Wednesday, October 27, 2010

More on Sarfatti's theories about the Einhorn Affair

Among the many related issues to the claims that Ira Einhorn was framed for the
murder of Holly Maddux to silence his activism in areas threatening exposure
of corrupt interests of the real parties responsible for this murder, the UFO
issue and related mind control and advanced weaponry aspects have been quoted
in media articles along with reference to the physics discussion list of Dr.
Jack Sarfatti, a longtime Einhorn acquaintance and collaborator, whose [now,
very old] email list included former and present CIA science authorities.

One recent post from this theortetical physics list is forwarded below as
reference to Sarfatti's informed opinions on ignored factors in the "Einhorn was framed"
thesis.


From: "Dr. Jack Sarfatti"
--[see more on Sarfatti from his stardrive.org website at end]--
To: "Arkadiusz Jadczyk"
Subject: Re: Flat Star Gate Portals in UFO Phenomenon
Date: Tuesday, November 28, 2000 11:13 AM

Yes, thanks for this useful link. Jacques Vallee has been acting covertly and

inconsistently lately re: UFOs. Publically, he is no longer involved, yet I
know for a fact he is still actively involved with a key well financed UFO
investigative organization. One reason for this, I surmise, may be his
intimate collaboration in the 70's with Ira Einhorn on matters UFO and also
the ARPA net precursor to the Internet. Einhorn is now in Vallee's country of
origin, France, protected by the French government for a horrendous capital
crime that IMO he did not commit. My own informed guess on what really
happened in Philadelphia in 1977 was that Holly met her death not by Ira, but
possibly by an overdose, maybe self-administered, may be not, as was common
in that crowd at that time, e.g. book Edie by Jean Stein and George Plimpton.
Ira has been quiet about relevant sordid details partly to protect Holly's
reputation. Ira had pissed off Mafioso Mayor Frank Rizzo and his corrupt DA
and police homocide goons who formed Central American style Death Squads. See
the film "The Thin Blue Line" for the true story of what was going on in the
City of Brotherly Love back then. Ira, away most of the incrediblly long 18
months between Holly's alleged death and the finding of her remains in a
storage room outside Ira's actual apartment, was clearly framed. He was tried
in absentia by a Kangaroo Court by a judge who personally hated him and
should have recused himself from the case. Fortunately the French Government
who approved the COMETA UFO report are not stupid.

Arkadiusz Jadczyk wrote:

Date sent: Tue, 28 Nov 2000

Organization: Global Advanced Intelligence Agency (GAIA)

His basic position that the phenomenon is not simple nuts and bolts tin
cans moving through space in the ordinary way like our NASA space craft
do. He alludes to "extradimensional" aspect.
"Alluding" is not yet a model! See
http://www.cassiopaea.org/quantum_future/vallee.htm

Best wishes,
Ark

Monday, October 25, 2010

Email from Sarfatti in 2001: "Bush about to intervene in the Einhorn Affair"

From: "Dr. Jack Sarfatti"
Sent: Saturday, March 31, 2001 2:10 PM
Subject: Re: The Einhorn Affair

Thanks re: rumor from Dick Farley that President Bush is about to intervene in the Einhorn Affair.
Note that Senator Arlen Specter was Ira's original defense attorney and that Ira claims he was framed
because of his work with Colonel Tom Bearden and others on alleged Soviet psychotronic "hyperspace
weapons" and "UFOs" around the Uri Geller situation that was very much in the limelight in the mid-70's when CIA, DIA etc. was funding paranormal remote viewing research that Ira, working with Jacques Vallee, Arthur Young, Andrija Puharich, Sir John Whitmore, Joyce Petchek, Brendan O Regan, Esalen's Michael Murphy and others was very much in the thick of at the time. Einhorn was also deeply involved in Serbian affairs around the Tesla Archive in Beograd, and the nephew of the Shah of Iran. He was also the book agent for "Space Time
and Beyond" that I coauthored with Fred Alan Wolf and Bob Toben dedicated to Carlo Suares in Paris. The Plot thickens.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Specter: Just doing my job as his lawyer

I couldn't find the date of this one, but I'm guessing it's around 2000, possibly 1999. It is another article but has some worthy quotes from Arlen Specter, Ira's lawyer in 1979.


He was only doing his job.

That was how U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter described his role as a private lawyer 20 years ago in getting low bail for Ira Einhorn, launching the hippie guru into 16 years on the lam in Europe.

Lawyer and radio talk-show host Michael A. Smerconish asked Specter yesterday if he had any regrets about his role in freeing Einhorn after Einhorn's arrest in 1979 in the killing of his girlfriend Helen "Holly" Maddux.

"I was doing my job as a lawyer," Specter said on the call-in show. "That's what a lawyer is supposed to do."

Einhorn, then 38, was arrested after Maddux's battered body was found in a trunk in Einhorn's apartment. She had been dead about 17 months, police said.

At a bail hearing before Common Pleas Judge William M. Marutani, Specter asked for bail for Einhorn of $5,000.

The district attorney's office asked for $100,000.

Marutani compromised and set bail at $40,000. Einhorn made the required 10 percent, was turned loose and soon fled the country.

That was the only time Specter represented Einhorn, who could not afford Specter's high fees.

Specter suggested that his successors in the DA's office have been less than diligent in going after Einhorn.

"The law has to be very tenacious in pursuing him and bringing him back to justice," he said.

"When I was district attorney, I didn't ask anyone else to do my job," Specter said. "The district attorney has a lot of power and a lot of leverage. I would be interested to know what kind of surveillance Einhorn is under."

- John F. Morrison

Friday, October 22, 2010

Who is Jack Sarfatti?

Jack Sarfatti (born September 14, 1939) is an American theoretical physicist and the author of a number of popular works on quantum physics and consciousness. He is known for his iconoclastic ideas, and is interested in what he sees as the breakdown of the paradigm that posits science and the humanities as separate disciplines, arguing that physics — which he calls "the Conceptual Art of the late 20th Century" — [ [http://www.disinfo.com/archive/pages/article/id773/pg1/ weird science] ] has replaced philosophy as the unifying force between science and art. [ [http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/1997/08/17/SC46892.DTL The Universe, As Seen From North Beach] ]

Sarfatti's main interests lie in Timothy Leary's "SMI²LE" program of space migration, intelligence increase, and life extension. [ [http://www.disinfo.com/archive/pages/article/id773/pg1/ weird science] ] His views include Colonel Phillip J. Corso's speculation that UFOs may be of extraterrestrial origin or could be "terrestrial time ships" originating from our own future; that parapsychological phenomena may be real; that "retro-causal" (future-to-past) faster-than-light communication may be possible; and that space travel could be achieved by a controlled, possibly "psychokinetic" (mind manipulating matter), local warping of "emergent curved and torsioned" spacetime. [ [http://stardrive.org/ufos.shtml UFOs and the New Physics] ] in "the fuselage of the flying saucer using nano-engineered 2D quantum wells with anyon condensates" ("Super Cosmos").

He is the author of the self-published books "Super Cosmos" (2005), "Destiny Matrix" (2002), and "Space: Time And Beyond II (Dark Energy)" (2002), and co-author with Fred Alan Wolf and Bob Toben of "Space-Time and Beyond: Toward an Explanation of the Unexplainable" (1982). He is a frequent contributor to Usenet [ [http://groups.google.com/groups?q=author%3ASarfatti&qt_s=Search Google Groups search] ] and has set up a website where he discusses his ideas. [ [http://stardrive.org Stardrive] ]

Academic background

Sarfatti was born in Brooklyn, New York to Hyman Sarfatti, an Italian Sephardi Jew from Macedonia and his wife Mildred. [ [http://www.qedcorp.com/pcr/pcr/si05.html UFOs and the New Physics] ] [ [http://hnn.us/readcomment.php?id=15653 Stephen Schwartz lies] ] [ [http://www.stardrive.org/Jack/dad.pdf My Story by Hyman Sarfatti] (pdf)]

He completed his B.A. in physics at Cornell University in 1960, where he wrote an honors thesis under the guidance of Hans Bethe, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1967. His first published paper, "Quantum-Mechanical Correlation Theory of Electromagnetic Fields," appeared in 1963 in "Nuovo Cimento", the journal of the Italian Physical Society.

He obtained his Master's, also in physics, from University of California, San Diego in 1967, and in the same year, "The Goldstone Theorem in the Jahn-Teller Effect," which he co-authored with Marshall Stoneham, was published in "Proceedings of the Physical Society of London", and "Laser Self-Focusing Analogue to the Landau-Ginzburg Equation of Type II Superconductivity" in "Physics Letters". [ [http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/1997/08/17/SC46892.DTL The Universe, As Seen From North Beach] ]

From 1967-71, he worked as an assistant professor of physics at San Diego State University, obtaining his Ph.D from University of California, Riverside in 1969, where he wrote his thesis under the supervision of Fred Cummings. In 1970, he and Cummings co-authored "Beyond the Hartree-Fock Theory in Superfluid Helium," which was published in "Physica Scripta" in Switzerland. [ [http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/1997/08/17/SC46892.DTL The Universe, As Seen From North Beach] ]

From 1971-2, he was employed as a research fellow under David Bohm, the American quantum physicist, at Birkbeck College, London. [ [http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/1997/08/17/SC46892.DTL The Universe, As Seen From North Beach] ]

From 1973-4, he worked with Abdus Salam, who won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1979, at the International Centre for Theoretical Physics in Trieste, Italy.

