*************************************************************************** Will Zuzak; DEMANUK.025 = NBCSL Resolution re DOJ; 1996-01-01 *************************************************************************** From: The New Federalist Title: NBCSL Blasts Justice Dept Misconduct, Calls for Congressional Hearings Date: December 25, 1995 Page: Front Page [start of article] On Monday, December 18,1995, the National Black Caucus of State Legislators (NBCSL), the nation's largest organization of African-American elected officials, representing 574 legislators in 44 states, made public the resolutions adopted at their 19th Annual Legislative Conference, which took place in Birmingham, Ala. on Nov. 28-Dec.2. Resolution 20, printed in full below, was first adopted on Nov. 30 by the NBCSL Task Force on Ethics, chaired by Senator McKinley Washington of South Carolina, and was ratified by the full conference on Dec.2. Titled "A Call For Congressional Hearings To Investigate Misconduct by the U.S. Department of Justice," the Resolution endorses the recent independent hearings facilitated by the Schiller Institute to investigate political targetting of groups and individuals by a nest of corrupt permanent bureaucrats inside the Criminal Division of the Justice Department, and demands that both Houses of Congress exercise their oversight responsibility by conducting investigative hearings along the same lines. It also urges the Congressional Black Caucus to similarly demand such action. The Resolution was drafted following a moving presentation by former Senator Theo Walker Mitchell (SC), a leader of the NBCSL since its founding, and a key participant in the Independent Hearings. Resolution 20 A Call For Congressional Hearings To Investigate Misconduct by the U.S. Department of Justice WHEREAS, a series of extraordinary independent public hearings, facilitated by the Schiller Institute, to investigate allegations of gross misconduct by the U.S. Department of Justice, occurred just outside Washington, D.C. on August 31 and September 1; and WHEREAS, many distinguished members and former members of the NBCSL, including Senators Robert Ford and Maggie Wallace Glover of South Carolina; Reps. William Clark and John Hilliard of Alabama; Reps. Toby Fitch and Howard Hunter of North Carolina; Rep. Ulysses Jones, Jr., of Tennessee; Rep. Percy Watson of Mississippi; former Senators Theo Mitchell and Herbert Fielding of South Carolina; former Reps. Frank McBride and Judge Tee Ferguson of South Carolina; and Judge Ira Murphy of Tennessee, among others, participated in said hearings; and WHEREAS, the hearings focussed on cases where there was evidence of political targetting of groups and individuals by corrupt officials inside federal governmental law enforcement agencies, working in tandem with a concert of private organizations; and WHEREAS, the evidence presented was organized into three panels: (1) the campaign of harassment and selective and vindictive prosecution conducted against African American public and elected officials called "Operation Fruehmenschen (primitive man)" by the FBI; (2) the conduct of the Department of Justice's Office of Special Investigations (including the cases of John Demjanjuk and former UN Secretary General and President of Austria Kurt Waldheim); and (3) the case of Lyndon LaRouche, described as the largest-scale single case, involving the same Department of Justice apparatus that operated in the OSI and "Operation Fruehmenschen" cases; and WHEREAS, in case after case, the panel heard decisive evidence of rampant Department of Justice corruption, prosecutorial misconduct, withholding of exculpatory evidence, and conscious perjury and fraud upon the court, politically motivated and designed to deprive American citizens of effective representation in violation of the Voting Rights Act; and WHEREAS, the evidence was presented, not by the good word of the witnesses alone, but documented by the government's own documents, records, and memoranda, first supressed and later obtained under the Freedom of Information Act, and other legal actions, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE 19TH ANNUAL LEGISLATIVE CONFERENCE OF THE NATIONAL BLACK CAUCUS OF STATE LEGISLATORS (NBCSL), ASSEMBLED IN BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA, NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 2, 1995, That this body, the 19th Annual Legislative Conference of the National Black Caucus of State Legislators, join this independent panel of distinguished individuals, in demanding that both Houses of the United States Congress exercise their oversight responsibility and conduct investigative hearings to examine these allegations of gross misconduct by the Department of Justice in the three areas of testimony heard by this panel, and urge our colleagues in the Congressional Black Caucus to do the same. PROPOSED RESOLUTION SUBMITTED BY: Senator McKinley Washington, South Carolina Senator Thelma Harper, Tennessee RESOLUTION APPROVED THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1995 BY THE TASK FORCE ON ETHICS APPROVAL CERTIFIED BY: Senator McKinley Washington (SC), Chair RESOLUTION RATIFIED IN PLENARY SESSION, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1995 *************************************************************************** Will Zuzak; DEMANUK.025 = NBCSL Resolution re DOJ; 1996-01-01 Posted on the Internet by Stefan Lemieszewski ***************************************************************************