Mystery Solved
I applied for a writ of certiorari with the U.S. Supreme Court and learned for the first time that I had been indicted and convicted of passing forged checks on a date when I did not even cash checks. This was shocking. I had to solve this mystery. Was this a mistake. If it was a mistake, who made the mistake. I had been convicted of forgery of a financial instrument. I was appealing that conviction. How did the tables get turned? Additionally, the opinion was one that I had never seen before. This was not possible. I was the lead attorney. There could be no opinion that I had not seen at this level. Thus I began to try to unravel this mystery.
I decided to start at the beginning. I went back and requested copies of all my record, warrants, indictments, probable cause statements, etc. I was denied copies of all of the above. I had been denied copies before and during the trial. The 10th Court of Appeals had ruled that I was not entitled to copies of recorded statements or exhibits used or admitted into the record during trial as “I should know what was on them anyway.” The trial judge had ruled that I had received all that I was entitled to receive and I could not have copies of probable cause statements. This time I was not going away. I sent notices to the Mayors of Bryan and College Station that I was going to sue. The City Attorney responded and told me that I had received all that I was going to receive until the Attorney General made a ruling as to whether he had to release records to me. The attorney general Abbott did not rule as to whether the probable cause statements, warrants, indictments had to be disclosed. He did rule that the extraneous offenses did not have to be disclosed specifically, the Burleson County complaint and probable causes and indictment. Now mind you, these things had been used in my trial. I was not allowed to see them even on appeal. The 10th Court of Appeal had ruled that this did not violate the TCCP, Texas Constitution, and rules of evidence. I then went to get another copy of the record. The District Clerk refused me a free copy of the record even though I had been declared indigent when they seized all my funds and issued an order that I could not maintain a bank account “so I would not be able to obtain money to assist in my defense.” I had seen four different copies of the trial transcript at this point. I had purchased the clerk and court reporter’s record from the court of appeals. I had learned that I had never seen this copy of the court of appeals record before and all of my motions and documents had been destroyed. My indictments had been removed from the record. The motion to reduce the bond and the record had been destroyed or removed. There was no docket sheet of documents filed in the court of appeals and the orders. I knew something was wrong. I responded to the State Bar of Texas response and learned that they had an indictment for December 23, 2006. I had never been indicted for any crime on that date to my knowledge. Moreover, I had not committed a crime of any kind on that date. I had only made a withdrawal from my account in the mall. I did not write or cash any checks on that date. I wanted a copy of any complaints for this date and was denied. To date I have not been shown any copies of complaints filed on this date. I had allegedly been indicted and convicted of charges that I was not allowed to see. I had prepared and filed my Writ of Habeas Corpus in federal court. I decided to go and get a copy of the documents that I filed in U.S. District Court. The records had been altered and the documents I filed had been removed from the record. I went to the clerk and asked where the documents that I filed with the court with my writ of habeas corpus were and was told that they had not been imaged and the originals that I filed were kept for one year and had been destroyed. This was in the clerk’s office of the federal court that documents were altered and fabricated. I had filed the copies with my application for petition for discretionary review with the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. I went to the Texas Supreme Court and found that my copies had not been imaged. They had been returned to the 10th Court of Appeals and all copies had been destroyed. In the meantime, my home was being broken into as well as my car and my legal files were being stolen. They kept coming and ransacked for all hidden copies and disks of record. Mystery solved. The records were altered in court and my home was burglarized to destroy the original copies of the records. What surprised me was that the Texas Surpreme Courts both civil and criminal were involved as well as the judges of the 10th Court of Appeals. Otherwise who wrote the new opinion. Or, did the District Judge in federal court alter the opinions and records to support his ruling. Even my pleadings in the U.S. Supreme Court were altered. They were all in on the corruption. I asked, “why?” I already knew the answer. They were always corrupt. They just got caught. This was the way they always did things. The only question was how widespread was the corruption.