He then left academia. In 1975, Dr. Sarfatti founded the "Physics Consciousness Research Group" to do research on parapsychological phenomenon such as telepathy. This research group was funded by Werner Erhard.

Thereafter, he worked at the Esalen Institute in Big Sur. In 1999-2000 at Joe Firmage's ISSO exotic propulsion group in San Francisco with a budget of several million dollars. [ [http://www.cnn.com/US/9901/12/planetary.executive/index.html CNN - Silicon Valley CEO continues alien quest despite skeptics - January 12, 1999 ] ] Fact|date=February 2007

Observation of Uri Geller

On June 21, 1974, Sarfatti was one of a number of scientists and other interested parties — a group that included Arthur C. Clarke, Arthur Koestler, David Bohm, John G. Taylor, Bernard Carr, [ "Can Psychical Research Bridge the Gulf Between Matter and Mind?" Bernard Carr "Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research", Vol 59 Part 221 June 2008 ] and John Hasted — who conducted observations of Uri Geller while the latter displayed what he said was telekinetic energy.

Sarfatti was initially impressed by Geller, and commented: "My personal professional judgement as a Ph.D. physicist is that Geller demonstrated genuine psychoenergetic ability at Birkbeck, which is beyond the doubt of any reasonable man, under relatively well-controlled and repeatable experimental conditions." ["Science News", vol. 106, July 20, 1974, p. 46.] He later revised this opinion after discussing the matter with James Randi. He wrote in a letter: "On the basis of further experience in the art of conjuring, I wish to retract my endorsement of Uri Geller's psychoenergetic authenticity." ["Science News", December 6, 1975, p. 355.]

Bernard Carr on Jack Sarfatti

Bernard Carr makes the following comment that outlines some of Jack Sarfatti's ideas regarding the relationship of quantum theory and consciousness:

**"More generally, Jack Sarfatti [ Jack Sarfatti, 1998, with M.C. Levit, [http://arxiv.org/abs/physics/9704029 "Are the Bader Laplacian and the Bohm Quantum Potential Equivalent?"] , "Causality & Locality in Modern Physics" (Series: Fundamental Theories in Physics, Vol 97), Kluwer Academic Publishers, pp 353-358. ISBN 0-7923-5227-0 ] has argued that signal non-locality could still be allowed in some form of ‘post-quantum’ theory which incorporates consciousness. He regards signal non-locality as the micro-quantum limit of a more general non-equilibrium macro-quantum theory. The relationship between micro and macro quantum theory is then similar to that between special and general relativity, with consciousness being intrinsically non-local and analogous to curvature. His model involves non-linear corrections to the Schrödinger equation and may permit retrocausal and remote viewing effects (2002)." [ "Can Psychical Research Bridge the Gulf Between Matter and Mind?" Bernard Carr "Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research", Vol 59 Part 221 June 2008 Page 30 ]

Publications

Written works

*Sarfatti, Jack. 2008, [http://mail.df.unipi.it/~elze/DICE2008.html "Emergent Gravity as a Macro-Quantum Coherent Vacuum Field"] .
*Sarfatti, Jack. 2006, [http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0602022 "Emergent Gravity: String Theory Without String Theory"] , ArXiv.org.
*----, 2004, [http://scienca.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=21 "Einstein Gravity with Dark Energy and Dark Matter as Sakharov Metric Elasticity"] , "GR17 Dublin 2004: 17th International Conference on General Relativity and Gravitation: Book of Abstracts", p. 181.
*----, 2004, [http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:hBNHazh3zTkJ:www.qedcorp.com/London/03-Sarfatti-P.pdf+%22Wheeler%27s+World%22+sarfatti&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=1 "Wheeler's World"] , "Developments in Quantum Physics", Nova Publishers, pp 41-84. ISBN 1-59454-003-9
*----, 2003, [http://www.aps.org/meet/MAR03/baps/abs/S5150006.html "Macro-Quantum Origin of Gravity and Quintessence"] , Papers at APS Austin & Philadelphia published in APS Abstracts for those meetings. "Bulletin of the American Physical Society", Vol 48, No 1, Part II, N35-6, p. 832.
*----, 2002, "Space-Time and Beyond 2: Dark Energy", AuthorHouse. ISBN 1-4033-9022-3
*----, 2002, [http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-bib_query?bibcode=2002gchr.conf..419S&db_key=AST&data_type=HTML&format= "Progress in Post-Quantum Physics and Unified Field Theory"] , "Gravitation and Cosmology: From the Hubble Radius to the Planck Scale" (Series: Fundamental Theories of Physics, Vol 126), Kluwer Academic Publishers, pp 419-430. ISBN 1-4020-0885-6
*----, 1998, with M.C. Levit, [http://arxiv.org/abs/physics/9704029 "Are the Bader Laplacian and the Bohm Quantum Potential Equivalent?"] , "Causality & Locality in Modern Physics" (Series: Fundamental Theories in Physics, Vol 97), Kluwer Academic Publishers, pp 353-358. ISBN 0-7923-5227-0
*----, 1998, [http://www.qedcorp.com/pcr/vigier/slides/Vigier1.htm "Beyond Bohm-Vigier Quantum Mechanics"] , "Causality & Locality in Modern Physics", (Series: Fundamental Theories in Physics, Vol 97), Kluwer Academic Publishers, pp 403-410. ISBN 0-7923-5227-0
*----, 1991, [http://www.physicsessays.com/toc.asp?nmb=04 "Design for a Superluminal Signaling Device,"] , "Physics Essays", Vol 4, No 3, Sep 1991, pp 315-336.
*----, 1977, "Higher Intelligence is Us in the Future", in "Spit in the Ocean", Fall 1977, No. 3, Ken Kesey, pub., Tim Leary, ed.
*----, 1975, "The Physical Roots of Consciousness" in Mishlove, Jeffrey, "The Roots of Consciousness", pp 279-290. ISBN 0-394-73115-8
*----, 1975, "Space-Time and Beyond", with Fred Alan Wolf and Bob Toben, E. P. Dutton. ISBN 0-525-47399-8
*----, 1974, "The Dirac Equation and General Relativity," "Foundations of Physics".
*----, 1973, "Regge Trajectories as Rotation Black Holes in Strong Gravity", "Collective Phenomena", H. Frohlich & F.W. Cummings, eds.
*----, 1971, "On mini black holes", short note in "Nature Physical Science".
*----, 1970, "Beyond the Hartree-Fock Theory in Superfluid Helium," with Fred Cummings, in "Physica Scripta" (Switzerland).
*----, 1969, [http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-bib_query?bibcode=1969PhLA...30..300S&db_key=PHY&data_type=HTML&format= "Destruction of Superflow in Unsaturated 4He Films and the Prediction of a New Crystalline Phase of 4He with Bose-Einstein Condensation"] , "Physics Letters", Vol 30A, No 5, Nov 1969, pp 300-301.
*----, 1967, "Laser Self-Focusing Analogue to the Landau-Ginzburg Equation of Type II Superconductivity", "Physics Letters".
*----, 1967, "The Goldstone Theorem in the Jahn-Teller Effect", with Marshall Stoneham, "Proceedings of the Physical Society|Proceedings of the Physical Society of London] ", cited as a major paper in "AIP Resource Letter on Symmetry in Physics", 1980 (done at United Kingdom Atomic Energy Research Establishment, Harwell, Didcot, Berks).
*----, 1963 "Quantum-Mechanical Correlation Theory of Electromagnetic Fields," "Nuovo Cimento" (journal of the Italian Physical Society).

Broadcast

*Paramount Pictures "Star Trek IV" DVD has commentary on time travel by Sarfatti: "Time Travel: The Art of the Possible" runs eleven minutes and 14 seconds and provides information from 'three prominent quantum physicists'. We get comments from Dr. Nick Herbert, Dr. Fred Alan Wolf, and Dr. Jack Sarfatti." [ [http://dvdmg.com/startrek4se.shtml Star Trek IV commentary] ]

Mention of Jack Sarfatti in books by other authors

*Sarfatti's ideas on physics and consciousness have been cited in a number of popular and scholarly books, including "Cosmic Trigger" by Robert Anton Wilson, "Bohemia" by Herbert Gold, "Geometry, Relativity and the Fourth Dimension" by mathematician Rudy Rucker, "The Oxford Handbook of Free Will" edited by philosopher Robert Kane, "White Holes" by physicist John Gribbon, "Rocket Dreams" by Marina Benjamin, books by Stanislav Grof, "Dancing in the Light" by Shirley MacLaine, "The Dancing Wu Li Masters" by Gary Zukav and "Exo-Psychology" (Reprinted in second edition as "Info-Psychology") by Timothy Leary. Sharon Weinberger, an editor at Aviation Week, mentions Sarfatti in her book "Imaginary Weapons", in reference to his early work with Hans Bethe at Cornell on the idea for a nuclear isomer gamma ray laser.

