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MULTI-CIRCUIT ORIGINAL PROCEEDING 15-XXXX-OP IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT 333 Constitution Ave. NW Washington DC 20001 15-5251-OP 15-5218 USDC-DCD 15-cv-1036-RJL & IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT 600 S. Maestri Place New Orleans, LA 70130-3408 15-XXXX-OP 15-40238 USDC-DCD 14-cv-254-ASH IN RE: NATURAL BORN CITIZEN PARTY NATIONAL COMMITTEE, ET AL. Originating cases: USCA-DCC 15-5218, USDC-DCD 15-cv-1036-RJL The 2016 presidential election revolves around the seminal issue of an ineligible nomination and misprision of treason as chief executive and as the unconstitutionally nominated executive agency heads under color of law and so called executive agency actions or orders facilitating the mass amnesty of illegal aliens and their non-14" amendment “anchor babies” so as to dilute the constitutional redistricting census and ultimate votes of natural born citizens of the Republic of the United States. The Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee, et al., seeks an immediate mandamus creating multi-circuit multi-state jurisdiction based at the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit for all underlying originating cases and all related constitutional cases listed in the docket of the originating cases Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee et al v FEC et al USDC-DCD 15-cv-1036 RIL. In addition, this mandamus seeks US Treasury Department Secret Service as well as the Department of Defense as necessary party agencies to be added to the multi- circuit/ multi-state USCA-DCC and USCA-5C mandamus(s). And further, a mandamus including an immediate consolidation before judgment with the pending SCOTUS certiorari amnesty matter: “Arpaio v Obama” USCA DCC 14- 5325. Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee Party Rules NBCP-NC “Party Vetters” must be sworn public officers themselves having currently affirmed or sworn an oath of office in loyalty to the US constitution including as well as the various state constitutions. (e.g. NBCP-NC National Notary Public Project “Rabenda Rule”) NBCP-NC “candidate-electors” must themselves have documentation proving both their birth parents themselves being natural born US citizens and NBCP-NC Candidate- Electors being otherwise NBC eligible to be elected CINC- POTUS (No person except a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President; neither shall any Person be eligible to that Office who shall not have attained to the Age of thirty-five Years, and been fourteen Years a Resident within the United States.) Section 1 of Article Two of the United States Constitution sets forth the eligibility requirements for serving as president of the United States, under clause 5: NBCP-NC 2016 “Party Members” NBCP-NC 2016 “party voters” are that class of the general class of documented US citizens that will elect NBCP-NC 2016 presidential electors. Party Voters must be vetted by NBCP-NC electors as having both birth parents were US citizens at NBCP-NC member's birth and otherwise including being of current federal election voting age before date of CINC-POTUS General Election November 2016. NBCP-NC Party 2016 CINC-POTUS Candidates must be vetted by elected NBCP-NC Electors as being otherwise natural born citizens eligible to be elected CINC-POTUS. (e.g. “Trump Rule”) Errata signed Saturday, September 21, 2015 gee ESE Si, Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee Harold William Van Allen Co-Chairperson, Candidate-Elector 2016 POTUS/CINC PO Box 312 (351 North Road) Hurley, NY 12443 845 389 4366 845 331 1925 Fax Certification of electronic service US-DOJ / US-OAG USA/ NYSOAG Counsels for: Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee et al. v DOS, et al. craig.lawrence@usdoj.gov; Larry Klayman, Esq leklayman@gmail.com Donald J. Trump info@donaldtrump.com; Fairlene G Rabenda FRabenda@verizon.net: ‘RABCEL@state.pa.us'; 'director@dcboee.org'; ‘angie.rogers@sos.la.gov'; 'christopherT@michigan.gov'; ‘corporations@dos.ny.gov'; lections@DOS.MyFlorida.com'; ‘elaine.manlove@state.de.us'; ‘election@ohiosecretaryofstate.gov'; ‘Elections@sos.ca.gov’; ‘elections@sos.state.co.us'; ‘elections@alaska.gov'; ‘elections@sec.state.ma.us'; ‘elections@state.sd.us'; 'elections@elections.sc.gov'; ‘elections@hawaii.gov'; ‘elections.sos@state.or.us'; ‘feedback@sos.nj.gov'; ‘gary.poser@state.mn.us'; ‘info@elections.ok.gov'; 'info@elections.ny.gov'; ‘info.sbe@maryland.gov'; '‘john.merrill@sos.alabama.gov'; kari.fresquez@state.nm.us'; 'kim.strach@ncsbe.gov'; im.turner@sos.ms.gov'; ‘Ikimmet@mt.gov'; 'nvelect@sos.nv.gov'; ‘rob.hammons@sos.arkansas.gov'; 'secretaryofstate@nebraska.gov'; 'SEEC@ct.gov'; 'sos@sos.ga.gov'; 'sosadmin@azsos.gov'; ‘soselect@nd.gov'; 'SOSmain@sos.mo.gov' Clerks of Court and 50 state election officers and counsels for party states and amici as well as State of Texas et al v USA et al. defendants USDC-TXSD 14-cv-254-ASH. © related cases o USCA-DCC 14-5325, 14-5327, 15-5218, 12-5414, 10-5092, 10-5082 © USDC-DCD 14-cv-995-SH, 14-cv-1966-RIL, 08-cv-2234, 09-1295 © USDC-TXSD (Brownsville) 14-cv-254-ASH o USCA-Sth Circuit 15-40238 o NYSUCS Appellate Div. 2"! Dept. 14-10489 © NYSUCS Kings Civil Supreme 08-29642, 12-21948 o NYSUCS Albany Civil Supreme 12-1787, 12-1433 Harold Van Allen — et From: Sobonya, David P. (RMD) (FBI) Sent: ‘Thursday, September 17, 2015 731 AM To: Harold Van Allen Subject: RE: USCA DCC 15-5251 In re Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee FBI investigation of Stanley Ann Dunham and Lee Harvey Oswald travel destroyed passport records 1957-1963, Dear Mr. Van Allen, ‘The FBI has received your Freedom of Information Act/Privacy (FOIPA) request and it will be forwarded to Initial Processing for review. Your request will be processed under the provisions of FOIPA and a response will be mailed to you at a later date. Requests for fee waivers and expedited processing will be addressed once your request has been assigned an FOIPA request number. You will receive written notification of the FBI's decision. Information regarding the Freedom of Information ActPrivacy is available at htto://www.fbi.cov/, htto:/mww.fbi,gov/foia/ or http:/wwwjustice.qovioip. If you require additional assistance please contact the Public Information Officer. Thank you, David P. Sobonya Public Information Officer/GIS Recordi/information Dissemination Section (RIDS) FEI-Records Management Division 470 Marcel Drive, Winchester, VA 22602-4843 PIO: (540) 868-4583 Direct: (S40) 868-4286 Fax: (540) 868-4391/4997 Sent: Wednesday, September 16, 2015 4:24 PM To: FOIPARequest Subject: USCA DCC 15-5251 In re Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee FBI investigation of Stanley Ann Dunham and Lee Harvey Oswald travel destroyed passport records 1957-1963 Importance: High Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee et al v FEC et al USDC DCD 15-1036 Under FOIA please provide all FBI investigation documentation including database metadata regarding the destruction of D0S/CIA/INS/ travel and passport records from years 1957 - 1963.—specifically for Lee Harvey Oswald and Stanley Ann(e) Dunham and aka Barry Soetoro aka Barack Obama Jr http://www sodahead.com/united-states/who-is-barty-soetoro/question-1678573/ http://Awww.washingtontimes.com/news/2015/sep/16/cia-confirmed-oswald-contacted-cubans-soviets-befo, Ish Harold William Van Allen 351 North Road Hurley, NY 12443, hvanallen@hvc.rr.com 8453894366 General Docket United States Court of Appeals for District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals Docket #: 15-5218 Docketed: 07/31/2015 Nature of Suit: 2895 Freedom of Information Act of 1974 Natural Born Citizen Party, et al v. FEC, et al Appeal From: United States District Court for the District of Columbia Fee Status: Fee Paid Case Type Information: 4) Civil US 2) United States x Originating Court Information: District: 0090-1 : 1:15-cv-01036-RJL Lead: 1:15-cv-01036-RJL Motions Judge: Richard J. Leon, U.S. District Judge Date 06/30/2015, Date OrderiJudgment: Date NOA Fil 07/22/2015 07/30/2015 Prior Cases: None Current Gases: None Not available Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee Plaintiff - Appellant Harold W. Van Allen Harold W. Van Allen Plaintiff - Appeliant Direct 845-389-4366 Email: hvanallen@hve.r.com INTC Pro Se} Firm, 845-389-4366 351 North Road Hurley, NY 12443 Federal Election Commission R. Craig Lawrence Defendant - Appellee Email craig lawrence @usdoj.gov INTC Gvt US Attorey} US. Attorney's Office (USA) Gil Division Fim: 202-252-2500 555 4th Street, NW Washington, DC 20530 Federal Bureau of Investigation R. Craig Lawrence ‘Defendant - Appellee INTC Gut US Attomey] {see above) United States Department of State R. Craig Lawrence Defendant - Appellee [NTC Gvt US Attomey] (see above) Central intelligence Agency R. Craig Lawrence Defendant - Appellee INTC Gvt US Attomey] (see above) Barack Hussein Obama R. Craig Lawrence Defendant - Appellee INTC Gut US Attorney] (see above) US Copyright Office R. Craig Lawrence Defendant - Appellee INTC Gvt US Attorney] (see above) New York State Board of Elections Defendant - Appellee Natural Born Gitizen Party National Committee; Harold W. Van Allen, Plaintis - Appellants v. Federal Election Commission; Federal Bureau of Investigation; United States Department of State; Central Intelligence ‘Agency; Barack Hussein Obama; US Copyright Office; New York State Board of Elections, Defendants - Appellees 07/31/2018 US CIVIL CASE docketed. [15-5218] 07/31/2015 = NOTICE OF APPEAL filed [1566058] by Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee 689,301 Mand Harold W. Van Allen seeking review of a decision by the U.S. District Court in 1:15-cv- (01036-RJL. Assigned USCA Case Number [15-5218] 08/06/2015 = CLERK'S ORDER filed [1566491] setting briefing schedule: APPELLANT Brief due 2p9.443K8 10/05/2015. APPENDIX due 10/05/2015. Failure to respond shall result in dismissal of the case for lack of prosecution. The Clerk is directed to mail this order to appellant by certified ‘mail return receipt requested and by 1st class mail, [15-5218] 08/06/2015 FIRST CLASS and CERTIFIED MAIL SENT [1566495] with return receipt requested [Receipt No.7007 0710 0004 7190 5745] of order [15664515]. Certified Mail Receipt due (09/08/2015 from Harold W. Van Allen. [15-5218] 08/18/2015 = CERTIFIED MAIL RECEIPT [1568596] RECEIVED from Harold Van Allen [signed for on 1's, 95:18KB 08/11/2015] for order [1566495-2] sent to Appellant Harold W. Van Allen [15-5218] General Docket United States Court of Appeals for District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals Docket #: 15-5251 Docketed: 09/09/2015 Inre: Natural Born Citizen, et al Appeal From: United States District Court for the District of Columbia Fee Status: Fee Paid Case Type Information: 41) Orig. Proceeding US 2) Mandamus 