2009/02/28

Initiating A 9/11 Criminal Investigation in the USA

Initiating A 9/11 Criminal Investigation in the United States
 
The American People Deserve accountablility for the massive National Security failures of 9/11/2001

FACT: The 9/11 Commission found that numerous government officials failed in their respective duties to protect the American people from terrorist attack on 9/11/2001.
 
FACT: The 9/11 Commission admitted there were MASSIVE government failures on 9/11. To-date, not one person has been held accountable for the massive security failures on 9/11. 
 
FACT: There has never been a criminal investigation into "9/11" the very worst government security failure in U.S. history. 
 
FACT:  the N.Y.F.D. has forbid N.Y. firefighters from publicly discussing what they saw on 9/11.
 
FACT: Cheney and Bush publicly threatened members of Congress to cut programs, etc. if Congress held any 9/11 investigation.
 
FACT: Cheney had NO authority to issue orders to the military, and the evidence indicates Cheney clearly broke the law on the morning of 9/11.
 
America's need for accountability on the security failures of 9/11 is a undisputed basis for a federal criminal investigation.

 
We, The People seek to hold accountable every government official who failed their duty to protect America.
Accountability for our government's failure to protect thousands of Americans inside the United States of America on September 11th, 2001.
Why Americans seek ACCOUNTABILITY and JUSTICE:
Accountability for "future deterrence of institutional negligence" is the seminal reasons for a true, ongoing, in-depth, full criminal investigation of the persons and events of 9/11.
Justice for the murder of thousands of Americans on 9/11.
Marshall support from the legal community, law enforcement and the NYC Fire Dept. in seeking a criminal investigation into these matters by letting them know we support them and the real need for accountability. These witnesses need federal whistleblower protection, since the N.Y.F.D. has forbid N.Y. firefighters, etc. from publicly discussing what they saw on 9/11.

Enlist public support by asking them to call their representatives and "insist" that the U.S. Attorney's Office get busy with a criminal investigation of all the currently known parties.

ron@investigate911.com
 
http://www.investigate911.com

http://www.projectfilibuster.com

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wmGeUlCMYp8

http://www.youtube.com/kucinich1

http://www.corvuswire.com

http://www.youtube.com/americafirstcrowd

Indictments:

Before the target of an investigation is arrested, prosecutors generally will take the evidence they have gathered to a grand jury. Grand juries are composed of 16 to 23 citizens. Agreement by a bare majority is required to find probable cause exists that a crime was committed.

Grand juries are formally supervised by a district judge, often the chief judge, but for all practical purposes they function day-to-day under the auspices of the U.S. Attorney's Office. Only prosecutors present evidence before a grand jury, and a finding of probable cause – necessary to issue an indictment – is a relatively low standard of proof.

The indictment lists the crimes the defendant allegedly committed and describes the facts the government believes support those allegations. It is a roadmap to what the prosecution intends to prove at trial. Grand jury indictments are returned to the district court – usually to a magistrate judge – in a sealed court hearing. Indictments generally are unsealed after a defendant is arrested.

A criminal case also can begin without an indictment. In these cases, the lead investigator swears out a criminal complaint, called an "information," setting forth the same kinds of allegations and facts that would be contained in an indictment. Absent an indictment, the prosecution must convince a judge that there is probable cause to proceed with the case. These hearings are held in open court after the defendant has been arrested in a felony case.
 
A defendant can agree to waive indictment and proceed with the case based on the criminal complaint, or can demand that the prosecutor seek an indictment.
 
 

 
 
 

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