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Politics : US Government Attack on Gibson Guitar -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: CF Rebel who wrote (187)8/9/2012 7:34:29 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 227
 
Justice Department says it won't prosecute Goldman Sachs or its employees for financial fraud

Thursday, August 9, 2012

WASHINGTON (AP) — Justice Department says it won't prosecute Goldman Sachs or its employees for financial fraud.

Read more: seattlepi.com

A Senate panel found that Goldman marketed four sets of complex mortgage securities to banks and other investors but that the firm failed to tell them that the securities were very risky. The Senate panel said Goldman secretly bet against the investors' positions and deceived the investors about its own positions to shift risk from its balance sheet to theirs.

Read more: foxnews.com



To: CF Rebel who wrote (187)8/19/2013 11:28:30 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 227
 
In Eric Holder’s DOJ, enforcing the law equally is ‘high heresy’
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By Grae Stafford 08/19/2013


In the final part of his interview with The Daily Caller, J Christian Adams, a former lawyer with the Department of Justice in the Civil Rights Division turned whistle-blower, explains how the internal dynamics of the DOJ operate and how a political agenda is being instigated through the implementation or non implementation of law.

“I saw it on the inside of justice, at the Justice Department,” Adams said. “I saw the structures, the attitude, the philosophies, the conference room meetings and you begin to get an appreciation for how this whole left-wing apparatus works when you are actually a part of it. … When you’re on the inside, you learn the architecture.”

Adams, who started as a lawyer with the DOJ in 2005, recounts how cases he brought regarding white people drew huge criticism compared to the cases he brought regarding black or Hispanic minorities.

“One of the things I was brought in there to do was to simply be objective and neutral, but see, that’s high heresy. They don’t want people who are objective and neutral. They want people who are part of the orthodoxy, so during the Bush administration, a very small number of people were brought in and it was like an anti-body in the system. The left went absolutely wild. They had congressional hearings. They could not abide by people who were willing to enforce the law to protect everybody.”


Injustice by J. Christian Adams Grae Stafford/Daily Caller

In his new book “Injustice” Adams details how a request by the Civil Rights Commission to appear under a subpoena over the Black Panther voting intimidation case was blocked by the DOJ and how Adams was informed not to comply with the subpoena. “They said that if you comply with the subpoena, you’re violating our directives. The problem was that there’s a federal statute that says that you have to comply with the subpoenas and if you don’t it’s a crime — it’s a crime, its a criminal offense to interfere — so I just resigned my job and testified about what’s going on.”

Catch any parts of the J. Christian Adams interview you may have missed here:

‘Voting law, Civil Rights Law is a tool to help Democrats’

Read more: dailycaller.com



To: CF Rebel who wrote (187)2/2/2014 12:42:23 PM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation

Recommended By
CF Rebel

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 227
 
Gibson Sticks Thumb in Obama Administration's Eye with 'Government Series' Guitars

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Breibart ^ | feb 1, 2014 | by Jeffrey Poor





In 2011, the Department of Justice raided Gibson Guitar facilities in Memphis and Nashville, alleging a violation of the so-called Lacey Act, a law that bans the importation of certain kinds of wildlife, plants and wood. At the time of the raid, Gibson Guitars CEO Henry Juszkiewicz told Hugh Hewitt on his radio show that the feds confiscated tonewood imported from India for the guitar Gibson manufacturers which would result in a cost of $2 to $3 million for his company.

At a great expense in legal fees and time, Juszkiewicz fought the federal government tooth and nail. But in August 2012, he settled with the Department of Justice by agreeing to pay a penalty of $300,000 and a $50,000 community service payment to the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation.

At the time, Breitbart News suggested that the federal government targeted Gibson because of the conservative ideological stance it had supported. But according to the Gibson Guitar website, the tonewood was returned and made into the Government Series II Les Paul guitars:

Great Gibson electric guitars have long been a means of fighting the establishment, so when the powers that be confiscated stocks of tonewoods from the Gibson factory in Nashville—only to return them once there was a resolution and the investigation ended—it was an event worth celebrating. Introducing the Government Series II Les Paul, a striking new guitar from Gibson USA for 2014 that suitably marks this infamous time in Gibson’s history.

Gibson’s line of those guitars start $1,099 and are topped by a pickguard hot-stamped in gold with the “Government Series” graphic, which is a bald eagle hoisting a Gibson guitar neck.

“Each Government Series II Les Paul also includes a genuine piece of Gibson USA history in its solid rosewood fingerboard, which is made from wood returned to Gibson by the US government after the resolution,” the website states.





















To: CF Rebel who wrote (187)2/2/2014 1:00:12 PM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation

Recommended By
CF Rebel

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 227
 
What Gibson Guitars Did with the Wood the Government Returned

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American Thinker ^ | 2/2/2014 | Victor Keith

In 2011, the Department of Justice conducted raids on the Tennessee facilities of the famed Gibson Guitar company and confiscated large quantities of tonewood that had been imported from India and Madagascar.

The action included armed SWAT teams, with automatic weapons,
who apparently feared being garroted with a guitar string by an enraged Gibson employee. These raids were conducted due to the Lacey Act, which bans the importing of certain woods. The issue at hand was not that the wood was endangered or illegally harvested, but that it was not of the proper thickness that would have meant that some labor had been performed on it by workers in India and Madagascar. This was the law in Madagascar and India as a nod to the unions in those countries. Gibson, who hand-makes its guitars, cannot guarantee the craftsmanship of its products if a portion of the work is done outside their facilities.

What raised many eyebrows about this governmental action was that the countries involved, India and Madagascar, indicated that they were not interested in pursuing the matter when contacted by the Department of Justice
. Also, even if Gibson had been guilty, this would have been a civil, not a criminal matter. Finally, this same kind of tonewood is used by other guitar makers such as CF Martin and Company and Fender. Those other companies were not raided. The principle difference seems to be that those companies contributed to Democratic candidates, while Henry Juszkiewicz, the CEO of Gibson, gives openly to Republicans, and Gibson has plants in a right-to-work state.

After spending nearly two and half million dollars in legal fees and paying a $300,000 fine, the government has settled with Gibson and has finally returned the confiscated tonewood.
Normally that would be the end of the story, with a victory scored for partisan government bullying of political opponents, however, that is not the end.



Gibson took that wood and made it into the Government Series II Les Paul. These special edition guitars are hot stamped in gold with the Government Series graphic, which is an American bald eagle holding a Gibson guitar neck.


It is an admirable statement of defiance of an abusive government and a refusal of a historic American company to be intimidated.

Read more: americanthinker.com





To: CF Rebel who wrote (187)2/2/2014 1:07:07 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 227
 
Fender is the other major marketer of guitars. And, yes, they are a big Demo donor.

This was nothing more than Eric Holder doing a number on his big donor's competitor. Crony Capitalism at its worst.