Theft by Court: Inglewood and Culver City Municipal Courts: Enforce Black Codes
Graduation from High School was a feat achieved by Carl that many inner-city youths can only imagine. At his graduation party Carl received a Nissan/Sentra from his Dad, the neatest gift ever. It is ironic that a gift offering untold pleasures can provide Carl a crash-course in how miserable life can become when his path crosses that of a few misguided officials after a minor fender bender.
For the first time since the Emancipation Proclamation, publication by a black of the book titled Theft by Court holds other Americans accountable to the rule of law where an inner city youth has been violated.
It is shameful that far too many elected officials, especially those who hold office in black America-the freest nation on earth, place very little or no significance in the Constitution and laws when citizens over whom they exercise jurisdiction are violated. The greatest deterrent to the malaise that exists in the inner-city (code word for black) is respect for, execution and enforcement of the Constitution and its laws.
Esther M. Lofton was presented documents proving that institutions of the American people evinced a design, with impunity, to reduce an inner-city youth legally, financially and politically. It would be unconscionable for her not to make this known to the American people for this is not an isolated instance of official wrongdoing. Inner city residents, including herself, lack the representation that protects them from capricious and arbitrary acts, especially from government. Esther lives in the city of Los Angeles with her eldest son, a 30-year employee with the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP), now retired minus all retirement benefits, also in the absence of cause.