Judge Finds Cisco, US Authorities Deceived Canadian Courts
djmurdoch writes "The Vancouver Sun reports that 'The giant computer company Cisco and US prosecutors deceived Canadian authorities and courts in a massive abuse of process to have a former executive thrown in jail, says a B.C. Supreme Court judge.' Peter Adelkeye was arrested last year as he was testifying in a special hearing in Vancouver. It turns out he was there because US authorities would not grant him permission to enter the US to testify in a civil case between him and Cisco. The Canadian judge said that almost nothing in the US Attorney's letter was true, and has overturned his extradition order. Slashdot discussed this case in April."
Our top cops are always eager to serve big corp, especially if they're Uncle Sam's big corp.
When will the American populace finally tire of the country being for the corporations, of the corporations, and by the corporations and take it for the people instead?
I think I'm going to go try to find a non crazy group that's working on this. Are there any?
Or should i just join the ACLU and hope for the best?
The preferred solution is to not have a problem.
I would imagine that an extradition request for a criminal complaint would have to come from the US Justice Department, perhaps even routed through the State Department. Random individuals can't ask governments to arrest people and ship them overseas. Random individuals can file suit in the other country and then that country can take steps as needed to keep the person there if warranted. In many countries however this would be inconvenient to a multinational - since they would be subject to loser-pays, security of costs, and all kinds of other things that they don't have to deal with in the US. And, of course, they have to convince the other country that they have jurisdiction.
..a multinational corporation lied and the US government lied to protect it! What a huge surprise!
State governments are surrounded by the People they govern. If a state government misbehaves, it only takes a short while to rally your neighbors and drive the 1-2 hours from your home to the capitol & remind the leaders that they can be deposed if they don't obey the citizens.
It is wiser to put most of the governmental power close to home, where the leaders are surrounded by their neighbors, rather than thousands of miles away in the Cone of Silence we call Washington. (Example: Three-quarter of the people opposed the Banker Bailout Bill, but it passed anyway, because congress doesn't care what we think.)
My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
Returning power to the people usually happens just before an emperor is created. Historically I mean. Caveat emptor.
Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
He gets to live in beautiful, functional Switzerland instead of the shithole that is the USA today. :)
Justice DONE.
you had me at #!
occams razor doesn't exlude simple conspiracies.
which is all most have to be.
a handful of powerful friends can fuck a lot of people over with very simple conspiracies like the one in the OP.
They can be as simple as
"we don't want him to give evidence? You write an official letter accusing him of something, I'll have an aide make up some bullshit rumors and spread those around and we'll try to make sure the court case is over before he's sorted out the mess"
or even "fuck the law, make up some charge that's hard to defend yourself against then arrest him and throw him in jail"
But those kinds of stories are boring.
massive conspiracies are hard to hold together but a few golf buddies can do fine.
Conspiracy nuts assume that the world trade centre was some kind of inside job with stupidly complex motives.
In reality there's no need for that when the same ends can be achieved by a far simpler method of politicians simply taking advantage of the situation after the fact to push through whatever horrific measures they've always wanted.
the problem isn't a deficit of trust.
Hell more problems are caused by trusting fools who believe campaign promises and press releases.