Chiquita SECRETS Revealed - Cincinnati Enquirer’s 18-page investigative report
From Cincinnati Enquirer’s 18-page investigative report on Chiquita Banana. For more fascinating coverage, visit the website at: http://enquirer.com/chiquita/index.html [url no longer valid of course ;-)]
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CINCINNATI ENQUIRER
Sunday, 3 May 1998
Chiquita SECRETS Revealed
More…
BY MIKE GALLAGHER(now fired) AND CAMERON MCWHIRTER
“We can only fire him (Renaldo Escobar) with cause because of hisinvolvement in the Colombian problem if we file a criminal charge againsthim with Colombian authorities. Clearly we would not want to do thatbecause we would be implicating ourselves” -David Hills, Chiquita lawyer,discussing how to deal with a subsidiary company lawyer involved in a Colombian bribe scheme.
An Enquirer investigation has found that Chiquita made business decisionsin Latin America to cover up a bribery scheme involving company andsubsidiary employees, helped foreign growers try to evade taxes, and ran into tax problems.
Corrupt activities committed by U.S. companies abroad may fall under theU.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA).
The act, passed in 1977, followed a series of international scandals inwhich American companies operating overseas were caught bribing foreign officials, paying kickbacks for contracts and committing other acts that would be illegal in the United States. The act prohibits United States companies or their employees from offering a bribe to influence a foreign government official’s acts or decisions. The act also requires that U.S. companies maintain accurate records of their foreign operations.
Bribery
——-
The bribery incident involved paying government officials in Turbo,Colombia, to help the company’s Colombian subsidiary Banadex obtain use of a large government storage facility. Company records and high-level sources within the company described how, after learning of the scheme,company officials took action to hide it.
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) investigators have issued subpoenas to Chiquita seeking documents reflecting how Chiquita obtained access to the Colombian government-owned storage space.
Chiquita, through its lawyers stated, “Chiquita’s policy is not to make illegal payments to any government officials.”
Sources told the Enquirer that two Chiquita executives have been forced to resign: Douglas Walker, vice president for operations, and Renaldo Escobar, a company lawyer in Colombia.
Jorge Forton, a Chiquita executive in Medellin, Colombia, who is now in the United States, also is being forced to resign, but company officials, including Chiquita President and Chief Operating Officer Steven G. Warshaw,
have allowed him to stay on temporarily while he seeks other employment in the U.S.
High-level Chiquita sources said Mr. Escobar and Mr. Walker were given generous severance packages and have signed confidentiality agreements preventing them from discussing any company business, including the
Colombian incident.
After leaving Chiquita, Mr. Walker was hired by Corporex Companies, Inc. in Northern Kentucky. As part of Mr. Escobar’s severance package, he has been hired as an outside lawyer in Colombia for Chiquita, company records
revealed.
One high-level Chiquita executive provided the Enquirer with recorded, internal company voice-mail messages to back up his information. Citing fear of losing his job and company retaliation, the executive requested
confidentiality.
Prior to leaving the company, Mr. Escobar, in a Dec. 13, 1997 voice-mail message to Chiquita lawyer Manuel Rodriguez, described how and why Banadex -Chiquita’s Colombian subsidiary - became involved in the incident that included payments to Colombian customs agents. He also explained Chiquita’s need to obtain the Colombian-owned storage facility. Mr. Escobar’s message was spoken in Spanish and translated for the Enquirer.
The customs area Chiquita was allowed to use after paying Colombian customs agents is both an enclosed and open area “in which the imported cargoes we bring in (to Colombia) are stored,” Mr. Escobar said. “While the nationalization process takes place, we bring fertilizers, fungicides, etc., in pretty big amounts.”
The “nationalization process” is when cargo arriving in Colombia from other countries is kept stored at an indoor - outdoor facility controlled by Colombian customs officials. The cargo remains in the customs area until it is inventoried, recorded and all taxes are paid to the Colombian government. The customs agents then release the cargo so the company that owns it can deliver it to its operations in that country.
