Week 22 - Update on the Lawsuit by Dr Len Ber.
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Should DOJ Attorneys report the crimes of the FBI?
The crime-fraud exception to Attorney-Client Privilege.
U.S. v. Zolin, 491 U.S. 554, 562-63 (1989)
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There is no attorney-client privilege…
when the services of the lawyer were sought or obtained to enable or aid anyone to commit or plan to commit what the client knew was a crime or fraud.
DOJ Attorneys are aware that the FBI is placing non-terrorists on a terrorist list, and DOJ is obligated to report this on-going crime. This is a violation of Federal law and the U.S. Constitution. The DOJ receives a daily copy of the Terrorist Screening Database (TSDB) distributed from the FBI. It is not hidden from the DOJ.
The DOJ already knows that our Plaintiff's names appear on the TSDB.
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When the crime-fraud exception applies, the attorney can be subpoenaed and must disclose the information. Also, the attorney must take it upon themselves to report the information, because it is required under the procedural rules of the court, and under the ethics rules of the Bar Association.
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The crime-fraud exception applies to ongoing and future crimes, such as the ongoing crimes against Targeted Individuals. By now, the DOJ is aware of the FBI and DHS crimes. So why are they not reporting it?
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By hiding the FBI crimes, the DOJ is committing a crime. Their attorneys can be sanctioned, and lose their license to practice law.
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1. Federal law requires the DOJ to report these crimes.
2. Court procedures require the DOJ to report these crimes.
3. The Bar Association requires the DOJ to report these crimes.
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So why is the DOJ not reporting it?
Bravo! Well said. DOJ is not reporting because it's also perpetrator of this crime
Thank you. Keep up the great work !