LA Superior Court Judges 'Slush' Fund
Tort Claim filed in August 1998
Request To Disclose Source of Funds - Jan 1999
Insight Magazine Article - April 1999
Update 4/11/99
Published in Washington, D.C.. . . . Vol. 15, No. 16 -- May 3, 1999 . . . .
www.insightmag.com
Insight Magazine
Is Justice for Sale in L.A.?
By Kelly Patricia O'Meara
An alleged slush fund for the L.A. Superior Court Judges Association
is at the heart of a scandal involving possible income-tax evasion and gifts that may
affect judges' rulings.
Child-custody cases always are heart-wrenching, but a three-month probe by Insight has
unearthed an added twist for parents with cases before the Superior Court in Los Angeles.
Emotionally distraught litigants are questioning whether a cozy financial connection
between judges, attorneys and some court-appointed professionals in the City of Angels is
affecting the outcome of their cases. Friends of the court are concerned that, at the very
least, there is a strong appearance of impropriety.
. . . . Private bank accounts that benefit judges are at the heart of this brewing scandal
-- one that state and local agencies resolutely have failed to investigate, adding further
suspicion. Bank accounts funded in part by fees from local lawyers and others involved in
the family-court system are troubling litigants. Many feel it is impossible to know
whether they're facing a judge who has benefited financially from an attorney appearing
before the court.
. . . . Former presiding judge Robert Parkin tells Insight that an account critics dub a
slush fund is nothing more than "coffee-and-flowers" cash for the Los Angeles
Superior Court Judges Association, or LASCJA. But documents obtained by Insight show the
bank account served a great many purposes and that the judges' association, a private
organization, did not pay taxes on funds run through the account for the benefit of its
members -- who also would be subject to taxes.
. . . . Law-enforcement sources are nervous and concerned about the LASCJA accounts. They
and county officials tell Insight not the least of the concerns is that for years county
employees, paid by the taxpayers, were at the same time working on the LASCJA's books.
This is because before filing for federal tax-exempt status in late 1997, the LASCJA was
using the federal employer-identification number, or EIN, of Los Angeles County, which in
turn covered the fact that the judges were not paying taxes on the outside income they
moved through their association.
. . . . "On the face of it, there appear to have been one or several laws that may
have been broken, but without specific information it is impossible to know what statutes
are applicable," says Beth Miller, a spokeswoman for California Secretary of State
Bill Jones. At the federal level a spokesman for the IRS who declined to be named said
that an act of this nature "may fall under Section 72.061 of the tax code -- fraud
and false statements."
. . . . How much money is involved? Plenty. Just one of the LASCJA Bank of America account
statements shows this alleged "coffee-and-flowers" fund with a balance of
$110,000, according to copies secured by Insight.
. . . . Parents with business before the Superior Court say they feel caught in a web of
judicial deceit that borders on an organized racket. But for years their requests for an
investigation fell on deaf ears, as elected officials and law-enforcement agencies did
nothing. Enter Marvin Bryer, a retired computer analyst in La Crescenta, Calif.
. . . . Bryer became ensnared with the family-court system after his daughter, Karen, was
faced with losing custody of her 2-year-old son. Having spent nearly $100,000 on attorneys
and research fees, Bryer took matters into his own hands and has been campaigning for a
probe of a system that he claims "purposefully profits off the conflict of the
families in litigation." He says, "I felt violated, almost numb, when I learned
that the judges were making money through the child-custody system. The judges have too
much power, and nobody is monitoring these guys."
. . . . In July 1994, Bryer challenged the internal finance auditor of the family court, Gregory Pentoney, to turn over all records of donations to the court
from members of the Los Angeles County bar. It was in those records that he found two
"donation" checks totaling $6,750 to the judges' fund, requisitioned through the
bar association by the mother of the man Bryer's daughter was resisting in her custody
case. This was regarded as compromising family-court judges in Los Angeles County from
hearing the case and it was moved to Orange County.
