Unit 1012 Cover Photo

Unit 1012 Cover Photo

Friday, October 30, 2015

UNIT 1012 AWARDS THE RAYNER GODDARD ACT OF COURAGE TO THE THREE MUSKETEERS OF CALIFORNIA



            Unit 1012 awards the Rayner Goddard Act of Courage Award to a trio of former California Governors, where we nickname them The Three Musketeers, spoke out against Proposition 34 and encouraged the voters to preserve the death penalty.

            Unit 1012 respects them for upholding the death penalty law and not giving into the Abolitionist. We, the comrades of Unit 1012, do not want leaders in the state to support the death penalty for political gain but for justice and protection in the state.

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjYQPrp3GPC23ZhDb_KVT6aH7y_CBcGa3AJWvP0A62gaPc-TIXqb_Uq5C-hmi_8BTYlX3SrJQglWPVeQ0lTYoREBIiXOnEJae6yVTHPL0PDCA10i7jFbe3oYIeeI260AVWhi11VAz37MIa-/s400/NoTo34+Part+3.jpg
Pete Wilson, George Deukmejian and Gray Davis



KERRY NICOL WANTS THE DEATH PENALTY FOR HER DAUGHTER’S KILLER

Kerry Nicol



"Today, as this case has come to an end, we would like to say justice has been done but we are afraid that while five young lives have been cruelly ended, the person responsible will be kept warm, nourished and protected. In no way has justice been done. These crimes deserve the ultimate punishment and that can only mean one thing. Where a daughter and the other victims were given no human rights by the monster, his will be guarded by the establishment at great cost to the taxpayers of this country and emotionally to the bereaved families. The public must insist that this government look at returning the death penalty for cases such as this, otherwise many more families will go through the same suffering that we have had to endure."

“I want my daughter’s killer to go the same way as she did. If he was dead I wouldn’t have to sit here, thinking about his smirking face, him eating his dinner and watching TV – things my daughter will never do again. You always get do-gooders who say you can’t hang them. Why do they still want these people to live?”

AUTHOR: Kerry Nicol, the mother of Tania Nicol, aged 19, from Ipswich, the first of the victims to be reported missing, disappeared on 30 October and was reported missing by her mother 48 hours later. Her body was discovered on 8 December near Copdock Mill in a river by police divers; there was no evidence of sexual assault and a post mortem could not establish a definite cause of death. Nicol attended Chantry High School but had left home at 16 to live in a hostel, where she began to use heroin. Nicol, the youngest of the five victims, worked as a prostitute to fund her addiction to heroin and cocaine. She had originally worked in massage parlours, using the alias of Chantelle in one, but was asked to leave on suspicion that she was using drugs. Her mother was unaware she was a prostitute, and thought she had been working in a bar or a hairdressers.

LIE AND LIE TO ABOLISH THE DEATH PENALTY



            After learning about the Anthony Porter Case, We, the comrades of Unit 1012, NEVER and DO NOT support any wrongful conviction, we want the guilty to be punished. However, we know that the ACLU Demons, uses the word, ‘innocent convicted’ not because they fear convicting the innocent, but they just oppose convicting the guilty.

            On this date, October 30, 2014, Alstory Simon was freed from Prison after spending nearly 15 years behind bar after being framed by the Innocence Project. We encourage the public to never believe in those Anti-Death Penalty Activists (Pro Murderers and murder victims haters) send by Satan anymore, as they enjoy LYING AND LYING SO MUCH

Adolf Hitler on the Big Lie



Illinois Death Penalty was Abolished Based on a Lie

Posted By Daniel Greenfield On November 11, 2014 @ 9:28 am In The Point | 18 Comments

Earlier this year I wrote about the lengths that anti-death penalty activists are willing to go to fight the death penalty. That included torturing the murderers they claimed to want to protect.


In 2008, the Supreme Court ruled that lethal injection did not represent cruel and unusual punishment. The question hinged in part on the risk of pain through the procedure. In 2010, the American Board of Anesthesiologists warned it would decertify any anesthesiologist participating in the death penalty. Then the supply of sodium thiopental, the medication mentioned in the ruling, was cut off.

The goal was to raise the “substantial risk” of serious pain in lethal injections and move the Supreme Court toward outlawing or suspending the death penalty. The worse an execution went, the more likely it was that future executions would be stopped based on the risk of it happening again. By making lethal injection as messy as possible, the pro-criminal lobby was torturing killers now to save future killers.


Making the death penalty as painful as possible was one tactic that anti-death penalty activists used to try and outlaw it. Another involved straight up framing someone else for the crime.


Identified by several eye witnesses, Porter was sentenced to death for the fatal shooting of Jerry Hillard and Marilyn Green at a south side Chicago park in 1982. He was just two days from a lethal chemical injection when he was freed in February 1999 following Simon’s confession.

Then-Gov. George Ryan imposed a moratorium on the death penalty in 2000, and Illinois abolished capital punishment in 2011.


How was that confession obtained? You know those nice liberal movies portraying amoral cops as willing to do anything to frame an innocent black man?

Kind of like that except the amoral cops were really amoral liberal activists.


Protess and two of his journalism students came to Simon’s home in the 200 block of E. Wright St. in Milwaukee and told him they were working on a book about unsolved murders. According to Simon, Protess told him, “We know you did it.”

Then Simon received a visit from Ciolino and another man. They had guns and badges and claimed to be Chicago police officers. They said they knew he had killed Green and Hillard, so he better confess if he hoped to avoid the death penalty.

They showed him a video of his ex-wife, Inez Jackson, implicating him for the crime — a claim she recanted on her death bed in 2005 — and another video of a supposed witness to the crime who turned out to be an actor.

They coached Simon through a videotaped confession, promising him a light sentence and money from book and movie deals on the case. Simon, admittedly on a three-day crack cocaine bender, struggled to understand what was going on.

Perhaps worst of all, they hooked up Simon with a free lawyer to represent him, Jack Rimland, without telling him that Rimland was a friend of Ciolino and Protess and in on their plan to free Porter.

At Rimland’s urging, Simon pleaded guilty to the crime and even offered what sounded like a sincere apology to Green’s family in court.


Some conservatives decided that the Innocence Project was a good thing to be involved in. This should be a wake-up call. Like everything else, this is another social change project featuring Ends Justify the Means reasoning that included framing someone who didn’t do it just to discredit the death penalty.


We know now that the explanation was that Simon was snared in a trap set by people who wanted to end the death penalty, no matter what the cost. Once they convinced Simon it was for his own good, he was all in.


Time for us to get out and stay out of ventures like this.

OTHER LINKS:

WHAT’S WRONG WITH THE WRONGFUL CONVICTION MOVEMENT BY MARTIN PREIB

Crime Lab Report




INNOCENCE FRAUD PROJECT: