Wednesday, August 19, 2015

I can honestly say that my life has become a John Grisham Book

I can honestly say that my life has become a John Grisham Book since I began litigating in Texas Probate Courts. It’s not like this in every county thank God. The terrorists live in metropolitan areas. It was clear during my first case, when a court literally sold an autistic boy for $100,000 to a child abuser, and more so by my sixth, in which a sweet elderly man’s wife is a hostage of the State. The four cases in between involve murder. The following includes a brief summary of each case and yes, I plan to write a book someday.
  1. Autistic Andy – I was shocked and appalled (and quite desperate) during my very first introduction to guardianship as a court literally sold Andy to his psychopathic father for $100,000 because his sweet, loving mother lacked sufficient funds to complete the transaction. Two attorneys were appointed to represent Andy’s desires and best interest, but neither did their job because doing so required that guardianship go to mom and they get paid out of the indigent defense fund, which is rumored to be bankrupt. I worked for free two years because the opposition would not permit my client to remain in the case unless I did so. The Court imposed cost bonds on the parties, when this was illegal because no bond provision existed in the law to charge it. I argued for six months against the bonds, demonstrating that the Legislature had considered Bills three times that year regarding the imposition of a bond, but denied it. What’s more, the woman serving as Andy’s guardian ad litem was the REPTL attorney who wrote the bond statute being considered that year. So, everyone knew there was no bond and yet, as I argued for six months, I was threatened at least 15 times with incarceration, with this Judge telling me that he had my jail cell picked out for six months. He was hinting that he was going to hold me in contempt because he was warning me to stop making a record of a crime and I refused. As I prayed for God to have my back, I finished the trial, writhing in pain with a TENS unit on my back to stop the pain. But two years of spoon feeding autism to these women and special education proved futile from the outset as the only relevant factor to them was the bond and their $100,000 in attorneys’ fees. His lawyer did not call one witness and introduced only one exhibit which consisted of an affidavit she obtained from my expert witness when she bribed or threatened the woman. This is illegal and breaks the ethics rules. This lawyer placed her duty to defend on me, including the cost of experts my client could not pay. But at the end of the trial when the lawyers were too tired to endure any more of me, I managed to get into evidence the equivalent of 60 experts taking the stand in 864 pages of education and medical records since Andy was an infant. It was a miracle and I pray the appellate court saves Andy because no amount of killing myself in that case was going to change the fact that the decision was made the moment my client was unable to pay the illegal cost bond.
  2. Murder #1 – Wilma. Wilma was placed in guardianship with no due process, trial or input into her lifetime of incarceration by her thieving son, Larry. Larry tried to abscond with the bulk of Wilma’s $1 million estate before being caught by his sister and forced to return it. But Larry had something to hide in the money he stole, so he filed guardianship to cover his tracks. I’m not sure if he bribed the lawyers involved or it was business as usual, but another issue stands out which I can not get out of my mind. This case was going well for my client until she testified against the Judge in case #1 during a recusal hearing. The judge was not recused, though he should have been for calling my autistic young other client the unabomber due to his disability. After the recusal hearing in my first case, that Judge walked in and said “I just had breakfast with the Judge and it’s going to be a great day.” I felt sick because I knew that was for me. It was. During a hearing that day in case #2, everything went abruptly south as I would clearly understand while my client’s mother starved to death and the Judge denied two emergency temporary restraining orders and three motions for Jury trial and I watched her die. The most illegal thing that happened was that hearing. Two police officers stared me down, told witnesses to clear the aisle in case they didn’t to move fast to me, and rubbed their pistols the entire hearing while they stared me down.
