The
Tyrannical Crucifixion of an American Hero
Introduction by Angel Shamaya
Director, KeepAndBearArms.com
Anyone who is paying attention to
today's Executive, Legislative and Judicial activities is fully aware that abuse
of power has become the norm. Political might is wielded as a pastime -- an
amusement, once scorned nationwide, that has now become par for the course in
American politics. Judges rule, literally. Powerful legislators with the
"right" connections can irreparably damage entire lives with a few
phone calls. Executive political figures can put a man's background on display --
complete with false information that smears him to the grave -- accompliced by an
all too willing media force for whom scruples are all too frequently a distant memory. Good people
get trampled like roaches on yesterday's sidewalk, leaving in their wake an
emboldened tyrannical system -- a dragon with sharper teeth and a bigger
appetite for everything we hold dear.
We can't let that happen this time.
Not to this guy.
What he did for us was too important to
let him get chewed up and flushed into the sewage that runs like a
disease-infested river from the bowels of our farce of a "legal"
system.
I'm asking for help here. I'm asking for you to
help rescue a righteous MAN from the ravenous clutches of a DEMON that is doing
everything it can to help devour our country whole.
We must help Russ Howard.
And we must act quickly.
Russ Howard led the drive to recall Roberti -
that slimy, crooked former California Senate President who gave us the infamous
Roberti-Roos Assault Weapons Ban of 1989. Russ was the Executive Director of the
organization that put Roberti out of his political career in a move that speaks
volumes about what one man can do with the right team of people. His group,
Citizens Against Corruption, also helped Roos empty his taxpayer-funded desk, as
well, putting the brakes on many more ominous anti-self-defense, anti-freedom
maneuverings in the state of California, slowing the tide of anti-gun
legislation in ways we can only imagine.
We owe this guy some serious respect, and we
owe him the help he needs to stop an assault being waged against him that is not
only against the law and the constitution, it is immoral to such an extreme I can't even believe
these people think they can get away with it!
They will NOT get away with it!
Russ Howard put everything on the line, working
every waking hour to get rid of dangerous and powerful legislators in one of the
most pivotal legislative trend-setting states in our nation. He set aside any
semblance of a personal life for us because he knew how important it was to make
an example of a vicious anti-gun lawmaker. Russ set himself up as the Head Foe
of the very people who tried to kill our freedoms, and he won! We won
through his tireless actions. And he did it for you and for me and
for every other freedom-loving American in our nation.
And now one of many out-of-control government
agencies
from Hell is trying to destroy Russ financially - and spiritually. They want to
crucify this man I've come to know - with good reason - as my brother, and we
can't let it happen. Russ put the hurt on a couple of powercrazed sub-American
wretches, and they are trying to punish him with a severity that comes straight
out of some nightmare, but it's real, and the fools are going to pay for it with
a victory we will all celebrate.
The victory cry when we win this case is going
to be very loud, very clear, and, once again, the rogue, anti-freedom, political
powermongering, law-making lawbreakers in California will understand that We The
People are aware of who they are, what they do, how they do it, and why they do
it, and we will not be their whipping boys any longer.
Read this synopsis of the "legal"
assault being waged against Russ knowing that -- because of this man and the good
team of people who worked diligently alongside him -- the rats who brought us the
Roberti-Roos "Assault Weapons" Ban of 1989 are no longer lying or prying their way
into outrageous anti-freedom laws in the state of California.
Then see the footnote for how you can help us
behead this monster in its tracks. We the People need to regulate these despicable
people and their dark "systems," and I am asking you to help us do it.
Ready to get infuriated? Read
on...
In
re: FPPC v. Howard, Cicero,
& Californians Against Corruption
By
Russ Howard
http://www.CACDefenseFund.org
(coming soon)
Contents:
1. Introduction
2. Background
3. Political "Reform" and Freedom of Expression
4. Court Actions
5. Conclusion
6. How you can help
1.
INTRODUCTION
I write on behalf of
political freedom and on behalf of Steve Cicero and myself, longtime activists
for constitutional liberty, about our legal struggle with the Fair Political
Practices Commission, the agency that enforces California's campaign finance
disclosure law. It is a story of petty bureaucratic tyranny and political
retribution; moral, legal, and judicial atrocities; and laws abused and broken
by those sworn to uphold them; all related to what is reportedly the largest
political disclosure fine ever issued in America.
