Friday, February 13, 2015

Pro Illegal Anti- American Oregon Governor Kitzhaber Resigns because he is Crook

Kitzhaber Resigns due to Illegal alien and Corrupt Fiance
 His fiance married an illegal alien from Africa for money, Then Kitzhaber gave illegal aliens in Oregon health care , including pregnant illegal aliens.
No co-pay. He printed up brochures in Mexican to enroll them on our dime.He actively worked for illegals, encouraging amnesty and for even more illegals to move to Oregon. 
He over-turned the voter approved initiative to stop giving licenses to illegals and ,we the voters, had to re-vote on it, approving it a second time.
 He is a completely daft old man who fails to understand what it is like to live in Oregon and not be wealthy.
A more personal scandal struck the governor's office late in 2014, when the Willamette Week exposed a previously unknown marriage between First Lady Cylvia Hayes and an Ethiopian immigrant in 1997. Hayes admitted to the union, which was dissolved in the early 2000s, and said it was an illegal green card marriage into which she entered for money during a difficult period in her life. Kitzhaber was reportedly unaware of the marriage until the Willamette Week's investigation.[25] Just days later, local news stations reported that Hayes was involved in another criminal scheme in 1997 involving a marijuana grow operation in Washington, to which Hayes also admitted.[26][27] At the same time, Kitzhaber faced questions over Hayes' consulting business and whether the first lady improperly used her position and relationship to the governor. Kitzhaber asked for an ethics review into Hayes' business activities,[28] which the state commission declined to look into.[29] Kitzhaber publicly defended Hayes against criticism, saying the state executive branch followed protocol with regard to her consulting work and calling her past marriage a "personal issue", although he admitted at a debate that he was "taken aback and hurt" to learn of it.[30][31]
SALEM, Ore. (AP) — Long-time Democratic Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber on Friday announced his resignation amid allegations his fiancee used her relationship with him to enrich herself.
In a lengthy statement released Friday, Kitzhaber said he broke no laws and said his resignation would be effective on Wednesday.
"Nonetheless, I understand that I have become a liability to the very institutions and policies to which I have dedicated my career and, indeed, my entire adult life," he said.
The decision capped a wild week in which Kitzhaber seemed poised to step down, then changed his mind, but ultimately bowed to calls from legislative leaders that he quit the state's top job.
The announcement is a stunning fall from grace for the state's longest-serving chief executive.
Secretary of State Kate Brown, a Democrat like Kitzhaber, was expected to assume the office and become the first openly bisexual governor in the country. Unlike most states, Oregon does not have a lieutenant governor, and the state Constitution puts the secretary of state next in line.
Kitzhaber called Brown back to Oregon from a conference in Washington, D.C., earlier this week. People close to Kitzhaber say he asked her to come back after deciding to resign in the wake of the influence-peddling allegations involving his fiancee, a green-energy consultant. But he then changed his mind, saying he wouldn't step down, which led to a Wednesday meeting between Kitzhaber and Brown that she described as "strange."
By Thursday, the leaders of the state House and Senate said he had to go. Other top officials in the overwhelmingly Democratic state also said Kitzhaber should resign.
"I finally said, 'This has got to stop,'" Senate President Peter Courtney said after he met with Kitzhaber. "I don't know what else to do right now. It seems to be escalating. It seems to be getting worse and worse."
Kitzhaber handily won re-election in November to a fourth term after surviving the botched rollout of Oregon's online health care exchange, which turned into a national embarrassment.
But the allegations surrounding his fiancee Cylvia Hayes' work were more harmful, dominating headlines in the state following his victory.
A series of newspaper reports since October have chronicled Hayes' work for organizations with an interest in Oregon public policy. At the same time, she was paid by advocacy groups, she played an active role in Kitzhaber's administration, a potential conflict of interest.
The spotlight on Hayes led to her revealing that she accepted about $5,000 to illegally marry a man seeking immigration benefits in the 1990s. Later, she admitted she bought a remote property with the intent to grow marijuana.
Though questions about Hayes have swirled for months, the pressure on Kitzhaber intensified in recent weeks after newspapers raised questions about whether Hayes reported all her income on her tax returns. She has not publicly addressed the allegation and Kitzhaber has declined to. Earlier this week, Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum said she was launching a criminal investigation.
Kitzhaber has consistently maintained that he and Hayes worked hard to avoid conflicts between her public and private roles.
A fiercely private person, Kitzhaber has been forced to answer embarrassing and personal questions about his relationship. In response to questions at a news conference last month, Kitzhaber told reporters that he's in love with Hayes, but he's not blinded by it.
Kitzhaber, 67, met the 47-year-old Hayes before the 2002 election, when he was governor and she was a candidate for the state Legislature. She lost her race, but they later reconnected after Kitzhaber's term ended.
After eight years out of office, Kitzhaber was elected governor again in 2011. Hayes used the title "first lady," though the couple never married, and she took an active role in his administration. They were engaged last summer.
The scandal over alleged influence-peddling was not the only one to hammer Kitzhaber since his return as governor. Kitzhaber, a former emergency room physician and passionate advocate for health care reform, was embarrassed last year when Oregon was the only state that was unable to launch an online health insurance exchange in the first year of the federal health care law.
Oregon spent millions of dollars in federal grant money but has abandoned the technology for Cover Oregon. The state and its main technology contractor, Oracle Inc., are blaming each other for the failure in multiple lawsuits.
Before the Cover Oregon debacle, Kitzhaber had racked up a series of successes. He convinced lawmakers to overhaul the state Medicaid system, then convinced the Obama administration to give Oregon $2 billion to implement it. He spearheaded cuts to retirement benefits for public employees despite being elected with considerable help from the unions whose members lost out.
After the successes, top Republicans declined to challenge Kitzhaber in last year's election. He easily defeated state Rep. Dennis Richardson, who relentlessly pounded Kitzhaber over the Hayes scandal but was unable to overcome Oregon voters' aversion to his social conservative views.
Kitzhaber has an acute understanding of the Legislature and how to use the power of the governor's office to achieve his objectives. He proved adept at isolating the people he disagreed with, but he also angered his supporters and was left with few friends. When he got into trouble, his fellow Democrats did not speak up.
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Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Bay Roc Apartments Lake Oswego _ Another C & R Real Estate Slum

