Darryl W. Perry Releases Ad for Mayoral Campaign
Darryl W. Perry, candidate for Mayor of Keene, NH speaks about the Ballistic Engineered Armored Response Counter Attack Truck.
Darryl W. Perry, candidate for Mayor of Keene, NH speaks about the Ballistic Engineered Armored Response Counter Attack Truck.
Another article covering the Robin Hood trial, this one focusing on day 3, was published today in the Keene Sentinel. Also now available are the full day hearing videos from Free Keene. There will be more analysis to come as counsel for both sides prepare their final memorandums and judge John Kissinger composes his ruling. While the Free Keene cuts of the video are viewable now, the raw segments from which they were produced in 1080p are currently uploading to Fr33manTVraw. The twitter hashtag #robinhoodtrial was used by many following the case live, which provides a thorough timeline of the proceedings.
Darryl posted a bunch of live tweets during today’s Robin Hood “evidentiary hearing”, day 3 of 3. Below is an archive of all the tweets from today, day 3, in reverse chronological order (starts at the bottom). In case you missed the tweets from the other days, here they are: Day 2, Day 1.
Stay tuned here to Free Keene for the latest on Robin Hooding. Video from both day two and three is still to come.
Darryl W. Perry ?@DWPerry78 3h
Court is out #robinhoodtrial
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Darryl W. Perry ?@DWPerry78 3h
Kissinger says he will issue a decision after reading further memoranda of law #robinhoodtrial
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Darryl W. Perry ?@DWPerry78 3h
Again comparing public employees is public to employees who have desk jobs #robinhoodtrial
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Darryl W. Perry ?@DWPerry78 3h
“I think we’re starting to repeat ourselves” – you don’t say!?! #robinhoodtrial (more…)
This week’s AKPF #1 timeslot on Cheshire TV will be occupied by Aqua Kommandante Parkour Faction #1. Taking a break from tales of parking enforcement, this entry opens and closes with athletic action featuring parkour on the streets of Concord. Sandwiched in between the sequences is a special extended version of dramatic footage previously aired on Cheshire TV during the days of ShireTV. Don’t miss this week’s installment designed to shock and awe the masses in Aqua Kommandante Parkour Faction #1.
In a 15-0 vote this week the Keene city council has decided to put more money in the hands of local illegal drug dealers by banning synthetic drugs. The unintelligible seven-page ordinance proscribes fines in the hundreds of dollars and will result in the products being removed from local store shelves. While the concerned moms and dads pat themselves on the back for successfully achieving the illusion the drugs are no longer available, local drug dealers now have another product they can add to their repertoire.
Oh, and of course they can now raise the price so customers who are hooked will be more likely to steal and rob people to get money to continue their habit.
That’s right Keene councilors, you can make prohibition work this time!
If that weren’t what absurd enough, apparently city councilor/state rep Kris Roberts has proposed legislation to “remove the ability of anyone to challenge the city’s ordinance based on its lack of authority to enact it”. Hopefully that will go down in flames, but wow – talk about a power grab.
Here’s an article about the vote from the Keene Sentinel’s Kyle Jarvis: (more…)
As you know from day one of the “evidentiary hearing” in the Robin Hood case, the last thing that happened in court was that Pete filed a motion to remove his name from the case, since he has not been involved in Robin Hooding. The city’s hired-gun private attorneys filed an objection to that motion, stating that because Pete used a radio one time to announce the location of a parking enforcer and that he once had a conversation with one, that he must be considered part of the “civil conspiracy” and kept on the case. The judge denied Pete’s motion.
The last post I made about the case was regarding free speech attorney Jon Meyer’s motion to dismiss the case. Now the city’s attorneys have filed their objection. They claim they have a right to sue to protect their employees and that Meyer’s motion is improperly timed. They say they should be able to complete the evidentiary hearing before a motion to dismiss is entertained. Of course, there are two more full days of court slated for that evidentiary hearing, so that means more billable hours to the fancy private attorneys that the city people will force taxpayers to fund.
An interesting new twist has come to the case where a local man named Matthew Phillips has filed a “motion to intervene“, in an attempt to join the case as a defendant! Phillips makes the argument that since the city argued that Pete should stay as part of the case (when all he ever did was use a radio once and have a conversation with a PEO), that Phillips should be added as he claims to have Robin Hooded more than Pete. (more…)