Now, Meyer has made the time in his busy schedule for the Robin Hood of Keene case where the people calling themselves “the city” are suing several Robin Hooders in hopes of creating a 50ft anti-freedom radius around the meter maids. Meyer filed his appearance today in Cheshire superior court on behalf of five of the six defendants, with Copblock.org‘s Pete Eyre deciding not to opt-in to having an attorney.
To be clear, Meyer is donating his valuable time to the cause, pro-bono, and is up against the city people’s hired gun (paid by your tax dollars) private attorneys, including renown civil rights attorney Charles P. Bauer. Bauer and his partner Eric Moskowitz have filed this “Memorandum of Law” on the constitutional issues in the case, as the judge requested. I’ll post Jon Meyer’s memorandum when it is ready, likely in a couple of weeks, as he just signed on to the case.
Porcfest this year was fantastic, lots of fun, and the most-well-attended ever! Various media were there at the event and here are some of their stories:
On the cusp of continued revolution the world over, AKPF #1 Ep. 07 brings perspective to the goings-on in Keene, New Hampshire. Royalty continues its legal civil assault on the Merry women and men, while the globe collectively laughs at the prospect of Robin Hood of Keene being a joint terrorist organization as alleged by agitators in support of city force. Propaganda videos and documents circulate as anonymous antagonists subvert power structures. Where will it end? Tune in next week for even more outrageous updates from the underground.
1. 00:10 Opening Beethoven Credits AKPF
2. 01:52 Where’s the Video of Robin Hooders Hassing Meter Maids? by Ridley Report
3. 06:58 Free Keene audio video blog chronic ling segueway
4. 07:04 Excerpts from the Robin Hood initial hearing shenanigans
5. 19:14 Derrick J’s Peace News Now segment on Robin Hooding
6. 20:22 Darryl wins a parking ticket examination courtroom procedure
7. 24:13 Derrick J video records Robin Hood in action and gets attacked by Daniel J. White (more…)
First, the Concord Monitor tells the story of Joe Hamel, who recorded a Concord city bureaucrat and had his home searched by police, was charged with “wiretapping” and eventually had the charges dropped. The story also features quotes from heroic first amendment attorney Jon Meyer. Then, they editorialize in favor of the police no longer arresting people for recording government workers. Both articles are very good.
Good news! As a result of the hearing on the warrant, judge Runyon of district court issued an order reversing the fire inspection portion of the warrant and threw out all evidence gathered by fire chief Gary LaFreniere. (more…)