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According to recent reports, Chief Justice Rehnquist might well step aside at the end of this term. Who will be the next Chief Justice? Who do we want as the next CJ? Who do we not want as the next CJ? John Roberts of the DC Circuit looks like a very strong candidate at present. Are there any sleepers?
 
Posts: 532 | Location: McKinney, Tx | Registered: June 22, 2001Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Alex Kozinski is probably in the running.
 
Posts: 527 | Location: Fort Worth, Texas, | Registered: May 23, 2001Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Someone from the 9th Circuit! As controversial as that court manages to remain, can he overcome that hurdle even with a great personal record?
 
Posts: 532 | Location: McKinney, Tx | Registered: June 22, 2001Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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I say, put Robert Bork back on the list. If nothing else, he will soften up the Senate for acceptance of anyone else.

John Bradley
District Attorney
Williamson County, Texas
 
Posts: 7860 | Location: Georgetown, Texas | Registered: January 25, 2001Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Now that Roberts has become CJ of the US, how certain is it that another woman or a minority representative will be selected to replace Justice O'Connor? Does it matter? Is there a probability that someone from the 5th Cicuirt area will be nominated? Does it matter?
 
Posts: 532 | Location: McKinney, Tx | Registered: June 22, 2001Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Absent any judicial history, it will be very hard to assess what type of justice Ms. Miers will make. Given her loyalty to the President though, I suppose we should expect someone with very conservative values. Another Justice O'Connor? While someone does not have to come to the Supreme Court with prior judicial experience, what has history shown about those who didn't have any?
 
Posts: 532 | Location: McKinney, Tx | Registered: June 22, 2001Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Now that Roberts has become CJ of the US, how certain is it that another woman or a minority representative will be selected to replace Justice O'Connor?

Meirs covers both bases -- she's a woman, and a minority ... a Texan-American! Wink
 
Posts: 2430 | Location: TDCAA | Registered: March 08, 2002Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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If Miers becomes associate justice, she will be the second Texan justice to ever sit. I wonder how many Texans have been nominated over the years? Since the bench has traditionally been loaded with justices from north of the M-D line, we should be heartened that someone from the south has even been nominated.
 
Posts: 532 | Location: McKinney, Tx | Registered: June 22, 2001Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Sorry if I misspelled that, but didn't Harry Reid say she was worthy of consideration? How "heartening" is that? However, some have suggested that she's being thrown out there so that Democrats will try to marginalize her and then Bush can bring in his real choice. When she's been in the press, though, she seems quite devoted to Bush, even going so far as to call him brilliant. Much of her career also seems fairly intertwined with Bush. How reliable an indicator that is, of course, remains to be seen. Just ask Henry II about Thomas Becket. Well, I guess you can't ask either of them, they're both dead.
 
Posts: 1243 | Location: houston, texas, u.s.a. | Registered: October 19, 2001Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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SATURDAY
OCTOBER 8
2005

------------------------------
How Miers' law firm helped defraud investors

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted: October 8, 2005
1:00 a.m. Eastern


� 2005 WorldNetDaily.com

In 2000, Locke Liddell & Sapp, the Texas legal firm of which Harriet Miers was then co-manager, paid out $22 million to settle out-of-court with investors, many of whom had been defrauded of their life savings in the Austin Forex International currency-trading Ponzi scheme run by former Texas football star Russell Erxleben. Locke Liddell agreed to pay the $22 million restitution to investors because legal representation the firm provided Erxleben figured prominently in the perpetration of the fraud itself.

Michael Shaunessy, the Austin attorney who represented the investors in the Locke Liddell settlement, told WND that Erxleben's Ponzi scheme defrauded over 600 investors who had established more than 800 separate investment accounts with Austin Forex International, or AFI.


"Many of these investors were seniors," Shaunessy explained. "Erxleben convinced some of them to borrow the equity out of their homes, others he showed how to convert their IRAs to self-directed IRAs, so their IRA money could be handed over to him. Investors in AFI lost everything; some were retirees who lost their life savings. People were not able to make their home payments and their homes were foreclosed; some had to move in with relatives because they had nothing left after Erxleben was finished with them."

What had Locke Liddell done wrong? According to the petition filed by Shaunessy, Locke Liddell's lawyers allowed AFI to sell unregistered securities. Moreover, the firm signed off on Erxleben's fraudulent investment brochures and promotional materials that contained misrepresentations. Locke Liddell knew for months that AFI's was taking staggering losses; still, the firm did nothing until they found out that state securities regulators had begun investigating.

"These were not sophisticated investors," Shaunessy explained. "Many of them were older, and their economic means were limited. There were a lot of retired people. People's lives were disrupted; there were divorces. I even heard rumors that some people become suicidal."

