Archive for October, 2008

Jefferson on the Current Monetary Crisis

Monday, October 13th, 2008

By Christopher Hansen:

Many American wonder what just happened to their 401Ks, and their stocks. They wonder why the cannot pay their mortgage and why the Federal Reserve Notes, they falsely believe to be dollars, are becoming more and more worth less and less. Thomas Jefferson explained, in the year of our Lord 1819, what was going to occur if the bankers were allowed to do what they have done to us.

“The system of banking we have both equally and ever reprobated. I contemplate it as a blot left in all our constitutions, which, if not covered, will end in their destruction, which is already hit by the gamblers in corruption, and is sweeping away in its progress the fortunes and morals of our citizens.” — Letter to John Taylor (28 May 1816 AD)

Interesting that Jefferson stated that these bankers would sweep away not only the fortunes of our citizens but our morals.

In the words of President George W. Bush: “MISSION ACCOMPLISHED!”

By the way, a current silver dollar minted by the U.S. mint since 1986 AD can still buy four gallon of gas and three gallons of milk.

But then no one can say we were not warned by a higher power:

Prov. 20: 10 Divers weights, and divers measures, both of them are alike abomination to the Lord.

Micah 6: 10 ¶ Are there yet the treasures of wickedness in the house of the wicked, and the scant measure that is abominable?

BABANGIDA KAKAKI, KADUNA, NIGERIA says hi.

Sunday, October 12th, 2008

Dear Mr Hansen,

Do you remember me? I am one of the International Visitors who had a meeting with you through video conference at University of Nevada, Reno, while we were at University of Les Vegas sometimes in March this year. It has been a long time. You spoke about the Independent Party, and your party’s stand on wide range of issues.

Currently, I have written a book on my US experience, which will be published in a couple of days from now. Its titled, Portraits of A Trip: A Journalist’s Glimpse of the United States of America. But I realised that, I have to put a little I can have about the Independent Party of America, which I do not know. So, I need your help.

I have entered the google search, but it has not been helpful, that is why I have to contact you.

I need a brief history of the Independent Party, its manifestoes, campaign strategies - ways to convince Americans, its mass appeal among Americans, and possibly future anticipations.

I know you have a tight and busy schedules, but I believe you will help me. In addition, below is the portion of the book about our meeting on that day.

Thanx,

BABANGIDA KAKAKI,

LEADERSHIP NEWSPAPERS,

KADUNA, NIGERIA.

+234 80 260 255 07

Then at quarter to 2:00pm on thursday, February 28, 2008, we again boarded buses to University of Nevada in Reno, where we had a video conference with Mr. Christopher Hansen, the President of Independent Party of America. He spoke very critically of the Bush administration and even the union of the United States of America itself. He criticized the foreign policy of the US since early 50s. In fact, when asked about the so-called war on terror, Hansen admitted that it was Bush administration that masterminded it against its own people and country, in order to justify perpetual war on its perceived foes according to reliable evidences. He denounced the US foreign policy that US blindly support Israel, and even some dictators around the world. Honestly, I was bewildered that, how can Department of State organized this meeting which someone who does not support the US government at all. It’s amazing to many of us. So when I asked one of our English Language Officers, (ELO), he replied that, it was democracy in action. Their people have the right to voice their opinions by First Amendment. So, I wish our political leaders would one day not only tolerate opposition, and constructive criticism, but work with them for the good of our democracy and the nation.

FEMA sources confirm coming martial law, says Wayne Madsen

Sunday, October 12th, 2008

By staxbrix,

Wayne Madsen a Washington based investigative journalist, author, columnist and former U.S. Naval Officer is reporting a document called the “C & R” document is being passed around among senior members of Congress and their staff.

Bush planning martial law

FEMA sources have told Madsen that the Bush administration is putting final touches on a plan that would initiate martial law in the event of continuing economic collapse causing massive social unrest, bank closures resulting in violence against financial institutions and another fraudulent presidential election that would result in rioting in major cities and campuses around the country.

Troops on American streets

In addition to FEMA sources, Army Corps of Engineer sources report that the assignment of the 3rd Infantry Division’s 1st Brigade to NorthCom to augment FEMA and federal law enforcement for the purpose of traffic control, crowd control, curfews, enhanced border and port security, and neighborhood patrols in the event a national emergency being declared.

America may default on it’s loans

The “C & R” document reportedly states that if the United States defaults on loans and debt underwritten from China, Japan and Russia and America unilaterally cancels the debts, America can expect a war that will have disastrous results for the United States and the world.