At a 1995 hearing, the FPPC fined us $808,000 in absentia for shielding
donors from harassment during a 1994 campaign against former Senate President
David Roberti, coauthor of the Roos-Roberti Assault Weapon Ban.
The Roberti Recall, California's first legislative recall to qualify since 1914,
drove Roberti from office by draining his financial and political capital.
We're currently seeking
support in the form of funding, amicus briefs, pro bono legal research, and
perhaps additional or substitute representation by a public interest law firm.
Those familiar with the case may wish to skip to Section 3. Donation information
is at the end.
2.
BACKGROUND
Self-defense civil rights
activists will long remember 1989, when a sensationalist media joined
publicity-hungry politicians to turn California's Stockton schoolyard killings
into national hysteria. Roberti and Assembly Speaker Pro Tem Roos enacted the
first in a wave of state & federal "assault weapon" bans, and
though it passed by just one vote in the Assembly, gloated over vanquishing the
"once-powerful gun lobby".
Enemies of the Constitution
had learned from tackling too much with Prop 15, California's failed 1982
handgun ban. Adopting more flexible, incremental tactics, they waited like
jackals to exploit disasters like Stockton. Roos-Roberti divided &
conquered, isolating "extremists" from "legitimate" owners
of "sporting guns". And it banned a style,
"military-style", facilitating arbitrary, subjective additions to the
ban. It was a fraud, whipping up fear of semi-autos by mislabeling them
"assault weapons" (i.e., machine guns) and calling them "the drug
dealers' weapon of choice". A study by AG Van De Kamp was buried when it
showed that such firearms were involved in only about 1% of crimes.
In their arrogance, Roos
& Roberti poked the hive too hard, and dozens of newly hatched grassroots
groups emerged in defense. Among them, Californians Against Corruption
ousted corrupt legislators who violate their oath to defend the Constitution.
Led by founders Rick Carone, Jerry Allen, Bill Dominguez, and others, CAC's
wildcat re-mail campaign against Roos exposed a $50,000 bribe disguised as
investment profits. CAC's creative approach to directing grassroots resources
involved a campaign letter and voter labels, mailed to volunteers in all 50
states, who had pre-committed to copy, fold, stuff, stamp and
"re-mail" into a district, at their own expense, enabling direct mail
on a shoestring budget. The re-mail campaign, along with subsequent recall
moves, precipitated Roos' 1990 resignation. I was a volunteer in that campaign.
In 1991, I was invited into
CAC leadership. In 1992, I resigned as Director of Research for the Prop 174
school voucher initiative to free up time to help organize efforts to oust
Roberti. Due to redistricting, Roberti had abandoned Hollywood for a special
election in heavily Democratic Van Nuys. Pundits predicted a cake walk, but he
survived our surprise re-mail campaigns only by spending an astounding
$2,500,000 and damaging relations with his party, since most of the money
should've gone to other Democratic campaigns. Like sunlight through a magnifying
glass, our technique was to relentlessly focus limited and otherwise relatively
dispersed and thus harmless grassroots resources on a single target, holding the
focus long enough to burn. In fundraising letters and strategy papers, we
repeatedly stated our minimum goals: Empty Roberti's warchest, weaken and
eventually destroy him, send a message to other corrupt politicians.
From 93-94, as CAC Executive
Director & Treasurer, I organized and directed a coalition of gun rights,
tax limitation, law enforcement, good government, and victims rights groups,
most of which I had worked with on other campaigns, to qualify our first
legislative recall in 80 years. Groups included People's Advocate, Law
Enforcement Alliance of America, Operation Slush Fund, Citizens for Law &
Order, and the Doris Tate Crime Victims Bureau. Each had its reasons for ousting
a politician whose 28-year tenure had been an overall disaster for the state.
Roberti was a soft-on-crime, tax-&-spend, big-government statist presiding
over the most corrupt senate in memory. Three of his key lieutenants were
convicted of racketeering. Roberti, a consummate insider, claimed he knew
nothing about it. Nevertheless, with help from a self-serving loose cannon in
one of the gun rights groups, the press painted the coalition as strictly a
"front for the gun lobby", partially fracturing the coalition and
weakening the campaign.
Still, the Coalition for
Government Integrity made Roberti a liability. Dems no longer trusted him with
purse strings, and he resigned his presidency. Even so, he still outspent us
10-1 (not counting "volunteers" bussed from the capitol, etc.). With
that and the usual election fraud, we lost by 9%. But Roberti was running for
treasurer and the primary was just 6 weeks away. It was too much. On losing, he
grumbled that the "gun lobby" had ended his career by exhausting his
resources. We had succeeded, and for several years, it paid off. Predictably, as
legislators became 'gun shy', a torrent of gun bills slowed to a trickle and
stopped. But legislators didn't like the idea of uppity grassroots groups making
trouble for them, so they moved to restrict recalls. And before it was over,
Roberti, once our most powerful legislator, got revenge.
During the petition campaign,
our signature-gathering firm had abandoned us mid-drive, claiming Roberti had
offered the proverbial deal they couldn't refuse. Our recall strategy document
was leaked to the media, which vilified us as "extremists" and began
printing donor names. CAC was burglarized. The home of Recall Chairman Bill
Dominguez, a collector of antique and modern firearms, was also burglarized.
Bill never told the press, yet within hours Roberti's campaign was gloating that
an "arsenal" had been stolen (oddly, no guns in this
"arsenal" ever surfaced). I got death threats and photocopies of
swastikas in the mail. CAC's Chairman and his wife received lewd, threatening
calls. Donors complained of harassment.
As Senate President, Roberti
had power to influence legislation, the judiciary, police agencies, regulators,
and private employers. Donors were vulnerable to retribution. Some even worried
about ending up on lists of suspected Roos-Roberti violators. Consequently, I
temporarily stopped identifying donors in campaign finance reports, while still
providing each donation amount, balancing the need to protect donors on the
one hand, with the spirit of California's disclosure law on the other.
When Roberti was out of power
and the danger seemed over, I turned in everything requested and told the FPPC
of the harassment. The Supreme Court has repeatedly held (see below) that
disclosure must be waived in such conditions.
But for years the FPPC had
already singled us out for harassment, threatening to prosecute and fine us
unless we provided our home addresses and phone numbers, and unless we accounted
for the efforts of our volunteer re-mailers as in-kind donations. In fact, CAC
had been continuously investigated and harassed by the FPPC since its founding.
We told the FPPC as early as mid-1992 that we were worried about the real
possibility of retribution and harassment from various sources, including the
FPPC itself, so we had no intention of giving out home addresses and phone
numbers. Moreover after we mailed re-mail packages to volunteers, the re-mail
effectively became their independent expenditures, and we had no practical or
accurate way of valuing their efforts. We had no idea what their labor was
worth, what they paid for copies, or whether they even went through with the
mailing. In 1992, we threatened to sue for violations of our civil rights if the
FPPC kept harassing us, and they backed off.
Notwithstanding that, on
November 2nd, 1995, the FPPC issued the largest disclosure fine ever, trumping
up hundreds of violations from what was effectively a late report, the maximum
penalty for which would've been $10 per day. They imposed separate, maximum
fines multiple times for each donor, as if the withholding were permanent:
$2,000 per name, per address, per employer, and per occupation. The day they
fined us $808,000 for protecting grassroots donors from harassment, they fined
the San Francisco 49ers $60,000 for money laundering.
The FPPC misrepresented my
actions, claiming I had shown no good faith. In fact, the reason my fine
is so draconian is because I acted in good faith and reported as much as
I could. Had I not originally reported donation amounts, then cooperated with an
audit and turned in everything they asked for, they would not have known how
much to fine me. Had I given them no information at all, then filed a
report on the audit date, it would've been a late filing with a small
fine or none at all. Far from punished for not cooperating at all, we were
punished for cooperating as much as we could. In lying about my actions and
failing to credit good faith and eventual full compliance, the FPPC violated the
very act it exists to enforce.
At one point, we intended to
make Steve Cicero treasurer, and notified the FPPC. We had jumped the gun. I
never resigned, and we did not correct the error until the campaign was over. I
told the FPPC that the alleged acts were mine alone, yet they held us jointly
liable, as if we were both the official treasurer simultaneously. The FPPC
falsely swore we were served with notice. Last I checked, that's a crime, yet
who will punish them? As the Roman satirist Juvenal asked nearly 2,000 years
ago: Who shall guard the guards?
