By Stewart Resmer
The Marine Corps Field Manual teaches and admonishes that there is no such thing as a coincidence on the battlefield. And, that if it happens again that you may assume that you have engaged the enemy.
Coincidentally, as the Republican National Convention kicks off in Milwaukee, the federal judge originally appointed by that very Republican nominee for President, just threw out the “Classified Documents” case against the the same individual, who just as coincidentally was convicted on 34 felonies, and is an adjudicated sex offender, serial bankruptcy artist, election denying, known Epstein associate liable for $450 million of fines, fees, court costs, and assessments in one case and $88 million in yet another case, plus interest, on the grounds that the appointment of the federal prosecutor (aka Special Counsel) is unconstitutional.
But wait, there’s more!
Coincidentally, the appointment of any Special Prosecutor that this court determines as unconstitutional in favor of the accused serial offender flies in the face of the coincidental historical record of the appointment of Special Prosecutors like Leon Jaworski during the Watergate era, the coincidental appointment of Kenneth Starr who replaced Robert Fiske during the Whitewater era.
Coincidentally others like Donald Smatz, Daniel S. Pearson, Curtis Vin Kaam, Carol Elder Bruce, were appointed as Special Counsel (Prosecutors) in a plethora of other federal cases.
That’s a lot of coincidences that just cannot be ignored when one stops to think how many times this federal judge has already ruled in favor of this individual and has been overruled by the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals.
Coincidental to the notion that the party of law and order just nominated a criminal in an attempt to hold on to power? You can form your own assumptions of what’s going on here, I’ve got mine.
Stewart Resmer is a Vietnam-era veteran, who served in the Marine Corps from 1969 to 1970, worked as a Hollywood stuntman and limo driver, and gained national attention after he removed a Confederate Battle Flag—a symbol of racism, slavery and white supremacy—from a flagpole at a banquet hall that abruptly closed a year earlier in Wayne Township, where he has been a resident for years. The New Jersey Monitor called Resmer “an unlikely transparency crusader” for using New Jersey’s Open Public Records Act when he suspects elected officials are hiding something.

