Date: Sat, 11 Jan 92 0:23:33 EST From: tadvocate@anonymous.com Subject: File 2--Craig's submission in #4.01 Reply to: File 2--How The Government Broke The Law And Went Unpunished > JUSTICE DENIED > > How The Government Broke The Law And Went Unpunished > > by Craig Neidorf > kl@stormking.com > > > TO THE READER: > > During the summer of 1990, I wrote the following review of how the > Privacy Protection Act of 1980 could have been applied to the above > described incident. After several months of trying to find a way to > file a claim, I have finally come to realize that the goal I seek is > unreachable because I do not possess the financial resources to hire > legal counsel and no law firm or organization capable of handling the > case will agree to take it on a contingency basis. Furthermore, as I > Protection Act of 1980 as described above. > > ********** Stuff Deleted*********** > > *** What Are The Remedies? > > Section 106(a) provides a civil cause of action for damages for > violations of the Act. Such an action may be brought by any person > aggrieved by a violation of the statute. > > WE DARE NOT GIVE UP THAT RIGHT! Craig, stop complaining. You are going to law school. File a pro se action against the government. File it and ask some of your professors to help you out. You'll learn more practical law then a thousand class hours. If we dare not give up our rights, then we dare not stop. The Advocate. [ This information published so that all members of the community can know that they do not need to depend on lawyers to protect our rights. The day an american may not protect his rights without a lawyer, is the day his rights have died.] PS For those interested. The supreme court is deciding a case where a man was convicted of receiving child pornography only after being targeted for 2 years in a blizzard of letters by undercover operators into buying it by mail. The supreme court will try to determine what limits the government may not violate in enticing people into breaking the law. Downloaded From P-80 International Information Systems 304-744-2253