Notes

Further reading

* [http://destinymatrix.blogspot.com/ destinymatrix ] Sarfatti's blog -- Read his new draft!  Amazing.
*Rothman, Milton. [http://www.csicop.org/sb/9609/internet.html "Reality check"] at CSICOP site
*Zukav, Gary. "The Dancing Wu Li Masters: An Overview of the New Physics", 1979, ISBN 0-06-095968-1
* [http://www.qedcorp.com/pcr/pcr/sar.html A webpage about Sarfatti at qedcorp]
*Talbot, Michael. "Mysticism and the New Physics",1993, revised, updated, ARKANA, Penguin, pp 2,25,28-9,36,40,42,56,57,59,67,87,89,97,122,125 on "behavior of particles", "consciousness". "fields", "gravitons, "participator", "quantum principles", "time ordering", "wormhole connections."

References

*Burns, Alex. [http://www.disinfo.com/archive/pages/article/id773/pg1/ "Weird Science"] , "Disinformation", January 28, 2001
*Rodrigues, Waldyr. [http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/gr-qc/0602111 "A Comment on Emergent Gravity"] , "arXiv.org", gr-qc/0602111
*Schwartz, Stephen. [http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/1997/08/17/SC46892.DTL "The Universe, as seen from North Beach"] , "San Francisco Chronicle", August 17, 1997

What Smell? By Ira Einhorn

Ira Einhorn has maintained his innocence since 1977 when Holly went missing and pigs and outsiders began pointing fingers. In every conversation I've ever had with people on the topic, which is about 3 who know the story-in-brief, the problematic questions I present get the *sigh*. " Move on. The retrial's constitutional destruction is... uhmmm... meaningless to you? " Shouldn't be. "DNA? Whattya..whattya ... ya ... ya ya thinking he didn't do it?" The reactions are weird and unsatisfying for me, but maybe that is because I know a lot about a case that was successfully stopped from continually resurfacing. Is Ira, to this very day, full of shit? It's information that should be heard in a retrial. Again. Maybe if you read all the posts you'll get more of an idea why that is the point of view this website stands for. The murder is the legal imperative as it should be, and Ira's chances of being believed are tiny at best, but his last trial was not a laughing matter as the judge made it seem.

Friday, July 07, 2006

In dealing with my case, the media in the United States have rarely reported the ‘facts’ or questioned them. What they have done is parrot the DA, as I dared to challenge a system that has become a political pathway, on the backs of defendants, often innocent, for aspiring DAs.

This short note is an attempt to clarify a particular aspect of my case: the smell that was associated with my apartment building, NOT MY APARTMENT, during the fall of 1977.

I have no idea what the smell was. One hypothesis was that of a dead animal trapped under the floor.

If Holly Maddux had been killed when the DA insisted she was killed for over twenty years and put into a trunk that was then stored in a closet just ten feet from my bed no one would have been able to live in that apartment while the body was decaying, as the smell of a dead body – human or animal – is overwhelming and permeates everything.

Yet, during that time period there were people in my apartment for long periods of time.

I counted eleven people, mentioned in my diary, who spent at least a number of hours with me.

Two women who slept overnight in the apartment, one for a weekend, shortly after the purported death, testified at my trial.

They smelled nothing, as there was no smell.

Holly was seen alive, on at least five separate occasions, months after her supposed death. Information that the DA tried to suppress.

She was supposedly killed in a manner that would have sprayed blood everywhere. No blood was found in the apartment.

No blood was found on her clothes which were conveniently lost.

So the SMELL is a red herring, and the judicial authorities know it to be so, for after hearing all the evidence, Judge Mazzola very pointedly told the jury to ignore the time of death.

An outrageous act given the fact of two decades of DA insistence on the date of death and a defense totally based on such an insistence.


June 2006
Ira Einhorn

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Care to debate facts anyone? PA, you reading?

The Smell

So much of the enormous media noise around the instant case has to do with the smell of a decaying body which both the prosecution and the defense agreed in court was impossible to sustain for any period in time, let along months and months.
Yet the closet in which the body was supposedly decaying was about 4 feet away from the room in which all the activity (reading, sleeping, love making and desk work) took place in the apartment.
Two women testified to having spent extensive time in the apartment during the time when others reported a smell outside and in other parts of the building.
They were not restricted in their movements in any way.  They smelled nothing.
Many other men and women, including a police detective, were in the apartment subsequent to the time that the Commonwealth has always insisted that the death took place.
They were not called to testify, by the defense as the time of death was fixed in stone by the indictment and their testimony would not have added anything to the situation.
There was no smell in the apartment itself.
Impossible, if a body had decayed there.
Also not a drop of blood was found in the apartment or on Holly’s clothes.
Add all this to five sightings of a dead woman 6 months after her death; The withholding of these sightings:
A judge who says ignore the time of death.
Also, during the trial, a long discussion about a fire escape next to the door – a red herring – as the actual fire escape door, in the kitchen, was left off the drawing of the apartment, by the man who spent eighteen hours in the apartment.
And the real kicker: Holly was found with keys to the apartment in her pocket.
There was no problem about bringing a body into the apartment as the deceased had keys to the apartment on her person.
The smell, as with so many other aspects of the case, does not point to the defendant, but into other directions that the neglected and now lost fingerprints reinforce.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

UNCONSTITUTIONAL: The Einhorn Law

If you want to get anywhere, you gotta start somewhere.  Take the unconstitutionality of Ira's retrial.  The weirdness kicks in to over-drive, so read and remember to question authority.  It's the only way.  You can accept what happened and the version you know, but does that truly mean the legal system has not failed at least in some areas?  The Einhorn Law is a perfect starting point because it backs off the main point just long to wonder, consider, think critically about how and why something went afoul. 

1.  The Einhorn Law

The law should apply to [Ira Einhorn].  It should apply not due to the fact that [he's] a good guy or a bad guy.  It is applied to [him] as a citizen who lives under the aegis of a written constitution.  To violate the Constitution in the way described in this article is to destroy the covenant that exists between those who are elected or hired to serve, for our benefit, and the people as a whole.  It threatens the very fabric of our lives and it demeans the union of the people, by the people and for the people that so many have bleed to preserve.
It is Tyranny.
When the American political system was formulated in the Constitution, one of the strongest enabling principles was the separation of powers.
It is a principle reinforced in an early Supreme Court decision: Marbury v. Madison.  It has been held as the LAW of the land since that time.

Ira Einhorn was tried in absentia in 1993.

His decision became final in 1995.

Only a court can open a final decision.

A legislative act can’t tamper with a final decision as it violates the separation of powers and makes nonsense of judicial finality.
The Einhorn Law is a travesty of American Justice.
In addition it violates the jurisdictional nature of a PCRA (Pennsylvania Court Reporters Association). Thus any decision it makes is without jurisdiction and a nullity.
The arguments put forward in response to these facts by the judge and the DA’s office have been puerile.
The Superior Court wrote a decision on the Einhorn Law that was based upon an outright lie, and so twisted a judicial principle that everyone who has looked closely at the reasoning has said: “It isn’t law.”
The Superior Court avoided a decision on the merits of the challenge to the constitutionality of the Einhorn Law by claiming that they could not grant the remedy, therefore they would not rule on the merits.
A first year law student would say: “Duh”.
One only looks at a remedy after one has made a decision on the merits.
This is how the law functions 100% of the time.
For a court to refuse to rule on the merits of an issue declares that due process does not exist for Ira Einhorn.
Pariahs need not apply.
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court, the final arbiter of law in Pennsylvania, has twice refused to rule on a controversial issue of outstanding public interest.
The case has received more publicity than any case in modern Pennsylvania history.  It is sheer avoidance, Chief Justice Castille must be vociferously reminded that there are sins of omission as well as commission – to avoid ruling on the Einhorn Law is to diminish the meaning of law in Pennsylvania and to spatter mud upon his recent pledge that justice will be done in Pennsylvania courtrooms.

From Nayer's Blog

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Article from 2002 ReTrial

Date: Thu, 26 Sep 2002 00:23:04 -0700
By Michael A. Fletcher

"If Einhorn has changed with the times, so too, has his defense. His prominent friends have long abandoned him, and nobody seems to be buying the idea of a government conspiracy against him.

In Einhorn's new trial, Cannon plans to focus on the holes he sees in the state's case, which, he acknowledges, is substantial. "The victim's body was found in the defendant's apartment. It is the major hurdle," Cannon said. "There is circumstantial evidence of major dimension."

Still, Cannon promises to present three witnesses -- including a former Philadelphia police officer -- who will testify that they saw the 30-year-old Maddux alive after September 1977, when prosecutors allege Einhorn killed her. He also plans to point out that Einhorn's fingerprints were not found on several boxes piled on top of the trunk in which Maddux's body was found. Cannon adds that no traces of Maddux's decomposing body were found in a rug and floorboards below the trunk in two of the three rounds of laboratory tests ordered by prosecutors."

And now for the toughest part of the story. Read below and insert theory as Fletcher does:

"Maddux left Einhorn in Europe and returned to the United States. Eventually, she met a new beau. When Einhorn returned home, he called her repeatedly. Finally, prosecutors say, Maddux told Einhorn that she wanted to end their relationship. He demanded that she come back to the apartment, prosecutors say, threatening to throw her belongings into the street. When she returned, she and Einhorn went to the movies. After that, she disappeared. "

Websearching All Ira Einhorn

All Ira Einhorn was found by these searches this week...






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Sunday, October 17, 2010

Listserve and The Unicorn - Part Seven

And finally... this 7 part series comes to an end with a comment by our loved DC Williams. David is a stellar human with a fantastic charm.