3) Originating Court Information: District: 0090-1 : #:15-cv-01036-RUL Motions Judge: Richard J. Leon, U.S. District Judge Panel Assignment: Not available In re: Natural Bom Citizen Party National Committee Ine - Petitioner Harold W. Van Allen Harold W. Van Allen Inre- Petitioner Direct: 845-389-4366 Email: hvanallen@hve.rr.com INTC Pro Se] Firm: 845-389-4366 351 North Road Hurley, NY 12443, R. Craig Lawrence Email: craig.lawrence@usdoj gov [COR LD NTC Gvt US Attomey] USS. Attorney's Office (USA) Civil Division Firrn: 202-252-2500 555 4th Street, NW Washington, DC 20530 In re: Natural Bor Citizen Party National Committee; Harold W. Van Allen, In re - Petitioners 09/09/2015 US CIVIL ORIGINAL PROCEEDING CASE docketed. [15-5251] og/0972015 = PETITION [1572424] filed by Petitioners Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee 7409.535M8_and Harold W. Van Allen for writ of mandamus. [Service Date: 09/10/2016 by Clerk, (CMIECF NDA] Pages: Exceeds Limits. [15-5251] THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT 333 Constitution Ave. NW Washington DC 20001 15-5251-OP IN RE: NATURAL BORN CITIZEN PARTY NATIONAL COMMITTEE, ET AL. Originating case: USCA-DCC 15-5218, USDC-DCD 15-cv-1036-RJL The 2016 presidential election (CINC-POTUS) revolves around the principal issue of ineligible executive action allowing amnesty of illegal aliens and their “anchor babies” so as to dilute the votes of natural born citizens of the Republic of the United States. The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, by far the least constitutionally impaired senior federal court with regards to nominations since January 2009 oath of office by an unconstitutional non-natural-born-citizen — aka “Barack Obama” the documented son of anon US citizen (i.e. “alien”). The Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee, et al., seeks an immediate mandamus transferring to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit the underlying originating case and all related constitutional cases listed in the docket of the originating case Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee et al v FEC et al USDC- DCD 15-cv-1036 RJL. And further, including an immediate consolidation before judgment with the pending SCOTUS certiorari amnesty matter: “Arpaio v Obama” USCA DCC 14-5325. Errata signed Wednesday, September 9, 2015 eS) Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee Harold William Van Allen Co-Chairperson, Candidate-Elector 2016 POTUS/CINC PO Box 312 (351 North Road) Hurley, NY 12443 845 389 4366 845 331 1925 Fax Certification of electronic service US-DOJ / US-OAG USA/ NYSOAG Counsels for: Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee et al. v DOS, et al. craig.lawrence@usdoj.gov, NYOAG.AlbanyPDF@ag.ny.gov © Clerks of Court and 50 state election officers and counsels for party states and amici as well as State of Texas et al v USA et al. defendants USDC-TXSD 14-cv-254-ASH. © related cases o USCA-DCC 14-5325, 14-5327, 15-5218, 12-5414, 10-5092, 10-5082 © USDC-DCD 14-cv-995-SH, 14-cv-1966-RIL, 08-cv-2234, 09-1295 © USDC-TXSD (Brownsville) 14-cv-254-ASH o USCA-Sth Circuit 15-40238 © NYSUCS Appellate Div. 2"¢ Dept. 14-10489 © NYSUCS Kings Civil Supreme 08-29642, 12-21948 © NYSUCS Albany Civil Supreme 12-1787, 12-1433 ‘The Washington Times: CIA confirmed Oswald contacted Cubans, Sov... http://license.ieopyright-net/user/viewFreeLse.act?fuid-MjAIMDI1Mzc= Lof2 The Washington Times September 16, 2015, CIA confirmed Oswald contacted Cubans, Soviets before assassination, memo shows By Kellan Howell ‘Three days after President John F. Kennedy was shot and killed in Dallas, U.S. intelligence officials told President Lyndon Johnson that they had confirmed that assassin Lee Harvey Oswald had recently traveled to Mexico City to visit both the Cuban and Soviet embassies, according to a half-century-old briefing memo declassified Wednesday. ‘Oswald's travel plans were revealed in an unprecedented deciassification and release by the CIA of thousands of presidential daily briefings from the 1960s, Though the memos are decades old, about one-fith of their contents was Still redacted to protect sources and methods. ‘According to the Nov. 25, 1963, briefing, Oswald - a former U.S. Marine who defected to the Soviet Union in 1959 - visited both the Cuban and Soviet embassies on Sept. 28, 1963, “He was trying, we are told, to arrange for visas so that he could travel to the USSR via Havana," the briefing reads. Oswald returned to the U.S. on October 3, according to the briefing, On Nov. 22, 1963, Oswald shot Kennedy with a sniper rifle as the president was traveling in an open-air motorcade through Dealey Piaza in Dallas He was initially arrested in the death of police officer J.D. Tippit, who was killed on a Dallas street about 45 minutes after Kennedy was shot. Oswald was later charged with the Kennedy assassination as wel, but denied shooting anyone, cai scapegoat, ‘Two days later Oswald was shot and killed by a Dallas nightclub owner, Jack Ruby. ing he was @ Fifty-two years after the events, the intelligence briefing of Nov. 22, 1963 - the day of the assassination and the first presidential inteligence briefing for Johnson as he assumed the presidency - remained a mystery. “For this day, the Checklist Staff can find no words more fitting than a verse quoted by the President to a group of ewspapermen the day he leamed of the presence of Soviet missiles in Cuba," the checklist reads. “Bullfight critics ranked in rows Crowd the enormous piaza full; But only one is there who knows And he's the man who fights the bull” The lines Kennedy cited are from a poem by bullfighter Domingo Ortega, The remainder of the checklist for Nov. 22 is empty. It is unclear whether the intelligence document was intentionally 9/20/2015 8:41 PM his case which ‘ occurred in the 1950s remains historically important. Sergeant Croswell’s son, Lieutenant Robert Croswell, currently serves in Troop C where this case took place. Kenneth Weidenborner is one of the PBA’s oldest members. | There Was A Raid | At Apalachin It took a country cop with a devotion to duty to blow the lid off the biggest crime clambake in U.S. history and put the Mafia on the run “What have we got here, Bd? his | of November 13, 1957, seemed to partner, Trooper Vincent Vasisko, asked, _ promise nothing out of the ordina motel office In the motel office, the propri k complaint,” _etor's wife dug out the bogus ch 1359, Croswell replied, matter-of-factly. and gave the details of the iné Croswell’s beat was like that. He the officers. Croswell listened sympa: S rgeant Edgar Croswell of the | came up against very little serious | thetically and made notes. A car By John M. Ross Mtustrated by Ray Houlihan t to | Reprinted fom SAGA lew York State Police whecled his | crime. Mostly he investigated domestic turned into the driveway, and Croswell ‘unmarked police car into the dri- | battles, gambling parties or motor vehi- instinctively glanced out the window. stick reway of a new motel on the outskirts | cle violations and more rarel of Apalachin, a tiny town in the placid | up on payday. But otherwise, it was countryside of south-central New York. | nice and peaceful. And this afternoon PaA TROOPER ducked out of sight behind a door. ‘The driver of the car was Joseph Barbara, Jr. and Croswell had spotted him as quickly as a bird dog picking up a scent. The Barbara family had made life in the sticks a little more interesting for a restless and inquisitive sleuth like Croswell. From the very day in 1944 when Croswell was assigned to the sub-station at nearby Vestal, N.Y., Joseph Barbara, Sr. had ‘been the sergeant's pet project. He was an extremely intriguing project, but a frustrating one, too. ‘Through relentless work over 13, years, Croswell had succeeded in pin pointing Barbara as the chief mobster of the area. A suspect in three Pennsylva- nia murders in the early ‘30s, Barbara wore a cloak of respectability as the operator of a beer distributing and soft drink bottling plant in nearby Endicott, N.Y. Croswell’s close scrutiny of the operation, however, had established the suspicion that the large consignments of ‘sugar, supposedly used for the manu- facture of soft drinks at the Barbara plant, were being detoured into the pro- duction of bootleg whiskey. In his work as a Bureau of Criminal Investigation agent for the area fanning out of Binghamton, Croswell also found Barbara's name bobbing up in almost every important case. It mattered not what crime was being investigated — gambling, extortion, murder — some- where along the line Barbara would enter the picture. But linking him with a crime and being able to charge him with it were two different matters, Bar- bara was a skilled hand at protecting himself in the clinches and he had out- foxed the law again and again. Croswell, who is described by fel- low officers as a “twenty four-hour cop,” never lost heart in his pursuit. Three times a week, often on his own time, he ‘would drive up to the $100,000 Barbara mansion on an Apalachin hillside and look the place over. If there were strange cars on the property, the sergeant would jot down the license numbers and cross-check them with his list of Barbara's known associates. 12 ‘Sometimes he would pull into the drive- | ly Boxers that roam the grounds and way and take pictures of the house — simply to needle Barbara and his family. Croswell also obtained a court order to place a wire tap on Barbara's residence and business telephones. ‘The results of this operation proved rewarding, and several Barbara hench- ‘men were taken into custody from time to time. Barbara, however, man- aged to stay in the clear and Croswell ‘was waiting patiently for him to slip. Behind the motel door, Croswell responded to Trooper Vasisko's inquisi- tive nudge. “Barbara's kid,” Croswell whispered, Young Joe Barbara announced to the motelkeeper that he wanted to reserve three double rooms for the nights of November 13 and 14, and that the bill should be charged to the Canada Dry Bottling Company of Endicott, his father’s plant. The motel owner's wife asked him to register for his guests, but young Barbara refused, explaining that his father was having a mecting of some of his Canada Dry associates and it was impossible to say who would use the motel rooms. He picked up the three keys and left. “Looks like Joe’s having a little powwow,” Croswell observed as he and Vasisko came out of hiding. “Maybe we'd better take a look at what’s hap- pening at the bottling plant.