The New Hampshire Attorney General has filed an appearance and motion on behalf of Circuit Court Administrative Judge Edwin Kelley and Superior Court Chief Judge Tina Nadeau. The motion is to “quash” the subpoenas that they have been served with by the Merrimack County Sheriffs Department which require them to appear as witnesses in State v. Jason Talley.
From the motion:
6. The Defendant has copies of the three orders at issue. If the trial court deems the orders themselves relevant and admissible evidence, they can be admitted as trial exhibits by the proferring party. Testimony from judges regarding their mental process leading up to the issuance of their orders, however, is prohibited and properly excluded.
I attempt to take conversations to their logical conclusions. If Person A makes an absolutist statement it in the least leaves ample room for questions posited as “devils advocate” and likely brings to light questions never before considered, that upon further scrutiny, causes Person A themselves to admit that flaws exist in their argument.
Over the past week when conversing with Keene police employees about their stance on the possible acquisition of a BEARCAT armored vehicle, some noted that “it’s free” – essentially saying that since it is to be provided via a federal Dept. of Homeland Security grant it’d be erroneous to turn it down.
Overlooking the fact that the federal government (like government at any level) must first steal or print what they spend, my immediate follow-up to such it’s-free-so-why-not-take-it statements is to question the point at which they’d say “no thanks.”
What would Keene “authorities” do if they were offered other military hardware, such as a drone? Sound far-fetched? Not so. Fortunately, as the story below demonstrates, at least some comic relief can be had from this escalation of the police state thanks to the rampant be-afraid-of-everything mindset peddled since 9/11 (hey – any excuse to grow the size and scope of the State, right?)
STOP Judicial Child Abuse in New Hampshire Family Courts is a popular legal blog for tracking abuses of all things domestic relations law related in the New Hampshire Judicial Branch’s Family Court Division. I’m honored to say that I’ve been invited to guest blog at their site about abuses I witnessed in the area of domestic relations law while working as a law enforcement officer.
I cannot imagine one New Hampshire law enforcement officer who has not had to serve some court order that they knew just defies logic as it pertains to a specific family situation. Kicking people out of their own home is not a pleasant thing to have to do for work… especially when you know the court is wrong. Police officers know far better what the situation is within a family with problems than the court ever will, yet those same officers are often completely unaware of hearings which result in lives literally being destroyed.
Today the blog published an article informing the New Hampshire legal community of the New Hampshire Judicial Branch abuses of Adam Muller and Jason Talley.
UPDATE: My signature will not be the only signature on the “rule 11 petition” to the NH Supreme Court.
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Two days after New Hampshire State Representative (and Redress of Grievances Committee member) George Lambert (R) (Hillsboro-27) authorized subpoenas for four sitting New Hampshire judges in the presence of New Hampshire State Representative JR Hoell (R) (Merrimack-13), Judge Kathleen McGuire DENIED Jason Talley the ability to question said judges about what they knew about the court orders that caused him to be arrested for mere POSSESSION OF A CAMERA.
Why would he want to question them about the orders? Because they enacted them three days after a judge committed a crime on camera.
She also DENIED Jason’s request that the trial be moved out of the county as he doesn’t believe he can receive a fair trial there.
I now intend on filing a Rule 11 Petition with the New Hampshire Supreme Court to ask that they take this case from the Cheshire County Superior Court.
“The legality of any judge’s order will not be an issue for the jury to determine because a court order may not be disobeyed unless and until it is reversed.“
Immoral and unconstitutional judicial orders should, at the very minimum, be questioned and shown to the public. In this case I think they should be shown to the entire New Hampshire General Court as well.
There literally are judges committing crimes on camera and then bad judicial orders being enacted to cover as a result in Cheshire County… and it needs to stop.
The enforcement of said corrupt orders needs to stop as well. Why isn’t Cheshire County High Sheriff Foote driving these court orders directly to the New Hampshire Supreme Court and saying “NO” ???