State v. Jason Talley is Tomorrow at 9:00AM – You’re Ordered To Stand

The Cheshire County Superior Court has unequivocally asserted that it is completely within the Court’s prerogative to order violence to force you to stand in the courtroom when instructed. In the past this Court has even done such ridiculous things as ordering law enforcement officers to lift people up by their elbows and ordering people’s arrest for not standing… only to release them five minutes later and wish them a “Merry Christmas.”

This stuff is happening in the United States of America. Really.

As an officer of the Court, I must ask you to comply with the Court’s order and stand under your own power when attending Jason’s trial tomorrow. If you don’t stand, you may be physically lifted or imprisoned.

If you’re unable to stand or are injured, you may just have to explain yourself further.

Remember:

Jason Talley filed a “Motion To Refrain From Authorizing Physical Force To Demand Respect.

The State objected and supported the notion of continued violence to make people stand.

The Court sided with the State in an stamped order.

Jason filed a “Motion To Reconsider” his original motion asking the Court not to use violence against the public.

The Court denied the “Motion To Reconsider.

They Won’t Follow their Own Rules

Did you know that rule 1.1 of the district courts is that they can waive the rules at any time? It’s true – and they do. Anytime you call them on breaking their own rules, they just breeze right on by like the rules mean nothing to them. However, when *you* break one of those rules, they operate on a whole other set of standards.

There are countless examples of this, but here’s another one.

I’m currently facing a trespass charge for trying to do business at the “superior” court when I’d been “banned” by a flagrantly illegal order from local sheriff Dick Foote.

So, we’re mere days away from the trial date of April 17th, and the Cheshire attorney’s office has only just sent their witness list to me. Their rule, 2.10 B says:

Not less than 14 days prior to trial, the State shall provide the defendant with a list of names of witnesses, including experts and reports, and a list of any lab reports, with copies thereof, it anticipates introducing at trial.

It was less than a week prior to trial before I got the witness list (more…)