“If we didn’t have the customs (storage) area, we would have to ask a third party to give us the service of having this cargo in storage while the nationalization process happens,” Mr. Escobar said. It would cost Banadex
more than $1 million a year to obtain a similar storage facility for imported cargo during the nationalization process, he said.
Responding to suggestions by Chiquita officials in Cincinnati that they may want to “shut down” the Colombian government storage operation due to concerns that the way that the use of the property was obtained would
surface, Mr. Escobar, in his voice-mail message responded:
“I’m afraid there’s an excess of prevention in this, almost paranoia. I personally don’t find it logical to shut down ours (storage operation) so a third party will give the service. It is better to leave it as is, or let it die by itself, but not using it, frankly, makes no sense to me.”
Discussing how payment was made to Colombian customs agents to secure the storage area, Mr. Escobar said: “What happened, remember Manuel, was that the company, for security reasons, delivered what had to be delivered to the customs agents, who gave it to a third party and this party to its final destination, which means a lot of time without being traced.
“I see no risk, maybe one in a thousand, that this thing could mean that we are in trouble,” Mr. Escobar said. “If whomever found about this inside the company decides to make a scandal out of it, that’s another thing that you
will be able to analyze better than me.”
In a Nov. 17, 1997 voice-mail message from Mr. Walker to Robert Olson, Chiquita’s general counsel in Cincinnati, Mr. Walker confirmed the bribery issue as the reason he was leaving the company. In the message, Mr. Walker also expressed concern that other Chiquita employees were learning of it after promises the matter would be kept confidential. He said one of his best friends, a Chiquita finance executive, had asked him about gossip that he (Walker) was fired for being involved in a Colombian bribery scheme.
Mr. Walker, Chiquita’s vice president of operations, in his voice-mail message, said his friend had heard that “Jorge Forton and myself had been fired for bribing a Colombian official for a warehouse facility in Turbo. So
he has it pretty close to accurate if not completely accurate.”
Noting that he had signed a confidentiality agreement with Chiquita prohibiting him from discussing the matter with anyone, Mr. Walker said in his voice-mail message:
“So here I am by contract totally precluded from being able to address with my closest friends information they’re hearing in the most mundane fashion through the office and obviously it’s extremely disturbing to me, extremely frustrating to me, and I don’t know what at this point you guys can do about it, but I hope you’re able to do something.”
Mr. Walker did not return repeated telephone calls from the Enquirer.
In a Dec. 10, 1997 voice-mail message to Mr. Olson and Chiquita President Warshaw, Chiquita lawyer David Hills described a conversation he had with outside lawyers in Colombia regarding Renaldo Escobar and the ways in
which his employment could be severed due to the Colombian incident.
Mr. Hills advised against firing Mr. Escobar because the only way to legally do that would alert Colombian authorities to the fact the bribery occurred. Additionally, he added, notifying Colombian authorities would publicly tie Chiquita to the bribe.
Mr. Hills’ message, in part, said, “We can only fire him (Escobar) with cause because of his involvement in the Colombian problem if we file a criminal charge against him with Colombian authorities. Clearly we would not want to do that because we would be implicating ourselves. So basically, the only thing we can ask Renaldo to do is to basically have a, we’re basically asking him to resign, which doesn’t put us in the best legal position.”
Chiquita, in a written response through its lawyers to the Enquirer, declined to discuss the Colombian incident, the resignations of the employees, or whether the company violated the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
“Chiquita’s ‘Code of Conduct for Associates’ requires employees to comply at all times with the laws that affect the company’s business,” the response said. “It is Chiquita’s policy and consistent practice to take appropriate disciplinary action where employees fail to abide by this standard of conduct. Employment information, however, is strictly confidential.
“Chiquita respects the privacy and personal interests of its employees. As a result, it is Chiquita’s policy and practice not to discuss with the media -or anyone else - its relationships with particular employees or the
circumstances in which a person may then leave the company’s employment.”
Tax schemes
———–
Other internal documents indicate that Chiquita may have helped foreign brokers and banana growers evade or avoid taxes in their respective countries.
For example, an Oct. 17, 1991, internal report marked “Confidential” from Marco A. Garcia, a former Chiquita financial analyst, to Mr. Hills, explained how Chiquita maintained financial records in Miami for the purpose of
helping Ecuadoran growers, with whom it had contracts, evade taxes.
