Center’s Founding

Understanding Through Direct Experience

        President John F. Kennedy often used an analogy to describe how people developed inner strength.  The analogy was  that like iron ore - until a person is put under severe fire and strain an individual cannot develop an inner strength of steel.  Beginning in the early 1990's, the founders of the Center for Legal Reform became the unwitting victims of a culture of coordinated corruption within the legal, judicial and law enforcement systems.  The fire and strain they were forced to endure over the ensuing years made the victims internal resolve stronger.  As the victims resolve grew stronger their practical knowledge about the truth of the operations of the dark side of the legal system also grew as they personally struggled with the many faces of corruption inherent in the legal system.  The victims learned about how in many geographic areas and governmental entities in the United States a culture of abuse and corruption has evolved and operates unimpeded as a standard in the judicial, law enforcement and legal systems.  Over the years these systems have become almost immune from reform efforts.

        After years of dealing with the financial ruin, physical pain and emotional damages, several individual victims united together and founded the Center for Legal Reform.  The Center for Legal Reform’s main goal is to help those who are unable to light the lamp of truth in order to withstand and prevail over the dysfunction and corruption they are often forced to face alone.  The victims who founded The Center for Legal Reform will carry their physical and emotional wounds through life.  They believe by helping others through the positive work of the Center for Legal Reform they will give meaning to their never ending personal pain and emotional suffering.

"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." -- Benjamin Franklin