From DC Williams....
"The only policy that will enable this corruption and skullduggery to be resolved is
by a "Truth Commission Amnesty" program analogous to what happened in South Africa
after the end of apartheid where instead of prosecuting as war criminals the
perpetrators of apartheid genocidal policies, those who accepted corrected ethic,
renouced their previous actions, and agreed to work together for the good of the
nation -- these people were pardoned and were able to apply their positions of power
and influence towards creating a better nation in the future. In America, not only
should the nonviolent victims of the drug war now imprisoned be pardoned, but also
the murderous corrupt perpetrators of the bogus drug war must also be given the
chance to change the errors of their ways and acknowledge the truth of their
misdeeds and reapply their talents and skills to solving today's global social
and environmental problems before it is too late to save all life on Earth from
otherwise impending destruction not only from accelerated climate change and the
dangers of nuclear conflagration but from the increasing ozone layer depletion that
1988 Project Earth climate modeling predictions deemed on-target as of 1997 say
will destroy all the oceanic phytoplankton (over half of Earth's oxygen supply) by
solar irradiation by the year 2008. http://www.projectearth.com To solve this
emergency we must quickly move away from fossil fuel power towards the suppressed
and available new-energy ("free-energy") technologies such as cold fusion, LENR,
ZPE, rotating magnetic systems, oscillating magnetic systems, etc etc, that can
provide power without fuel by mechanisms demonstrated but yet to be fully
understood due to corporate media and government scientific suppression. We need
a New Manhattan Project, but an open public one, to quickly implement this new
energy economy as per Science and Technology in Society and Public Policy list
posts at url below. Very important we also need to revive on a global emergency
scale level the USDA 1941-45 Hemp for Victory program to grow this most useful
and bioefficient plant everywhere possible on Earth as soon as possible for its
economic value and its superior bioefficiency per acre for biofuels applications
to replace fossil fuels, to save the forests and heal the atmosphere reducing
carbon dioxide and reoxygenating it to enable the ozone layer made from atmospheric
oxygen to be replenished in time. This is an essential Global Emergency Alert
Response. David Crockett Williams, C.L.U.
http://www.globalpeacenow.org

The Khazarian Conspiracy Video Series: Part 1 of 12

All 12 parts of this video are up and available on Youtube. It offers tremendous background information on this very relevant situation vital to the world on so many fronts...

Spetsnaz Mind Fighting

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Listserve and The Unicorn - Part Six

Was Ira naive to all of these happenings?  Certainly, he was not as well verse
publicly, but there might have been deeper connections that he wanted to avoid for
sheer fear. Just speculating on this but will certainly be a part of this blog for
sheer interesting factor.

http://www.citypaper.net/articles/080300/cs.cover3.shtml As the summer of 1996 wore
on, Philadelphia's small community of criminal defense attorneys smelled blood in the
water when it came to getting old BNI cases overturned. In a frenzy of filings, one
motion followed another in rapid succession, each requesting that a past conviction
be thrown out and a prisoner released because the individual's arrest had been tainted
by the mere presence of BNI personnel at the scene. When the District Attorney's
Office did not contest the motions, the convicts went free. Before it was all over,
by McLaughlin's estimation, 85 defendants had been let go, people from whom BNI had
confiscated a total of $1.2 million worth of heroin, crack and cocaine, not to
mention dozens of illegal firearms and motor vehicles. Another attorney who has
frequently handled drug cases, Louis Savino, showed remarkable candor about the
situation when he told the Inquirer, "It made my job easier. I don't know about
the general public. They're just letting people skate.. These are allegations of
significant amounts of drugs." Most other defense attorneys were more sanctimonious,
making public claims about their clients' innocence, even when their court motions
merely claimed they had been caught improperly. The scandal hit at a time when
the Pennsylvania Attorney General's Office was already in a state of general turmoil.
The elected AG, Ernie Preate, had gone to prison for campaign finance corruption.
The acting AG, Thomas Corbett, was a lame duck, a mere seat warmer who would be
replaced in early 1997 by the winner of the November 1996 election. Nonetheless,
soon after the prosecutors started dumping BNI cases, Corbett appointed his deputy
attorney general Eric Noonan to review the cases and file a report on fixing the
problems with the Philadelphia BNI office. Noonan's report was never made public,
but a draft has been obtained by City Paper. In it, Noonan's exasperation is evident
as he lays out the inability of the prosecutors to articulate just what they found
so offensive about McLaughlin and his crew. This is where he accused the
prosecutors of failing to provide any specifics beyond "a general 'gut feeling' of
discomfort" with BNI cases. As best as Noonan could tell, the prosecutors had
three very general criticisms of the arrests made by McLaughlin, Micewski,
McKeefery and Eggles: The BNI agents often entered houses without warrants, they
reported seeing drugs in plain view with a frequency that defied credibility and
the "recurring fact patterns" in their cases, as claimed by Guy Sciolstuff up.
As head of the Drug Strike Force Legal Services section, Noonan was already well
versed in search and seizure law. After reviewing hundreds of BNI files, however,
he concluded that while the bureau could sharpen up some of its procedures, he
could find nothing about its work that was improper or not credible. For one
thing, law officers can enter a house without a warrant if they reasonably suspect
contraband may be in danger of being destroyed. The allowable procedure is to
"secure" the property first and then request a warrant to actually search the
building. Noonan found BNI agents had always given their explicit reasons for such
"prior entries" in their search warrant requests, and had never tried to conceal
them. To test the credibility of the "plain view" arrests that the prosecutors
complained about, Noonan took a tour of the Dominican-controlled drug corners
where the BNI agents had done so much of their work. "During slightly more than
an hour of driving through the various neighborhoods, our vehicle was approached
no fewer than three times by street corner dealers who readily displayed various
types of drugs to the driver." Noonan witnessed five other drug transactions,
some within view of uniformed police officers who "had very little impact on these
street dealers' temerity.. [B]ased on the foregoing, it appears their recurring
ability for such plain view observations is quite believable." Finally, on the
matter of Sciolla's "recurring fact patterns," Noonan wrote that he found no such
patterns that were "incredible due to their frequency." Forced to state the obvious,
Noonan wrote that some recurring patterns are "not unforeseeable" with drug
arrests, given the organized and routine nature of narcotics dealing and trafficking.
Although Noonan's report made some suggestions about how BNI agents and supervisors
could improve their reporting methods, he found nothing that would warrant the
treatment that McLaughlin, Micewski, McKeefery and Eggles received at the hands
of the prosecutors. The report, completed in July 1996, would have given
Philadelphia's BNI crew some much-needed moral support, but no portion of it was
ever made public. Instead, acting AG Tom Corbett continued to make occasional
disparaging remarks about the agents, perhaps attempting to put the bureau's past
behind it. McLaughlin, Micewski, McKeefery and Eggles were pulled from the streets
for good, and a new supervisor was assigned. On May 17, 1996, with the four agents
no longer permitted to make arrests, the District Attorney's Office announced it
would start handling BNI cases once again. On July 1, 1996, Dr. Jose Francisco
Pena Gomez lost the runoff election for the Dominican presidency. But he and his
Dominican Revolutionary Party didn' t have to worry about drug investigations any
more. Soon after Pena Gomez's fundraising visit to New York several months earlier,
the DEA had shut down its investigation. And Pena Gomez's supporters kept active
in politics. In October 1996, prominent members of Dominican drug trafficking
organizations - people assigned special DEA identity numbers - attended a fundraiser
for the New York Democratic Party at an Upper West Side tavern. The guest of
honor that night was Vice President Al Gore. In the fall of 1997, when they filed
their federal civil rights lawsuit, the careers of McLaughlin, McKeefery, Micewski
and Eggles were mere shadows of what they had been 18 months earlier. For more
than a year McLaughlin had been reassigned to a desk job, while McKeefery worked
in the motor pool, signing out vehicles. Micewski was reassigned to do paperwork
in a BNI office in northeastern Pennsylvania, while Eggles took an extended leave,
eventually deciding to retire. All were still officially under investigation by
the FBI. In September, a Housing Authority police officer named Harry Fernandez
called McLaughlin to tell him he had FBI troubles of his own. Fernandez had worked
frequently with McLaughlin's BNI crew on drug investigations in the past. Now he
was facing federal charges for lying about a search he did on a car in 1994. He
had recovered more than three pounds of cocaine in what was said to be the largest
street bust in city history, but he had falsified some details in the search and
some fellow housing officers had given him up. Fernandez told McLaughlin that the
FBI was offering him immunity in exchange for information about the BNI. But it
wasn't until Fernandez's 1998 trial, when he got a transcript of Fernandez's
Sept. 23, 1997 FBI interview, that McLaughlin could see just how badly they wanted
to nail the Bastard Squad. FBI: Look, let's cut the shit. You know those guys at
BNI are dirty. They planted drugs on people[,] stole their money. We want you to
tell us about that. Fernandez: I'll tell you whatever I know, but if you're
looking for illegal shit that those guys did. I do not know anything about it.
FBI: Why do you keep protecting these guys? Fernandez: I'm not protecting them
but if I don't know anything illegal about them how can I say anything? FBI: This
is your only way out. Do you understand that anything you say here can't be
used against you[?] No matter what illegal thing you did and tell us we can't use
it against you. That's a hell of a break. Fernandez: I would tell you if I know.
I'd give up anybody in order to benefit me. But unless you want me to lie I don't
know anything. Fernandez was eventually acquitted of three of the four charges
against him. He received a two-and-a-half-year sentence for lying to a federal
officer. The lawsuit filed on October 17, 1997, with all four Bastard Squad
members as plaintiffs, listed 16 co-defendants including Stiles, Gordon, a State
Department assistant secretary, three CIA employees, two FBI detectives, five
members of the Attorney General's chain of command, two New York drug traffickers
and, finally, the candidate himself, Pena Gomez. Pena Gomez has since died, and
several other defendants, including Arnold Gordon, have successfully sought to be
dropped from the case via a summary judgment. Gordon was covered by prosecutorial
immunity, which forbids people from suing prosecutors for their legal decisions.
Stiles, however, has had his summary judgment request denied by a judge, partly
because there is some evidence he encouraged the Attorney General's Office to
order all the Bastard Squad members removed from the Essington Avenue office.
In 1998, Donald Bailey filed a second lawsuit on behalf of McLaughlin, McKeefery
and Micewski, alleging that Attorney General officials had responded to the first
lawsuit by retaliating with "harsh, uncompromising employment and travel burdens,
all in order to punish the plaintiffs for using the civil rights laws to protect
their rights and redress their grievances." (Eggles, having retired, was not a
plaintiff in the second lawsuit.) Not until October 1998 did Stiles inform the
Attorney General's Office that the FBI investigation of the Bastard Squad would
not result in any indictments. He finally made the announcement that the FBI
investigation was complete in February 1999, nearly three years after it started.
Although the number of convicted felons set free in the BNI scandal rivals that
of the 39th District scandal, there remain some serious differences between the
two affairs. In the 39th, the city eventually paid out $3.5 million in settlements
to falsely arrested defendants. By contrast, none of the civil cases filed against
the Bastard Squad was settled, and none ever made it to trial. Each was thrown
out by an appellate judge, including one who noted tartly that "Plaintiff does
not dispute the basic facts. that he was driving an automobile which contained
over 2,000 vials of crack cocaine." And yet, just two weeks ago, another repeat
offender drug dealer, one who was serving four to seven years in state prison,
was granted a new trial simply because the arresting officer was Sparky McLaughlin.
The District Attorney's Office immediately moved to nol-pros, and the man, who is
still awaiting trial on two unrelated assault charges, went free. McLaughlin,
Micewski, McKeefery and Eggles remain possibly the only unindicted law officers
anywhere to be essentially blackballed by the prosecutors they were obliged to
work with. But they are no longer the only cops to have their investigative careers
interrupted or destroyed under strange circumstances involving Dominican drug
traffickers and their pricey private lawyers. One highly effective Philadelphia
Police narcotics squad was suddenly shut down and pulled off the streets in 1997.
They were told death threats had been made against them. Only later did they
learn the FBI was investigating them because lawyers for Dominican drug dealers
were complaining the squad was making unconstitutional searches. After three
years, the FBI had nothing to show for their trouble. But the narcotics squad,
which had been arresting an average of 30 dealers a week, was dismantled. Some
have filed formal grievances against the police department for unfairly reassigning
them to desk jobs. Two other cases in New York City follow a similar pattern
in which successful teams of narcotics agents have been pulled from duty after
drug lawyers made allegations of misconduct that inevitably proved groundless.
Could it be that the attorneys for Dominican drug traffickers have hit upon a
reliable method of undermining the entire justice system by simply driving a
wedge of suspicion between the cops and the prosecutors (two cultures which are
prone to mutual mistrust in even the best of circumstances)? Way back in April
1996, that's exactly what BNI supervisor Mike Lutz thought had happened to
McLaughlin, McKeefery, Micewski and Eggles. That eloquent memorandum defending
the men who would soon become the Bastard Squad contained this very well-reasoned
paragraph: "Is it not our agency alone that is making a consistent pattern of
arrests, confiscating large amounts of drugs, money, cars and guns in these areas?
How best to defeat the efforts of the Law Enforcement Agency that is wreaking havoc
against this organized drug ring[?] Put the spotlight on them. Put them in retreat.
Initiate an investigation. Make false and unfounded allegations. It will stop them
in their tracks. And it did. "The scheme worked, [the Dominican drug traffickers
and their lawyers] paralyzed an entire Law Enforcement Agency and at the same
time ruined [its] credibility. How in God's name could their broad brush associate
us. with the 39th District scandal? They did."