The report detailed the growers’ financial transactions with a Chiquita subsidiary called Agricola Del Guayas.
Under a section called, “Purpose of Offshore Books - Miami account,” it reads: “Competitive pressures. Growers want dollars offshore to evade taxes and to avoid converting to Sucres (Ecuadoran currency) at the official
rate which is 5% to 8% less than the free market rate.”
In another case, a series of tape-recorded voice-mail messages among Chiquita lawyers, company executives and employees reveals Chiquita’s plan to help a broker avoid paying taxes on an anticipated commission payment
from the company.
According to Chiquita records, a company called Corporacion Midori S.A. in San Jose, Costa Rica, was hired in 1996 to help sell some of Chiquita’s Honduran and Colombian companies, land and equipment.
Prior to agreeing to broker the sales deals, representatives of Midori and a Chiquita subsidiary called Chiquita Brands Inc., of Delaware, signed a contract to allow Midori to search for potential buyers and negotiate
possible deals, according to Chiquita records.
Midori then signed a similar contract with one of Chiquita’s Colombian subsidiaries, the records show.
Eugene Rodriguez, a Chiquita executive coordinating the Midori deal, told Chiquita officials in Cincinnati in an Oct. 11, 1997 voice-mail message that the company had agreed to pay Midori its commission “offshore” in “a deal
where they don’t have to pay taxes.”
In his voice-mail message to Mr. Hills, Mr. Rodriguez said: “Actually we asked the guys to provide a deal for us, an offshore deal. A deal where they don’t have to pay taxes…They (Midori) didn’t want to pay taxes. And we
always said that they would have the payment offshore.”
A high-level source within Chiquita who was involved in the Midori payment scheme confirmed how the deal was arranged. An offshore account would be used to pay Midori so the Colombian government would not have access to any paperwork, such as invoices, etc., to prove how much, if anything, Midori would be paid for its commission, he said.
But in early October, a problem arose after Midori negotiated the sale of a Chiquita banana operation in Colombia called Shangri-La.
When Midori asked about its commission, experts in Chiquita’s tax department in Cincinnati questioned whether Chiquita was legally obligated to withhold 35 percent in taxes from the commission per Colombian tax
laws, according to several internal Chiquita voice-mail messages.
To avoid jeopardizing the sale, Chiquita officials devised a plan to pay Midori its commission without withholding the Colombia-required tax.
Midori had complicated the commission payment problem by signing a broker’s agreement to sell Chiquita’s Colombian property with both Chiquita Brands Inc. and its Colombian subsidiary, according to company records. That problem had to be overcome if Midori’s commission was to be paid without withholding the Colombian tax, according to Mr. Hills in an Oct. 11 voice-mail message to John Ordman, Chiquita’s senior vice president of finance, and others.
To solve the legal dilemma, Chiquita officials came up with a plan to pay Midori its commission without taking out taxes. The plan was described in an Oct. 20, 1997 voice-mail message from Mr. Hills to Mr. Ordman. Chiquita would obtain every copy of Midori’s contract with Chiquita’s Colombian subsidiary. All copies of the contract would be sent to Cincinnati headquarters where officials would “annul it, kill it, mutually terminate it,” said Mr. Hills.
Chiquita wanted to hide the fact that Midori’s commission was going to be paid offshore, according to an Oct. 20, 1997 voice-mail message to Mr. Hills from Scott Wittman, a Chiquita tax specialist.
“We have consulted with counsel (and) gotten their input on this transaction. They feel that we have a position that we can take. It says because this agreement is between CBI (Chiquita Brands Inc.) and Midori that the withholding tax would not apply.
“The one thing they caution us on is definitely do not include in the (land sale) agreement anything related to the brokerage commission and the fact that it is getting paid offshore. We obviously don’t want to highlight that,” Mr. Wittman said. Company records did not reveal the amount of the proposed land deal or the proposed broker’s fee.