“Conflict” is the “C word” in the document.

Washington fears a popular Revolution

The other possibility discussed in the document is that the federal government will be forced to drastically raise taxes in order to pay off debts to foreign countries to the point that the American people will react with a popular revolution against the government.

“Revolution” is the document’s “R” word.

Berlusconi Says Leaders May Close World’s Markets

Sunday, October 12th, 2008

By Steve Scherer

Oct. 10 (Bloomberg) — Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi said political leaders are discussing the idea of closing the world’s financial markets while they “rewrite the rules of international finance.”

“The idea of suspending the markets for the time it takes to rewrite the rules is being discussed,” Berlusconi said today after a Cabinet meeting in Naples, Italy. A solution to the financial crisis “can’t just be for one country, or even just for Europe, but global.”

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell as much 8.1 percent in early trading and pared most of those losses after Berlusconi’s remarks. The Dow was down 0.5 percent to 8540.52 at 10:10 in New York.

Group of Seven finance ministers and central bankers are meeting in Washington today, and will stay in town for the International Monetary Fund and World Bank meetings this weekend. European Union leaders may gather in Paris on Oct. 12, three days before a scheduled summit in Brussels, Berlusconi said today, while Group of Eight leaders may hold a meeting on the crisis “in coming days,” he said.

Berlusconi didn’t give any details about what kind of rules leaders were looking to change, except to say that leaders are “talking about a new Bretton Woods.”

The Bretton Woods Agreements were adopted to rebuild the international economic system after World War II in a hotel in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire. The aim of the agreements was to establish a monetary management system, initially by pegging currencies to gold. The IMF was set up later to help manage the international financial system.

To contact the reporter on this story: Steve Scherer in Rome at scherer@bloomberg.net

A Wasted Vote

Sunday, October 12th, 2008

By Chuck Baldwin

When asked why they will not vote for a third party candidate, many people will respond by saying something like, “He cannot win.” Or, “I don’t want to waste my vote.” It is true: America has not elected a third party candidate since 1860. Does that automatically mean, however, that every vote cast for one of the two major party candidates is not a wasted vote? I don’t think so.

In the first place, a wasted vote is a vote for someone you know does not represent your own beliefs and principles. A wasted vote is a vote for someone you know will not lead the country in the way it should go. A wasted vote is a vote for the “lesser of two evils.” Or, in the case of John McCain and Barack Obama, what we have is a choice between the “evil of two lessers.”

Albert Einstein is credited with saying that insanity is doing the same thing over and over again, and expecting a different result. For years now, Republicans and Democrats have been leading the country in the same basic direction: toward bigger and bigger government; more and more socialism, globalism, corporatism, and foreign interventionism; and the dismantling of constitutional liberties. Yet, voters continue to think that they are voting for “change” when they vote for a Republican or Democrat. This is truly insane!

Take a look at the recent $700 billion Wall Street bailout: both John McCain and Barack Obama endorsed and lobbied for it. Both McCain and Obama will continue to bail out these international banksters on the backs of the American taxpayers. Both McCain and Obama support giving illegal aliens amnesty and a path to citizenship. In the debate this past Tuesday night, both McCain and Obama expressed support for sending U.S. forces around the world for “peacekeeping” purposes. They also expressed support for sending combat forces against foreign countries even if those countries do not pose a threat to the United States. Neither Obama nor McCain will do anything to stem the tide of a burgeoning police state or a mushrooming New World Order. Both Obama and McCain support NAFTA and similar “free trade” deals. Neither candidate will do anything to rid America of the Federal Reserve, or work to eliminate the personal income tax, or disband the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). Both Obama and McCain support the United Nations. So, pray tell, how is a vote for either McCain or Obama not a wasted vote?

But, back to the “he cannot win” argument: to vote for John McCain is to vote for a man who cannot win. Yes, I am saying it here and now: John McCain cannot win this election. The handwriting is on the wall. The Fat Lady is singing. It is all over. Finished. John McCain cannot win.

With only three weeks before the election, Barack Obama is pulling away. McCain has already pulled his campaign out of Michigan. In other key battleground states, McCain is slipping fast. He was ahead in Missouri; now it is a toss-up or leaning to Obama. A couple of weeks ago, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Florida were all leaning towards McCain, or at least toss-up states. Now, they are all leaning to Obama. Even the longtime GOP bellwether state of Indiana is moving toward Obama. In addition, new voter registrations are at an all-time high, and few of them are registering as Republicans. In fact, the Republican Party now claims only around 25% of the electorate, and Independents are increasingly leaning toward Obama.