. . . . According to a statement by Robert M. Mallano, the presiding judge of the Superior
Court in 1993 and 1994, the funds being deposited into the account were not payments from
lawyers and other court personnel, but "contributions made by judges to the
association." If so, were these earned funds on which taxes were not paid, and what
did the judges do to earn these monies? Moreover, other funds also were deposited in the
LASCJA account. In a deposition taken in response to a case in which Mallano was asked to
disqualify himself due to his possible financial interest, Mallano provided a sketchy
picture of how the funds were raised for the LASCJA.
. . . . "Judges often participated on their own time in writing articles for various
bar groups and assisted in lawyer-orientation programs, seminars and the like with various
bar associations. Often when judges declined payment for these services, the bar
associations made donations to the judges' association," Mallano said. Former
presiding judge Parkin confirms Mallano's explanation of the LASCJA account to Insight,
adding, "I think one judge edited a book or something and contributed the $20,000 he
made into the account." According to Parkin, taxes never were paid on any of the
funds going into the account.
. . . . Parkin and Mallano's description ignores a great deal of money moved to the LASCJA
accounts -- from direct payments by attorneys and other court personnel for minimum
continuing legal education, or MCLE, classes to assorted "seminars" conducted by
Superior Court judges -- according to copies of banking records obtained by Insight.
. . . . The process by which the checks were being collected and deposited into the
judges' account raises still more questions about the LASCJA and highlights the perceived
conflict that arises from the judges' financial relationship to other child-custody
professionals who work for the court.
. . . . Dozens of checks, obtained by Insight, deposited in the LASCJA account were made
out to several other institutions, including the Judges Miscellaneous Expense Fund, the
Judges Trust Fund, the Family Court Services Special Fund and the Family Court Services.
These organizations are not registered with the IRS or the California State Franchise Tax
Board, and if the Bank of America has accounts for any of them, the checks were not
deposited in those accounts.
. . . . Not only were attorneys who argue cases before the family court making payments to
the judges' fund, but so were the court monitors -- appointed by the judges and paid a
professional fee of as much as $240 a day as observers during child visitations. These
monitors qualify for their jobs by paying to take a training and certification course from
the judges, with the check going to the fund, whereupon they are placed on the exclusive
list the judges use when assigning monitors.
. . . . The Los Angeles County Bar Association's contributions to the fund were payments
to the judges run through a joint partnership with the court on MCLE classes. They split
the proceeds from legal and professional seminars.
. . . . So, in addition to the ethical issues involved in how the bank account has been
maintained, its funding also raises numerous legal issues, according to attorney Richard
I. Fine, a taxpayers' advocate. "If a private group [the LASCJA] is using a public
building and everything associated with that private group is being paid for with
taxpayers' dollars, then it is clearly fraudulent," Fine contends. He adds that
"unless the public entity has passed an ordinance specifically allowing the private
group to exist and specifically stating that the public will bear the costs -- separate
phones, leasing office space, furniture, computers, etc. -- then it should be paid for by
the private organization."
. . . . According to Fine, "If the judges have provided false information on official
financial statements submitted to government agencies or financial institutions [the Bank
of America account], then they have defrauded the Internal Revenue Service and the county
and the people of Los Angeles by receiving tax-free status under fraudulent means. ...
This would be the same as if a person lied on their tax return. It is incredulous to me
that something like this could have happened and the IRS, state attorney general, county
district attorney and auditor have not acted over all these years."
. . . . Yet that is what appears to have happened. In 1996, when Bryer first brought the
matter to the attention of Alan Sasaki, the auditor/controller of Los Angeles County.
Sasaki's office conducted a "limited review" of the checks paid by the bar to
the judges and determined that those two checks Bryer was questioning, totaling $6,750,
should have been deposited into the county treasury.
. . . . However, rather than requesting that the judges return the money to the treasury,
Sasaki's office merely suggested they "take corrective action to ensure future
revenue from court-sponsored events is deposited into the proper accounts." Without
full disclosure of the LASCJA books and bank records, it is impossible to know how much
money belonging to the county has been siphoned into the judges' private account, critics
note.