At the last minute, Midori’s deal to sell the Shangri-La property apparently fell through, according to a March 23 voice-mail message from John Ordman to Mr. Hills. Mr. Ordman said that more than five months after the Midori commission tax issue surfaced, Chiquita still owned and controlled the Shangri-La property.
“It’s not a perfect secret,” Mr. Ordman said. “There are people who know that Chiquita owns Shangri-La. But it is not generally known in Colombia, and it’s particularly not generally known among the popular groups, if you will, in Colombia. There is probably no place that I can think of that this company has more exposure to an easy $ 10 million loss than Shangri-La. If Shangri-La were to be invaded by squatters, or as you know, it is in a bit of aguerrilla-active area, it could really become extremely difficult to protect. We’ve had some near misses there in the past. It’s one of the things that really keeps me awake at night.”
In a Chiquita response to Enquirer questions issued through its attorneys, the company stated that information provided to the Enquirer was false and that “any implication of wrongdoing on the part of Chiquita in connection with these alleged transactions is false.”
Chiquita further stated that “Chiquita has not sold the property referred to by the Enquirer and has not terminated any contract with Midori.”
Honduran tax problem
——————–
Chiquita’s main subsidiary in Honduras also has run into a tax problem there.
In early 1997, the Honduran tax department completed an investigation of the Tela Railroad Co. to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars in asset taxes from at least 1992, according to Chiquita re-cords and Honduran officials.
After unsuccessful attempts to get the company to pay, Honduran tax officials took their case against Chiquita’s subsidiary to court, according to several voice-mail messages of Chiquita tax specialist David Hochwalt to
Mr. Hills, Mr. Ordman and others. That action was confirmed for the Enquirer by Jorge Ramirez Mendoza, a Honduran tax department spokesman.
In November, Chiquita “threw in the towel” and agreed it had, indeed, failed to pay asset taxes of 8.7 million lempiras (about $ 700,000 U.S.), since 1991, according to Mr. Hochwalt, in a Nov. 14, 1997 voice-mail message to Mr. Olson, Chiquita’s general counsel and senior vice president.
The company paid its disputed taxes in late November.
To keep from paying an additional hundreds of thousands of dollars in penalties and interest on the unpaid taxes, Chiquita lawyers asked Honduran officials to eliminate those charges under a Honduran tax amnesty plan,
according to Mr. Hochwalt
In a statement issued through its attorneys, Chiquita said that the company’s subsidiary and the Honduran government had “divergent views” on the taxes owed and the company was challenging the amount in court. The
subsidiary eventually “elected to participate in a national tax amnesty program by paying the tax in dispute (about $ 700,000). Participation in the program eliminated the risk of interest or penalties that might have
resulted if the (legal) challenges had not succeeded.”
Chiquita officials in Cincinnati approved hiring a San Jose, Costa Rica company to find buyers for the banana giant’s non-core assets in Colombia and Honduras. Problems arose when the Costa Rican company - Midori -
found a buyer for Chiquita’s Shangri-La plantation in Colombia, but insisted its commission be paid off-shore as a way to avoid paying taxes. The land sale apparently fell through.
Key Chiquita players
——————–
Chiquita Brands International is the world’s largest banana company, employing more than 36,000 workers and selling its fruit in 40 countries.
The company deals in fruit juices, ready-to-eat salads, margarine, shortening, vegetable oils and canned food. But its signature product has always been the bright yellow banana that it bills as a “perfect” food.
Carl Lindner, 79, self-made multi-millionaire , is Chairman and CEO of Chiquita Brands International. He took control of the company in 1984 .
Keith Lindner, 38, made president and chief operating officer of the company in 1991. Later moved to the position of vice-chairman.
Steven G. Warshaw, 43, president and chief operating officer of Chiquita Brands International Inc.
