Thursday, December 04, 2008

Justices Decide on Obama's Birth Cert Suits

Update: The SC has thrown out these lawsuits and is likely to continue that trend when others arise. What a waste of our courts. 
The loons have made it into the mainstream press, which proves you should never dismiss the fringe, no matter how loony they appear. They've been working on trying to prove Obama is not a U.S. citizen for a solid year now.

If you Google any of these folks, you'll find that they're way out on a limb wearing a funny hat and polka dot socks. You'll also find out their intentions are race based. They're having difficulty with Obama's blackness. Andy Martin was one of the originators of the Obama is a stealth Muslim terrorist rumor that persisted throughout the campaign.

The Supreme Court will decide what to do with several of the cases tomorrow.
Chicago Trib: Among those filing lawsuits is Alan Keyes, who lost to Obama in the 2004 Illinois Senate race. Keyes' suit seeks to halt certification of votes in California. Another suit by a Kentucky man seeks to have a federal judge review Obama's original birth certificate, which Hawaiian officials say is locked in a state vault.

Other suits have been filed by Andy Martin, whose case was dismissed in Hawaii, and by an Ohio man whose case also was dismissed. Five more suits, all later dismissed, were filed in Hawaii by a person who is currently suing the "Peoples Association of Human, Animals Conceived God/s and Religions, John McCain [and] USA Govt." The plaintiff previously sought to sue Wikipedia and "All News Media."

The most famous case questioning Obama's citizenship was filed in Pennsylvania in August on behalf of Philip J. Berg and sought to enjoin the Democratic National Committee from nominating Obama. The U.S. Supreme Court declined to accept the case. Earlier, a federal judge rejected it for "lack of standing"—ruling that Berg had no legal right to sue. In cases like this, judges sometimes believe the matter is best left to political institutions, such as the Electoral College or Congress, said legal scholar Eugene Volokh of the University of California at Los Angeles.