. . . . Alf Schonbach, manager of the finance, accounting and internal-audits section of
the L.A. Superior Court, has overseen the LASCJA account since 1992. He now tells Insight
he paid no attention to whom the checks were being written. Schonbach says, "Somebody
on staff collected the checks from the attorneys at the door during the weekend seminars
and kept them in a safe box over the weekend. Then they'd bring them into the office, and
then we would deposit the checks into the LASCJA account."
. . . . Despite the fact that Schonbach and his staff managed all aspects of the judges'
account and regularly received account statements from the Bank of America, which in turn
printed the county EIN at the top of the statements seen by Insight, he says he had no
knowledge the judges were using the county of Los Angeles EIN to avoid taxes.
. . . . Tyler McCauley, Los Angeles County's assistant auditor, also tells Insight he was
not aware the judges had been using the county EIN, although the county "has an
agreement with banks to notify them when someone is using the number." He explains
that "the Bank of America never brought this to our
attention."
. . . . Although the auditor's office knew since at least 1996 that the LASCJA was using
the county EIN, no administrative or legal action was taken. And despite the serious
repercussions of having unknown entities randomly using the county's tax-exempt number,
Sasaki seems unconcerned. "The fact that they are using our EIN is an issue with the
IRS, not an issue with us," he says.
. . . . Sasaki's response did not surprise Bryer. "Every time I'd go to a
law-enforcement agency or county representative to file a complaint, they'd tell me to go
to some other agency. All you get is a big runaround with no one willing to help." A
dozen county, state and federal agencies have had the opportunity to do something. The
list reads like a Who's Who of law enforcement, beginning with the judges themselves: the
Los Angeles Police Department, or LAPD; the bunco and forgery unit of the LAPD; the county
Sheriff's Department; the district attorney; the city attorney for Los Angeles; the county
of Los Angeles auditor and assistant auditor; the county treasurer; and the state attorney
general. All failed to act.
. . . . Bryer also has met with representatives of the U.S. Department of Justice,
Republican Rep. James Rogan's staff, the FBI and the IRS. The IRS couldn't comment to
Insight because it is prohibited from releasing information about complaints -- including
information as to whether a probe has been opened.
. . . . Nathan Barankin, a spokesman for California Attorney General Bill Lockyer, says of
Bryer's complaint, "The request has been reviewed by the city of Los Angeles attorney
and the county of Los Angeles district attorney, but no one has asked us to do our own
investigation." He adds, "We have only been asked to review their decision, not
to move forward on the request.
. . . . Such a response suggests the attorney-general's office is making it clear that the
Los Angeles district attorney and the city of Los Angeles attorney have taken the position
that there has been no criminal wrongdoing on the part of the LASCJA. Attorney General
Lockyer, however, was unaware of a March 3, 1999, preliminary investigation by the bunco
unit of the LAPD in which Luis Lopez, an investigator for the city attorney's office,
admitted to Bryer that he was directed not to initiate the crime report and was ordered to
shred documents related to his investigation of LASCJA. Lopez refused to comment for this
article.
. . . . Perhaps the stonewalling and apathy Bryer has faced from these agencies may be
attributed to the fact that many of them are carrying on similar practices, he and others
believe. Running private corporations inside the public sector is quite the accepted
practice among Los Angeles officials, Insight learned. And many of those corporations are
linked to the very agencies that reviewed the LASCJA.
. . . . For example, the IRS has Certified Public Accountants Inc.
at the address of the district office of the IRS. The IRS refused comment. The Association
of Los Angeles City Attorneys Inc. operates at City Hall, where Chief of Criminal Division
Maureen Siegel says she was not aware it is listed. The Association of Deputy District
Attorneys Inc. is run out of the Criminal Court Building, where Bill Ryder, who handles
its accounts, says he is unaware of any rules concerning operation of a private
corporation inside public buildings. Gil Garcetti, the district attorney of the county of
Los Angeles, has two associations incorporated out of his offices in the Criminal Court
Building. These are the District Attorney Crime Prevention Foundation and the Special
Assistance for Victims in Emergency Inc. Spokeswoman Jerri Patchett claims these
corporations were authorized by the Board of Supervisors and information about them is
sent to that board annually.