Friday, October 15, 2010

Breaking: Einhorn Gives Interview After 8 Years of Media Silence

It has been a long time since we heard about the goings on in life of The Unicorn. Ronnie Polaneczky, Philadelphia Daily News Columnist, was tracked down by the 70 year-old and was interviewed for a newspaper piece. Guess what, we also get to see him, sorta, in a 2009 headshot.

We'll hit the comment thread in a little while, lets give it some time to get shaking.

In the meanwhile, I just had a look at this new article. By the lack of quotes it seems to be probable that Ira took Ronnie to task -- and without the aid of any modern day recording devices -- as she was left jotting down a few quotes that she feels equal her hatred for the man. And her words are now reaching out to Philadelphia as if the hatercade has arrived and the information is good because Ira sits rotting! Wow, good luck with that, Mrs. Polaneczky. Somehow, she managed to write the same article we read four hundred and fifty time 10 years ago. A few background details, and two or three updates, personal interjection annnnndddd CUT. That's a take. Hard to argue that he deserves more, but her tone was no different than the courtroom. At least we have come to expect snark from a journalist.

But there is more. A bonus that does include Ira's point and it all starts to make sense now. One article for Ira, and one from the Philadelphia angle. Whew, I feel all grown up now because I can figure such things out on my own! Ronnie wasn't about to let Ira's article be left unprinted, a key bone she throws, and the result is interesting.

From Ira,
SINCE MY ABRUPT return to the Pennsylvania Prison System in 2001, I have had numerous conversations with shocked former citizens who have repeated the same words to me, in different form, again and again: "I never dreamed that people caught up in the judicial system could be treated so unfairly, with such lack of concern for their rights.
Read the rest -
Here
and
Here