Imagine a meter maid gives
you an $808,000 parking ticket, perhaps equal to all the property you'll ever
own or disposable income you'll ever earn. He then falsely swears he served
notice of your 'right' � not to a jury trial � but to a kangaroo hearing,
and not before a judge � a "right" we have even on $10
tickets � but before the officer himself, who serves as judge, jury &
executioner. Having never been served, you "fail" to appear. Other
than that, your only 'trial' is in the press. He then issues the largest ticket
in history by "default" and sues to collect, even though it
turns out the Supreme Court had already said you could park there to protect
free speech. Surely this violates something among the 1st,
5th, 7th, 8th, 9th, and 14th
Amendments and the California Constitution's "right" to privacy. If
they can get away with this, then let's stop kidding ourselves. You
have no rights the state doesn't want you to have, nor any reasonable assurance
of justice unless you're lucky, wealthy, or connected.
3.
POLITICAL "REFORM" AND FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
This fine has the effect of
suppressing grassroots campaigns against powerful incumbents, abusing a
political regulatory system to ends unintended by the law that enables it. That
law, with its unfair enforcement, violates freedom of expression and
association.
California's Political
Reform Act established the FPPC to force public disclosure of political
activities previously exercisable anonymously. It was supposed to level the
playing field against powerful incumbents and special interests. The theory is,
if voters know who gets special interest money, they'll vote for the challenger.
The reality is, very few
voters pay attention to campaign donations, and elections are bought & paid
for as much as ever. Now, however, participants in the political process must
navigate complex legal minefields, publicly report donors, and detail activities
on time-consuming forms. No problem for powerful incumbents and special
interests, which can afford full-time professionals and will always find (or
make) loopholes to do whatever they want. The cost is borne by grassroots groups
and underdog challengers.
The folks who do pay
attention to campaign finance details are those with the power to punish donors
who oppose them. Pre-PRA, anonymity shielded donors from incumbents' power to
influence legislation, police agencies, regulators, employers, and the
judiciary. Post-PRA, incumbents could dry up opposition funding by actual or
implied threat of retribution. Government employees or contractors, for example,
may no longer be able to risk helping a challenger. Far from leveling the field,
the PRA steepened it.
The potential for 1st
Amendment suppression can be seen in www.OpenSecrets.org,
where anyone can look up your donations. Imagine your boss has very different
opinions from yours. With a mouse click he can find out your political beliefs
and proceed to destroy your career. To avoid a lawsuit, he never reveals the
real reason you no longer get promotions, or why you're terminated. He just
finds fault elsewhere. Once people learn how public their donations really are,
many will feel forced to withhold them. In short, forced disclosure enables
the powerful to oppress the powerless, and transforms political involvement from
a right into a privilege.
In Buckley v. Valeo
(1976) the Supreme Court
called for waiving disclosure under "reasonable probability [of] threats,
harassment, or reprisals from�Government officials or private parties� [H]arassment
of members�or�the organization itself... A pattern of threats or�public
hostility... [R]eprisals and threats�against individuals or organizations
holding similar views." In Brown v. Socialist Workers Party
(1982), the Court forbade forced disclosure that would subject donors
to "the reasonable probability of threats, harassment, or
reprisals..." Analogously, McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Cmn
(1995) held that prohibiting distribution of anonymous campaign literature
abridges freedom of speech.
4.
COURT ACTIONS
The FPPC quickly moved to
convert the fine to civil judgment. Our first attorney, acting through the
Institute for Constitutional Rights (now defunct), cross complained with a
petition for writ of mandate. Our arguments are primarily based on grounds of
due process (including lack of jurisdiction), 1st Amendment, 8th
Amendment/excessive fines, and equal protection. The intent is to also raise the
California Constitution's right to privacy. Not long after the cross complaint
was filed, John W. Howard of ICR (no relation) became attorney of record.
About that time, I flew to
Sacramento and researched the FPPC case of former Assemblyman Paul Horcher,
whose fine was quashed because the issuing officers were improperly appointed.
