On Thu, 13 Nov 2008 12:27:32 GMT, " krp" <krp34@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>
>"Greegor" <Greegor47@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
>news:871ea208-81d9-46b4-9037-5ad67b3763bb@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> DS > CPS has qualified immunity.
>>
>> Do you think that will work when they
>> supervised a starving emaciated kid
>> almost to death over a five year span of time?
>
>
>The trouble is Greg, that Danny is SIMPLISTICALLY correct. All
government
>actors DO have some limited immunity. You can't sue them for lying Greg,
>because the President, the cabinet and ALL of Congress would be doing
life
>terms.
Since when does a civil suit result in jail/prison time?
No wonder no one hires you as a part of their defense team.
>What DANNY doesn't say (either because of ignorance or us USUAL
>deceit) is that this immunity can be pierced. Any time a state actor does
>something outside their chartered duties, they are acting "ultra vires"
>outside the scope of their legitimate authority, and can be in violation
of
>a citizen's civil rights.
>
>To immunize against Danny and Ken Wills typical
BULL****..................
You're the one who is claiming a civil suit would result in a life
sentence.
>
>http://dictionary.law.com/default2.asp?selected=2181&bold=%7C%7C%7C%7C
>
>ultra vires
>(uhl-trah veye-rehz) adj. Latin for "beyond powers," in the law of
>cor****ations, referring to acts of a cor****ation and/or its officers
outside
>the powers and/or authority allowed a cor****ation by law. Example:
Directors
>of Highfliers, Inc. operate a small bank for its employees and friends,
>which cor****ate law does not permit without a bank charter, or sells
shares
>of stock to the public before a permit is issued.
>
>(also applies to state actors) But I am willing to BET Kent Wills will
claim
>it does NOT! Any takers?
>
>http://www.duhaime.org/LegalDictionary/U/Ultravires.aspx
>
>Without authority. An act which is beyond the powers or authority of the
>person or organization which took it.
>
>Latin for without authority.
>
>An decision which is beyond the powers or authority of the person or
>organization which took it.
>
>When a decision is thought to be ultra vires, the typical remedy is to
get a
>higher level judicial body, such as a Court, to *****s and rule on it.
>
>If the decision has already been made, the remedy is certiorari.
It goes straight to SCOTUS?
>If the
>decision is anticipated, the remedy is prohibition.
>
Me:
>> Outside of your drunken stu****, and the mental illness you have
>> admitted it caused, I'm not a justice.
Kenneth Robert Pangborn:
>NO **** SHERLOCK!
Kenneth Robert Pangborn, admitting he's an alcoholic.
See Message-ID: <kjsf449973e8lmqj9q0rct2c42m546jukb@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>


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