  Bay Roc Apartments (Land of desperation) owned By the Evil C& R Real Estate Services


The place is owned by a psychopath. I just got out, and thank God. Rents have risen 30% and 40% in the last three years and there are further rises coming with every lease. Storage was free: now it's $25 for a tiny room. Machines in the laundry room were reduced in number and programmed to cost more. Pets were allowed, now, none. Smoking was permitted outside: now you and your guests can't smoke anywhere on the property. Water and sewer are $140 per month and climbing because the owner decided to install a lot of unnecessary landscaping and pay for the installation and maintenance on the backs of the tenants. The trash chute (a favorite convenience and very helpful to handicapped tenants) was blocked and now garbage is kept in several ugly dumpsters in the parking lots. Every "improvement" has come at a severe price for current tenants. Dozens were forced to move, and suddenly. It was horrible in too many ways to count and the owner is STILL raising the rent. He saw a good location and a neglected property that no one else would buy because the repairs would be exorbitant. This prick was ruthless enough to throw people out, some of whom were old and had been there for decades. It takes a special person to look at a place that no one would touch and say, "I'M the asshole who will DO this!" Keep you chin in the air, Mr. and Mrs SlumLord. They're looking at you.
Bison coming to trample C & R real estate services

  • http://www.thebayroc.com/contact/


Monday, February 9, 2015

Squatter Right's In Oregon

Squatters Rights In Oregon
 Before Oregon was invaded , in the 1980's, campgrounds were free and housing was cheap and mexicans were still being deported.
 I know of one family that lived in a campground to save money for a house.
 Imagine that
- it all changed when most of California, the East Coast and Mexico began moving here in  the late 80's.
 With rents skyrocketing, we may have to form squatter's settlements on public lands. If you go into Seattle or Portland you can see campsites on the right of  way and sidewalks that never would have been here in the 80's.
 The campgrounds at the coast are expensive, but did you know that you can camp on the beach for free , legally, if there is no house or hotel fronting the beach where you camp?
 Or that you can legally live on public land for around two months? 
 Most of these ideas are not useful for w

There’s a Squatter on My Property! What Do I Do?

The United States has seen an increase in squatting in unoccupied houses, often foreclosed homes, in recent years. This can be a surprise to the owner. Last year, for example, the buyer of a foreclosed home in Portland was surprised to find that a squatter had broken into the house, changed the locks, and registered the electricity under his name. He claimed to be the owner based on occupancy.