* Finishing up their business at the motel, Croswell and Vasisko headed for Barbara's plant in Endicott, across the Susquehanna River. It was after quitting time when they arrived and all was quiet. They checked the park: ing area and found no suspicious look- ing cars. After an hour of observation, they decided the plant wasn't the place they were looking for. “Let's try the house,” Croswell suggested. Tt was seven p.m. when the law. men completed the seven mile trip back to Apalachin, Barbara's rambling, fieldstone mansion sits off a lightly traveled dirt road on the highest hill in the area. It has no fence or shielding trees, and no guards except two friend: contribute some token barking when a stranger arrives, In the wide driveway to the Bar bara place, the officers spotted four expensive and well-polished cars. roswell recognized one as belonging to Patsy Turrigiano, a convicted still opera- tor of Endicott. He wrote down the license plate numbers of the other three cars and headed back to the station in ‘Vestal to check out the identification, Replies to his teletype queries indi- cated that one car was owned! by Alfred Angelicola of New Jersey, another by James LaDuca of Lewiston, N.Y., near Niagara Falls, and the third by the Buck- eye Cigarette Service of Cleveland, Ohio. It was an interesting combination. ‘With Turrigiano up there,” CCroswell pointed out, “this looks like it might be an alcohol deal. Guess we'd better let the ATU men know about it.” ‘The sergeant called Agents Arthur Ruston and Kenneth Brown of the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax Unit of the USS. Treasury Department, who had been working with Croswell on his investigation of Barbara. The agents said they would be over immediately. In the meantime, the sergeant retumed to the motel to see what was happening there. ‘The big car with the Ohio plates was parked out in front ‘The motel proprietor tok! Croswell that two men had arrived around 8:30 p.m. and had gone directly to their room, "How about taking a couple of cards down to them so they can regis- ter" Croswrell asked. “It might be inter- esting to see what they put down.” ‘A moment later, the motel owner returned, fuming. The men had refused to register, claiming, “Joe will tuke care of it in the morning.* “I'm gonna throw those bums out,” the innkeeper roared. “You'll be doing us a favor if you let them stay,” Croswell assured him. "We can keep an eye on them here." roswell now was joined by Rus- ton and Brown, and they paid another visit to the Barbara house. The same cars, with the exception of the Ohio PBATROOPER | car, were in the driveway. ‘They went back and staked out the motel, and around 11:30 p.m. LaDuca's car arrived, The officers sat tight. ‘Their cautious vigil at the Barbara place and the motel continued until two am., when both points seemed to be buttoned up for the night. Cros well went back to his bachelor quar- ters at the Vestal station and studied the situation Barbara's meetings with top gang, siers and racketeers were not new to Croswell. The country cop had hooked into an earlier conclave that not only underscored Barbara's power in the Binghamton area, but also linked him with the hierarchy of the notorious Mafia, the terrorist syndicate of crime ‘and corruption which milks Americans of more than $2,500,000,000 per year Croswell made his first break through when a speeding motorist was picked up by a New York State trooper in Binghamton in October, 1956. The driver, Carmine Galante of Brook N.Y, a fovortime graduate of Sing $ and a prime suspect in the 1943 murder of Carlo Tresca, an anti-Fascist newspa per editor, didn’t have a driver's license, In this embarrassing situation, Galante tried to pass off the license of one Joseph DiPalermo. It might have ‘worked except for one thing ~ Galante couldn't give the correct birth date on the license when the troopers ques: tioned him. Galante was arrested The alert trooper, knowing of Croswell’s painstaking study of Bar. bara’s activities and associates, thought the sergeant might be interested in this prize quarry. He called the Vestal sta- tion and Croswell came on the double. Galante had two companions with him when he was arrested. One, who identified himself as Frank Garofalo, volunteered to accompany Carmine to the station. The other traveler wisely chose to take off like a large bird Croswell's subsequent investigation turned up the reasons why. Garofalo had no criminal record, although be had long been suspected of trafficking in illegal alcohol. Croswell thought the unidentified companion very likely was Joe DiPalermo, the man whose license had been shown to the trooper. At one time associated with Charles (Lucky) Luciano, DiPalermo had been Galante’s partner in many ventures. Further checking by Croswell showed that all three men for many years had consorted with Joseph and Salvatore Profaci, who were identified by the Kefauver Committee in the 1951 hearings as “top leaders of the Mafia." Hopeful of linking these top-rank ing hoodlums with Barbara, Craswell covered all the hotels and motels in the area. At the Arlingon Hotel in Bing. hamton, he hit the jackpot. The records showed that Barbara had made reservations for five guests and that he and Garofalo, along with Louis Volpe, John Bonaventre and Joe Bonanno, all known to the police, had signed the register. There was no indication how many others had attended the meeting in Barbara's two-room suite, but it was apparent that Galante, and possibly DiPalermo, also had been there. Charged with three motor vehi law violations, Galante faced a jail term and a heavy fine. The fine didn't worry Galante's associates; that was only money. But poor Carmine sitting in the cooler nly for 30 days was something else. Machinery was put in motion immediately to keep Galante out of jail. Politicians, elected officials, lawyers and influential busi nessmen either visited or telephoned Broome County for the next few days trying to square the rap. When this strategy failed, Captain Chris Gleitmann and Sergeant Peter Policastro of the West New York, NJ. Police Department visited Croswell According to Croswell and Trooper Vasisko, Captain Gleitmann explained that Galante worked for a friend of the ‘West New York police chief. The > potel patetesisisisaats friend was ‘a fellow named Joe." And the chief wanted to keep Galanie from going to jail. Gleitmann fenced nervously for a few moments and finally, according to the sworn testimony of Croswell and Vasisko, offered Croswell a bribe of $1,000 if he would handle the necessary ‘arrangements to turn Galante loose. “If that’s not enough, I can get more,” the captain allegedly promised. Gleitmann and Policastro were invited to leave. Galante was fined $150 and served 30 days in the Broome County jail, Croswell and Vasisko filed a report of the bribe offer, which, after a delay of more than two years, resulted in the indictment of Gleitmann and Policastro along with Emest Modarelli, West New York ditector of public safety, and Police Chief Frederick Roos on bribery charges. The latter two also were charged with ignoring the New York police report of the bribe offer. At the time of the indictment, it was revealed that a direct telephone line existed between Galante’s Avco Vending Machine Company in West New York, and the West New York police headquarters. After the Galante episode, Croswrell hhad requested all hotels and motels in the area to advise him of any reserva- | tions or occupancies by Barbara, or charges to Barbara's plant account, The sergeant never heard from the innkeep- ers, although he had reason to suspect that at least one other conclave was held thereafter. On the morning of November 14, 1957, Sergeant Croswell wondered how many more pieces of his favorite Jigsaw puzzle would fall into place as a result of Joe Barbara's latest conven: tion. Would it move him any closer to the day he could take Barbara by the collar and haul him off to jail? Or ‘would the well-camouflaged opera- tions of Joe and his sinister associates simply add another tantalizing chapter to Croswell’s diary of frustration? roswell had no way of knowing that U.S. Immigration officials had a \4-karat tip from an informer in Italy m4 that a secret summit meeting of Ameri- a's gangland empire was imminent. No way of knowing that he, a country cop on a peaceful hillside, would, before the day was out, be cast in the role of dealing the dreaded Mafia the ‘most punishing blow it has suffered in almost a century of corrupt and bloody operation in the U.S. roswell started the day by calling his boss, Inspector Robert E. Denman, at Sydney, N.Y,, and telling him of the strange cars at the Barbara place. “I don't know if it will lead us to anything,” Croswell told the inspector, “but we'll continue to check it out.” Croswell, along with the ATU men, made the motel his first stop. LaDuca’s car was gone, but the Ohio car was still where it had been parked the night before. Croswell asked the motel owner's wife to check the rooms, She returned with the informa: tion that the three rooms were empty, no luggage had been left behind, and that all six beds had been slept in. The next stop was Barbara's plant in Endicott. They looked over the parked cars and cased the building. ‘The trail was cold. “Well, that means we have to go ‘over to Apalachin,* Croswell said, 12:40 p.m. Croswell turned into Arsartarss big driveway. His eyes widened as he saw nine expensive cars parked in the wide area in front of the four-car garage. The sergeant coolly _ began to copy down the license plate | numbers of each, while a young Dalma- | tian in the kennel ran at the end of the garage barked continuously. Just as Croswell completed his notations, a group of ten men appeared from behind the garage. They stopped in their tracks and peered suspiciously at Croswell. The sergeant sized them up carefully. In an instant they were joined by a few others, Then someone pushed the panic button and all of them began to yell excitedly. A few took off on the | dead run toward the house. Croswell | put his car in reverse and, as he slowly backed out, he became fully aware of | off other avenues of escape. Barbara's the magnitude of Joe Barbara's picnic. ‘Toward the rear of the huge house, Croswell saw approximately 25 more cars ~ expensive Cadillacs, Imperials and Lincolns. Behind the garage, a group of men were gathered around a big, stone barbecue pit laden with siz- ling steaks. More guests filled the ele- gant fieldstone summer house, which became a sheltered outdoor terrace when its many doors were folded into place. It had a bar, music, café tables and chairs, and a well-stocked buffet. “Wow, what a clambake!” Croswell said as he headed out of the driveway. Followed by the ATU men in their car, Croswell drove down the narrow dirt road for about a mile, angled his car to block the road, and then went into conference with the Federal agents and Trooper Vasisko, ‘Let's find out who Joe's got at his party,* Croswell said. ‘The sergeant then quickly laid his plans for stopping each car that came down from Barbara's place. Croswell had studied the land around the Bar- bara estate many times. There was only one road out, since a couple of