1996-06-13 - Republican Revolution?

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From: lroth@ios.com (by way of Duncan Frissell <frissell@panix.com>)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 40627f984a227a780f9ce4a563b0248419d0495fc6541a684ac54f442fb262f4
Message ID: <2.2.32.19960612184410.0076ea34@popserver.panix.com>
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UTC Datetime: 1996-06-13 02:32:23 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 13 Jun 1996 10:32:23 +0800

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From: lroth@ios.com (by way of Duncan Frissell <frissell@panix.com>)
Date: Thu, 13 Jun 1996 10:32:23 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Republican Revolution?
Message-ID: <2.2.32.19960612184410.0076ea34@popserver.panix.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


Now that Internet Kaos!!! has been legalized, I guess it's OK to post this.

To paraphrase Lazarus Long "Avoid strong drink.  It might make you shoot at
tax collectors outside of New York State."  Love those soft and squishy judges.

>From the NY Post, Wednesday, June 12, 1996.

CONVICTION OF TAX MAN'S KILLER GETS TOSSED OUT

By Gregg Birnbaum
Post Correspondent

ALBANY --- The state's top court yesterday threw out the murder conviction
of a Republica Party activist who gunned down the first IRS agent to die in
the line of duty.

The court of Appeals overturned the 1983 conviction of James Bradley, who
asked IRS collection agent Michael Dillon, "Mike are you prepared to meet
your maker?" --- then fired an M-1 rifle at him twice.

Bradley then knelt down to take Dillon's pulse and shot him a third time
before driving to a friend's house to present him with the weapon as a
"souvenir."

Dillon 61, had gone to Bradley's house near Buffalo in September 1983 to
collect the last $332 of a $2,000 lien imposed by the IRS.

When Bradley wouldn't pay up right away, Dillon threatened to seize one of
his cars.  Bradley got his rifle, returned to the kitchen, where Dillon was
sitting and started firing.

In a unanimous unsigned ruling, the Court of Appeals said the trial judge
undermined Bradley's insanity defense by improperly allowing the jury to
also consider a first-degree manslaughter conviction.

That's the charge on which Bradley was convicted.  He was acquitted of
second-degree murder.

At his sentencing, Bradley predicted Dillon wouldn't be the last IRS agent
to die at the hands of an irate taxpayer and said, "I was just helping
President Bonzo get government off our backs," an apparent reference to
then-President Reagan.

The Erie County district attorney said he expected to resubmit the case to a
grand jury.  If Bradley is tried again, he will face a first-degree
manslaughter charge or lesser, his lawyer said.

Before the shooting, Bradley, 76, had long been known as a Republican
campaign worker in the Buffalo area.  He is now in the Mohawk Correctional
Facility in Rome and is said to be ill.

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