Ladies and gentlemen, Barack Obama is headed for an electoral landslide victory over John McCain. John McCain can no more beat Barack Obama than Bob Dole could beat Bill Clinton.

I ask, therefore, Are not conservatives and Christians who vote for John McCain guilty of the same thing that they accuse people who vote for third party candidates of doing? Are they not voting for someone who cannot win? Indeed, they are. In fact, conservatives and Christians who vote for John McCain are not only voting for a man who cannot win, they are voting for a man who does not share their own beliefs and principles. If this is not insanity, nothing is!

So, why not (for once in your life, perhaps) cast a vote purely for principle! Vote for someone who is truly pro-life. Someone who would quickly secure our nation’s borders, and end the invasion of our country by illegal aliens. Someone who would, on his first day in office, release Border Patrol agents Ramos and Compean and fire U.S. Attorney Johnny Sutton. Someone who would immediately, upon assuming office, begin leading the charge to dismantle the Federal Reserve, overturn the 16th Amendment, expunge the IRS, and return America to sound money principles. Someone who would get the US out of the UN. Someone who would stop spending billions and trillions of dollars for foreign aid. Someone who would prosecute the Wall Street bankers who defrauded the American people out of billions of dollars. Someone who would work to repeal NAFTA, CAFTA, GATT, the WTO, and stop the NAFTA superhighway. Someone who would say a resounding “No” to the New World Order. Someone who would stop using our brave men and women in uniform as global cops for the United Nations. Someone who would stop America’s global adventurism and interventionism. Someone who would steadfastly support and defend the right of the people to keep and bear arms.

Save thousands every year by switching your sales to Silver Dollars

Friday, October 10th, 2008

Scholley, Susan wrote:
>
> Dear Mr. Hansen:
>
>
>
> Let me first clarify that the Legislative Counsel Bureau (LCB) does not give legal advice to members of the public. The Research Division assists members of the public in locating information on a wide variety of topics but we are not legal authorities on the tax or currency questions you have.
>
>
>
> The e-mail you reference was responding to a question taken over the phone from a legislator’s staff person on behalf of a constituent. In preparing the response, I contacted the Nevada Department of Taxation for assistance on the question of the sales tax implications, if any, of using silver dollars to pay for goods or services. It appears that you have a copy of the e-mail response sent to the legislator’s staff person.
>
>
>
> Please note that the response is very general (given the broad nature of the question) and is in no way a legal opinion or comprehensive statement on the general topic. Moreover, I was not provided any specific facts nor was I advised that the question related to a matter in litigation. Therefore, if you need direct confirmation of a particular fact or an opinion or additional information on this topic, you are advised to contact the Department of Taxation at (775) 684-2000.
>
>
>
> Thank you.
>
> ___________________________
>
> Susan Scholley
> Chief Principal Research Analyst
> Nevada Legislative Counsel Bureau
> Telephone: (775) 684-6825
> Fax: (775) 684-6400
> sscholley@lcb.state.nv.us
>
> From: Christopher Hansen [mailto:christopher@ubernet.net]
> Sent: Friday, October 03, 2008 8:24 PM
> To: Scholley, Susan
> Subject: Silver Dollars
>
>
>
> Dear Susan Scholley,
>
> I am in the middle of a lawsuit that deals with the issue of how the State of Nevada handles silver dollars v Federal Reserve Notes.
>
> I do not trust email that have been forwarded to me because they can be faked. I would like you to send me an email that states:
>
> Assuming that a transaction is taxable under Nevada law (e.g., purchase of an item), the Department advises that a silver dollar is considered the same as a dollar and would not be treated differently than payment by a one dollar bill.
>
> Thank you. I would not want to include that statement if you had not stated it so I wanted to be sure you actually wrote it.
>
> One other question I hope you can answer. Will a silver dollar be treated specifically the same as a “one dollar” Federal Reserve Note. I ask because a United States note (a one dollar bill) is different, according to the United States Treasury Website, than a Federal Reserve Note.
>
> Thank you in advance for the conformation and answer.
>
> Christopher Hansen
>
>
> Dear Michelle:
>
> I checked with the Department of Taxation on the question of whether payment in silver dollars affects the potential State sales or use tax liability of the person receiving such payment.
>
> Your question (I think) asked about payment for services with silver dollars and I should point out that Nevada does NOT impose sales or use taxes on services. But, assuming that a transaction is taxable under Nevada law (e.g., purchase of an item), the Department advises that a silver dollar is considered the same as a dollar and would not be treated differently than payment by a one dollar bill.
>
> Of course the wisdom of using silver dollars to purchase items is questionable since the coin would likely be worth more than a dollar to a coin dealer.
>
> Please note that this response is in the context of State sales and use taxes and does not address any federal income tax issues. For answers to questions relating to federal income tax liability, the constituent should be directed to the IRS or www.irs.gov for assistance.
>
> I hope that is helpful. I am out of the office next week but will return Oct. 7th so if this answer leads to more questions, please do not hesitate to contact me at (775) 684-6484 or via e-mail. If you need more immediate assistance, please call (775) 684-6825.
>
> ___________________________
>
> Susan Scholley
> Chief Principal Research Analyst
> Nevada Legislative Counsel Bureau
> Telephone: (775) 684-6825
> Fax: (775) 684-6400
> sscholley@lcb.state.nv.us