wooden bridges had fallen and blocked cronies had to either come down the dirt road by car or try to make it on foot through an extensive wooded area to the rear of the Barbara house. Croswell put in a call on his short wave radio to Sergeant Walter C. Kennedy at the Vestal station. Kennedy arrived within five minutes, was briefed on the situation, and left to notify the zone commander at Horse heads, N.Y., of the need for all avail- able uniformed personnel. Vasisko also was dispatched to the station to tele- phone news of the development to Inspector Denman, and Agent Brown rode along with him to pick up anoth: er car. This left Croswell and Agent Rustin to man the roadblock. hortly before one p.m., the first vehicle came down the road. It was a light truck operated by a local excon- viet, Bartolo Guecia. Croswell > PBA TROOPER recognized him and let him pass. The truck went down the road a short way, turned around and came back up and returned to Barbara's. Obviously, this was a test run The spot Croswell had selected gave him a clear view of the open area around the Barbara house, As soon as Guecia arrived back at Barbara's, apparently with the unhappy news of the police roadblock, Croswell saw several of Barbara's guests take off like frightened deer across the open fields, headed for the woods. Almost immediately, the first car, a 7 Imperial, came down. Croswell spped it and told the five occupants to get out. He and Agent Rustin searched the car and each individual, 1 a wy PEA TROOPER eee Ry Jn a desperate effort to escape Sergeant Croswell' roadblock, ‘o muonber of the fugitive scuried into the surrounding woods and then asked the five to identify themselves. The first one to step up ‘was Russell Bufalino of Kingston, Pa He showed licenses indicating that he ‘was the owner and operator of the ear roswell recognized the name immedi- ately; the police dossier on Bufalino pegged him as the boss of Eastern Pennsylvania gambling operations. “That's a big one to start with,” the sergeant (old himself, The next one ‘was more impressive, however, "Vito Genovese,” the past bespectacled man announced. roswell gave him a long, second look. Every cop knows this name. Lawmen point to him as perhaps the most powerful man in the underworld — boss of the northeastern area and heir apparent to the declining kingpin, Frank Costello. The others identified themselves as Gerardo Catena, Dominick Oliveto and Joe Ida, all lesser lights. "What are you fellows doing up here? Croswell asked, There was silence for a moment Finally, Genovese responded. "Do we have to answer your questions?” he __ asked politely. 3 Technically, he did not have to do anything more than identify himself. Croswell, of course, realized this. Reluctantly, he had to tell them that they ‘were not required by law to answer faced, Genovese gave him a weak, crooked smile as the hoodlums were permitted to return to the car and continue. Three more cars came down the road. These were ‘owned and operated by local thugs. Croswell knew them. He searched them, checked out the cars, jotted down their names and told them to move on. “This is too big a job to do out here in the road,” Croswell told Rustin. "I think we'd better take the rest of these fellows over to the station.” It took a little while for Croswell to get the assistance he need- ced for this large-scale operation. Troop- ers had to hurry from scattered points like Horscheads (45 miles), Whitney Point (25 miles}, Waverly (25 miles) and Binghamton (13 miles). Under normal conditions, only six or seven men are on duty at the nearby Vestal station. By the time all available personnel had reported, Croswell had 21 men to work with — 17 uniformed troopers, two Bureau of Criminal Investigation men and the two ATU agents, A modest force for the job at hand When the first reinforcements arrived from Vestal, Croswell tured the roadblock over to a pair of troopers and then got on his short-wave radio to direct the roundup of the shy guests who were attempting to escape through the woods, ‘The cars continued to roll down the dirt road, but now the occupants were escorted by troopers (o the tiny station at Vestal. Within a couple of hours the station was bulging with the greatest assortment of murderers, extortionists, dope-peddlers, vice lords and racketeers ever assembled under one police roof in the history of U.S. crime. AL first they were herded into two small offices. But as more fell into the trap, a larger recreation room, and, finally, one of the bedrooms of the troopers’ sleeping quarters had to be ‘opened fo accommodate the unwilling guests. We didn’t worry about their comfort,” Croswell recalls. "In some of the rooms they were jammed in like it was rush hour on the New York subway, and there was hardly enough room to sit on the floor. No one com plained, though." Then Croswell arrived at the sta tion, he set up the procedure for processing the convention delegates. One at a time they were brought into the sergeant's office and directed to lake off their shoes and empty the con- tents of their pockets on a desk. They were told to count their money and retum it to their pockets. If they > "7 had personal papers, they were exam- ined by Croswell. They were searched for weapons. Finally they were interro- gated and a personal history sheet — including details like age, height, ‘weight — was filled out for each. ‘As each man finished the question- ing, his history sheet was turned over to an officer who checked the information via teletype and tried to determine if the individual was wanted by his local police. In some cases where the tele {ype replies were inconclusive, direct long-distance telephone calls were placed to law enforcement agencies. It was an enormous undertaking, since the delegates to this convention represented 11 states and came from ‘such scattered points as California and Florida, as well as Puerto Rico. Of the ‘60 rounded up, only nine did not have criminal records. The others had an aggregate of more than 100 convictions and 275 arrests. However, none of the 60 was on a police “wanted” lst ‘The frisking of the individual hood indicated that even the Mafia some- times benefits from past mistakes. In the only other raid of a crime convention on record, in Cleveland in 1928, 13 of the 21 delegates were armed. This time not a single weapon was found. Three of the Apalachin confreres — Genovese, Joe Profaci and Joe Magliocco — had also been at the Cleveland clambake. “These fellows were pretty well rehearsed for the occasion,” Croswell points out. "Most of them carried no personal papers or cards. Few had wal: lets. They simply had their drivers’ licenses in their shirt pockets and a roll of bills in their trousers. “Their feeble attempts to explain their presence at Barbara's also fol- lowed a pattern. They had dropped in to sce Joe, they said, because they had heard that Joe had been sick. It was just a coincidence, they claimed, that they all happened to get there at the same time. And, of course, they told us this with straight faces, too.” It was true that Barbara had been ill. Barlier in the year he had under- ‘gone a serious heart operation, But the PBA TROOPER claim of “coincidence” in the mass sick-call was shot full of holes a few days after the convention when Croswell dug up an interesting tidbit. Barbara’s houseman had placed a $431 meat order with Armour’s in Bingham- ton a week before the convention, call- ing for 200 pounds of steak, 20 pounds of veal cutlets, a whole boiled ham, and a can of luncheon meat. The cut of steak specified was so choice that it ‘was not immediately available in Bing: hamton, a city of 80,000 population, and the order had to be rushed to a packing house in Chicago. Barbara, apparently, was not taken unawares by the coincidence of 60-odd friends drop: ping by at the same time. Croswell’s investigation also uncovered the significant fact that 19 of the visitors had arrived in a body at Broome County Airport on the morn- ing of November 14, after a TWA flight from Newark, N.J. In checking the plane's manifest, Croswell discovered that all 19 had used fictitious names — in most cases the names of unsuspect- ing neighbors back home. Croswell had to call on his last | shred of patience as he endured the frustration of netting only evasive answers, or utter silence, over more than 12 hours of interrogation. Occa~ sionally, an unusually fanciful tale by a hoodlum would provide some comic relief. For instance, when Simone Scoz: zari of San Gabriel, Calif., was asked for his occupation, he proudly replied: “Unemployed for twenty years.” When he emptied his pockets, he produced $9,000 in cash. Boy, you must have had some sock when you quit work,” one of the troopers commented sarcastically. Most of the thugs carried large sums of cash in $50 and $100 bills. ‘The best examples of creative think- ing were turned in by the delegates who | ‘were apprehended after trying to escape through the woods. Two thugs picked up by the troopers near the wooded area behind the Barbara estate swore they had journeyed up from New Jersey on the Pennsylvania Railroad to look at some real estate. When the troopers pointed out that the Pennsy didn’t oper- ‘ate within 70 miles of Apalachin, one simply shrugged his shoulders and com- plained: “I don't know why you fellows don't believe us." James LaDuca, whose car had been spotted by Croswell at both the Barbara home and the motel the night before, ‘was picked up by troopers near the Binghamton city line, about four hours after the trap was sprung. He was ri: ing with three other hoods in the Ohio car Croswell had checked out the night before. The shoes of the four were dirty and muddy, and their clothes disheveled, apparently from the rough, overland hike. Nevertheless, they insist ed that they were just passing through Binghamton on their way from Buffalo. | ‘Croswell told LaDuca he had previ- ‘ously seen him and his car at the motel. LaDuea said that was impossible. Croswell searched LaDuca and found package of matches bearing the mote!'s name, but LaDuca stuck to his story. LaDuca’s car was located later in Barbara's garage. Croswell theorizes that LaDuea and the other three men worked their way through the woods and back to the motel without being detected. There they picked up the Ohio car and almost succeeded in escaping the area when they were nabbed. ‘The task of rounding up the dis- mounted gangsters wasn't as difficult as it might seem. “Actually these fellows were easy to spot,” Croswell says. “They were dressed just about like Hollywood gangsters — dark coats, wide-brim hats, white-on-white shirts, pointed shoes and dark suits hand-tailored from imported cloth. They couldn't be mistaken for farmers or picnickers. "A few of them managed to get through the woods and reach a nearby house. ‘They rang the doorbell and told the Indy of the