Klayman, taking an apparent break from his winning birfer lawsuit in Florida, pens his take on what should be done in the Zimmerman case... indict the prosecutor. And he's sent her an ultimatum, and if she doesn't respond satisfactorily, by golly he's going to do just that, in his spare time, I suppose, because he's also taking step to indict Obama.
Last week I wrote that one of our last recourses as patriots and citizens of the United States was to impanel our own grand juries, as proscribed in the Constitution, and bring criminal charges against those establishment politicians and public servants who are bringing down our nation through their corrupt actions.
While our illegitimate president, Barack Hussein Obama, remains at the top of the list – and indeed I am taking steps to properly have him indicted for his fraudulent and treasonous acts – another obvious legal target of We the People’s push for justice should be Duval County State Attorney Angela Corey.[...]
It now turns out that newly disclosed evidence shows that Zimmerman likely had a reasonable fear of severe bodily injury or death and acted appropriately in self-defense by shooting Trayvon Martin. This evidence comes in the form of a photo of Zimmerman’s bloody head taken by a third party just minutes after Martin was shot and killed. The photo was not disclosed by Corey in sworn affidavits she filed in support of Zimmerman’s indictment, showing her predilection to charge the young man at all costs.
As reported by Breitbart.com, it is not surprising that even liberal constitutional Harvard Law professor
Alan Dershowitz was outraged by Corey’s criminal actions in not only succumbing to pressure to indict Zimmerman, but for in effect falsifying evidence. Here is what Dershowitz – who, despite his leftist leanings, from my experience is a man of intellectual integrity (for example, he views Roe v. Wade as in illegal Supreme Court decision) – told the Internet publication:
[...]
This week, I penned a letter to Corey
on behalf of the American people,

demanding that she dismiss her indictment of Zimmerman and present all of the evidence, including but not limited to the exculpatory photo, to a neutral grand jury that would then make the call whether to indict the young Hispanic and, ironically, part-black man, it now turns out.
If Corey does not respond affirmatively to my letter and do the right thing and mete out justice on behalf of We the People, she should be made an example of and indicted herself for perjury, obstruction of justice and other related crimes for cooking the charges against Zimmerman.