. . . . In order to get control over the ever-increasing nonprofit corporations popping up
inside public buildings, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors established
guidelines for foundations, requesting that they report the amount of staff time spent
working for the organization and the value of government office space, supplies, etc. Of
the above corporations, only the District Attorney Crime Prevention Foundation has listed
itself with the Board of Supervisors.
. . . . "The entire concept of family law," says Bryer, "is that it is to
operate in the best interest of the children. But the fact is that court personnel are
making a living by decimating the bank accounts of the litigants, which ultimately
destroys the quality of the child's life." Bryer is referring to the excruciating
process litigants are forced to endure in order to prove they are worthy of retaining
custody. Here's an example of what may be requested of such litigants in Los Angeles:
. . . . If a divorcing couple is unable to come to an agreement on the custody of their
child, the court has the power to require the couple to attend mediation sessions with a
court-appointed marriage counselor who attempts to resolve custody differences.
. . . . During these court-ordered sessions, mediators have the authority to demand that
one, or both, of the litigants submit to tests, including drug testing. If a judge
believes additional tests are necessary, litigants may be subjected to psychiatric
evaluations or face losing their child. Once custody has been decided, the litigant who
loses custody becomes the noncustodial parent and the judge determines the financial
payments that must be made to the custodial parent.
. . . . At each step of the process, both litigants are forced to pay thousands of dollars
for the services demanded by the court, not including the fees each side already is paying
attorneys. But the child-custody cash register doesn't stop ringing. The system continues
to rake in money for its swarm of support personnel long after custody has been awarded.
. . . . In the case of the noncustodial parent missing payments, collection is turned over
to the Bureau of Family Support, or BFS -- in Los Angeles District Attorney Garcetti's
office -- which becomes the collector and distributor of the noncustodial parent's
payments. For years, however, complaints have been raised about Garcetti's alleged
mismanagement of the BFS, and currently 14,000 families are owed nearly $25 million that
Garcetti has collected but refused to pay.
. . . . With information generated by Insight's investigation into the family-court
system, a lawsuit was filed by taxpayers' advocate Fine on Feb. 19 on behalf of John R.
Silva of Sylmar, Calif., an aggrieved parent. Although Silva has made child-support
payments since 1984, Garcetti's office sent him a letter in late 1997 advising that his
payments were in arrears to the tune of $64,000. Garcetti began garnishing Silva's
paycheck, despite the fact that Silva had documentary evidence both that all payments were
received by Garcetti's office and that they never were forwarded to the custodial parent.
Garcetti's office is trying to make Silva pay a second time and, in one instance, has left
him with only one dollar of his pay.
. . . . The Silva lawsuit seeks to require Garcetti immediately
to distribute the millions in child-support payments he has been holding. Bryer is hopeful
that the lawsuit will provide an opening for investigation of the whole child-custody
system. "The mishandling of the child-support payments," says Bryer, "is
just one more outgrowth of a broken system that begins with the family court. It's time
for the unholy financial relationship between the judges and other court professionals to
end, and the lawsuit filed against Garcetti is as good a place as any to start."
Copyright © 1999 News World Communications, Inc.
We have just received an interesting request and reply from Ms. Elodie McKee, pursuing the disclosure of the same illegal funds that are prominent in the Tort Claim against the County of Los Angeles filed last September.
Ms. McKee represents the Los Angeles Women's Coalitition Against Lawlessness and, by letter, requested an accounting of the Tax Exempt fund known as the Los Angeles Superior Court Judges Association from the Honorable Judge John Ouderkirk. The registration of any Tax exempt Organization must be made available to the public under U.S.C. Title 26, Section 6104 (e), upon request by an individual. (A protection provided by Statute to protect public funds). Apparently, the Judge has hired an attorney, John J. Collins (a Governor of the State Bar of California) to deny public access to this information. As seen clearly from the notice of the State of California Tax Board, the Los Angeles Superior Court Judges Association has been designated as a Tax Exempt orgnization and therefore must provide this information to the public.