house that their car had broken down and they were stranded. ‘They asked her to call a cab for them, ‘The lady agreed, but told them to remain on the steps. A pair of our > 9 ing at Ba cruising troopers came along while she ‘was telephoning, and they spotted the men immediately. When the lady returned, she saw her callers being hauled off by the troopers. ‘Only four slipped through the net. Croswell believes two managed to hire a {axicab, since he has a report of a hack being in the area at that time. The other pair probably got a lit from a motorist to the railroad station. The names of all four, however, have been learned. ‘One of the prize packages snatch ed from the woods was former City Councilman John C, Montana of Buf falo, Montana had done such a fine job cf window dressing his operation as a respectable liquor dealer that he had been chosen Buffalo's Man of the Year in 1956. Upstate New York police, however, long had suspected him of underworld ties ‘When Montana was finally cor ralled, he asked if he might speak pri vately to Sergeant Croswell. He told the -geant a heart tugging story, according to Croswell, All this was so embarrass: ing for a man of his position, Montana PBATROOPER pointed out, He had dropped in to see his friend Barbara, not knowing who ‘was going to be there. When he saw who the other visitors were, he immedi atcly tried to leave. That was when he encountered the troopers, he said. When he realized his story wasn't getting through to Croswell, he reached for the patent device of the criminal, according to the sergeant. He said he knew many important people in Buffalo, Croswell says, and that some of these friends could be very helpful to the sergeant. Croswell walked away from him in disgust and later made a special report on Montana's proposal. Most of the delegates were 50 to 5 years old. Of the 60 men rounded up, 34 were foreign-born, though none had any difficulty speaking or under- standing English. In the weeks that fol lowed, it was odd how many of those who were ordered to appear in court or before investigating bodies clammed up by saying they couldn't handle the language Croswell encountered good man: ners from his panicstricken guests with only two exceptions. They were John DeMarco of Shaker Heights, Ohio, and John Scalish of Cleveland, Ohio. Both ‘were surly and completely uncoopera tive. DeMareo had a record that includ ed murder, blackmail and bombing, and a stretch in the Ohio State Peniten: tiary, Scalish’s past performance chart showed three counts of robbery, parole violation, and two terms in prison. As a special reward, Croswell saw to il that they were the last to leave the Vestal station, When Croswell first realized the importance of the mammoth conclave he had uncovered, his impulse was to lock up all the participants overnight so that a more penetrating study could be made of each. He huddled with Lieutenants K.£. Weidenborner and J.A. Murphy on legal procedure. They took law books from the shelf and searched them like men reaching for a straw. Finally, they had to admit sadly that there was no way the hoodlums could be detained, not even for some- thing like disorderly conduct. > 121 “the New York State Penal Lav, tion 722, clearly states the grounds for | charging an individual with disorderly conduct. It deals with persons of evil reputation consorting for an unlaveful ‘purpose. The Mafiosi fitted that catego- ry perfectly. However, the law further staies that this must be carried on in a public place. Furthermore, Croswell and his aides couldn't prove the delegates were consorting for an unlawful pur- pose, nor were the officials in a position to immediately prove the delegates were persons of evil reputation. "There was no legal basis for hold- ing them on a conspiracy charge, and vagrancy had to be ruled out because ‘Tioga County, which had jurisdiction ‘over the meeting, doesn’t have such a jaw on its books. Under New York law, Croswell was obliged either to place charges against them and arraign them before a judge “without unreasonable delay," or turn them loose. AL 1:30 a.m, almost 13 hours after the net had fallen on the underworld executive session, the last of the hoods | was released. Most of them had been held for seven or eight hours. “It almost broke our hearts to have to toss all those big ones back,” | Sergeant Crosweil says. “I'm only a country cop, not a legal expert, but it seems obvious to me that there aren't enough teeth in our laws when we have to release a band of men who have dedicated their lives to lawless- ness before we've had time enough to give them a thorough sifting, “We did everything we could with- in the legal bounds. We made sure we had no fugitives from justice. We checked them for weapons or inerimi- nating evidence. And we tried to | squeeze from them every pertinent bit of information they and the law would allow. If nothing else, we were able to get them out in the open where any- ‘one could take a legal shot at them." This is a modest appraisal, indeed, of the results of the raid at Apalachin. In tearing away a large piece of the veil of secrecy that has shielded the Mafia these many years, Croswell put more | PBATROOPER heat on the big operators of organized crime than they had felt in many a year The roster compiled in the tiny police office at Vestal has given Ameri a's law enforcement agencies a broad and authentic picture of the “syndicate” for the first time. It conclusively estab- lished the ties between Murder Incorpo- rated, in New York, the Purple Gang in Detroit, Al Capone’s old mobsters in Chicago, and other terrorist mobs in Florida, New Orleans, Cleveland and California. And it signaled the launching of investigations in almost every area of the country into the activities of the del- cegates to Joe Barbara's elegant soirée. Most of the convention delegates hid behind the protection of the Con- stitution’s Fifth Amendment, claiming their testimony would be self-ncrimi- nating. The few who clected to testify made a mockery of the proceedings by spinning fanciful, and often hilarious, tales of the purpose of the outing at Apalachin, John Montana, for instance, said he was on his way to Pittston, Pa., on the day of the Apalachin raid, when his three month-old Cadillac developed brake trouble. It just happened that he was near the home of his old friend, Joc Barbara, and Montana was sure Joe would have a mechanic sitting around the premises who could repair the brakes. Joe Profaci, the “Olive Oil King,” said he got to Apalachin by mistake. He took a wrong turn while driving from New York to Scranton, Pe., and lo and behold, where did be wind up? Near Apalachin, of course. And with friend Barbara recovering from an ill ness, wasn't it perfectly natural for Profaci to drop by to see him? ‘Anthony Guarnieri, who identified himself as a seller of women's dresses and men's shirts, happened to be in Endicott on November 14, 1957, where he met Patsy Turrigiano. The latter said he was going over to see Joe Barbara, Guarnieri claims this was an amazing coincidence, since he had three shirts he had made up for Bar- bara sitting on the rear seat of his car awaiting delivery. “T might as well go with you,” Guarnieri says he told Patsy. It was as innocent as that. Bartolo Guccia, the Endicott ex-con- viet who drove the truck on the test run of Croswell’s roadblock, told investiga: tors that he was simply picking up a weekly fish order at the Barbara home, Asked why he had returned to the man- sion once he had successfully passed through the roadblock, Guccia informed them that he had forgotten the fish ‘order and went back to double-check. “By the way,” one of the interroga tors asked, “what was the order?” Three porgies and a mackerel,” Guocia snapped. At first, the mobsters seemed to fare quite well in the weeks that fol lowed the tabulation of the roster at Apalachin. There was embarrassment for many members of the underworld hall of fame, of course. A few slaps on the wrist, too. Some of the hoodiums lost their beer and alcohol licenses, notary public commissions and pistol permits, One ex-convict was returned to jail for violation of parole, and Barbara, the host with the most, was pressured into selling his lucrative bottling plant. It took the authorities a few months to develop the information Sergeant Croswell and his men had compiled at ‘Apalachin. By the spring of 1958, there was enough ammunition accumulated to launch a broadside attack against the ‘very roots of organized crime. ‘The call to action was sounded by the U.S, Justice Department, when it announced its all-out drive to put the 100 Top Hoodlums” behind bars or out of the country. It called for the pooling of all available information on the mob- sters by various other Federal agencies, including the FBI, the Immigration Ser- vice, the Internal Revenue Service, the Bureau of Narcotics and the Treasury ‘Department. And it announced its intention of invoking antitrust laws to trap labor racketeers and others who ‘manipulated sinister operations from behind respectable fronts, ‘The Council of State Ps Governments and the National Associa- tion of State Attorneys General pitched in with pledges of assistance and coop- eration. Milton Wessel, 35, was named by the Attorney General to lead the attack, placing him at the head of the newly formed Special Group on Orga- nized Crime. And the battle was on. most immediately, the Immigration vice began to move against the foreign-born Apalachin confreres, charg: ing them with ‘illegal entry” in some cases, or classifying others as “undesir- able aliens." The ax fell first on Russell Bufalino, the alleged Mafia chieftain in the Basten Pennsylvania area. He was ordered deported. Joe Profaci was next. ‘Ten others waited in the wings. "The Bureau of Narcotics cemented its case against kingpin Genovese and three other Apalachin delegates and after a four-month trial they were found guilty of conspiring to import and sell narcotics. TThus, in two swift strokes, three of the Mafia's most powerful leaders were being readied for the skids. But, more was to come. ‘The New York Commission of Investigation, a thorn in the sides of the Mafiosi from the outset, stepped in to deal the mobsters the most severe blow of the post-Apalachin period. After a Jong line of gangsters had succeeded in hiding behind the Fifth Amendment at last August's hearing and investigations, the Commission granted immunity to seven Apalachin participants when they altempted to follow suit. ‘The seven — ‘Carmine Lombardozzi, Rosario Mane so, Costenze Valenti, Frank Valenti, Joe Riccobono, Paul Castellano and Michael Miranda — still refused to talk. The Commission then ordered the men tossed into jail. ‘The thugs cried “Foul!” and sent their high-priced lawyers scurrying for ‘an appeal, In the first test, the Appellate Court upheld the order, The mob's attor- neys