Copyright 1998 The Cincinnati Enquirer
The offer to propagandapress.org was supposed to be a remedy for taking my photos without my permission. But the offer to propagandapress.org and Marcus Jacobs no longer stands since they just want to harass. I am a working guy like everyone else. If you want pictures of Mike Oliver I recommend that you take pictures yourself instead of stealing mine. TW
Tim
16 Mar 07 at 4:43 am
The offer to propagandapress.org was supposed to be a remedy for taking my photos without my permission. But the offer to propagandapress.org and Marcus Jacobs no longer stands since they just want to harass. I am a working guy like everyone else. If you want pictures of Mike Oliver I recommend that you take pictures yourself instead of stealing mine. TW
Tim
16 Mar 07 at 4:44 am
The offer to propagandapress.org was supposed to be a remedy for taking my photos without my permission. But the offer to propagandapress.org and Marcus Jacobs no longer stands since they just want to harass. I am a working guy like everyone else. If you want pictures of Mike Oliver I recommend that you take pictures yourself instead of stealing mine. It was your own actions that took you down propagandapress. TW
Tim
16 Mar 07 at 4:58 am
The offer to propagandapress.org was supposed to be a remedy for taking my photos without my permission. But the offer to propagandapress.org and Marcus Jacobs no longer stands since they just want to harass. I am a working guy like everyone else. If you want pictures of Mike Oliver I recommend that you take pictures yourself instead of stealing mine. TW
Tim
16 Mar 07 at 5:45 am
AGAIN, The initial offer to propagandapress.org was supposed to be a remedy for taking my photos without my permission. But the offer to propagandapress.org and Marcus Jacobs no longer stands since they just want to harass. I am a working guy like everyone else. If you want pictures of Mike Oliver I recommend that you take pictures yourself instead of stealing mine . TW
Tim
16 Mar 07 at 2:03 pm
Again, all one needs to do is read the propagandapress.org action above to see what a person means by harassment.The initial offer to propagandapress.org was supposed to be a remedy for taking my photos without my permission. But the offer to propagandapress.org and Marcus Jacobs no longer stands since they just want to harass. I am a working guy like everyone else. If you want pictures of Mike Oliver I recommend that you take pictures yourself instead of stealing mine. TW
Tim
16 Mar 07 at 2:07 pm
Propagandapress.org was silenced by their own actions, but according to propagandapress.org, everyone else is to blame. The offer to propagandapress.org was supposed to be a remedy for taking my photos without my permission. But the offer to propagandapress.org and Marcus Jacobs no longer stands since they just want to harass. I am a working guy like everyone else. If you want pictures of Mike Oliver I recommend that you take pictures yourself instead of stealing mine. TW
Tim
16 Mar 07 at 2:10 pm
I am just a working guy and propagandapress.org has no right to take my images and then post them without my permission. No way is propagandapress going to purchase my images because they are not for sale to them. I do not agree with the way that you target people who do not share your opinions. That fact is that you do not and will not ever know my feelings on political matters because I do not wish to share them with you. all you have is your own speculation. You twist the content of private emails and highlight and insert text to make the emails appear favorable to your view. It is simple. I will take legal action against you if the images are used as you stated many times before. Your name is lovely by the way Al Fallujah. Obviously a fake name just like your views. TW
Tim
16 Mar 07 at 8:54 pm
Timmy before you go over the edge due to your high levels of anxiety and aroused emotions please remember you contacted us then went on to contact our web server in a maneuver that was quite deceptive…check your usages of words before you toss them out there secret agent man
ask 31 shots mike about fallujah next time you guys get together for a chit chat cause he does have the blood of a whole lot of innocent Iraqis dripping from his paws
so i guess we’ll see each other in a kangaroo court somewhere in gringolandia? cause you cant seem to stop with the threats.
propagandapress
16 Mar 07 at 11:10 pm
how ridiculous is the logic of propagandapress.org. I was the photographer who was doing my job, standing in the cold for hours lugging all that equipment and answering endless questions as to why I was out there in the streets of NY. Who was I waiting to take a picture of and so-om. Propagandapress cowards weren’t there. I was the photographer that got the shot of that 31 Shot Cop. And there was no malice toward anyone and that’s that. It wasn’t Propagandapress.org. In fact Propagandapress.org never did anything for Sean Bell. Now propagandapress.org and Marcus Jacobs want to lump me in with the shooters of Sean Bell when infact I only took a photo of the NYPD Detective. I never even met him before. But now A scared little coward hiding behind anonymity and a fake name Al Fallujah want’s to throw down with of all people a photographer who was simply doing his job. Idon’t even think anyone else reads propagandapress anyway. By the way I have never worked for the NYPD I was simply doing my job. I recommend that cowardly Marcus get a job.TW
Tim
17 Mar 07 at 12:25 am
It is well known that Propagandapress stole my work.TW
Tim
17 Mar 07 at 1:29 am
by the way Timmy we don’t expect you to admit working for the NYPD or being a soft imperialist here. and also we honour your service and bravery in the line of duty in taking the photo of 31 shot mikey
you’re getting a bit too emotional. take a breather and take a walk around the block or something. what exactly could we have done for Sean Bell? predict he was going to be murdered for being Black and warn him? turn on our pre.crime scanner and zap 31 shot mike? call your co.workers at the NYPD?