Listserve and The Unicorn - Part Five

http://www.citypaper.net/articles/080300/cs.cover2.shtml  

But it's also fair to ask why, when faced with two tried-and-true options for
addressing their worries about BNI's credibility, the District Attorney and the
U.S. Attorney in Philadelphia independently chose to take all of the pending BNI
cases and, as the cops might say, "shit-can" them. It was a unique, scorched-earth
approach that was also, the BNI agents claim, the only prosecutorial measure that
would ensure a quick and permanent demise for BNI's investigation of Dominican
narco-politics. Neither Stiles nor Gordon would comment for this story. Both,
however, have given accounts of their actions under oath, either through sworn
depositions or in criminal hearings. Arnold Gordon, however, had a history of being
dissatisfied with certain BNI cases, one that pre-dated the bureau's problems with
the CIA and Pena Gomez. Gordon had complained about BNI arrests to Attorney General
officials on at least two occasions in early 1995, raising questions about the
facts concerning a total of eight separate cases. In April of 1995, McLaughlin's
diary records that Gordon had asked for disciplinary charges against McKeefery,
alleging he had admitted in open court to searching two drug houses without a
warrant. The subsequent internal investigation cleared McKeefery. Then, in May
1995, Gordon sent a letter to the then-acting Attorney General, requesting a review
of seven cases that prosecutors for both his office and the U.S. Attorney's office
found troubling. Five of the cases directly involved McLaughlin, McKeefery,
Micewski and Eggles. In one case, Eggles and McLaughlin had arrested a man caught
running with a kilo of cocaine, and the assistant U.S. attorney assigned to the
case expressed fears that the arrest had been too simple and, therefore, not
credible. Another case had been thrown out because the judge found no probable
cause for searching a property where drugs were found. Although the May 1995
letter would later be used by defense attorneys as evidence that the BNI agents
lacked credibility, Gordon has never invoked the cases mentioned in that letter
as a reason for his April 1996 decision to nol-pros every case involving McLaughlin
and McKeefery. At a preliminary hearing in November 1996, after he agreed to drop
53 BNI-related cases, Gordon explained to a judge "the reason for nol-prossing
these fifty-three cases was because Officer McLaughlin did something which one
could characterize as lying in a search warrant.. We chose not [to put McLaughlin
on the stand] solely because of what had occurred with regard to that one search
warrant." A month later, before a different judge, Gordon claimed he was only
using "his best prosecutorial judgment" in deciding to drop all of McLaughlin's
and McKeefery's cases. "Although I've taken this action, I may be wrong and they
may be right. In other words, I don't know that those officers lied in a search
warrant. In fact, I may be unfairly stigmatizing them, by the action I've taken
in these cases." In February 1995, just a few months before Gordon's first
complaint against McKeefery, a federal grand jury had indicted five Philadelphia
police officers, charging them with planting drugs on defendants and stealing from
them. Less then a month later, the Philadelphia District Attorney's Office started
dropping charges against people convicted on the five officers' testimony. The 39th
District scandal, which ended up freeing more than 100 defendants, was supremely
embarrassing to the District Attorney's Office. Then, in the spring of 1996, just
weeks before Gordon announced his decision to stop taking BNI cases, the five
police officers were all convicted and received prison sentences up to 13 years.
News of the district attorney's dumping of BNI cases broke on KYW-TV Channel 3 on
April 23, 1996, followed by a front-page Inquirer story the day after. Both
reports, as well as follow-up news accounts, were quick to draw lines of
similarities between BNI and the 39th District scandal. It was an unfair
comparison, which became increasingly obvious as the months went by, since the
BNI agents had never been charged with anything. Just the week before, five rogue
police officers from North Philadelphia's 39th District had been given sentences
of up to 13 years for offenses that included framing suspects, beating them and
extorting money from them. More than 100 cases involving the five officers had
already been overturned - but only after they had been indicted and charged with
crimes. Reporters focusing on the similarities of the tossed-out cases could just
as easily have pointed out the district attorney's sudden interest in not
prosecuting cases of officers who hadn't been charged with anything. Instead,
the newspapers quoted unnamed law enforcement sources as stating that the joint
city-FBI corruption probe that caught the 39th District police was now expanding
to include the Bureau of Narcotics Investigation. By May 16, the head of BNI's
Philadelphia office was replaced and McLaughlin, Micewski, McKeefery and Eggles
were all reassigned to desk jobs. In late June, the State Senate's Judiciary
Committee rushed to Philadelphia for hearings that had promised to examine why so
many drug arrests by a state agency were being nullified by federal and local
prosecutors. However, by the scheduled date, June 21, it had already been well
established that the FBI was looking into BNI's Philadelphia office. The
prosecutors and the Attorney General's Office begged off on attending the hearings,
stating they were duty-bound not to discuss matters under criminal investigation.
Rather than shed light on the decisions of the District Attorney and the U.S.
Attorney, the hearing became a one-sided affair in which defense attorneys
complained vocally about the persistent problem of police "corruption," lumping
together BNI's problems with the criminal behavior of the 39th District cops. At
the hearing, Miguel Torres gave teary-eyed testimony accusing McLaughlin of beating
him and stealing cash. He did not, however, accuse McLaughlin of planting drugs
on him. State Sen. Vince Fumo grabbed that day's headlines by imploring Torres
to sue the state for McLaughlin's alleged conduct. He was quoted as saying, "I hope
you hit us for at least a couple million bucks." (Years later, Torres would sue,
but he would never get his day in court. Appeals courts denied he had grounds for
a false arrest complaint and just this year the Supreme Court refused to hear his
final appeal. McLaughlin had long since passed a polygraph test clearing him of
Torres' charges.) Meanwhile, in the Dominican Republic, Jose Francisco Pena Gomez
won the first round of elections on May 21. News reports considered him the leading
candidate for the final runoff election on July 1. Two very different kinds of
lawyers represent narcotics defendants in the Philadelphia justice system.
Defendants with no money get public defenders assigned to them by the courts.
On the other hand, defendants who can afford to pay for a defense hire counsel
from among a small coterie of experienced local criminal lawyers. Among Dominican
drug defendants, one of the top attorneys of choice is Guy Sciolla. Guy Sciolla
doesn't do TV ads. He has a tiny one-line entry in the Yellow Pages. If you've
never heard of him, then you're probably not the type of person who'll ever need
him. Years ago Sciolla was on the other side of the fence, as a prosecutor in
the Philadelphia District Attorney's Office. Back then he counted among his
colleagues in the homicide unit the very two prosecutors who would shut down the
BNI crew - Michael P. Stiles and Arnold Gordon. The Philadelphia legal community
is a very small place. In the weeks and months before Stiles and Gordon decided
to stop taking BNI cases, Guy Sciolla was working up a motion to spring a former
BNI arrestee from federal prison. Miguel Tapia had been caught by McLaughlin and
Eggles with a brick of cocaine in his car. Tapia had been set up by one of BNI's
informants, who told the agents to wait for Tapia to make a delivery at a corner
store at Fourth and Annsbury Streets. Tapia drove up in an Oldsmobile, parked and
entered, where McLaughlin was waiting for him. Eggles later testified that he,
meanwhile, recovered a brick of cocaine from the floor of the car, after spotting
it peeking out from under a newspaper. Tapia was arrested on the spot, though it
would be some hours before it was revealed he had lied about his identity and that
his real name was Anci Liriano. Eggles was able to seize the cocaine without a
warrant under the "plain view" provisions of search and seizure law, which allows
police to take action when they see something they can "reasonably suspect" is a
controlled substance. The informant's tip was critical to the legality of the
arrest since it provided the reasonable suspicion needed to look inside the car.
A jury found Tapia/Liriano guilty and a judge gave him a 63-month federal prison
sentence. Sciolla's legal brief on behalf of Tapia was filed just two weeks after
news of the BNI scandal hit the papers. It made no claim that Tapia/Liriano was
innocent of anything. It did not allege that the agents had planted the cocaine
in his car. If anything, Sciolla's Tapia brief is a somewhat unique court document
in that it drips with innuendo and sarcasm. It backhandedly doubted Eggles'
credibility by claiming that a series of past BNI arrest reports, few of which
even involved Eggles, displayed "remarkable and repeated fact patterns." It went
on to question the very existence of BNI's confidential informant. Years later,
in a sworn deposition, U.S. Attorney Michael Stiles would recall the Tapia case
as one of the main reasons he determined the entire Bureau of Narcotics
Investigation was unfit for future federal prosecutions. In recounting the facts
of the Tapia case, Stiles' version was similar to Sciolla's, in which doubt was
cast on whether McLaughlin and Eggles' informant had ever existed and little
connection was found between Tapia and the Oldsmobile. But other investigative
agencies, including the DEA, had long ago confirmed they were using the same
individual as an informant, and a civilian witness in the store had testified
for the prosecution that Tapia tried to throw away the keys to the car.
(Tapia was set free in July 1996. Seven months later, Delaware State Police
records show he was stopped for speeding on I-95 and that $31,000 was found
hidden in his car's false-bottomed gas tank. The car and the money were seized,
but Tapia was let go.)

Hippie icon fights murder charge by invoking the stars

Unfortunately, I can't seem to find the author of this article, printed in 2002, and then reprinted on Buzzle. I've probably read this one 4 or 5 times over the years so I thought I'd include it here on the All Ira page. The last line is indicative of the general feeling for Ira. It is also one of the articles that has mention of Peter Gabriel. In fact there is even some promise here that Gabriel was still in the mix and could have attended the courtroom proceedings. Alas, he played his show in Philly that week, and turned the other cheek. We can make some assumptions as to why -- maybe he had given Ira some coin to sock away for one of those rainy nights while on the run, or maybe The Unicorn self-worthed Peter in some conversations he didn't want to hear. In any case, there is not more than a peep from Peter about his relationship with Ira Einhorn so mark that as yet another sad ending.

Author not credited



In the Sixties and Seventies, when flower power raged, Ira Einhorn liked to describe himself as a 'planetary enzyme'. It was a suitable term for the former guru who was not even present for his first murder conviction nearly a decade ago.

Tomorrow, the long odyssey of Ira Einhorn nears its conclusion: the infamous New Age fugitive goes on trial again for the 1977 murder of his lover, a pretty Texas heiress named Helen 'Holly' Maddux. This time Einhorn will be present in the flesh and apparently in spirit in a Philadelphia courtroom.

'He's remarkably well, upbeat and looking forward to it,' says his defence counsel William Cannon. So well, in fact, that 62-year-old Einhorn has invited some old friends from his hippie seer heyday to speak to his good character, among them singer Peter Gabriel, actress Ellen Burstyn and Edward Bacon, father of actor Kevin Bacon.

Such is the bizarre world of Ira Einhorn, a man who once hung out with beat heroes and hippie superstars such as Allen Ginsberg, Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin, organised 'be-in' events, ran for mayor of Philadelphia on a ticket of free love and expanded consciousness, and considered himself too mythic to wash; a man who preferred to be known as 'The Unicorn' because that was the creature that would lead us into the Age of Aquarius.

The trial is unlikely to involve too much free-thinking or proselytising of the benefits of group sex. Einhorn, who was arrested in France in 1997 after a 16-year manhunt and extradited by the French on condition that he would be retried, is facing a charge of murder in the first degree which carries a sentence of life without parole.

Prosecutors say it is an open-and-shut case and do not believe any stars will turn up to revisit their acquaintance with Einhorn or wish to be associated with a man who has already been found guilty once of bludgeoning Maddux to death and stashing her body in a steamer-trunk yards from where he slept in the apartment they had shared.

Eighteen months after the murder, Maddux's mummified corpse was discovered after neighbours had complained of the stench from fluids dripping down the wall. When police made their grim discovery, Einhorn said simply: 'You found what you found.'

However, the long road to justice was only beginning. Einhorn said Maddux had vanished one night after saying she was going to the grocery shop. But even after his arrest, he managed to get respected, if deluded, members of Philadelphia society to speak on his behalf.

He was granted bail for a small sum put up by Barbara Bronfman, former wife of Seagram distilling heir Charles Bronfman. Shortly before his trial was set to begin in 1981, Einhorn disappeared. 'The evidence was so insurmountable, he had no choice but to take off,' says Michael Chitwood, the lead detective in the case. 'There was no way this guy was going to stand trial.'

Einhorn's flight took him first to Ireland where he lived under the name Ben Moore. Philadelphia investigators believe he was supported by wealthy benefactors taken in by his strange charm and ideas of paranormal psychology and mind control during his flight. 'Even if you're a sack of shit who's a planetary enzyme, you've got to eat something,' said one.

