Wednesday, April 20, 2016

Michigan law at any level doesn't provide for poisoning people. There are many more involved with looking the other way.

There are many more involved. This incident encompasses too many people. There are deaths. (click here) There is poisoning of thousands of children. The last estimate is 9000 children. (click here) This is heinous by simply the fact there are so many people and their families effected for the rest of their lives. This occurred because of an administration that was out to punish Flint, Michigan at every turn over fiscal problems. This is far more than malfeasance and/or misconduct.

I won't accept the fact this was some kind of idiotic error. This went on and on for well over a year and nearly two years. If it weren't for a few professionals from OUTSIDE the Snyder administration these people would be realizing more and more hardship.


The State of Michigan's Attorney General better be incorporating the vast reach of the poisoning and the heinous and GROSSLY NEGLIGENT behavior of this Governor's administration.


There is a direct link to the Governor. He threw out the book and his emergency manager caused this to occur. There is absolutely no doubt this is one of the most heinous administrations the State of Michigan has seen.


Every one of those lives that have been effected because of vicious fiscal policy of Governor Snyder better receive justice. There better not be a slap on the wrist for anyone. I can't believe it has taken this long to BEGIN to come to conclusions. Obviously, Schuette doesn't have a clear grasp of the crimes committed here.


If this was anywhere other than Michigan the federal government would be screaming human rights violations. Yes, MOST DEFINITELY, there are crimes against humanity. Absolutely. I have no doubt.


April 19, 2016
Candice Williams

...The indictments are “the first of more to come,” one source said. (click here)

Schuette’s probe has been looking into state and local government officials to determine whether state laws were violated. In launching the investigation in January, Schuette said the crisis in Flint was “a human tragedy in which families are struggling with even the most basic parts of daily life.” He vowed to “help restore some of the trust in our government while helping families move forward.”

Schuette assembled what he called a “top-shelf” team earlier this year for the probe, led by Todd Flood, a former Wayne County assistant prosecutor, and Andrew Arena, who ran several major investigations as head of the Detroit FBI Office until his retirement in 2012. Arena came out of retirement, he said, because the Flint water investigation is “the biggest case in the history of the state.”...

...Liane Shekter Smith, former head of the DEQ’s Office of Drinking Water and Municipal Assistance. In response to a spike in Legionnaires’ cases that coincided with the water crisis — 91 cases in 17 months beginning in June 2014, including 12 deaths...