Lone Protester- I Demand Justice!

05/06/09

I could never be a politician in South Carolina because I don’t have the ability to speak out of both sides of my mouth at the same time. Whenever I hear them congratulating themselves on their accomplishments I want to go up to them and ask each one individually where in the hell were you while your state was being over run with half a million illegal alien invaders? What were you doing while tens of thousands of native born South Carolinians lost their jobs and businesses in this onslaught. Where were you when every construction site in this state was flooded with criminal companies and workers while our mayors and cops sat on their asses?

No one speaks up for the rights of construction workers in this state as we suffer the indignity of having our jobs and businesses stolen by criminals that our justice system silently aids and abets. Our voices are silenced because our courts are not interested in the truth anymore. Our only recourse is to protest, we are not allowed to use our political correct legal system to right the wrongs done against us. When we attempt to stand up for our rights in the workplace, those same rights are violated and we become acquainted with the inside of a jail cell. I suffered the abuses of a runaway criminal justice system over a period of ten months. I sat in the defendants chair and listened to a pompous judge tell the jury that my case had nothing to do with illegal immigration when it had everything to do with it.

But my case is not over by a long shot. It took ten months for my lawyer to receive the trial transcripts from the clerk of court, something that normally takes two weeks. Three months ago my lawyer filed legal action with the Fifth Judicial Circuit Court of South Carolina. It names four defendants who conspired together to deprive me of my constitutionally guaranteed rights of free speech and expression. The four entities are the city of Columbia, SC, Richland County, it’s police department and the individual that I protested. They face six charges, malicious prosecution, abuse of process, assault and battery, false arrest and imprisonment, civil conspiracy and last but not least, violation of my civil rights. Two of them face a maximum of five years in prison if they are found guilty. I requested that they receive a trial by jury, exactly like I did. The American people can decide for themselves their guilt or innocence based on the facts and not on a politically correct criminal justice system that pretends that they are for us when their actions speak different.

I demand justice! Three months is more than enough time to decide if South Carolina’s Fifth Judicial Circuit Court will hear my charges and the charges of every other construction worker in this state. Today I am firing a shot over the bow of the political correct system of justice in South Carolina. Today I am demanding a quick and speedy trial as guaranteed by our Constitution for the criminals that conspired together to shut me up and deprive me of my rights. I want them to experience what they forced me to go through over ten months. I want them to face justice exactly like I did.

I demand justice! I demand that the Fifth Judicial Circuit Court of South Carolina make a decision in my case. Stand up for the Constitution or get the hell out of the way because I am determined that justice will prevail. The criminals that tried to shut me up are going to have their day in court like they forced me to. They might think that their money and power gives them more justice than me, but they are sadly mistaken because the American people and the Constitution are in my corner.

Carmen Mercer, the new leader of the Minuteman CDC, along with a few other organizations, has started a nation wide call-in rally for my benefit. She wants American patriots everywhere to call and fax every member of South Carolina’s Fifth Judicial Circuit Court and demand that rule of law be followed in my case.

I demand justice for myself and tens of thousands of other South Carolinian construction workers that have been deprived of our rights. You pretend to represent us when in reality you represent the people that would replace us. Constitutional law demands that you hear my plea whether you want to or not. You are obligated to follow those laws and not the dictates of criminals as determined by a jury of American citizens. Make a decision in my case or prove yourself worthless like the rest of the criminal justice system in this state. Make a decision or get the hell out of the way because I am determined to see this to the end.