keep doing your job Timmy
propagandapress
17 Mar 07 at 2:23 am
Again I am just a working man. I am in no way employed by the NYPD. Get it right.TW
Tim
17 Mar 07 at 2:41 am
Calling them comrades is deceptive at best by propagandapress.org. A more correct term would be subjects of my photographs.TW
Tim
17 Mar 07 at 2:45 am
You are all a bunch of clowns, and your collective intellectual engine has the horsepower of a lone fat hampster on a lead wheel, its body riddled by crack cocaine, starving and vainly chasing a morsel of its own sh*t.
Thankfully the only responsiblity any of you will ever have is running this website. If you can even keep that up. Phew!
Steven
17 Mar 07 at 12:27 pm
It is obvious that the only thing propaganda.org so-called writers are good at is cut and paste.
Jayson
17 Mar 07 at 4:55 pm
jason we’re all waiting for our acceptance letters from colombia school of journalism. put in a good word for us with your pals over there
propagandapress
17 Mar 07 at 5:46 pm
Propagandists use a variety of propaganda techniques to influence opinions and to avoid the truth. Often these techniques rely on some element of censorship or manipulation, either omitting significant information or distorting it. They are indistinguishable except in degree from the persuasion techniques employed in social, religious and commercial affairs. Recently persuasion technology has come into common use, in all styles from digital image alteration to persuasive presentation and persistent telemarketing based on repetition, making these techniques impossible to avoid. Hmm. Sounds like propagandapress.org
Jayson
18 Mar 07 at 6:51 am
somebody, anybody give Jason a cookie. this guy is a genius
otherwise we can sign him up for a military tribunal at paradise guantanamo
GW
18 Mar 07 at 8:03 am
Marcus at propagandapress.org says above “now while all this is taking place”. It is a lie. It iwas not “while all this is taking place” The letter to the webhost was after Marcus made it clear that he had no intention of following any copyright protocol.TW
TimW
19 Mar 07 at 12:32 am
Timmy cant have it both ways…while he was thanking us [see below] he was also contacting our web host and accusing us of terrorism
his letter to Marcus was dated 14th March….the web host sent us his complaint on the 15th. which meant they got it that day or earlier. if they got it that day the 15th this would mean Timmy is a bigger liar than previously thought. assuming they got it before the 15th then Timmy is insane cause like we said he sent that letter of thanks on the 14th.
we got everything in documented evidence unlike one double agent who shall remain nameless
From: “Tim Wâ€
Date: Wed, March 14, 2007 8:46 pm
Hi Marcus:
Thanks for your reply. I do feel better about the situation since you replied in earnest. Thanks in advance for removing the photo and my private message.
Subject: propagandapress.org - AUP/TOS violation
From: [our web host]
Date: Thu, March 15, 2007 12:09 am
Hello,
We’ve received a complaint regarding the content of [propaganda press] so
wee had to disable HTTP access to this account.
propagandapress
19 Mar 07 at 2:25 am
Get ready for your libel slander suit. Because you and wordpress have it coming to you.TW
TimW
19 Mar 07 at 5:11 am
please clarify so we can be on the right side of the law. you do not work for NYPD or any affiliated organisations?
propagandapress
19 Mar 07 at 6:29 am
mr president!! mr president, now that you’re a multiple winner of the shoot yourself in the mouth award what are you going to do?
