Bob Zeidman, A Quiet Attack on American Principles Is Going Unnoticed

Bob Zeidman

An underreported result of the trial of police officer Derek Chauvin is upending American ideals of justice

[Editor’s note: Complementing Bob Zeidman’s account of attacks on expert witnesses because others don’t like their testimony was the Summary Judgment Oral Hearing in Pozner v. Fetzer, during which the Judge simply set aside the reports of two forensic document examiners that all four of the death certificates I had introduced into evidence were fake and then ruling that I had defamed the Plaintiff on the ground that I had published that one of them–which had no file number, no state certification, and no town certification–was fake. The miscarriages of justice in state and federal courts appear boundless. For how they staged the death of George Floyd, see “Deception Galore: Hate Crimes and More” (below) and also available at False Flags and Conspiracies Conference 2020 for download.]

The sanctity of American justice is predicated on the right to a fair trial. Trial by jury was one of the most important American principles at its founding, guaranteed in the body of the Constitution in Article III, Section 2, and in the Sixth Amendment. It was instituted as a protection of individuals against abuses by the government.

Earlier this year, police officer Derek Chauvin was convicted of the murder of George Floyd. Chauvin’s attorneys had hired highly experienced and respected retired forensic pathologist Dr. David Fowler as an expert witness. Fowler testified that Floyd died of “a sudden cardiac arrhythmia due to his [underlying] heart disease … during his restraint and subdual by the police” and not because of lack of oxygen. Despite Fowler’s testimony, the jury convicted Chauvin of murder.

Many trials end in decisions that seem wrong, and you may or may not agree with the conviction of Chauvin. But whether we agree with any particular decision or not, the American system of justice requires us to abide by it. Otherwise, the system falls apart.

The whittling away of the American justice system in this instance is not the government’s attempt to change a jury’s verdict; the government got the conviction that it wanted. In a dangerous precedent, the government is now attempting to ensure that future cases are more likely to result in the verdict it wants by making it clear that witnesses with whom it disagrees will be punished, ostracized, and have their careers destroyed.

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