took it a step higher. By the time the New York Court of Appeals handed clown its decision on March 13, 1959, the seven Apalachin delegates had spent roaTROOreR ‘more than seven months in the cooler. ‘The court said they must remain there until they decided to loosen their | tongues. It was a crushing blow. | ‘The Brothers Valenti, reaching for | ‘what they hopefully thought was a legal loophole, announced they would talk. Interpreting the court decision some- what loosely, the Valentis figured all they had to do was furnish answers — any answers — to the questions about Apalachin, and they woukt be set free. So, when they appeared before the Commission, they sang the old tune about “sitting up with a sick friend." ‘The Court ruled that the Valentis had not complied with the order, since they did not furnish “bona fide" answers. Costenze Valenti was in a rage when attendants carted him back to | his cell, Thumbing an angry finger in the direction of the judge, he bellowed: “Who does this guy think he is, God?” ‘The New York Commission set out to round up more Apalachinites and send them through the same talk-or ail routine. But now the hoodlums made themselves scarce. Some were so scarce that police began to speculate on the possibility that the Mafia was perma nently silencing some of its members. The legal net did trap two of the most elusive fish, Joe Barbara and his 23-year-old son, joe, Jr. Last March, some 17 months after the Apalachin picnic, the law succeeded in indicting Joe, St, on income tax charges. Barbara did not give in easily. In | December 1958, New York Police had taped a subpoena on the door of his mansion, directing him to appear before the Investigation Commission in New York City. The envelope also contained $16 to pay his round-trip railroad fare — a legal requirement. Barbara ignored the subpoena. The police made him keenly aware of the invitation on his door by barking through bull:horns that could be heard. a quarter of a mile away. “Come out, come out," the horn blasted, “there's a subpoena on your eae \ Barbara didn't touch it, and his lawyers claimed in court that he had not been legally served. They were overruled. Now the Barbara barristers cited the $16 check for carfare and said this was not enough to pay Big Joe's way to New York. The round trip, they claimed, was 206 miles between ‘Apalachin and New York, and figured at the legal rate of eight cents per mile, this was 48 cents short, Again, they ‘were squelched by the court. ‘On March 13, Big Joc was indicted, ‘and lawmen pointed out that it probably cost Barbara more than $500 in legal fees to debate the issue of 48 cents. ‘Two weeks earlier, Joe, Jr. was roused from his bed in the middle of the night, and taken in his pajamas to New York City, where he was booked oon perjury charges. Looking at the scoreboard approxi: mately 18 months after Apalachin, the law showed some impressive figures. “Ten of the Apalachin 66 were in jail; six more were indicted; three faced prompt deportation; three were found guilty of narcotics charges; one had died; and the remainder were either under warrant cr subpoena — but, mostly, were miss ing, meaning in hiding, Neither the investigations nor offi- cial hearing has succeeded in pinning down the reason or reasons for the ‘gangland convention. Speculation has ranged far and wide concerning the eon: vvention’s agenda, Some claim it tied in swith the murder of Albert Anastasia and the distribution of some of the spoils of his former crime empire. Others say it concerned Havana gambling interest of the Mafia. And still others list such items as narcotics, labor racketecring, | the juke box industry, and other assort- ‘ed forms of shakedown on the program. i James S. Mooney, of the New York City police, told the McClellan Committee that the Apalachin meeting had been called for the purpose of “trying” Mafioso Car- mine Lombardozzi, who had stepped cout of line with the syndicate, Mooney says his informants reported that > 125 horizons - Italian police unveil mafia, ilegal immigration link HARRY’S P= Pome Pee goog IDG NAIA) 20ers cere annenscny ten ae WOME TURKEY ECONOMY WORLD SPORTS LIFE ARTS/CULTURE OPINION VIDEO PHOTO Timms) Radka Italian police unveil mafia, illegal Daily News Follow us on a immigration link FROME Xinhua | 2/4/2010 12:00:00 AM | . {Malian police arrest 22 Italians and 35 Indian nationals across the country in ‘what officials says fs a landmark operation against immigration scams run by ‘talan patce on Wednesday arrested 32 Italans and 35 Indien nationals across the Country in what ofits sald was a landmark operation against immigration seams run by the Calabria Mai, te Kia news agency reported yesterday. ‘mong those arrested were several businessinen who gave the Immigrants apparently legal joo documents and tieee provncal employees. Interior Minetr Roberto Maron Raled the operation as "groundbrealang” in showing for the frst ime how the Colaria Mafia, known a Naanghea, was running Wegl immigrants into Tay. ‘Kirgaton NY Recents Are Rates By Now "The direct inyolement of Néranghets dan in favoring legal imeigrtion has finaly PubheRacerde Wee been proven,” Maron sa, adding Wat wos a worrying signal prowng how much ‘money can be made from Such business. Recaling talon Prime Minister Siva. Most POPULAR Berluscon's recent words, Maronl stressed that te fight agains egal immigration was part ofthe county's war on organized ere said oa aes Reggio Calabria Prosector Giuseppe Pgnatone sad the operation "shows 'Nrangheta's_emerstttacks ‘apacty to explt any opportunity for goin” He said the organization "used 3 “eta vated oviton asin Sephistcated mechantsm whch induded Indian immigrant, compe oie and Tara's former rasdee Gil veacy'to | SHOP businessmen.” Seve gant need ctor ‘Accoweing to te pice, the tncans resident in Italy contacted hundreds of people back Worthan okt hares on Cyrus MONS home wanting to joi thelr femiies and arranged thelr employment contacts tough Suet Take pres rode int L two" Nerangeta ln. The immigrants pad Between 10,000 and 18,000 sures each, —_‘forwectons ‘aking te Mafia earing tore than six milion eure. Det ure on Turkeys nds beaming The police deni thatthe operation had anything to do with ast months rac cts in MME the town of Rasarno, where legal migrant workers cashed wth local residents or acer ones ‘at trons ty ‘vera days. The Nérangheta groups were aiegealylavaved here inthe exploUaon of Th is Ua eared ur the Hs imeagrat labor. res 1.20 under Tar preioney to et The canter-right government has cracked down hard on Nérangheta since the murder of _W-20 uns Tr prosoncy 2 leading regional omic 2005, Tt is considered the most dangerous sect of Italy's fia, Last week the athories unveded a new anti-Mafia strategy aimed at curing THs clues rats for ‘elra ‘organized crime through the establishment of @nabonal agency to Seize Mafia asots, MNT OF 4h ored ror rep an ibative to cur egal abor was aso pu forward by the government, involving 2 task force of $50 inspectors who wil examine more then 200 businesses in agrcuture ‘MOST COMMENTED, ‘and constrcton ‘ . FABRIC MATTERS.» a TRY RACK WELBON Lof2 9/21/2015 9:41 AM. ‘The Calabrian Narangheta in Australia - Gangsters Inc. hitp://gangstersine.ning.com/profiles/blogs/the-calabrian-ndrangheta-i pita Ei ey if i" italy bas produced thre ofthe world’s most infamous criminal groups. Cosa Nostra from Sil, the Camorra from Campania, andthe “Ndrangheta from Calabria continue to hold the country in a stranglehold But as Italians migrated wo other countries, so did these criminal gangs. Steven Ralph has rescarched the presence of these lalian mafia groups in Australia for Gangsters Ine. and inthis article sheds light on the dark history of the 'Nérangheta in Australia ‘The early booms in immigration to Australia by southern and westem Europeans would per off by the early decades ofthe 20th century. The following decades saw the majority of laly’s migrants beading towards greater “La Merica’, chiefly the United States, but also Canada. However, betwcen the Immigration Act rated in 1917 and te imposition of migrant quot systems in the U.S. te Italian masses once again sought new shores for prosperity Hence, while immigration rates in Australia had stayed moderate yet steady during tis period following the War yeas and Kaly's subsequent surrender (during which some 18,000 Italians were interred as enemy aliens in Australia), migration rates yet again exploded into Australia, Ever vigorous, Italian families established communities across Australis, settling more prominently in the southern and easter states of New South Wales, South Australia, and Victoria (the latter of which today accounts for some 40% ofthe entire sete Lalian-A stalin population). Natualisation spread widely, and by the 1950's the greater majority of aians in Australia were identifying as Australian citizens inthe national census, Unique “Littl Kaly(s)’ sprung up around the city centres of Sydney, Adelaide, and Melbourne. ‘Members ofthese communities plunged into their labours with a fierce work ethie and gregarious libation that serves a culture in good stead. Iatian populations spread throughout the eastern and south-eastern seaboards and the outlying hinterlands and further rural disrcts and ‘ovnships; the Riverina of New South Wales, the Barossa Valley region in South Australia an inlying Victorian towns such as Shepparton —-d 9721/2015 9:44 AM ‘The Calabrian Ndrangheta in Australia - Gangsters Ine bhtp:/gangstersine.ning.com/profiles/blogsithe-calabrian-ndrangheta-i 30f5 Mildura. Also, to lesser extents, populations settled across Australia’s ‘North End’, in Far North Queensland and the Northem Territory. While Brisbane and Darvin have relatively small Italian populations, substantial migration tothe cane-field bets and arable land has helped to Comment You need to be a member of Gangsters Inc, to add comments! Join Gangsters Ine Welcome to Gangsters Ine. Sign Up or Sign in Or sign in with ©2015 Created by Gangsters ine Badges | Report an Issue | Terms of Service Recommended for you THE LIFE OF THE MAFL. Sern el Cot fio tas about his Chicago Vee Lord Netion New map shows mob soil Mob bos Junior Gti father, the Mafia & John ang boss dead a4 clubs in New Yor. stabbed in parking lot Trae! 9/21/2015 9:44. AM 15-5251 Docket, General Docket United States Court of Appeals for District of Columbia Circuit Page | of 4 ‘Court of Appeals Docket #: 15-5251 In re: Natural Born Citzen, etal ‘Appeal From: United Statos District Cour forthe Distict of Columbia Fee Status: Fee Paid Docketed: 0910972015 (Case Type Information: 1) Ong. Procoading US 2) Mendemus 3) [originating Court information: District: 0000-1: 1:15-97-01036-RuL Motions Judge: Richard J, Leon, U.S. District Judge [Prior Cases: None Current Cases: ‘None Panel Assignment: Not available In ro: Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee Into Petitoner Harold W. Van Allen Harold W. Van Allen Inre- Pettoner Direct 848-269-4368 Email. hvanaleng@hve.r.com INTC Pro Sey Fim: 845-380-4365 351 North Road Hutley, NY 12443 R Craig Lawrence Email craig lawrenoe@usdo) gov [CORLD NTC GUS Attorney] US. Aitomey's Office (USA) Cia Drsion Firm: 202-252-2500 555 4th Steet, NW Washington, DC 20530 hitps:/lecf.cade.uscourts.gov/emecti/servlel/TransportRoom 9/10/2015 15-5251 Docket Page 2 of 4 In re: Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee; Harold W. Van Allen, } Inte Petitioners https://ecf.cade.uscourts.gov/emeef/servlet/TransportRoom, 9/10/2015 15-5251 Docket, Page 3 of 4 oovoer2018 [) US CIVIL ORIGINAL PROCEEDING CASE dockoted. 