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The Private Attorney Generals Department is composed of Private Citizens and Nationals whose Mission is to enforce the Private Rights of Action provided by Congress and State Legislatures. 

Another objective of Civil RICO is to turn victims into prosecutors, “private attorneys  general”, dedicated to eliminating racketeering activity.  See Rotella v. Wood.

 

About Us

 

The Private Attorney Generals Department is a Company established by Victims of Human Trafficking, Deprivation of Civil Rights, Fraud, Forgeries, Theft and Attempted Theft by both White and Blue Collar Criminals. It is not a Law Firm or Organization Composed of Attorney's At Law, but persons who have experience litigating as Pro Se Plaintiffs and Pro Se Defendants. 

A private attorney general may appear in court “ex rel.” on behalf of the “United States” (i.e. the federal government), the State of California, the People of California or the People of the United States of America.  Confer at “Ex relatione” in Black’s Law Dictionary, Sixth Edition. 

 

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PRIVATE ATTORNEY GENERALS DEPARTMENT

P.O. Box 2433

16 Salem Rd.
Willingboro, NJ 08046

 

Email: 

privateattorneygeneraldept@gmail.com

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      Areas of Service


The Private Attorney Generals Office provides Membership to Victims of Crime who seek to civilly prosecute their own cases. 

 

For Members we assist with the necessary information and tools for the Prepartion and filing Pro Se documents, such as appeals or motions and locating relevant information for cases brought pursuant to Private Rights of Action. 

 

 

A highly acclaimed civil rights lawyer, advocate, and legal scholar.   In an article addressing the status of contemporary African Americans, Alexander said, "The clock has been turned back on racial progress in America, though scarcely anyone seems to notice. All eyes are fixed on people like Barack Obama and Oprah Winfrey who have defied the odds and achieved great power, wealth and fame".[10] Alexander sees the masses of ordinary African Americans as being relegated to the status of a "racial caste," even though the official approach to dealing with minorities has been redesigned to avoid explicit use of racial attributes. According to Alexander, forms of "racial control" in the United States evolve as required by changing political circumstances and contemporary standards, with the policies of the current criminal justice system replacing Jim Crow laws, which in turn had replaced slavery. Alexander aims to mobilize the civil rights community to move the incarceration issue to the forefront of its agenda and to provide factual information, data, arguments and a point of reference for those interested in pursuing the issue. Her broader goal is the revamping of the prevailing mentality regarding human rights, equality and equal opportunities in America, to prevent future cyclical recurrence of what she sees as "racial control under changing disguise.


The Pulitzer-Prize winning author of Slavery by Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II, and co-executive producer of the acclaimed PBS documentary of the same name. His is also a contributing editor at The Washington Post and chair and host of Forum, a public affairs program produced by the University of Virginia’s Miller Center and aired on more than 100 PBS affiliates across the U.S. Mr. Blackmon states: By 1900, the South’s judicial system had been wholly reconfigured to make one of its primary purposes the coercion of African Americans to comply with the social customs and labor demands of whites. It was not coincidental that 1901 also marked the final full disenfranchisement of nearly all blacks throughout the South. Sentences were handed down by provincial judges, local mayors, and justices of the peace—often men in the employ of the white business owners who relied on the forced labor produced by the judgments. Dockets and trial records were inconsistently maintained. Attorneys were rarely involved on the side of blacks. Revenues from the neo-slavery poured the equivalent of tens of millions of dollars into the treasuries of Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Georgia, Florida, Texas, North Carolina, and South Carolina—where more than 75 percent of the black population in the United States then lived.
 

 

   

  

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Appearing in a Monday interview on Al Jazeera America’s Talk to Al Jazeera with David Shuster, West said 2.5 million new prisoners have been incarcerated while Obama has been in office mostly “because of soft drugs” and the disparity in “crack cocaine versus regular cocaine” users. West referred to this phenomenon as the “new Jim Crow” because he said minority communities and the poor are disproportionately impacted.

 

West blasted the level of corruption on Wall Street that has seen few people to go jail and said there has been a “two-tiered” system of justice under Obama.

 

West said that disparity applied to Obama’s economy as well, as corporations have made record profits while there has been “massive unemployment” and “increasing wealth inequality.” He said struggling Americans are “giving up work” or “working part time” in Obama’s economy and those numbers are not reflected in the official unemployment numbers.

Michelle Alexander

Douglas A. Blackmon

Cornel West

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