BAILOUT IS FUTILE AS AMERICA CRUMBLES

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

By Paul Craig Roberts

America has become a pretty discouraging place. Americans, for the most part, will never know what happened to them, because they no longer have a free and responsible press. They have Big Brother’s press. For example, on September 28, 2008, a New York Times editorial blamed the current financial crisis on “antiregulation disciples of the Reagan Revolution.”

What utter nonsense. Every example of deregulation that the New York Times editorial provides is located in the Clinton Administration and the George W. Bush administration. I was a member of the Reagan administration. We most certainly did not deregulate the financial system.

The repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act, which separated commercial from investment banking, was the achievement of the Democratic Clinton Administration. It happened in 1999, over a decade after Reagan left office.

It was in 2000 that derivatives and credit default swaps were excluded from regulation.

The greatest mistake was made in 2004, the year that Reagan died. That year the current Secretary of the Treasury, Henry M. Paulson Jr, was head of the investment bank Goldman Sachs. In the spring of 2004, the investment banks, led by Paulson, met with the Securities and Exchange Commission. At this meeting with the New Deal regulatory agency tasked with regulating the US financial system, Paulson convinced the SEC Commissioners to exempt the investment banks from maintaining reserves to cover losses on investments. The exemption granted by the SEC allowed the investment banks to leverage financial instruments beyond any bounds of prudence.

In place of time-proven standards of prudence, computer models engineered by hot shots determined acceptable risk. As one result Bear Stearns, for example, pushed its leverage ratio to 33 to 1. For every one dollar in equity, the investment bank had $33 of debt!

It was computer models that led to the failure of Long-Term Capital Management in 1998, the first systemic threat to the financial system. Why the SEC went along with Paulson and set aside capital requirements after the scare of Long-Term Capital Management is inexplicable.

The blame is headed toward SEC chairman Christopher Cox. This is more of Big Brother’s disinformation. Cox, like so many others, was a victim of a free market ideology, itself a reaction to over-regulation, that was boosted by academic economic opinion, rewarded with Nobel prizes, that the market “always knows best.”

The 20th century proves that the market is likely to know better than a central planning bureau. It was Soviet Communism that collapsed, not American capitalism. However, the market has to be protected from greed. It was greed, not the market, that was unleashed by deregulation during the Clinton and George W. Bush regimes.

I remember when the deregulation of the financial sector began. One of the first inroads was the legislation, written by bankers, to permit national branch banking. George Champion, former chairman of Chase Manhattan Bank, testified against it. In columns I argued that national branch banking would focus banks away from local business needs.

The deregulation of the financial sector was achieved by the Democratic Clinton Administration and by the current Secretary of the Treasury, Henry Paulson, with the acquiescence of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The Paulson bailout saves his firm, Goldman Sachs. The Paulson bailout transfers the troubled financial instruments that the financial sector created from the books of the financial sector to the books of the taxpayers at the US Treasury.

This is all the bailout does. It rescues the guilty.

The Paulson bailout does not address the problem, which is the defaulting home mortgages.

The defaults will continue, because the economy is sinking into recession. Homeowners are losing their jobs, and homeowners are being hit with rising mortgage payments resulting from adjustable rate mortgages and escalator interest rate clauses in their mortgages that make homeowners unable to service their debt.