The response from Judge Ouderkirk's attorney, John Collins, shows why attorneys and judges are never placed under oath in the courtroom. They cannot be trusted.
The FEDERAL EMPLOYMENT IDENTIFICATION NUMBER 95-6000927 is registered as a Los Angeles County Federal Tax ID. Again! How can this fund be described as a private organization! This is a huge coverup.
Questions raised:
1. How much does Judge Oudenkirk have to pay John Collins for his services?
2. Has Judge Oudenkirk ruled on cases in favor of John Collins' clients?
Filed Sep 11, 1998
September 10 1998
TORT CLAIM - AGAINST THE COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES
ACCUSED: Tyler McCauley - Assistant Auditor - County of Los Angeles
Frederick Bennett - County Counsel of Los Angeles
Amy L. K. Shek - County Counsel of Los Angeles
Henry Stewart - County Sheriff of Los Angeles
Clarence Markham - County Sheriff of Los Angeles
TIME OF ACCUSATION:
Now - Ongoing
DAMAGES: Amount to be assessed by trial by jury
DESCRIPTION: The ACCUSED are part of an underground of white collar criminals who are involved in the theft of CITY, COUNTY, STATE, and FEDERAL money. The scheme started before their time as an organization known as the CONFERENCE OF CONCILIATION COURTS. That organization changed its identity and assumed the name ASSOCIATION OF FAMILY CONCILIATION COURTS. Using various identity changes, the organization was listed in the LOS ANGELES SUPERVISORS DIRECTORY in 1993 as JUDGES TRUST FUND ACCOUNTING.
The crime ring is an underground Mafia that posed as the COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES - by using the FEDERAL EMPLOYMENT IDENTIFICATION NUMBER 95-6000927. In recent dramatic announcements, the INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE has informed me that the EIN or FEIN number assigned to the latest version of the organization - the - LOS ANGELES SUPERIOR COURT JUDGES ASSOCIATION - is an EIN that was not assigned to the organization. It Is a COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES EIN!
I previously attempted to get this discovery - in the lawsuit BRYER vs PENTONEY - but 298 judges and commissioners in LOS ANGELES were disqualified on a ruse orchestrated by JUDGE GARY KLAUSNER - a ring leader of the scheme. JUDGE GARY KLAUSNER'S name is on the signature card of BANK OF AMERICA account listed under the name LOS ANGELES SUPERIOR COURT JUDGES ASSOCIATION EIN 95-6000927.
I was forced into the corrupt county - ORANGE COUNTY - where a co-conspirator named JAMES P. GRAY told me he would throw me in jail if I tried to make any more discoveries. FEARING FOR MY LIFE in a county that is FOREIGN to me - I dismissed my case without prejudice and continued to seek discovery away from the strength of ORANGE COUNTY.
On AUGUST 28, 1998, the LOS ANGELES DISTRICT ATTORNEY arrested my former defendant for the scheme - GREGORY S. PENTONEY -. The underworld known as the LOS ANGELES SUPERIOR COURT JUDGES ASSOCIATION - posing for the COUNTY - has attempted to sway the case by offering PENTONEY his job back so they can get GOVERNMENT IMMUNITY for PENTONEY - and get the case dismissed. The JUDGE DALE FISCHER lowered the bail from 500,000 to 300,000 so PENTONEY can get out and confer with his old employer.