We seem to have stronger 'Horcher' grounds than Horcher himself had.
Moreover, the commission
was improperly constituted, due to vacancies throughout the period in question
that were longer than the 30-day maximum.
(The PRA has checks & balances: Various state officers appoint 5
commissioners, no more than 3 from one political party. The FPPC may act during
vacancies, which may not exceed 30 days. While not explicit, the logical intent
is that it may only continue to act during the 30-day maximum period,
else the checks are meaningless and easily defeated by never reappointing, say,
Republicans. I.e., as long as there were 3 for a quorum, it could be a 100%
Democrat commission indefinitely.)
The FPPC failed to attend
every court hearing with impunity. (No "default" judgments against
them! Of course, had we failed to appear, our case would've been
dismissed and John sanctioned.) Then they seemed to forget about the case. But
now it seems as though they were intentionally playing dead.
This year, after 3 years,
they reactivated. John filed to dismiss for lack of prosecution, and they filed
to dismiss our writ for same. Who dropped the ball 3 years earlier was central.
Incredibly, the FPPC cited a special deal the courts are supposed to give
government agencies, where they merely have to claim high workload and
inadequate resources � as opposed to the presumably unlimited resources of
citizen defendants. The judge denied our motion and granted theirs, seeming to
rule reflexively for the FPPC. At one point, he simply said he disagreed with
our position, without offering any legal grounds. Then he put the case back on
calendar to be reassigned to new judge.
Then, by chance, John learned
the judge was former Assemblyman Lloyd Connelly, of the Connelly Ban on private
gun transfers, who along with Roberti & Roos was one of our 3 top
anti-self-defense legislators when CAC was founded. His conflicts of interest
are extensive. For example, Roberti, Roos & Connelly collaborated on bills
and donated to each other's campaigns, Roberti hired Connelly's law firm, and
Connelly was on our list of politicians to oust. Yet he failed to recuse or even
disclose. Throwing the case back on calendar cut the risk we'd ever find
out, making it seem like a hit & run. We filed a motion to vacate his
orders, and he denied it, so we re-filed it (hearing pending) with another
judge. I'm preparing a judicial ethics complaint.
5.
CONCLUSION
Any support for fighting this
atrocity is deeply appreciated. It seems like a cross between Les Miserables
(years pass, we think we're in the clear, then the inspector finds us), and The
Trial - arrested, processed, tried, convicted, and executed "without
having done anything truly wrong", and without knowing the charges. We know
our official charges, but I believe our real 'crimes' have not
been disclosed � on more than one level.
On talking with experienced
campaign treasurers, it turns out that with more expertise, we could've withheld
all the information and yet received no fine at all, if only we'd known
the magic excuse to put on the form. But we had no money for professional
consultants.
Still, we didn't do anything
truly wrong � Steve Cicero didn't do anything at all � and we don't
deserve to wear this around our necks forever. Shielding donors was the right
thing to do, though I'd have done it differently had I been a professional
operative. So little privacy left in a country founded on freedom, in a state
where privacy is "guaranteed". Our main goal is to quash the fine.
Yet, maybe there's a chance to strike a blow, however small, for privacy,
freedom of association, freedom of political expression, and the Constitution.
Fair
Political Practices Commission? Hardly. For protecting free speech within the
spirit of Supreme Court decisions, they fined us hundreds of times more than
they would've fined someone who withheld all information on the same
number of donors for the same period, and 13 times more than they fined a
professional football team for money laundering, selectively suppressing
dissent against grassroots. The real reason for this fine is not what we did,
but who we are, what we believe, and whom we ousted. We have little political
power, we're associated with increasingly vilified political beliefs �
constitutional liberty and the right to arms � and we spent years ousting the
state's most powerful legislators.
The Barbary Pirates exacted
tribute from European powers too busy fighting each other to crush them. It was
tolerated until the fledgling U.S. sent out a tiny fleet under Stephen Decatur.
Sinking ships forced the pirate leaders to terms, yet one of them sought to save
face by demanding two bags of gunpowder as tribute. Decatur's reply: "If
you want powder, you'll have to take our balls with it". The FPPC is a
political pirate, and I'd rather become a political prisoner than pay them
tribute for my freedom.
In Liberty,
Russ Howard
[email protected]
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