One theory has Einhorn seeking support from British rock star Peter Gabriel, a founder of Genesis. But although Gabriel admits meeting Einhorn in the Seventies, and Richard DiBenedetto, who led the manhunt for the Philadelphia district attorney's office, says the pair met in London within the past decade, there is no evidence that Gabriel - who did not apparently know Einhorn was an accused murderer - supplied him with any financial assistance.

Einhorn's lawyer, Richard Cannon, says Einhorn visited Gabriel at the singer's Wiltshire millhouse on several occasions. 'He [Einhorn] thinks Mr Gabriel's testimony could be very helpful,' he says. (Ironically, Gabriel is scheduled to play in Philadelphia on 18 November - in time, perhaps, for a visit to the court. A spokesman for Gabriel said he had not decided one way or the other.)

Einhorn then met up with Anika Flodin, daughter of well-to-do parents in Stockholm. Using the appropriated identity of Eugene Mallon, he moved with her to the secluded village of Champagne-Mouton near Bordeaux. The poet-prophet passed himself off as a writer of mysteries and an anti-nuclear campaigner, and attracted a following of impressionable French hippies who dubbed him Vieux Baba Cool - Old Cool Daddy.

'We were not surprised that even before the murder he was a guru,' recalled a neighbour of Einhorn during his his French exodus. 'He talked about things uncommon, but not extraterrestrial.'

In 1997, the authorities caught up with him after tracing a driver's licence Flodin had applied for in Sweden. But after his arrest, the French authorities refused to repatriate him unless he was granted a new trial - a condition met by a change in the state constitution. When Einhorn came home to face trial two years ago, he seemed to have lost none of the self-importance and self-promotion skills that had served him so well in attracting benefactors. He likened his stay in France to the apartheid-era imprisonment of Nelson Mandela and his situation to that of some 4,000 black men on death row in the US.

Prosecutors say their case against Einhorn is water-tight. 'We have a smoking gun already: we have the victim's body in a chest in his closet,' says assistant district attorney Joel Rosen.

The defence plans to introduce contradictory forensic tests from 1979 that could raise doubt in the minds of jurors and testimony from witnesses who say they saw Maddux alive after the time prosecutors contend she was bludgeoned to death. They also say they have an FBI report that says that - besides her corpse - no evidence of decomposition was found in the trunk or on the floorboards.

'If her body did not decompose in the trunk that upsets the case,' says Cannon. Dr Herbert Fillinger, a forensics expert, is expected to testify that Maddux could have been dead for as little as two months when her body was discovered.

Whatever turns the case may take over its projected six-week duration, the trial will shed light on an era of hippie dreams. How were wealthy and impressionable counter-culture dreamers of Philadelphia, Ireland and France taken in by a man who has been found guilty of beating his girlfriend to death?

One former acolyte, George Keegan, recalls meeting Einhorn before he jumped bail. 'We were walking down the street together. People who once would come up and hug Ira crossed the street and averted their eyes... He looked at me, sad, and said, "I'm not going to be able to be Ira Einhorn now". And I realised he was a selfish, arrogant bastard.'

© Guardian News & Media 2008
Published: 9/29/2002

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Listserve and The Unicorn - Part Four

The following is an important article that MUST be read.  It is of particular
interest. Much like how the Gary Condit story got pushed away (for totally
different reasons) this story has implications that have since been primarily
ignored as a result of the big happening that occurred a year later.

http://www.citypaper.net/articles/080300/cs.cover1.shtm

(and in case the link goes/went away... here's the text)

August 3-10, 2000

The Dominican Connection, Part Two: Shafted They can't go home again: The Bastard
Squad's former place of employment, BNI headquarters at 7801 Essington Ave.

Four angry narcotics agents are suing to prove that Uncle Sam is the ultimate pusher
man.
by Noel Weyrich
CLARIFICATION In the first part of "The Dominican Connection," the name of Edward
Eggles was inadvertently omitted, due to a court clerical error, from the list of
BNI agents suing the State Attorney General's and U.S. Attorney's Office in a 1997
federal civil rights complaint. The trouble started, they say, when they told
the CIA to go pound sand. For five months, the four Philadelphia-based agents
from the state Bureau of Narcotics Investigations and Drug Control (BNI) had
doggedly followed a trail of dollars and drugs that led from the squalid
street-corner crack markets in North Philadelphia all the way to the campaign
coffers of a leading presidential candidate in the Dominican Republic. As detailed
in last week's City Paper ("The Dominican Connection, Part I"), informants had told
narcotics agents in late 1995 that Dr. Jose Francisco Pena Gomez was bankrolling
his Dominican presidential campaign with narco-profits earned on the streets of
Philadelphia and other East Coast cities. The federal Drug Enforcement
Administration had confirmed that Pena Gomez had been linked to narcotics
traffickers in his home country, but nothing had been proven. In late March of
1996, the four agents - John "Sparky" McLaughlin, Dennis McKeefery, Charlie
Micewski and Edward Eggles - were working closely with the DEA's New York office,
which had its own Pena Gomez investigation under way. Together they planned to
track the flow of drug money and seize the candidate's presumably ill-gotten gains
during his next fundraising swing through New York City. It promised to be a
headline-making bust, one that would help cement BNI's reputation among the
cream of Philadelphia's crime-fighting crop. That's when CIA agent David Lawrence
showed up at the bureau's Philadelphia headquarters, a nondescript building near
the airport, with a few specific demands of the agents. He would leave empty-handed
and angry. As recounted in a diary kept by Sparky McLaughlin, the BNI agents had
previously given Lawrence and other CIA agents copies of audiotapes made by an
informant who had infiltrated Philadelphia chapter meetings of the Dominican
Revolutionary Democratic Party (PRD). The tapes recorded numerous comments linking
drug sales to Pena Gomez's campaign finance efforts. Now the CIA wanted more.
Lawrence wanted the informant's name and his Dominican province of origin. He did
not say why. McLaughlin wrote in his diary, "CIA Agent Lawrence was adamant about
getting this information as he was agitated when BNI personnel refused the request."
McLaughlin added that he and his crew "feared for the life of the informant and his
family if this information was revealed because if the informant disappeared
there would be no problem for the Clinton administration." For months, Lawrence
and other CIA agents based here and elsewhere had warned McLaughlin and his
colleagues that Pena Gomez was the favored presidential candidate of the Clinton
administration. The CIA people cautioned them that any move to confiscate Pena
Gomez's drug money would have to be cleared with the U.S. State Department first,
with the DEA as an intermediary. Now, in what would prove to be their last meeting
with David Lawrence, the CIA agent was leaving in a huff. Two days later, with
Pena Gomez making the fundraising rounds in New York, McLaughlin, Micewski, McCaffery
and Eggles headed up the Turnpike, intent on seizing Pena Gomez's money. During
their second night there, however, the operation was aborted by the DEA. With no
jurisdiction in New York, the BNI agents stepped back while Pena Gomez left for
home with an estimated $500,000 in U.S. currency in his bags. And then, two weeks
later, prosecutors in Philadelphia unilaterally stopped taking BNI cases, claiming
that some or all of the agents had been involved in questionable drug arrests. Once
the news hit the papers, McLaughlin, McKeefery, Micewski and Eggles were all but
washed up as drug agents. And although they've never been convicted of a crime or
even disciplined internally for misconduct, their credibility as witnesses has
been permanently compromised. This story, gleaned from thousands of pages of
public court filings, McLaughlin's diary and official documents, details a clash
of competing conspiracy theories. On the one hand, the Pennsylvania BNI agents
claim in a federal lawsuit that only the CIA and the Clinton-Gore State Department
would have had both the influence and the authority to stop the Pena Gomez
investigation cold while killing the agents' careers in the process. On the other
hand, Philadelphia's two chief criminal prosecutors insist that they took the
unusual step of setting free dozens of accused and convicted drug defendants - in
some cases sending dangerous felons back to the streets even after they'd pled
guilty - because they feared the BNI agents might be colluding to fabricate details
in arrest reports and provide false testimony in court. On April 29, 1996, Mike
Lutz sent off a four-page memo to his superiors at BNI. A soft-spoken career cop,
Lutz was a BNI supervisor who oversaw the work done by McLaughlin, McKeefery,
Micewski and Eggles (soon to become known as the Bastard Squad). Lutz's memo is an
amazing specimen of bureaucratic polemic, an angry, indignant litany of complaints
mixed with bitter and sarcastic swipes at Philadelphia's legal and political
establishment. "The accusations made against this office are not even factual,
they are allegations!" Lutz wrote. "Despite this, we are ostracized from the entire
Law Enforcement Community in Philadelphia. It is unfair and unjust." Just a few
weeks earlier, with almost no warning, the bureau had been told that Philadelphia's
prosecutors no longer wanted anything to do with BNI-related cases. On April 10
and 11, in separate meetings, representatives of the Philadelphia District
Attorney and the U.S. Attorney had told officials from the Pennsylvania Attorney
General's Office that they would never again handle arrests by McLaughlin and his
crew. Every pending criminal case requiring court testimony from McLaughlin and
McKeefery in particular would be withdrawn from prosecution, or "nol-prossed."
Some of these cases had been previously approved for prosecution and many of the
arrests had been made with the close cooperation of other state and federal agencies.
Convicted felons, some of them dangerous criminals caught with firearms, would go
free as a result. Cops who can't get their arrests prosecuted aren't cops for very
long. Just like that, the crime-fighting careers of McLaughlin, Micewski,
McKeefery and Eggles were over. Feeling like heroes just a few weeks earlier, they
became known thereafter as the Bastard Squad - an Army term for a misfit unit
detached from its battalion. As if by fiat, the move by the prosecutors was
tantamount to locking up the BNI's Essington Avenue office and turning out the
lights. State officials would later gripe that the prosecutors, to justify this
drastic decision, had offered only vague suspicions of wrongdoing on the part of
BNI agents. Eric Noonan, a deputy attorney general who submitted an internal case
study of BNI's files, wrote that "despite repeated contact with representatives of
the U.S. Attorney's Office and the DA's Office, no one was able to provide any
specifics other than a general 'gut feeling' of discomfort." A search through the
court records and depositions made available to City Paper reveals perhaps three
specific instances in which prosecutors suggested BNI agents might have falsified
search warrants and arrest reports. That's only three out of approximately 500
cases that the agents worked on. Nonetheless, in his response memo, Mike Lutz
agreed that any such misconduct charges certainly required investigation. But he
expressed disbelief that none of BNI's arrests would be prosecuted in the meantime.
"No matter what, our agency should not be precluded from arresting drug dealers.
while the investigation is going on," Lutz continued, pointing out that BNI was
among the very few law enforcement agencies in Philadelphia that had never been
tainted by criminal corruption indictments. "To close our doors is extreme and
ridiculous." The believability of law enforcement officers on the witness stand
is particularly important in narcotics cases. Unlike rape or robbery cases, in
which victims are the key witnesses, drug cases are often a contest between the
cops' testimony and the defendant's. The typical defense strategy in such cases is
to pull apart the police account of the arrest, and sometimes those efforts succeed.
Every day, then, prosecutors put cops on the witness stand who, in the past, may
have had some testimony or an arrest report thrown out over questions of accuracy,
proper procedure or truthfulness. But the Philadelphia District Attorney's Office
never resorts to dropping cases en masse unless their law enforcement witnesses
have themselves been charged with crimes. For officers with clean records to have
all their cases dumped is not only rare - it may well be unprecedented. Donald
Bailey, a Harrisburg lawyer and former Congressman who represents McLaughlin and
the others, swears he can find no example of anything like it, anywhere in
America. "It smacks of political sabotage," wrote Lutz, who suggested that the
District Attorney and the U.S. Attorney were Democrats out to embarrass the
Republican-controlled Attorney General's Office. But the lawsuit Bailey would
later file advanced a more far-reaching theory: "[W]hen the plaintiffs were
reticent to provide federal agencies with certain sources in the PRD, they were
suddenly ostraci[z]ed and became the targets of vicious unfounded attacks on
their [credibility] and career by the federal government (with the marionetted
support of the Philadelphia District Attorney's Office and the Attorney General
of Pennsylvania.)" It sounds far-fetched, and the defendants tend to regard
the suit with derision and contempt. Michael P. Stiles, U.S. Attorney for the
Eastern District of Pennsylvania, has denounced the charges in a deposition as
"preposterous" and "offensive." His attorney, Mary Catherine Fry, dismisses the
allegations as "a fairy tale," while Kevin Harley, a spokesman for state Attorney
General Michael Fisher, similarly deems them "rather bizarre." The Philadelphia
DA's office has offered no comment. But, as Don Bailey has said in depositions
of defendants in this suit, he believes his clients have been victimized by either
a "cover-up" or by an effort to intimidate them, because he has never seen
prosecutors behave this way before. The problem is this: If the prosecutors
were convinced that BNI's search and seizure practices were improper, they would
have faced only two possibilities - that the BNI agents were operating either
carelessly or criminally. The men were either bending the rules or breaking the
law. They needed either disciplinary action - or handcuffs and leg irons. Under
the first supposition, the prosecutors should have alerted the Attorney General's
internal affairs office in Harrisburg. On the other hand, if indeed the prosecutors
suspected McLaughlin and McKeefery of running roughshod over the U.S. Constitution
with a squad of crooked cops, then they arguably had a sworn duty to take their
misgivings to the FBI. Better than anyone, prosecutors know that the surest way to
lock up rogue cops is to keep them working the streets until the FBI catches them
red-handed. But the prosecutors did neither. Instead, Stiles and Arnold Gordon,
Philadelphia's first assistant district attorney, simply pulled the plug on all
of BNI's investigations by announcing their refusal to prosecute any new arrests
by McLaughlin and his crew. According to Stiles, the two offices arrived at these
decisions independently. "Plaintiffs also allege," says the lawsuit, "that in
furtherance of the unlawful policy of protecting the large-scale distributors of
illegal narcotics to largely captive center city populations, the defendants have
utilized the offices of the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of
Pennsylvania and the FBI to pursue an oppressive threatening investigation of the
plaintiffs in an effort to destroy their credibility." It is an outrageous
allegation, that the CIA and the State Department were so intent on protecting
the Dominican drug traffickers in the PRD that they used the FBI and the U.S.
Attorney's Office to destroy the careers of four Pennsylvania narcotics agents.