THE FOLLOWING IDENTIFIES EACH CONSPIRATOR BY NAME AND DEED
TYLER McCAULEY: On October 10, 1995, Tyler McCauley became the fraud investigator for the COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES - on a complaint Marvin Bryer filed against ALF SCHONBACH and GREGORY PENTONEY. In the secretive investigation - Tyler McCauley discovered that PENTONEY and SCHONBACH were involved in laundering money from the LOS ANGELES COUNTY BAR ASSOCIATION to the - yet another identity fraud - called the JUDGES MISCELLANEOUS EXPENSE FUND. All of the money was required by construction of law - to have been deposited into a court fund owned by the PEOPLE of the COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES.
Instead of turning the scheme over to the LOS ANGELES DISTRICT ATTORNEY - Tyler McCauley chose to give a warning to the CLERK OF THE COURT - by telling him to watch out that I was going to sue. I was never copied on the letter. In spite of the warning, the fact is that further damage had already happened. GREGORY S. PENTONEY was plundering the LOS ANGELES COUNTY TREASURY on his own scheme with a lawyer named FENTON. McCauley did not know this fact at the time.
What McCauley knew is that the JUDGES MISCELLANEOUS EXPENSE FUND had undergone another identity change and became - in April of 1993 - the LOS ANGELES SUPERIOR COURT JUDGES ASSOCIATION. Gregory S. Pentoney had boxes of checks in his possession - and bank statements - showing the organization was laundering checks under that name in all sorts of business schemes with lawyers and psychiatrists who were fixing court cases for profit.
The scheme used EIN 95-6000927. Eventually - to cover his - you know what - Tyler McCauley and the court arranged for a phony audit. According to what I read - the COUNTY BAR selected the auditor on recommendation. The auditor skilfully hid the information about the missing EIN 95-6000927 funds. Instead, to everyone's shock - millions were found missing in COUNTY CONDEMNATION FUNDS. Pentoney drew the wrath of the COUNTY and his office was raided by a sealed search warrant.
The DISTRICT ATTORNEY swooped up evidence - including files PENTONEY kept on me. The files include billing charges PENTONEY made on me while he falsified "Court" evidence on COURT LETTERHEAD. McCauley feigned that I was to blame for my "ambiguous" request to PENTONEY and that I refused to pay 2,000 dollars more to a government employee who was a fraud - stealing county money and lying in court records
I am holding TYLER McCAULEY directly liable for conspiracy to conceal a compounded
crime - and for deliberately allowing the LOS ANGELES SUPERIOR COURT JUDGES ASSOCIATION to
steal money by using the COUNTY EIN - 95-6000927.
FREDERICK BENNETT - Bennett is the lying and cheating COUNTY COUNSEL. In my daughter's case - BENNETT lied and said checks from the COUNTY BAR were gifts to the COURT and the COUNTY. BENNETT would normally be held to the PERJURY standards - but he is the MOUTHPIECE for the underworld that l am accusing. After charging me for his research - BENNETT continued to represent judge KENNETH BLACK - head of the FAMILY COURT SERVICES - when money was laundered by his section of the COUNTY BAR. Then - when I filed my lawsuit - BRYER vs. PENTONEY - EC020659 - BENNETT modified his prior statements and now admitted the LOS ANGELES SUPERIOR COURT JUDGES ASSOCIATION and the JUDGES MISCELLANEOUS EXPENSE FUND were funds to a PRIVATE organization. That was not what BENNETT said in his testimony to an ORANGE COUNTY JUDGE - THEODORE MILLARD.
FREDERICK BENNETT is nothing more than a PAID COUNTY CROOK. He is in violation of his duty to the PUBLIC and has - through perjury and chicanery - caused damage to me and my family. He did these lies under the jurisdiction as a COUNTY lawyer.
When the CITY OF LOS ANGELES began to investigate the scheme - a city investigator
named Luis Lopez was assigned the case. The jurisdiction is LAMC
Chapter IV Article 4. Frederick Bennett swayed the investigation by threatening Lopez
because BENNETT knew JIMMY HAHN - Lopez's boss. Lopez was ordered to stop the
investigation and shred his crime report. This issue is a major OBSTRUCTION OF JUSTICE. I
know about these matters and was in communication with various city officials who I INTEND
TO CALL TO THE STAND.
