Anatomy of a Hustle the Series captures the political betrayal and constitutional crisis of the True Story depicted in the best selling book of the same name.
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In the matter Preferred Communications Inc. v. City of Los Angeles.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit and later the U.S. Supreme Court found that the City of Los Angeles violated the First Amendment through its procedure relative to the South Central Los Angeles Cable Television Franchise specifically by depriving Preferred Communications Inc. access to the public utility lines.
Marshal would dismiss the case twice; and, twice, Marshall was reversed, in two higher courts. In sum, twelve senior members of the bench superseded Marshall's dismissal of the case; three judges from the 9th Circuit and nine justices in the U.S. Supreme Court.
The Ninth Circuit summarizes:
"...[t]he complaint should not have been dismissed. The activities in which respondent allegedly seeks to engage plainly implicate First Amendment interests."
The most extensively documented, clear-cut, historical conspiracy
Elector of Injustice

The Judge
without Honor

The layers of Institutional Power begin to stack Sky high.
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Injury in Fact : The plaintiff must have suffered an “injury in fact,” meaning that the injury is of a legally protected interest which is (a) concrete and particularized and (b) actual or imminent.
This means, it was established by the Supreme Court, that a causally linked action occurred that caused not a hypothetical but actual injury to the defendant. The nature of this injury cannot be de-linked from the actions of the defendant, the nature of the injury cannot be de-linked from the deprivation of 1st Amendment protections; when the City denied access to the public right of way needed for the construction of a Cable Television System for the district of South Central Los Angeles.
The aforementioned act is synonymous with the City having prevented two citizens, as Preferred Communications Inc., from entering an industry in the free market, during the pivotal phase of the industry’s infancy.
Com-cast ultimately inherited the monopoly, nearly a decade later, while South Central was a decade behind and would not receive the technology until the 1990s. All to serve the Mayor’s buddies.
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