MY REPLY RE:THIS ISSUE SENT BY GOOGLE
APOLOGIZE WILLNOT BE GIVEN !!!!!!!!!!!
MR TURNER IS A KNOWN RACIST OF WHITE POWER MOVEMENT WHO HAS BEEN POSTING PEOPLES PERSONAL INFORMATION OVER THE 9 YEARS SENDING US HARRASSING EMAILS.....ALONG WITH HIS LISTENERS SENDING US EMAILS ALSO HIS LISTENERS WHO HAS BEEN HARRASSING OTHER INTERNET RADIO ONLINE SINCE THEN MR TURNER WAS ARRESTED FOR THREATENING THREE FEDERAL JUDGES AND IS OUT ON BAIL HOWVER HIS BAIL AGREEMENT IS NO INTERNET IN THE HOUSE WITH HIS FAMILY IS USING FOR THIS FAMILY OF HAL TURNER WHICH IS A VIOLATION OF HIS BAIL AGREEMENT UNDER A FEDERAL JUDGE COURT ORDER IF YOU NEED VERICATION OF IT YOU CAN CLICK THE LINK TO IT AND THERE YOU WILL SEE WHAT THE BAIL AGREEMENT IS
http://www.northjersey.com/news/crime_courts/65420582.htmlBlogger charged with threatening judges free on bail
Thursday, October 22, 2009
BY PETER J. SAMPSON
The Record
STAFF WRITER
var clickTitle = "Blogger charged with threatening judges free on bail";
var trkcid=65420582;var partnerID=515552; var _hb=1;
window.onerror=function(){clickURL=document.location.href;return true;}
if(!self.clickURL) clickURL=parent.location.href;
4 Comments #printDesc{display:none;}
Internet blogger and talk show host Harold "Hal" Turner, jailed as a danger to the community after his June arrest by the FBI, was freed on bail Wednesday pending trial on charges of threatening the lives of federal judges in Chicago.
After 119 days in federal custody, Turner, 47, of North Bergen, walked out of the Martin Luther King Jr. Federal Building and U.S. Court House in Newark shortly after 1 p.m., under strict orders to refrain from discussing his case with the media and barring him from using a computer or any other device to access the Internet.
Waving a reporter and photographer away, Turner lit up a cigar as left the court complex.
Turner, who gained notoriety for controversial statements that endeared him to white supremacists, was arrested at his home June 24 for declaring in an online posting that three federal appeals court judges "deserve to be killed" for a June 2 ruling that upheld laws banning handguns in Chicago and a nearby suburb.
Turner provided the names, work addresses, phone numbers and photos of the judges in a follow-up post the next day.
During hearings in Chicago in July, Turner's lawyers disclosed — and federal prosecutors confirmed — that Tuner had worked on and off for several years as an informant for the FBI, passing along tips about violent threats against individuals and elected officials, including President Obama.
Prosecutors downplayed his role and a grand jury indicted him July 22 on a single count of threatening "to assault and murder" the three judges in retaliation for their ruling.
In September, U.S. District Judge Donald Walter, who sits in Louisiana, approved Turner's release under strict conditions that include a prohibition on his speaking to the media, home confinement, the Internet ban and electronic monitoring,
Walter also agreed to transfer the case from Chicago, where a federal judge's mother and husband were murdered in 2005, to Brooklyn for a Nov. 30 trial. Turner was later moved to the Hudson County Jail pending the posting of a $500,000 bond.
Newark attorney Michael A. Orozco, who represents Turner, declined to comment on the case.
Orozco has argued that Turner's speech was protected by the First Amendment, but the judge denied his motions to dismiss the indictment earlier this month, noting the right to free speech is not absolute.
E-mail: sampson@northjersey.com
Internet blogger and talk show host Harold "Hal" Turner, jailed as a danger to the community after his June arrest by the FBI, was freed on bail Wednesday pending trial on charges of threatening the lives of federal judges in Chicago.
After 119 days in federal custody, Turner, 47, of North Bergen, walked out of the Martin Luther King Jr. Federal Building and U.S. Court House in Newark shortly after 1 p.m., under strict orders to refrain from discussing his case with the media and barring him from using a computer or any other device to access the Internet.
Waving a reporter and photographer away, Turner lit up a cigar as left the court complex.
Turner, who gained notoriety for controversial statements that endeared him to white supremacists, was arrested at his home June 24 for declaring in an online posting that three federal appeals court judges "deserve to be killed" for a June 2 ruling that upheld laws banning handguns in Chicago and a nearby suburb.
Turner provided the names, work addresses, phone numbers and photos of the judges in a follow-up post the next day.
During hearings in Chicago in July, Turner's lawyers disclosed — and federal prosecutors confirmed — that Tuner had worked on and off for several years as an informant for the FBI, passing along tips about violent threats against individuals and elected officials, including President Obama.
Prosecutors downplayed his role and a grand jury indicted him July 22 on a single count of threatening "to assault and murder" the three judges in retaliation for their ruling.
In September, U.S. District Judge Donald Walter, who sits in Louisiana, approved Turner's release under strict conditions that include a prohibition on his speaking to the media, home confinement, the Internet ban and electronic monitoring,
Walter also agreed to transfer the case from Chicago, where a federal judge's mother and husband were murdered in 2005, to Brooklyn for a Nov. 30 trial. Turner was later moved to the Hudson County Jail pending the posting of a $500,000 bond.
Newark attorney Michael A. Orozco, who represents Turner, declined to comment on the case.
Orozco has argued that Turner's speech was protected by the First Amendment, but the judge denied his motions to dismiss the indictment earlier this month, noting the right to free speech is not absolute.