hell! me and laura we is going to disney land world land. whatever we going to disney house
Slander is an untruthful oral (spoken) statement about a person that harms the person’s reputation or standing in the community. [Timmy's got us on tape saying he's dating Madonna and Britney]
Libel
An untruthful statement about a person, published in writing or through broadcast media, that injures the person’s reputation or standing in the community.
propagandapress
19 Mar 07 at 6:44 am
TW Jules: The path of the righteous man is beset on all sides by the iniquities of the selfish and the tyranny of evil men. Blessed is he, who in the name of charity and good will, shepherds the weak through the valley of darkness, for he is truly his brother’s keeper and the finder of lost children. And I will strike down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger those who would attempt to poison and destroy my brothers. And you will know my name is the Lord when I lay my vengeance upon thee.
TW Jules
19 Mar 07 at 6:59 am
I’m NOT NYPD.
TimW
21 Mar 07 at 1:03 am
Okay so Propagandapress doesn’t want to stop this. I’ll see you and webpress in court.TW
Tim W
30 Mar 07 at 2:41 pm
Propagandapress liars will be served a court summons for what they have done on their pack of lies website and blogs.
Tim W
23 Apr 07 at 2:48 am
propaganda press would like to continue extending our generosity to revolutionary timmy wiencis. we’ve been generous enough to let him rant and rave on our pages un.edited. generous enough to let him attack, threaten, attempt to extort, make false accusations, tell lies, distort the facts, attempt weasel his way into the hearts of our web host and domain registrar with claims of…you guessed it…terrorism and on and on…kinda like his friends at the 103rd precinct and the NYPD who killed Sean Bell
over indulge revolutionary timmy but remember one thing we’re gunnin for freedom and you can’t stop this train.
propagandapress
23 Apr 07 at 10:24 am
Summons
The paper that tells a defendant that he or she is being sued and asserts the power of the court to hear and determine the case. A form of legal process that commands the defendant to appear before the court on a specific day and to answer the complaint made by the plaintiff.
The summons is the document that officially starts a lawsuit. It must be in a form prescribed by the law governing procedure in the court involved, and it must be properly served on, or delivered to, the defendant. If the prescribed formalities are not observed, the court lacks authority to hear the dispute.
In the federal district courts, the summons is prepared by the attorney for the plaintiff and given to the clerk of the court where the case will be heard. When the plaintiff’s complaint, setting out his claim, is filed with the court, the clerk signs the summons and gives it and a copy of the complaint to a U.S. marshal or to someone else appointed to serve the papers. Once the summons and complaint are served on the defendant, she must respond to them within twenty days or whatever other time the court allows.
Some states follow this same procedure, but other states allow service of the summons and complaint by delivery directly to the defendant. In those states, the lawsuit is considered begun as soon as the defendant receives the papers, even though nothing has yet been filed with a court. Actions commenced in this way are sometimes called “hip pocket” suits.
propagandapress
23 Apr 07 at 10:25 am
Marcus Jacobs and propagandapress.org were NOT there for the Bell family. But Marcus Jacobs showed up onlinline afterwards to exploit the situation to promote his personal hatered against all cops.
Jayson
23 Apr 07 at 5:13 pm
Marcus Jacobs and propagandapress.org were NOT there for the Bell family. But Marcus Jacobs showed up onlinline afterwards to exploit the situation to promote his personal hatred against all cops.
Jayson
23 Apr 07 at 5:13 pm
[...] 16th, 2007 before sending our letter to Tim not Timmy we realised we could not access the site. we kept getting an error message [...]
propaganda press silenced « propaganda press
16 Mar 07 at 5:56 am
[...] Marcus: Thanks for your reply. I do feel better about the situation since you replied in earnest. Thanks in advance for removing [...]
Tim W and propaganda press in dialogue « propaganda press
16 Mar 07 at 6:44 am
[...] Comments propagandapress on Tim W and propaganda press in dialogueTimW on Tim W and propaganda press in dialogueGW on Tim W’s letter to our web hostJayson on Tim W’s [...]
Tim Wiencis shoots himself in the mouth again « propaganda press
19 Mar 07 at 2:51 am