Shifting the troubled assets from the financial sectors’ books to the taxpayers’ books absolves the people who caused the problem from responsibility. As the economy declines and mortgage default rates rise, the US Treasury and the American taxpayers could end up with a $700 billion loss.

Initially, the House, but not the Senate, resisted the bailout of the financial institutions, whose executives had received millions of dollars in bonuses for wrecking the US financial system. However, the people’s representatives could not withstand the specter of martial law and Great Depression with which Paulson and the Bush administration threatened them. The people’s representatives succumbed as they did during the New Deal.

The impotence of Congress traces to the Great Depression. As Theodore Lowi in his classic book, The End of Liberalism, makes clear, the New Deal stripped Congress of its law-making power and gave it to the executive agencies. Prior to the New Deal, Congress wrote the laws. After the New Deal a bill is merely an authorization for executive agencies to create the law through regulations. The Paulson bailout has further diminished the legislative branch’s power.

Since Paulson’s bailout of his firm and his financial friends does nothing to lessen the default rate on mortgages, how will the bailout play out?

If the $700 billion bailout is based on an estimate of the current amount of bad mortgages, as the recession deepens and Americans lose their jobs, the default rate will rise. The $700 billion might not suffice. The Treasury will have to go hat in hand to its foreign creditors for more loans.

As the US Treasury has not got $7, much less $700 billion, it must borrow the bailout money from foreign creditors, already overloaded with US paper. At what point do America’s foreign bankers decide that the additions to US debt exceed what can be repaid?

This question was ignored by the bailout. There were no hearings. No one consulted China, America’s principal banker, or the Japanese, or the OPEC sovereign wealth funds, or Europe.

Does the world have a blank check for America’s mistakes?

This is the same world that is faced with American demands that countries support with money and lives America’s quest for world hegemony. Europeans are dying in Afghanistan for American hegemony. Do Europeans want their banks, which hold US dollars as their reserves, to fail so that Paulson can bail out his company and his friends?

The US dollar is the world’s reserve currency. It comprises the reserves of foreign central banks. Bush’s wars and economic policies are destroying the basis of the US dollar as reserve currency. The day the dollar loses its reserve currency role, the US government cannot pay its bills in its own currency. The result will be a dramatic reduction in US living standards.

Currently Treasuries are boosted by the habitual “flight to quality,” but as Treasury debt deepens, will investors still see quality? At what point do America’s foreign creditors cease to lend? That is the point at which American power ends. It might be close at hand.

The Paulson bailout is predicated on cleaning up financial institutions’ balance sheets and restoring the flow of credit. The assumption is that once lending resumes, the economy will pick up.

This assumption is problematic. The expansion of consumer debt, which kept the economy going in the 21st century, has reached its limit. There are no more credit cards to max out, and no more home equity to refinance and spend. The Paulson bailout might restore trust among financial institutions and enable them to lend to one another, but it doesn’t provide a jolt to consumer demand.

Moreover, there may be more shoes to drop. Credit card debt could be the next to threaten balance sheets of financial institutions. Apparently, credit card debt has been securitized and sold as well, and not all of the debt is good. In addition, the leasing programs of the car manufacturers have turned sour. As a result of high gasoline prices and absence of growth in take-home pay, the residual values of big trucks and SUVs are less than the leasing programs estimated them to be, thus creating more financial problems. Car manufacturers are canceling their leasing programs, and this will further cut into sales.

According to statistician John Williams [ http://www.shadowstats.com/section/commentaries ] who measures inflation, unemployment, and GDP according to the methodology used prior to the Clinton regime’s corruption of these measures, the US unemployment rate is currently at 14.7 per cent and the inflation rate is 13.2 per cent. Consequently, real US GDP growth in the 21st century has been negative.

This is not a picture of an economy that a bailout of financial institution balance sheets will revive. As the Paulson bailout does not address the mortgage problem per se, defaults and foreclosures are likely to rise, thus undermining the Treasury’s estimate that 90 per cent of the mortgages backing the troubled instruments are good.

Moreover, one consequence of the ongoing financial crisis is financial concentration. It is not inconceivable that the US will end up with four giant banks: J.P. Morgan Chase, Citicorp, Bank of America, and Wachovia Wells Fargo. If defaulting credit card debt then assaults these banks’ balance sheets, who is there to take them over? Would the Treasury be able to borrow the money for another Paulson bailout?

