September 5, 2013
MA No Longer Most Corrupt State
Shady business: Former New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin (right) and his attorney arrive at court in February. He has pleaded not guilty to charges of taking bribes and free trips in exchange for city contracts.
These rankings are are based on the number of convictions, which is misleading. It shows that the maintenance mechanisms are working. But in Massachusetts the criminal justice system does not address government corruption. Crime families now control police agencies of the state and the federal government's offices in Massachusetts. It is not possible to fight government corruption in Massachusetts. One major obstacle is the influence of Harvard University within the state. Education dominates the Massachusetts economy. Harvard University dominates education. Harvard University graduates and affiliates are elected and appointed to many offices in the local, state and U.S. government offices in Massachusetts. The corrective mechanisms are directed downward only. Police concentrate on street crime. State police protect elected officials from arrests conveniently withholding documents and records. The FBI frames innocent civilians and provides the identity of civilians who report crimes to criminals who execute them. Massachusetts is underrated in this survey due to faulty reasoning. The only time corruption is addressed is when the government prosecutors are dragged screaming by the Boston Herald which exposes what they can, fighting the Democratic criminal class which controls the state.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2412634/Louisiana-tops-list-countrys-corrupt.html
Want to keep your hands clean? Give Louisiana politics a miss: State tops the list for corruption in public office
Louisiana convicted 403 public officials in the past decade, according to the Justice Department
The Dakotas, Kentucky and Alaska made it into the top five for corruption
Former New Orleans mayor Ray Nagin goes on trial next month for taking $200,000 in bribes and free vacations in exchange for city contracts following Hurricane Katrina
By DAILY MAIL REPORTER
PUBLISHED: 13:23 EST, 5 September 2013 | UPDATED: 14:31 EST, 5 September 2013
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