"Erxleben was the perfect con man," noted Ed Martin, who was then the IRS special agent who tracked down the AFI Ponzi scheme. "He was this University of Texas football star, a kicker who then went to the NFL. He was the guy next door, your buddy on the golf course. Everybody liked him � the trouble was that he'd shake your right hand with his right hand, but his left hand would end up in your pocket."

In 1997, when Erxleben's scheme was in full swing, the Austin Business Journal wrote him up as a rising star. "In its first year," the Austin Business Journal reported in its Oct. 17, 1997, print edition, "Erxleben says Austin Forex averaged 8 percent to 10 percent monthly return for its clients, a 100 percent annual average. That's nearly double what a Top 25 mutual fund makes, according to a Bloomberg Business News study." Almost sounding like a sales brochure, the Austin Business Journal promoted Erxleben's hype: "Word is spreading from Austin Forex's small core of clients, and people are cashing in life insurance policies and college savings accounts to increase their initial investments. Austin Forex requires a minimum investment of $20,000."

Like all gifted con artists, Erxleben knew how to create the "can't lose" feeling. He would brag that he had the same law firm the governor had, playing off the fact that George W. Bush, then the governor of Texas, was known to be one of Harriet Miers' clients.

"He created the feeling that the boat was going to leave the dock, and you had to be on board," Martin explained to WND. "The problem was that you got on the boat only to find out the boat was going to sink, with you still on board."

When AFI began to take loses, Erxleben went the way of all Ponzi schemes � he used the money of new investors to pay off old investors, a pattern which led to the bragging about how great returns "everybody" was getting from AFI.

"It's like all Ponzi schemes," Ed Martin continued. "It works great until the con artist runs out of money. When the cash flow dries up, the deal is done. While the money lasts, the con artist lives high on the hog."

Erxleben knew how to do that; AFI rented plush space in an Austin high rise at 100 Congress Avenue with a glass-enclosed corner office that overlooked the Capitol.

"Trouble is that when the money is gone, the investors are left high and dry," Martin explained. Martin, now retired from the IRS, operates his own private investigation firm in Austin, where he specializes in preventing people from falling victim to financial swindles.

"It's a tragedy," he said, reflecting back on AFI. "The investors are all ordinary people � doctors, lawyers, Indian chiefs � except that some of them were seniors who lost their retirement money when Erxleben's scheme ran out of gas."



How responsible was Harriet Miers for allowing her law firm to participate in this fraud? Granted, Locke Liddell is a large law firm, and the fraud involved the Austin office, not the Dallas office where Miers worked. Still, she was supposedly "on watch" as the firm's co-manager when Erxleben perpetrated his fraud through Locke Liddell. In the press quotes of the time, Harriet Miers was typically the spokesperson for the firm.

Moreover, Locke Liddell was caught not once, but twice. The firm was also burned by con artist Brian Stearns, who used the law firm's advice to defraud investors in an elaborate fake-bond scheme. For its role in this scam, Locke Liddell had to cough up another $8.5 million to settle out-of-court with the fleeced investors, many of whom again were senior retirees. In a two-year period of time while Miers was co-managing the law firm, Locke Liddell paid out $30.5 million to pay back ordinary citizens who had been robbed of their money, in part because the firm allowed its advice to be parlayed by crooks.

"All in all, we did the best we could," settlement attorney Shaunessy told WND. "With the money Locke Liddell agreed to pay back, the defrauded investors ended up with something like 66 cents on their dollar."

The conclusion of the Texas legal community is that the bilked investors will never again see the 34 cents of every dollar they put into these schemes that Locke Liddell ill-advised. Unfortunately, in a post-Enron era, these credentials do not help build a positive resume justifying a lifetime position as an associate justice on the Supreme Court of the United States.


Jerome R. Corsi received a Ph.D. from Harvard University in political science in 1972 and has written many books and articles, including the No. 1 New York Times best-seller, "Unfit for Command � Swift Boat Veterans Speak Out Against John Kerry." Dr. Corsi is an expert on political violence and terrorism and founder of the Iran Freedom Foundation.
 
Posts: 532 | Location: McKinney, Tx | Registered: June 22, 2001Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Keep in mind that Jerry Corsi (the author of the WND piece) and Joseph Farah (the editor of WND) also opposed the John Roberts nomination.
 
Posts: 28 | Registered: August 22, 2003Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Sure, the author has an agenda. One would hardly expect a pro-Miers advocate to shine a light on the information. Maybe, also, Miers is overall the right person for the job, but if the facts are accurate, how significant are they? Do they reflect personally on her integrity as the co-manager? Alternatively, so long as she was not providing the advice, are they even relevant to her nomination?

Despite the tenor of the underlying article, the questions were posted as an apolitical inquiry!

[This message was edited by John Stride on 10-12-05 at .]
 
Posts: 532 | Location: McKinney, Tx | Registered: June 22, 2001Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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