Ira Went Beyond the Pale

What do you think when you hear about news of psychic phenomenon? By now it almost seems to be an afterthought because everybody knows there is, at some level or another, a degree to which all people have some psychic abilities. In today's internetter world - psychic ability is commonplace. This may be a result of the actions we are able to take when an event happens. For example, say you predict something that seems insignificant at face value - such as predicting if your wife picked up a that box of mushrooms at the market without having the conversation. She hadn't picked up mushrooms for six months, but you were itching to make a dinner with shrooms and you predicted, in your mind, that she would come home with the portabellos. You called it. You are psychic. Something in your mind said she'd get them and you didn't go to a market a get them because you had "that feeling." In fact, last week you did the same thing when you predicted the actions someone you don't know. It happened and you had a confidence it would happen yet you're not sure what triggered that confidence. OK. So this happens all the time, and if you were never consciously aware of these things happening, you suddenly find yourself wondering how you did that, and you go looking for answers. Next thing you do is submit to a websearch and find there are 2,000,000 links to stories, studies, articles, books and countless peer reviews from all kinds of people around the world. Your notion is confirmed, sort of. There is yet to be that definitive scientific study that confirms or denies that possibility that what is happening is psychic phenomenon. Scientists have a way of confirming such reports until well beyond that "duhh" moment. Such studies carrying a social impact like this gets snuffed out by scientists less likely to make waves are in most cases at the mercy of grant money and other triggers or door stops as it were.

A new study might show that psychic phenomenon is not just a sci-fi joke or trick of mind. So we look back at all the seers who tried to make certain claims and got laughed at, particularly if this issue was part of a court system defense plan. Such was the case with Einhorn. From Levy's book (p. 174), it was Ira's negotiations with the Hunt manufacturing company that found its way to draw negative reactions (later this manifested during the court system process). The Unicorn was paid $10 grand for a study on trending in the industry. Then "The Unicorn did go somewhat beyond the pale, though, in recommending that this machine-tool manufacturer establish venture capital projects to invest in "psychic technologies.""

Nearly 40 years later, psychic studies are going stronger than ever. Scientists have come to somehow make psychic practices not mere hallucinations or other such non-sense as reports continue to be included in Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, but they have made it kind of a hum-hum news event. It's everywhere. It's happening right now. Maybe you don't see it, maybe you don't take such mental risks, but there is psychic sideshows happening world-wide -- go look it up on the web.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Listserve and The Unicorn - Part Three

Now excerpts from the below last week's cover story overshadowed by the Shadow and
Republican Conventions: [see my conclusions/evaluations/suggestions at end]

"The trouble started, they say, when they told the CIA to go pound sand."
"CIA Agent Lawrence was adamant about getting this information as he was agitated
when BNI personnel refused the request." McLaughlin added that he and his crew
"feared for the life of the informant and his family if this information was
revealed because if the informant disappeared there would be no problem for the
Clinton administration."
"The CIA people cautioned them that any move to confiscate
Pena Gomez's drug money would have to be cleared with the U.S. State Department
first, with the DEA as an intermediary." "...only the CIA and the Clinton-Gore
State Department would have had both the influence and the authority..."
"It is
an outrageous allegation, that the CIA and the State Department were so intent on
protecting the Dominican drug traffickers in the PRD that they used the FBI and the
U.S. Attorney's Office to destroy the careers of four Pennsylvania narcotics agents".
--------- "...the District Attorney and the U.S. Attorney in Philadelphia
independently chose to take all of the pending BNI cases and, as the cops might
say, "shit-can" them. It was a unique, scorched-earth approach that was also, the
BNI agents claim, the only prosecutorial measure that would ensure a quick and
permanent demise for BNI's investigation of Dominican narco-politics." ---------
"The scandal hit at a time when the Pennsylvania Attorney General's Office was
already in a state of general turmoil. The elected AG, Ernie Preate, had gone to
prison for campaign finance corruption. "
"In October 1996, prominent members of Dominican drug trafficking organizations -
people assigned special DEA identity numbers - attended a fundraiser for the
New York Democratic Party at an Upper West Side tavern. "The guest of honor that
night was Vice President Al Gore."