AMY L. K. SHEK - Is - or was - a COUNTY PAID liar - a COUNTY COUNSEL. Ms. Shek
defended GREGORY S. PENTONEY in my lawsuit - EC020659 - while she had a private secret of
her own money laundering to the same scheme that involved PENTONEY. AMY L. K. SHEK
prepared a motion to dismiss my case. She argued that PENTONEY was a government employee
with government immunity - pursuant to Gov. Code Section 822.2. What AMY L. K. SHEK FAILED
TO DISCLOSE - is that HER CHECKS are laundered into the same scheme. I have seen the
checks but am not able to get copies because the COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES hired hatchet firm
- COLLINS, COLLINS, MUIR and TRAVER - were allowed to STEAL the records - including the
checks of AMY L. K. SHEK. COLLINS removed the boxes of evidence from the courthouse
finance department - to protect the COUNTY'S interest in the CONCEALMENT of the theft.
These checks include money laundered to send judges to COUNTRY CLUBS
- to buy jewelry, etc.
HENRY STEWART - LOS ANGELES SHERIFF. Henry Stewart is a bailiff for the CENTRAL LOS ANGELES COURTHOUSE - located at 111 North Hill Street. Unbeknownst to me at time of my lawsuit - HENRY STEWART was a major player in laundering money to the above described scheme.
In March and September of 1995 - HENRY STEWART and FAMILY COURT SERVICES - created yet another underworld scheme. STEWART and his co-conspirators conspired to create a bogus licensing school for job applicants for people desiring to earn money as CHILD CUSTODY VISITATION MONITORS.
Job applications were submitted to every applicant for HENRY STEWART'S "training". There is no evidence that HENRY STEWART has a license to run a training or licensing school. STEWART and his underworld, used COURT ADMINISTRATOR LINDA LEES - with the approval of JUDGE RICHARD DENNER - to collect money for the COUNTY EIN 95-6000927. The job applicants were told to pay the COUNTY through the name "FAMILY COURT SERVICES SPECIAL FUND". Of course - there was no such fund. All of the one hundred or more applicants were duped and defrauded. All of the money went into the underworld's pockets - through the BANK FRAUD and MAIL FRAUD scheme. All of the money was diverted into the LOS ANGELES SUPERIOR COURT JUDGES ASSOCIATION.
For his QUID PRO QUO reward - the judges in the scheme take children from parents and hire HENRY STEWART to be the PAID MONITOR. Stewart is able to force his presence and earn 25 to 30 dollars per day for every day he conducts the scheme. There is a STATE STANDARD that no person who works for the court should be a child custody monitor. STEWART and his underground do not follow any standards. The LOS ANGELES SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT has a policy requiring knowledge of all outside employment. STEWART taught the job applicants in the RICO scheme - using the COUNTY'S NAME.
I filed a complaint on STEWART with the SHERIFF'S department back in JUNE] 11, 1998. There is no word from the SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT. In conversations I am told by the SHERIFF'S that what STEWART does is his PRIVATE BUSINESS. RICO, however - is not a PRIVATE business.
The JUDGE who STEWART aided and abetted - RICHARD E. DENNER - was the judge in my
daughter's case. DENNER said he NEVER HEARD OF ANY FUND called FAMILY COURT SERVICES
SPECIAL FUND. Based on the evidence - this judge is a perjurer who is unfit for public
duty. SHERIFF HENRY STEWART and the COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES is JUDGE RICHARD E. DENNER'S
minion
CLARENCE MARKHAM - LOS ANGELES SHERIFF. Markham is a bailiff for the PRESIDING JUDGES who operate the LOS ANGELES SUPERIOR COURT JUDGES ASSOCIATION SCHEME.
