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HORIST: The shocking story of Aaron Schock.

<p>For those who may not find the name immediately familiar – and that is understandable – allow me to introduce you to Aaron Schock&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Schock entered public life at the early age of 19 when he was elected to the Peoria&comma; Illinois School Board – the youngest person ever to be elected to a school board in Illinois&comma; and perhaps the nation&period;  At the age of 22&comma; he was elected vice chairman of the school board and at 23 the president – again&comma; the youngest in Illinois history&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In that same year&comma; Schock ran and won a seat in the Illinois State House – making him the youngest person ever to serve in that body&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In 2008 – at the age of 27 – Schock ran for the United States House of Representatives and won&period;  He was again the youngest member of that body – but by far not the youngest in American history&period;  In the early days of the Republic there were scores of congressmen in their mid to late-20s – many barely over the constitutional minimum age requirement of 25&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Schock became one of the most famous members of Congress – not just because of his age&comma; but he was a bit of a sex symbol celebrity&period;  His chiseled &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;six-pack” and chest adorned the cover of Men’ Health magazine&period;  His vacation bathing suit photographs appeared in publications across the nation&period;  Readers of <em>Huffington Post<&sol;em> voted Schock the &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;hottest member of Congress&period;”<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Schock’s rise to prominence was not without a few minor ethical issues&period;  He drew criticism for serving as development and construction officer for the Peterson Company – the real estate arm of a healthcare facilities operator while serving as a member of the Illinois House&period;  His dad testified in a court case that young Schock had falsely notarized dates on documents involving tax shelters for his parents&period;  He was accused of selling his home to a major donor for three times its market value&period;  The House Ethics Committee reported that there was &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;substantial reason to believe that Rep&period; Schock violated federal law&comma; House rules and standards of conduct &&num;8221&semi; for soliciting &dollar;25&comma;000 from then-House Majority Leader Eric Cantor for his friend Adam Kinzinger’s campaign for Congress&period;  Schock would later pay a &dollar;10&comma;000 fine for that request&period;  Virtually all of these were considered minor infractions and did not affect his career to any appreciable degree&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Then came the scandal of 2015&period;  The Washington Post ran a story criticizing Schock for the grandeur of his office décor – reporting that he spent an inordinate amount of money to make his office look like a set for the television serious Downton Manor&period;  Well&comma; actually he did not spend it&period;  He never paid the decorating company – and that was a problem&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>This triggered a broader investigation by the prosecutors&period;  There were issues of paying for workout DVDs with campaign funds&period;  Media investigations alleged that Schock had inappropriately spent more than &dollar;100&comma;000 of office funds on personal expenditures&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Though many of the allegations were dubious and at worse controversial&comma; the federal prosecutors stepped in and charged Schock with 24 criminal counts &&num;8212&semi; including misuse of government funds&comma; fraud&comma; lying to investigators and filing false tax returns&period;  If convicted of these charges&comma; Schock could have spent 100 years in prison&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>As it turns out&comma; the case is less about a congressman going wrong and more about prosecutorial abuse&period;  He was first victimized by a grand jury process that enables a determined prosecutor to get indictments against anyone for almost anything&period;  It is so easy that in the profession it is often said that a prosecutor could get a grand jury to indict a ham sandwich&period;   The example is extreme&comma; but it reflects an unfortunate fact&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Two of the charges were so bad that Judge Colin Bruce summarily dismissed them&period;  Subsequently&comma; United States prosecutor Timothy Bass was removed from the case for improper behavior&comma; and even Judge Bruce had to surrender the case after making prejudicial remarks&period;  Once the case was re-assigned the Justice Department announced that yet another group of prosecutors would take over the case – prosecutors from a completely different district &&num;8212&semi; on the theory that they would be more objective – although that was not the official reason&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>This year&comma; the more objective prosecutors essentially threw in the towel&period;  They struck a deal to drop ALL the charges for a restitution of &dollar;42&comma;000 to the IRS and &dollar;68&comma;000 to his own campaign fund&period;  Schock would also plead guilty to the misdemeanor of failing to properly report some expense&period;  All of these are in the category of mistakes or &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;clerical errors” and are usually resolved administratively&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Schock is no longer a big name in the news anymore&comma; but his case should scare the Hell out of any freedom loving Americans&period;  We live in a nation where lawyers are the ruling-class and the prosecutors tend to be the enforcement arm of the ruling class – and their bias is a growing problem&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In the past&comma; this writer has written about the unfairness – the evil – of the grand jury system&period;  America is only one of three nations with such a procedure&period;  I have also raised concerns about the distortion of our democracy by having lawyers as the ruling class&period;  The Aaron Schock case in only one of millions&period;  He is still prominent enough to get noticed&period;  Not so with so many others abused by our prosecutorial system&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; there &OpenCurlyQuote;tis<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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