15-5251] covg02015 [jE] _ PETITION [1572424] fied by Petitioners Natural Bom Citizen Party National Commitee and Harold W. Van ‘apa 525me_ Allen for wit of mandamus. [Service Dale: 09/10/201S by Clerk, CMIECF NDA] Pages: Exceeds Limits. [15- 5251) https://eef.cade.uscourts.gov/cmecf/servlet/TransportRoom, 9/10/2015 NATURAL BORN CITIZEN PARTY NATIONAL COMMIZTE NAROLOW.VAN ALLEN eng nono Date HURLEY NY 2a oe Cleatc oF Count iol og aouar OF Agents foe FIFTY CAlS|b OO Fé ew paso MID-HUDSON VALLEY FEDERAL CREDIT {NiO} Bosca na Wee ZESD = YOU DEY = SCR =| ory pas samies qougoahan 4 i002 : geen Case #15-5251 — Document #1572424 Filed: 09/09/2015 Page 1 of 74 [aye UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS Se -9 205 FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT | 333 Constitution Ave. NW Washington DC 20002 L_BistriotakGniumbon apbee* | IN RE: NATURAL BORN CITIZEN PARTY NATIONAL ~*~ COMMITTEE, ET AL. Originating case USCA-DCC USDC-DCD 15-cv-1036-RJL The 2016 presidential election (CINC-POTUS) revolves around the principal issue of ineligible executive action allowing amnesty of illegal aliens and their anchor babies so as to dilute the votes of natural born citizens of the Republic of the United States. The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, by far the least constitutionally impaired senior federal court with regards to nominations since January 2009 oath of office by an unconstitutional non-natural-born-citizen — aka “Barack Obama” the documented son of a non US citizen. The Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee, et al., seeks an immediate mandamus transferring to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit the underlying originating case and all related constitutional cases listed in the docket of the originating case Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee et al v FEC et al USDC-DCD 15-cv-1036 RJL. USCA Case #15-5251 — Document #1572424 Filed: 09/09/2015 Page 2 of 74 And further, include an immediate consolidation before judgment with the pending SCOTUS certiorari amnesty matter: “Arpaio v Obama” 14-5325. Signed Monday, September 7, 2015 VU ELLE Once Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee Harold William Van Allen Co-Chairperson, Candidate-Elector 2016 POTUS/CINC PO Box 312 (354 North Road) Hurley, NY 12443 845 389 4366 845 331 1925 Fax Certification of electronic service US-DOJ / US-OAG USA Counsel for: DOS et al Clerks of Court USDC-TXSD USCA-Sth Circuit ScoTUS Case: 15-40238 Document: 00513133875 Page:1 Date Filed: 07/28/2015 USCA Case #15-5251 — Document #1572424 Filed: 09/09/2015 Page 3 of 74 United States Court of Appeals irr cincurr (OFFIC OF THE CLERK LYLE W. CAYCE “THL.s04s10-700 cum (600 5 MAESTRIPLACE [NEW ORLEANS, 1A 70130 duly 29, 2015 Mr. Harold William Van Allen Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee 351 North Road Hurley, NY 12443 No. 15-40238 State of Texas, et al v. USA, et al USDC No. 1:14-Cv-254 Dear Mr. Van Allen, We received your pleadings referencing the above case and addressed to the U.S, Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. Tn light” of you not being a party to the above appeal, and absent an accompanying request, we are taking no action. sincerely, LYLE W. CAYCE, Clerk oravit. Aitertoy by: Amanda Sutton-Foy, Deputy Clérk 504-310-7670 72 of 72 Tu E9858! O Pogapent: 00513133797 PagerT vate Frew Urrzerzors————— BEER BR Uw eE FST 424 Filed: 09/09/2015 Page 4 of 74 TEXAS, ET AL V USA ST AL OTR FAL - Ww -asy Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee July 26 2015 Clerk of Court US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit Attn: Deputy Special Counsel to the Clerk, Nancy Dunn 202-216-73 333 Constitution Ave NW Washington, DC 20001 Re: USDC-15-cv-1036 “Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee et al v FEC etal” Dear Clerks Office: This is to confirm Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee et al Notice of Appeal with a $505 check filed with at the USDC-DCD Clerk of the Court. In addition, Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee et al hereby files ‘motions in this US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit to consolidate this new Obama eligibility and amnesty executive action/order. ‘appeal with the two Pending USCA-DCC appeals 14-5325 “Arpaio v Obama et al” (USDC-DCD 14-cv- 1966) and 14-5327 “Strunk and Van Allen v DOS et al” (USDC-DCD 14-cv-995). All this as well as pending Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee et al motions to Intervene and consolidate with the multi-state and Pending muiti- circuit unconstitutional illegal alien amnesty executive action/order filed at USDC-TXSD 14-cv-254 “State of Texas et al v USA et al”. USCA-Fifth Circuit 15- 40238, 15-4-326, 15-40333, 15-40702, Is} larold William Van Allen Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee Co-chairperson, 2016 POTUS/CINC Candidate-Elector 351 North Road Hurley NY 12443 845 389 4366 _lvanallen@hve.rr.com &: Clerks of Court: USDC-DCD, USDC-TASD (Brownsville); USCA-5 Circuit USCA Case #15-5251 Document #1572424 WaSe! 15-423 LOCUMENt: UUD1S133 /9 (PAGE! ZS OO Filed: 09/09/2015 Page 5 of 74 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMDRE Natura! Bom Citizen Party National Commi {ronan mame - Civil Action No,_15-cv-1036 Federal Elections Commission et al sae aac NOTICE OF APPEAL ‘Notice is hereby given this 26th day of July 2018 a ‘Natural Bom Citizen Party National Committee et al hereby appeals to the United States Court ‘Appeals the District of C: ia Circuit from Mrwurs CREA Dewim hi Baharet arena ‘as PaaS EagE 7 i, rage July 22018 in favor of Federal Elections Commission against said sera el ge Attomey or Pro Se Litigant Pursuant to Rule 4(a) of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure Procedure a notice of appeal in a civil Staten or ofa es within 30 days after the date of enry of judgment or 60 daye i tha Unies States or officer or agency is a party) CLERK _uzsse mul copies of the above Notice of Appeal othe following atthe addresses indicated: Leaner |, Washington, DC: US Atiomey forthe Distict of Cohumbia 555 ath St MW: Wanton Do 20530 [NYS Atorey General, The Capt, teoaeon 2of72 Case: 15-40238 —DOCUMETE WOSTSTSS77 — PAGES — DE FNEU-UTTZez0S————— USCA Case #15-5251 Document #1572424 Filed: 09/09/2015, Page 6 of 74 Noriet oF AfPear usoe- 0e0 Fe Useh- Dee Mofrous To COuSouarrs wT ALAACS usca- pec {14-5325 fhelho v otng, : (Y- S53 A> STRuste ta V On, Natu Boas Cifiete Faary MeAewal Commi7e eFube. rah er Al Frebshae- fkteTeae Comm iS 5t0%. a Fitsen. Guan, CF Labesiibapeas EVAL 3 of 72 MASE, AUUESO — YUCUITIENL: WUD SLSSTSS— PEE aS USCA Case #15-5251 Document #1572424 Filed: 09/09/2015 Page 7 of 74 (CLOSED JURY, PROSE-NP,TYPE LFOIA U.S. District Court District of Columbia (Washington, ‘CIVIL DOCKET FOR CASE #: 1S ev 01006 RIL \. FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION et ol Date Terminated: 07/06/2035 ‘Assigned to: Judge Richard J. Leon Jury! Cones ADB-ce URI, [Nature of Suit 895 Freedom of 1:05-0r-01295-Ri1, Information Act Jab-seonss6-ecl Jurisdiction: US, Government J Defendant (Cause: 05:552 Freedom of lnformation Act Pisintist [NATURAL BORN CTTZEN PARTY NATIONAL ConaTTEE ‘Plaineatt suman! ‘represented by HAROLD WILLIAM VAN ALLEN 351 North Road Hurley, NY 12443 PRO SE v Defendant FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION Defendant FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION Defendant US. DEPARTMENT OF STATE ‘Defendant ‘CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY 4of72 MaDe, Lo-MUZOO —_LULUTTIENE UUDIS155/98 | PAYCTZ DE AO USCA Case #15-5251 Document #1572424 Filed: 09/09/2015 Page 8 of 74 BARACK HUSSEIN OBAMA, IL U.S. COPYRIGHT OFFICE o7fon/2015) jos/aa/201s 12 |NOTICE OF RELATED CASE by HAROLD WILLIAM VAN ALLEN, Case related } to Case j No, OB-c+02234 Ru. 08-c-01205 Ru, 20-4 004806, 14-v-00095- fr | | (entered: 07/03/2015) zs Richard J. Leon on 7/6/2015. (th) (Entered: 07/06/2015) 4 | MOTION for Reconsideration re 3 MEMORANDUM ORDER by HAROLD WILLIAM VAN ALLEN (if (Entered: 07/20/2015) ee i ! i ORDERED that Paint" Complaint i DISMISSED. SO ORDERED. Signed by Judge. { I sO7/17/2015 i 5 of 72 USCA Case #15-5251 Document #1572424 Filed: 09/09/2015 Page 9 of 74 ‘o7ra2paas | | MINUTE ORDER denying 4 Plaintifi' Motion for Reconsideration of uly 6, 2035 |_| Order, Motion for Leave to File Amended Complaint Under Seal and Motion {| onslidate. tis hereby ORDERED that plaints’ Motion is DENIED ints | entirety. Signed by Judge Richard. Lean on 7/22/2035. larf2,) (Entered: 7 | jovepons) 6 of 72 “Case: 15-A023S DOCUMENE VUSTSTSSIIT PETE A eME PMC OTT ZOTZOTT USCA Case #15-5251 — Document #1572424 Filed: 09/09/2015 Page 10 of 74 Case 1:15-cv-01036-RJL Document3 Filed 07/06/15 Page 1of2 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA NATURAL BORN CITIZEN PARTY NATIONAL COMMITTEE, et al, Plaintiffs, Civil Case No. 15-1036 (RIL) % FEDERAL ELECTIONS COMMISSION, etal, FILED JUL -6 205 Gith, US Distt & Bankruptcy Courts tr te Dis of Gals ) ? ) ) d ) ) d ) d d Defendants. 2015) [Dkt. #1] Pro se plaintiffs Natural Born Citizen Party National Committee and Harold William Van Allen (together, “plaintiffs”) filed the instant action on July 1, 2015. See (Complaint with Petition for Special Writ of Mandamus for Equity Relief [Dkt. #1}. Upon consideration of plaintiffs" papers and the relevant law, the Court DENIES plaintiffs? Petition for a Special Writ of Mandamus for Equity Relief,' and DISMISSES plaintiffs’ Complaint in its entirety. ‘The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure are clear that although “[njo technical form is required,” pleadings must be “simple, concise, and direct.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(4)(1). ‘The Court is mindful, of course, that complaints filed by pro se litigants are held to less stringent standards than those applied to formal pleadings drafted by lawyers. See Haines ' The Court also DENIES plaintiffs’ additional requests contained therein for Removal from ‘State Court of Closely Related National Born Citizen (New York) Siate Trial Court Case(s) and Assignment to a Special Three Judge U.S. District Court with a Special Master. See [Dit #1]. 