "Corruption Problem”.
        
        The reason is: In 2010, the Court held the Legislature was responsible to permanently resolve the problem created by the enactment of SBX 2 11. The Court held SBX 2 11 was interim legislation. SBX 2 11 was enacted in response to the Court holding “supplemental or local judicial benefits” paid to California State Superior Court judges by counties and/or courts was unconstitutional under California Constitution Article 6, Section 19. The payments were and under SBX 2 11 also are criminal under California and federal law. A 2009 Judicial Council Report to the Legislature showed as of 2008, 90% of the California Superior Court judges received the illegal payments. A copy of "Amend SBX 2 11" is located at: https://courtvictim.com/justicebill

         

        GET PRIORITY AND TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE BILL BY SHOWING YOU HELPED:
        Take a photo or screen shot of your submission to your representative’s and keep it where you can refer to it at a later time.
        The reason for this is the creators of the bill want to reward those who supported it and helped get it passed. Those victims will be allowed to file for restitution first and will need
        to supply proof they’ve done so.

        A copy of the Bill can be found HERE

        Richard I. Fine drafted the bill

        FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)

        1. Am I a candidate to get restitution via this Bill?
        YES if you’ve been victimized by a California Judge.

        2. Does this apply to victims going back how many years?
        To the mid 1980’s

        3. Besides restitution for my abuse what else does the Bill do to stop Judicial abuse?
        A Commission is established to oversee the judiciary

        4. What will stop the deep corruption from using the court system once again to ignore the bill or change it once implemented?
        The Commission functions to stop all judicial corruption

        5. Who is Richard I. Fine?
        Richard I. Fine, (Doctor of Law; Ph.D Law-International Law). He is a patriot and lawyer (presently qualified to practice before the United States Supreme Court). He was disbarred from California and “unlawfully incarcerated in solitary coercive confinement without charges being made” for 18 months in the Los Angeles County jail in retaliation for exposing (Dishonorable) Judge David Paul Yafee #29399 and all of the Los Angeles County Superior court judges for accepting unlawful payments/bribes from the county. These payments resulted in literally no one winning a case against the county when a judge made the decision.

        Dr. Richard I. Fine FULL BIO

        MORE
        RICHARD I. FINE BIO
        MORE INFO ABOUT RICHARD I. FINE’S EXPERIENCE
        INFO ABOUT RICHARD I. FINE’S CAMPAIGN FOR JUDICIAL INTEGRITY

        Dr Richard I Fines Bill Amend SBX 2 11 California Los Angeles County Superior Court Help Stop Judicial Corruption


        MORE ON DR. RICHARD I. FINE AND AMEND SBX 2 11

        If you don't know Los Angeles California Dr Richard I Fine Patriot lawyer former DOJ Prosecutor you should


         


         


        [subpages]

        HELP SHARE AND SUPPORT THE NATIONAL COURT VICTIM DATABASE: Share with your Family, Friends and Anyone affected by Judicial Abuse