During the Great Depression of the 1930s, the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation refinanced one million home mortgages in order to prevent foreclosures. The refinancing apparently succeeded, and HOLC returned a profit. The problem then, as now, was not “deadbeats” who wouldn’t pay their mortgages, and the HOLC refinancing did not discourage others from paying their mortgages. Market purists who claim the only solution is for housing prices to fall to prior levels overlook that rising inventories can push prices below prior levels, thus causing more distress. They also overlook the role of interest rates. If a worsening credit crisis dries up mortgage lending and pushes mortgage interest rates higher, the rise in interest rates could offset the fall in home prices, and mortgages would remain unaffordable even in a falling housing market.

Some commentators are blaming the current mortgage problem on the pressure that the US government put on banks to lend to unqualified borrowers. However, whatever breaches of prudence there may have been only affected the earnings of individual institutions. They did not threaten the financial system. The current crisis required more than bad loans. It required securitization and its leverage. It required Fed chairman Alan Greenspan’s inappropriate low interest rates, which created a real estate boom. Rapidly rising real estate prices quickly created home equity to justify 100 percent mortgages. Wall Street analysts pushed financial companies to improve their bottom lines, which they did by extreme leveraging.

An alternative to refinancing troubled mortgages would be to attempt to separate the bad mortgages from the good ones and revalue the mortgage-backed securities accordingly. If there are no further defaults, this approach would not require massive write-offs that threaten the solvency of financial institutions. However, if defaults continue, write-downs would be an ongoing enterprise.

Clearly, all Secretary Paulson thought about was getting troubled assets off the books of financial institutions.

The same reckless leadership that gave us expensive wars based on false premises has now concocted an expensive bailout that does not address the problem, which will fester and become worse.

Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal editorial page and Contributing Editor of National Review. He is coauthor of The Tyranny of Good Intentions.He can be reached at: PaulCraigRoberts@yahoo.com

How the bailout works

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

Young Chuck moved to Texas and bought a Donkey from a farmer for
$100.00. The farmer agreed to deliver the Donkey the next day.
The next day he drove up and said, ‘Sorry son, but I have some bad News the donkey died.’
Chuck replied, ‘Well, then just give me my money back.’
The farmer said, ‘Can’t do that. I went and spent it already.’
Chuck said, ‘Ok, then, just bring me the dead donkey.’
The farmer asked, ‘What ya gonna do with him?
Chuck said, ‘I’m going to raffle him off.’
The farmer said You can’t raffle off a dead donkey!’
Chuck said, ‘Sure I can Watch me. I just won’t tell anybody he’s dead.’
A month later, the farmer met up with Chuck and asked, ‘What happened with that dead donkey?’
Chuck said, ‘I raffled him off. I sold 500 tickets at two dollars a piece and made a profit of $998.00.’
The farmer said, ‘Didn’t anyone complain?’
Chuck said, ‘Just the guy who won. So I gave him his two dollars back.’
Chuck now works for the Goldman Sachs.

Secretary of State mistakenly fines Candidates

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

As published in recent newspaper articles
http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2008/oct/02/if-they-cant-get-right-how-will-they-do-officeolit/
and http://www.nevadaappeal.com/article/20081002/NEWS/810019964/-1/rss01 the Secretary of State has assessed fines to 30 Nevada candidates for failure to submit campaign finance reports by the August 5th deadline.

Many candidates are expressing outrage at the fines, claiming they filed the reports on time. A quick search of the Secretary of State’s website http://sos.state.nv.us/SOSCandidateServices/AnonymousAccess/ReportSearch/ReportSearch.aspx confirms this. The website shows scanned copies of the filing reports clearly received and date stamped by the Secretary of State by the due date. Among those wrongly fined were Assembly District Candidates Ryan Fitzgibbons, Don Woolbright, and Francis Allen.

Ryan Fitzgibbons said: “I was furious when I received the fine. $5,000 is a lot of money. Fortunately I kept the certified mail receipt showing I filed prior to the deadline. But what was my surprise to find out that the Secretary of State, the very organization levying the fine, had a scanned copy of my on time report posted on their website!”

Fitzgibbons, Candidate for Assembly District 17 stated: “This is frightening. The very people responsible for running a fair election don’t have the competence to check their own website before issuing large fines? I eventually received an apology letter from the Secretary of State rescinding the fine, but the damage is already done. They dragged a lot of honest candidates’ names through the mud with this debacle. Whose going to vote for someone they think neglected their campaign reporting?”

Amero information

Tuesday, October 7th, 2008