7of 72 Case: 15-4028 Document OOSTSTSS7IS PATE. I TIAN MC rT USCA Case #15-5251 Document #1572424 Filed: 09/09/2015 Page 11 of 74 Case 1:15-cv-01036-RJL Document3 Filed 07/06/15 Page2of2 — j ». Kerner, 404 U.S. $19, 520 (1972). Despite this less stringent standard, however, I ain ‘unable to glean from the plaintiffs” papers any legitimate grounds for granting the relic they are seeking. The statements contained in the plaintiffs" pleadings are, moreover, | neither simple nor concise, and as such, fall well short of Rule 8(4)(1)’s requirements. | Accordingly, it is hereby i ORDERED that Plaintiffs" Petition for Special Writ of Mandamus For Equity | Relief and Removal from State Court of Closely Related Natural Bork Citizen (New | York) State Trial Court Case(s) and Assignment to a Special Three Judge US District | ‘Court With a Special Master (Dkt.#1] is DENIED, and it is further | ORDERED that Plaintiffs’ Complaint is DISMISSED. t SO ORDERED. Case: 15-40238 DOCUMENT DUSTSTSSTSS Page OTE Te USCA Case #15-5251 — Document #1572424 Filed: 09/09/2015 Page 12 of 74 General Docket United States Court of Appeais for District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeats Docket #: 14-5325 Docketed: 12/29/2014 Nature of Suit: 2899 Other Statutes ‘Joseph Arpaio v. Barack Obama, etal Appeal From: United States District Court for the Distict of Columbia i {Foe Statue: Fee Paid Cont Raper gaeaeItoe aa Load: 1:14-o0-01966-BAH | Court Reporter: Barbera De Vico, Court Reporter | Trial A. US. District. Fllod: | Bate Ordeeudgment: 2 a "842018 PER GURIAM ORDER fle [1643016] denying bo moto of aso Wilan Von i ‘Allen, pro se, to participate as amicus curiae [35404212] in 14-6225 [14-5325] t 047202015 & PER CURIAM ORDER filed [1548075] allocating oral argument time as follows: ‘Appeliant - 15 Minutes, Appelioes - 16 Minutes. One counsel per side to argue; ‘directing party to fle Form 72 notice of arguing attorney by 04/27/2015 [14-5325] 04/20/2015 ti ENTRY OF APPEARANCE [1548088] fled | ‘Benjamin C. Mizer on behalf of t Appellees Eric H. Holder, Jr. sin Chaves Jobeean Barack Ose aha of ; Roviiguer_[14.5825) (Mer, Senin) i 04/20/2015 FORM 72 submitted by arguing attomey, Benjamin C. Mizer, on behalf of Appelioes Eric H. Holder, J. Jah Charles Johnson, Barack Obama and Leon Rodriguez (For Sm Oar rd Lane Roar ee dat Charles Jtneon, Barack ‘Obama ‘Rodriquez pursuant to FRAP 28} advising of additional authorities [Service Date: 04/29/2015 } [14-6325] (Clar, Jeffrey) * o/042015 ORAL ARGUMENT HELD before Judges Brown, Srinivasan and Pilar. [14-5325} [0805:2015 TRANSCRIPT [1556055] of oral argument [14-5325] 9 of 72 Cas rOcuT USCA Case #15-5251 Document #1572424 Filed: 09/09/2015 Page 13 of 74 (08/1072015 Mi NOTICE FILED (1556889) 'M. Aspaio OF ! (Boves Da aio20%8 | Sgn amy 10 of 72 Case: 15-40238 Document: Qub13153/98 Hage: 6 Dawe ricu. vireurevas USCA Case #15-5251 — Document #1572424 Filed: 09/09/2015 Page 14 of 74 Goneral Docket United States Court of Appeals for District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals Docket #: 14-5327 Nature of Suit: 2880 Other Statutory Actions. hrstopher Strunk, etal v. DOS, etal j Appeal From: United States District Court forthe Distict of Columbia Feo Statue: IFP Docketed: 12/28/2014 !Case Type information: i cwius } ated Soe i [Originating Court information: |)" Bistre: 0000-1 ae-0009- a0, | Trial Judge: Richard J Leon, U.S. Distict Judge Date Fllod: 06/10/2014 Date Order! Judgment: Date NOA Flied: siozot ‘anor ‘Load: 1:14-cy-00995-8i1 {Prior Cases: + None 1 None [Panel Assignment: Not available (Christopher Ear Strenk, (Chiistopher Ear! Strunk Plaintiff Appellant Direct: 845-901-6767 i INTC Pro Se] : Firm: 212-307-4446 893 Vanderbilt Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11238 ‘Harold W. Van Allen Harold W. Van Allen i INTC Pro Se} i Firm: 645-389-4366 ‘351 North Road i Hurley, NY 12443, 11 of 72 Case: 15-0238 Document UUSTSTSa US Pade oe Date ee OLE USCA Case #15-5251 Document #1572424 Filed: 09/09/2015 Page 15 of 74 [United States Department of Stato i Greig Lawrence 1 : Defendant-Appetee — Emal: [LDNTC GvtUS Attomoy] US. Attomey’s Offca (USA) Civil vision Fire 202-262-2800 I r 556 4th Street, NW i ‘Washington, DC 20630 i } Central intetigence Agency R. Craig Lawrence | 1 Defendant-Appelice [LD NTC Gvt US Attomey} . (see above) : t * Barack Hussein Obama Craig Lawrence i Defendant-Appetice [LD NTC Gvt US Attorney) 4 (soe above) 1 US Copyright Once R. Cri Lawrence { Defendant-Appetiee [LD NTC GvtUS Attomey) (ee above) Erie H. Holder, ur, US Attomey General | Terminated: 5 Defendant - Appetioe | i i ‘iNew York State Board of Elections t Defendant - Appellee : Christopher Eart Strunk; Harold W. Van Allen, : Plaintifs -Appeliants v | ; United States Department of State; Central Inteligence Agency, Barack Hussein | | fice Lreta Lynch, US Atomey Genera New York Sats Board of lessons. VS COPMTOHE : Defendants - Appetioes sarzar2o14 US CIVIL CASE dockated. 14-6327] }*2eeo4 NOTICE OF APPEAL fled [1529431] by Christopher Earl Strunk [Re Sumner ane ee eter ‘Court in 1:14-cv-00885-RJL. Assigned USCA Case Number 14-5327] 12 0f 72 Case: 15-40238 ~ Document D0SIS133798 Page> 10 — pare Freu-orrzerzors————— USCA Case #15-5251 Document #1572424 Filed: 09/09/2015 Page 16 of 74 ‘aeszo14 & CLERICS ORDER fled [1620434] directing party o fe motion to proceed semen (appeal informa pauperis or payment of dockang foe AcPact ae i : i g i t2rzere014 FIRST CLASS MAIL SENT [1529441] of order to both | : ‘appellants [14-5327], paoeta | }2zereo16 CERTIFIED MAIL SENT [1529442] with return receipt, ss27] | ovmazo1s CERTIFIED MAIL RECEIPT [1631377] RECEIVED from Rob Wharf for : ‘order [1529442-2] sent to Appelant Christopher Earl Sunk [14-5327] ovosra01s [sed ron ae SS APSTRECEVED fom Had Van Alon i {stgned for on 01/08/2015] for order [1529442-2] sent to Appellant Herold Woven Alon tasaz7 ouzs2015 MOTION filed [1534672] by Harold W. Van Allen leave io proceed ip in : Soa.1s0M@ the dstct court [Service Date: 01/28/2016 ] Pages: 1-10.[14 6327 fowes2015 MOTION fied [1534674] by Harold W. Van Allen for judicial noice, i 10ps.120M8 (Service Date: 01202015 Pages: 10 Te seen 1 onzer015 1834679] referring motion fp in distict court the dat court or consoan he eee 2 | abeyance pending IFP decision in : Court; The Clerk is dicted to tranamit a i ‘motion t the distct court. [14-5327] :01g0R015 & NOTICE [1595125] led from Clerk, Distict Court leave to proceed ip in : ‘402.834"8 the distict court is granted for Harold W. Van Allen [Case Number 1a : $827: 1FP] [14-5327], Fous02015 @ MOTION filed [1835393] by Christopher Earl Strunk leave to proceed ifp in : Sree the care court Sovce Le OUaoE ST en i foamenots GLERICS ORDER fled 11535304] refering apeliant Sunk’ maton ifpin {pasa00r® cisirct court £1535399-2] tothe distct cout for consideration, Gate 4 . 5827 held in abeyance pending decision in 1:14cv985-RlL. from U.S. 1 District Court; The Clerk is directed to transmit a copy ofthis order and the ‘rignal motion tothe district court. [14-8227] caano1s = MOTION filed [1536137] by Harold W. Van Allen for udiciat notice. Mr mna Gayest ton sted by nal surey nO eet: ‘G2/08/2015 by Clerk] Pages: 1-10. [14-6827] oaoa2015 MOTION filed [1636135] by Harold W. Van Allen for judicial | ‘notice [Electronic Version Original Paper Document in File} {Response to Motion served by mail due on 02/20/2015) [Service Date: | (0210572046 by Cierk| Pages: 1-10. [14.6327] NOTICE FILED [1537275] by Chvistopher Earl Strunk offing in Supreme Court [Service Date: 02/11/2015 ] [14-5327] be { 1 i 13 of 72 USCA Case #15-5251 Document #1572424 Filed: 09/09/2015 Page 17 of 74 ‘MOTION filed [1538853] by Harold W. Van Allon for judicial notice. (Response to Motion served by mail due on 09/02/2015) [Service Date: 02/17/2016 by Email] Pages: 1-10. [14-5327] NOTICE [1541400} fled trom Clerk, District Court leave to proceed ip in the distict court is granted for Christopher Strunk [Case Number 14-5327: FP] (14-5327) (CLERK'S ORDER fied [1541568] setting briefing schedule: APPELLANTS Brief due OAZBEDIS: APPENDIN due BABOONS Failure to respond ‘Shall result in dismissal of the case for lack of prosecution; The Clerk is ‘Thursday, Februnry 5.2015 240 PM {any Klayman E59 (edeymant@gmiicomt Lary Klayrnan Esq fekaymnan@yehoo.com ‘sg. lawrence (rig lnwrence@usdo}gov Christophe Ea Sou {(CEStnek@yehoo.com) ‘apse scribd como 254873203/USCA-DCC- 14-5327 -Motionrfor util "Notice-of-USCA-DCC-14-5325-a¢-Retated-Case-Arpaio-v-Obama-Appellant-Srief-and- ! Append 1 jw fa Seb come f25A87SI03/ ISUIKE-14-532!- Muar tet -be-Not ce OIECAECE £6 5325 45 ‘elated-Case-Arpace-Oboms-Appallant-net and Appeal tit From: Harold Van Allen fmaittodvanallen@hwe.com} ‘Subject: AE: Emaling: USCA-DCL 14-5327 Motion for Juda Notice of USCA-DCC 14-5325 as Related Case Arpaio ‘Obama Appellant ret and Appendint General Docket United States Court of Appeats for Disiriet of Cohumbla Circult ‘Court of Appeate Docket #: 14.5327 Dockated: 12202016 "Nature of Suit: 2800 Other Stansory Actions CCidatopher Sten eta v. DOS, et at ‘Appeal From: United States Dist Court fr the District of Columbia Fee Status: IFP Pending USDC Case Type information: 3) CNAUS. 2) Une States ‘District: 0090-1 1385 Lead: = 26.00. HE Pot : "Wa dye Rud toon US Da ge i : Sarg onro¢ ate reer uagean 2a WOM Fed: ‘name ‘anonte Prior Cases: ‘None Current Cases: Panes Assignment: Not avaiable USCA Case #15-5251 Document #1572424 Filed: 09/09/2015 Page 41 of 74 (Case 1:14-cv-00254 Document 196-2 Filed in TXSD on 03/1215 Page 8 of 15 (Christogher Ean Sunk Print - Appetiont Hard W. Von Alen Central ratigence Agency ‘Defendant Appetoe (Christopher God Strunk Dueck: 845-901-8767 INTC ProSe} Fir 212-307-4048 t 508 Vanderbilt Avera ar Sroakdyn. NY 11238 mre Gah USAC (see above), - owrt Gr Ay UsAoMUS ‘(see above) oa 8p nce ‘seeaboy nese "Case: 15-40238 Document: U0STST33798 Page: 36 Dale Fieu-urrzerzors— USCA Case #15-5251 Document #1572424 Filed: 09/09/2015 Page 42 of 74 (Case 1:14- USCA Case #15-5251 — Document #1572424 Filed: 09/09/2015 Page 48 of 74 (Case 1:14-cv-00254 Document 196-2 Filed in TXSD on 08/12/15 Page 15 of 15 ‘+5 Case:1é-ev-00254 Document 108 Fed in TXSD on oL/ZanS Page Sos UL. CONCLUSION Proposed amicurcariaerespectflly requests that this Court grant this mation, allow him (0 paticipate ms amici curiae, and accept fr Ging the bref submined with this motion ‘Dased: ansary 16,2015 ‘Respectfully submitted. fonmiboo Mascicy, ‘Virginia State Bar No. 41058 Freedom Watch, Inc. 2020 Pennsylvania Avenue N.W., Suite 345 ‘Washington, D.C. 20006 | hereby certify that service of the foregoing motioe and proposed brief wil be delivered cleczronically on January 16,2015, 1 couse for Paintf¥s 2nd Defendants dough the

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