If you have an hour to kill and don’t mind spending it hearing me talking about photography rights, you might want to check out my talk at the 2012 New Hampshire Liberty Forum, which was just posted online.
I talk about my experiences running Photography is Not a Crime, including what motivated me to launch it.
The trip was a great experience, especially when I visited Keene Monday morning with some of the activists who had been banned from the Cheshire County Courthouse because they used cameras inside the building.
There is no state law that bans video recording inside courthouses. (more…)
A happy fairy tale, or a story about a big bad wolf?
I was happy to read about our mayor’s trip to Alaska back in 1962 when he was a youngster.
Yes, those were the days when life was so much more simple, without all the complications of the times we presently live in. Unfortunately times have changed in many ways that cause us to be ever vigilant, but we also suffer from self-inflicted pain, suffering and fear.
War has been one of the main culprits as we continue to support the fear of communism, terrorism, this ism and that ism. (more…)
This blog is made pursuant to NH Rules of Professional Conduct 3.6 (c) (2) and (c) (6) as the following have been filed with the Cheshire County Superior Court and the people of New Hampshire should be made aware of the danger to the public interest.
Notice ACA John Webb doesn’t use the word “frivolous” with regard to the arguments I’ve made about the abuse of the public trust. To do so could be politically dangerous, considering there was an abuse of the public trust with Ademo’s arrest and the subsequent court orders restricting constitutional rights.
The legal standard to restrict constitutional rights is called “strict scrutiny.” One of the “prongs” of the strict scrutiny test is that the restriction must be for a “compelling governmental interest.”
I’m not sure covering up for a judge who commits a crime on camera would pass that test… therefore, Jason Talley and I assert the court orders are flagrantly unconstitutional and the public should be made aware of them.
Or at least people are now calling me a terrorist and calling for my indefinite detention as a result of my taking on the corruption happening in Cheshire County.
maximumfullpower
“Brad Jardis in my observation is a terrorist plain and simple. All he has done along with his so called activists friends has started violence against Judge Burke because they got caught breaking the law. It is a good thing the NDAA passed because Brad Jardis needs to be taken off the streets because of his violence.”
All my violence’eh? You apparently forgot to read this.
Why would they need the NDAA to come after me right now for what I am reporting if I was actually breaking the law? Everyone knows the NDAA is meant to only silence people who would be victorious in court.
This blog is made pursuant to NH Rules of Professional Conduct 3.6 (c) (2) and (c) (6) as the testimony I am referring to below was given at a public hearing at the New Hampshire Supreme Court, and thus, it is part of a public record. Additionally, the people of New Hampshire should be aware of the danger to the public interest.
As the time approaches where the string of events leading up to State v. Jason Talley becomes more and more public, I would like to remind the New Hampshire Supreme Court (and the news media) that at the “Rule 78” hearing on 12/16/11, (the rule about restrictions of New Hampshire’s Constitution Part I, Article 22 in the court system) that I attended, I stood right in front of you, on camera, and told you exactly how the courts were “inviolably” preserving the right to the freedom of the press in Cheshire County: a crime was committed by a sitting judge and high ranking judicial officials stripped rights away in an attempt to try and change the story.
I was even happy to see the former judge that I used to testify to as a police officer present on the panel. I figured it was beneficial to have someone on the panel who knows I am not a liar.
I spoke the truth, on camera, about the judicial cover-up occurring after Adam Mueller’s illegal arrest and how it ensnared Jason Talley. I was apparently ignored.
As Part II, Article 73-a makes you, the Supreme Court, the boss of all the lower courts in New Hampshire, I hope you are preparing to explain to the public how you were told specifically how a crime was being covered up in Cheshire County by judicial officers you supervise, but apparently did nothing about it.
^— This man spent two days incarcerated for a crime he never committed. He spent two days incarcerated for constitutionally protected activity.
Hold Judge Burke and the other judges who are involved accountable because it is the ethical thing to do… not because politics forces you to do so later.
You’re not above the law… you’re entrusted with it.