At least one organization in Portland maintains a website claiming to give advice on how to take “free” real estate by possession. This site, however, gives incomplete legal information that is likely to get squatters into trouble. The law generally does not tolerate the simple taking of property by occupation, and landowners can usually get the squatter removed, either by arrest or through court order.
Getting Title by Adverse Possession
There is an old process to get title by occupation called “adverse possession.” The basic idea is that there is a statute of limitations on claims to recover land. If the occupier continuously occupied the property for the statutory period (ten years in Oregon and seven years in Washington), openly maintained a claim to land (or, in Washington, held a deed that was ineffective for some reason), and acted in a manner that disputed the right of the real owner, the occupier could eventually get title as a result of the owner failing to remove the occupier. That has always been a tall order. In one case from New York, the court ruled that using a vacant lot for a vegetable garden was not sufficient to indicate a claim of ownership and denied the garderner’s claim to the lot.
Adverse possession does have use in such situations as mismarked boundaries, errors in deeds, and the like. One case in Washington involved a series of lots, in which every buyer was mistakenly given the deed to the adjacent lot. When the problem was discovered, one of the owners refused to cooperate in fixing it, and the resulting suit went to the Washington Court of Appeals, which ruled that everyone was entitled to the land they actually possessed.
In Oregon, adverse possession is an extremely difficult claim to prove. In 1989, the legislature decided that the traditional rule was an invitation to bad faith taking of the title, and made the requirements much tighter. Oregon now requires that the occupant actually believe he or she owns the land, and that the belief have a reasonable basis from objective facts. In addition, the burden of proof has been raised to the level of high probability. Most squatters in Oregon, therefore, are unlikely to succeed at an adverse possession claim, as there are no grounds to claim ownership.
Washington also has some additional requirements. The occupier must pay proeprty taxes. If the occupier is claiming forest land, he or she must make $50,000 worth of improvements that remain for ten years. On the other hand, the occupier may be able to claim reimbursement for improvements and taxes paid, on the reasoning that it would be unfair for the owner to benefit. Most squatters probably will not pay the property taxes, so it is unlikely that they would succeed.
Getting Rid of the Squatter
In many cases, the police may remove a squatter for trespassing or other charges. If they decide, however, that the situation is a private dispute, the owner will have to sue to remove the squatter. Unfortunately, a suit to remove a squatter is likely to take time to resolve.
An owner who needs to file suit to remove a squatter should be ready to present proof of ownership, absence of any agreement allowing the squatter to enter, and evidence showing that the occupier failed to meet one of the requirements for adverse possession. That the occupier (and any prior occupier) has not been there for the required time is usually the easiest to prove; after that, nonpayment of taxes or other demonstration that the occupier doesn’t reasonably claim ownership could be used.
Unfortunately, if squatting continues to occur, more owners may find themselves having to deal with the squatters. If the police don’t help, legal assistance may be necessary to navigate the case through the courts.omen or families as Oregon is also too dangerous for such things.

Friday, February 6, 2015

Mexicans Brought Measles with them as they Illegally Crossed the United States Border

Unaccompanied minors
This Is what Obama Imported to the US last summer
 ps  Mexican illegals love Disneyland
Did Mexicans Bring Measles Epidemic : Obama Border Surge

The sudden outbreak of measles across the United States raises questions about how the disease arrived in the country after it was eradicated here in 2000.

A quick review of the U.S. State Department visa requirements for immigrant visas reveals that applicants must be vaccinated for measles prior to their approval. Measles vaccination is not required for tourist visas, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, nor is it required for any other disease.
That leaves three possibilities. One is that a tourist present legally in the U.S. brought measles to the country while visiting. This is the most plausible explanation, given that the outbreak began at Disneyland.
Another possibility is that an illegal immigrant   alien brought measles to the country.
And the third, probably most remote, possibility is that a legal immigrant alien who was vaccinated still managed to contract the disease abroad, since the vaccination is not 100% effective in all cases.
There was a sudden arrival of illegal immigrant alien children over the summer. However, many of those children were from countries and regions that have high rates of immunization.
The highest rates of under-vaccination in the U.S. are to be found in low-income communities where illegal immigrants may live–but also in high-income communities where many residents have graduate degrees, and some are attracted to alternative methods of healing and non-Western medicine.
Reports from the border last year did indicate some problems with diseases, including illnesses likely to be spread rapidly in cramped holding facilities. Border patrol officerstold Breitbart News at the time that they do not screen for diseases among those detained.
From the border, many detainees were scattered to processing centers throughout the country, and many entered local schools this fall. The spread of measles from Disneyland across the country is far more recent, however.
Senior Editor-at-Large Joel B. Pollak edits Breitbart California and is the author of the new ebook, Wacko Birds: The Fall (and Rise) of the Tea Party, available for Amazon Kindle.