Monday, November 17, 2008

Alan Keyes Writ of Mandate

I found the California Superior Court file containing the Writ of Mandate regarding the lawsuit filed by Alan Keyes and others regarding the qualification of Barack Obama to serve as President of the United States based on his status as a natural born citizen. The 18 page filing is too long to post on this blog so here is a link:

https://services.saccourt.com/publicdms2/DefaultDMS.aspx

When the form opens enter case number 80000096

3 comments:

The Real Bob Anthony said...

John, I found something that may be of some interest to you and the people at Obama Crimes...


http://wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=81197

Bob said...

Alan Keyes answers Obama’s Kenyan Birth Question here:

http://www.keyesarchives.com/transcripts.php

Steve Matzberg Show (WABC, New York, August 15, 2004)

MALZBERG: And, of course, Obama born to a Kenyan and, I believe, a white American female–you believe without that history cannot feel what you feel to that extent?

KEYES: Well, I wouldn’t want to make any judgments, but I think that folks need to think about this, because the contrast in our views is related to the fact that I have been wrestling with something all my life that perhaps he hasn’t had to take as seriously.

Bob said...

An actual exchange between Keyes and Obama concerning Obama's Kenyan ancestry took place on This Week with George Stephanopoulos (ABC): (halfway down the transcript)

http://www.keyesarchives.com/transcript.php?id=323

STEPHANOPOULOS: But what about this issue that you, as a son of an African father have a different perspective from he, the grandson, great-grandson of slaves?

OBAMA: Well, keep in mind, first of all, that my grandfather in Africa was a domestic servant for the British and carried a pass book around. I don't know whether the point he was trying to make is that on the hierarchy of victim-hood, that somehow, you know, he is more qualified to speak for the oppressed. I'm--you know, so that's something that we would have to explore further. That's not, I don't think, a particularly relevant criteria by which we're going to make a decision about who's the best United States Senator from Illinois.