TALKING: The 40 Year Civil Rights Case Against LA City and County (Part 2)

(murphy directory)

Please view “The 40-Year Civil Rights Case Against Los Angeles (Part 1).”

The intent of this writing is twofold:

1. First,
The living, “Exhibit-A”

As a classic whistle-blow, corpus delicti is a body of evidence that reveals the “behind the scenes”, invisible to public scrutiny, reasons for LAHSA’s financial corruption failure, including other Los Angeles City & County (LAC&C) homelessness resolution and social services entities.

  • The public eye did not scrutinize certain “hidden” elements within the social services systems.
  • Not necessarily deliberately, these “roots” were invisible primarily because the busy residents of LAC&C didn’t supervise their public servants or scrutinize the use of their tax dollars.
  • Unfortunately, We the People of LAC&C failed to recognize the natural tendency of unsupervised human nature to go corrupt, particularly regarding the intoxicating power of public and private positions with large sums of money.
  • Nonetheless, individuals must be federally investigated and prosecuted, and the flawed systems that support them, which have been proven to be failed instruments in this matter, must be systematically replaced with effective ones.
  • Various ethno-racial biases, as well as socio-economic status classism, and partisan politics.
  • Poignantly, LAC&C and every urban-suburban center throughout the country are Democratic Party cities.
    (but where the Republicans?)
  • Yet, since the 1984 Olympics “sweeps” of homeless persons, despite billions of unaccounted for tax dollars spent, homelessness is far more numerically worse (excluding illegal alien occupiers) and complex in 2005.

2.  Second,
The Local Government Resolutions Summon The US President To Implement

The comprehensive, strategic national homelessness resolution plan that was presented initially in 1985, and particularly since the 1999 LA County Board of Supervisors, accompanied by two City Council, one being LA, and the other Santa Monica, of which was constructed the same year, JSAP – Join Statement and Action Plan (of the Law Enforcment Working Group).

The question is, as these government bodies legislate these non-binding but guiding Resolutions, why weren’t they carried out as demanded by the then-US President William “Bill” J. Clinton?  This must be investigated.

Please see “Black Homelessness” is a federal Civil Rights violation and must be the first and foremost domestic matter, even before that which is foreign or international.

This is particularly poignant in the “Torchlight” of the soon-arriving 2028 Olympics.

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