Markham is an ARMED public servant who takes orders from a corporation that was an association. The association that I described - has gone further underground and has changed its identity by switching the FEIN number for the COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES to another FEIN to hide all the money laundering and bribery and extortion schemes. MARKHAM received orders that he obeyed. The orders were to use his armed force to prohibit me from seeing the corporation's 990 forms, their 1024 and their letter of determination. These are violations of the UNITED STATES TAX CODE at TITLE 26 SECTION 6104 (e) et seq. The COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT also guards the "new" corporation - the LOS ANGELES SUPERIOR COURT JUDGES ASSOCIATION. The conspirators lied to the STATE FRANCHISE TAX BOARD and claimed they are brand spanking new. In their 3500 hundred form to the state - the "new" corporation hid all of the money laundered by SHERIFF HENRY STEWART and his conspirators. CLARENCE MARKHAM attempted to force me to not see the records of the conspiracy.
CONCLUSION: My family and myself have been robbed of our money and our rights by a conspiracy that has operated since 1962. In 1962 a JUDGE NAMED ROGER ALTON PFAFF and his cohort - MEYER ELKIN. The association was called the CONFERENCE OF CONCILIATION COURTS. This association routed money through the LOS ANGELES COUNTY CONCILIATION COURT -111 North Hill Street, Los Angeles California, 90012, ROOM 241. In 1969 - the association incorporated and has NEVER PAID taxes. Assuming they used EIN 95-6000927 - then duping the FEDERAL GOVERNMENT was easy. In 1979 the corporation was suspended. There is no record that they surrendered their bank account or the EIN. In California - the organization filed as a CIVIC LEAGUE - Revenue and Tax Code 23701g. A CONCILIATION COURT is NOT A CIVIC LEAGUE. The exemption certificate was mailed to a lawyer named Michael Aaronson at P.O. Box 1055, San Carlos California 94070. The STATE 3500 papers states the organization was to improve marriage counseling. However, conciliation court is a STATUTORILY mandated function of the COURT - not a private corporation for lying and thieving judges and their court staff. The income was alleged to be derived from dues and contributions. In reality, the funds came from laundering legal education money through the COURT CONCILIATION DEPARTMENT through the FINANCE DEPARTMENT.
In an incredible BREACH - a Judge from Detroit Michigan was listed as the Second Vice President His name is Victor J. Baum. The corporation number is 576876. I have no record of what EIN they used.
In 1981 - I presume their bank account was still open and they created a new identity called the Association of Family Conciliation Courts. This time - Margaret Little - FAMILY COURT SERVICES for LOS ANGELES, and a Colorado individual named Jessica Pearson orchestrated yet another version of the LOS ANGELES COUNTY COURTHOUSE SCHEME. Pearson borrowed the EIN of the WISCONSIN AFCC and claimed her office was in Colorado as an ILLINOIS corporation. The LOS ANGELES COUNTY COURTHOUSE became PEARSON'S and Dr MARGARET LITTLE'S California - FOREIGN - CORPORATION.
In 1991 and 1992 - the LOS ANGELES COUNTY BAR ASSOCIATION - under trustee JOHN J. COLLINS - who is now the COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES' hired gun - laundered $6,750 under false names called FAMILY COURT SERVICES and FAMILY COURT SERVICES SPECIAL FUND. The county conducted a phony report and used FREDERICK BENNETT to falsify information. Then McCauley backed PENTONEY and SCHONBACH of the court. John A Clarke of the court was forewarned I would sue. Then the judges were allowed to steal records with the help of Collins - now governor of the STATE BAR
These schemes - controlled in part by the COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES are unconscionable and represent a criminal underground that has destroyed the justice system here and abroad. It is time for the COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES to confess and give up. SINCE I DO NOT EXPECT HONOR among thieves, I expect to get this tort claim denied to protect the COUNTY'S unholy alliance. Come on surprise me and clear yourselves. Even Clinton is capable of saying he was sorry. The COUNTY can do at least that if not - the COUNTY IS A CROOK.
I swear under penalty of perjury by the laws of the State of California that the foregoing is true except that which is based on information and belief - and I also believe that to be true. I would like the county to sign under oath that my statements are true.
Marvin Bryer 9-10-98
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