By Andrew P. Napolitano
The president's men trash the Constitution to pursue antagonists
Independent voices from the TWT Communities

Regret hangs in each of Venjah Hunte's neat cursive words spread over two and a half pages of notebook paper.

While the sporting world counts down the hours until the start of Sunday's Super Bowl, family and friends of onetime Washington Redskins superstar Sean Taylor face a much longer wait for justice to be done.
Reporters and cameras will be barred from a key evidence hearing in the case against four men accused of fatally shooting former Washington Redskins star Sean Taylor during a botched 2007 robbery at his home, a judge ruled Wednesday.

Reporters and cameras will be barred from a key evidence hearing in the case against four men accused of fatally shooting former Washington Redskins star Sean Taylor during a botched 2007 robbery at his home, a judge ruled Wednesday.
"To begin I would like to send my deepest apology to the family of Sean Taylor," Hunte wrote in a letter to The Washington Times last month in response to several questions.
Man jailed in Sean Taylor murder case offers apology in first public comments →
"I haven't hug [sic] or kiss my family for almost 3 years," Hunte wrote, "the closest I get to them is a glass window, but I have noone [sic] to blame but self."
Man jailed in Sean Taylor murder case offers apology in first public comments →