  3. Murder #2 – Ruby. This was quite possibly the biggest mind screw because the Judge held Bible Studies in his court and I truly expected I would fare better. Wrong. I filed an emergency temporary restraining order to stop the illegal false imprisonment, chemical assault and battery with highly dangerous, life threatening anti-psychotics and watched in horror as my client’s mother was killed the very way I said she would be–drugging. She had a heart condition making it life threatening to give her Seroquel, but that was the objective. My expert was worried she would die from this drugging and tried to visit her again, but was threatened with arrest for trespass by Ruby’s lawyer and guardian ad litem. Her lawyer threatened my clients at mediation that their mother would never leave lock down, have a guardian and they would be punished at least $100,000 for daring to don the doors of probate court. With a proverbial gun to their head, they signed an illegal settlement agreement to save their mother’s life, but little did they know they had been had by the Harris County mob boss. The mob boss had no intention of honoring anything and so she didn’t. They could not afford for Ruby to blow the whistle, so they killed her.
  4. Murder #3 – The mediator. I do not yet have hard evidence, but I believe with everything in me that the mob boss hired a hit on the mediator in my case. Her partner did it in another case. So why would she hesitate? After mediation, seeking to set aside the illegal agreement, I filed a brief telling the World what happened after mediation and immediately, another witness dropped dead, the mediator in my case. I was stunned at the next hearing, when Ruby’s lawyer said “Judge Simpson, God rest his soul.” My head snapped back as I looked in horror at my co-counsel, nodding his head. I’m not sure if he understood he’d been murdered, but at mediation he was asking my client why criminal charges had not been filed against the mob? He was a witness to a crime, racketeering and murder for hire. He’s dead now.
  5. Murder #4 – Sleeping with the fishes or married to the mob? This case is the most gruesome case I’ve ever worked on, not practicing criminal law for the State. To steal a twenty million dollar case, the mob boss put out a hit on the proposed ward’s doctor and he was found slumped over in his car with his throat slit as he head dangled by a thread. If you’re wondering, no one has gone to jail in this case because they know the outcome for them. I was more of a spy in this case, brought in to see if my client’s hired lawyers were double crossing her. They were because no lawyer in town but me would dare take the mob boss on. Am I stupid or crazy? A bit of both? I attended a meeting where I learned that the mob boss forged a $20m trust document and my client’s lawyers just giggled. Where is the indictment? Probably never to come forth absent a miracle. Why? The cops are involved, married to the mob. The kicker in this case was when my client’s lawyers threatened to boycott mediation if I attended. They knew I wouldn’t be well received, being the only honest lawyer in town.
  6. Kidnapping #1: Linda. One of the most disabled women I’ve ever met who was pampered by her family was kidnapped and is still being held for ransom as I fight for her life and freedom in the appeals court. This case is truly sickening, with 19 lawyers feeding off the carcass of the estate of her daddy. At one point, I sent all 19 an email, demanding that they “STOP THEIR RACKETEERING” and cc’ing the Court coordinator for maximum impact. I was told to tone down the rhetoric. There’s nothing rhetorical about it. It’s organized crime. Their is extortion and blackmail with a hint of bribery for good measure.
  7. Kidnapping #2 – Caroline. Caroline is still being held by her captor, the woman who represented Andy and sold him to the highest bidder. Her million dollar estate has dwindled to $30,000 in four years while the guardian lived high on the hog off her assets and got permission to not invest her estate. She got permission to spend way more than she made, so the result was predictable. The most egregious part of this is that she is in a “limited guardianship” because nothing is wrong with her except perhaps the drugs they’re giving her to make her looked impaired. The doctor for the Court said she should be at home, but apparently that wasn’t the goal. Caroline is locked up in a maximum security nursing home and only permitted to see her husband once a week, if that, when he pays $100 for security to watch them so that he doesn’t tell her about the get away plan. I am stunned that I’m actually considering remedies appropriate for criminals to get her out.
So why haven’t I gone to the authorities. Three reasons. I’d end up dead, they would not do anything, and I don’t have enough evidence of some of these crimes, though they are indisputably crimes. I pray God will intervene. I’m actually a top 5% lawyer in the State of Texas, so I didn’t lose for lack of skill. I lost because I’m not a member of the cartel.

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