President Barak Hussein Obama’s illegal alien uncle Onyango from Kenya, dressed up like a respectable citizen (pictured at right), appeared briefly in court on Thursday, stemming from a drunk-driving arrest August 24.
Interestingly, his attorney said Onyango’s inebriated near-crash into a police car should not have caused an arrest in the first place and was a violation of the Fourth Amendment. Huh?
Lawyers will try any misrepresentation of the facts, no matter how blatantly false, but this ploy should be a plea too far.
Obama’s Uncle: Cops Had No Right To Stop Car, The Boston Channel, November 17, 2011
“He wasn’t committing any motor vehicle violations at the time. That’s our position,” defense attorney P. Scott Bratton said.
Right, he has merely nabbed in the act of dangerous drunk driving with a blood alcohol lever of .14 percent, nearly twice legal limit, by police. Apparently when the perp is related to the President, counsel can say the accused is a unicorn from Mars and the judge will not argue.
(For extra Obama background info, see a diagram of the President’s complex family tree. I would post it directly, but the necessary text about how to interpret is lengthy.)
Perhaps Uncle Obongo will become the new diverse face of the Obama administrative amnesty. After all, the uncle didn’t kill anyone on his drunk-driving escapade, unlike so many others. And he is gainfully employed (against the law) back at his old liquor store gig.
The actual court time was very brief, just a minute or so, and the next courtroom pretense of legal process was scheduled for January 12.
Obama’s uncle back in court to challenge charge, MetroWest Daily News, November 17, 2011
FRAMINGHAM — The lawyer for President Barack Obama’s uncle told a judge today he will challenge the legality of his client’s traffic stop.
Onyango Obama, 67, was arrested on Aug. 24 by Framingham Police after they say he nearly struck a cruiser while driving on Waverly Street.
Obama’s lawyer, P. Scott Bratton told Framingham District Court Judge Robert Greco that he will file a motion to suppress challenging the legality of the police pulling Obama over.
The motion to suppress hearing is scheduled for Jan. 12. The motion must be filed two weeks prior to the hearing.
After the hearing, Bratton refused to comment on what the motion will be based on. He also refused to say if Obama has been in touch with the president, or if his immigration case has been resolved.
Obama did not speak to the press.


