GANDALF'S 的个人资料Gandalf's Staff照片日志列表更多 工具 帮助

Water War page 4

Those bastards, the city said they were going to postpone the water rate increase for further study. They then did a big slick ad campaign announcing how Lubbock Power and Theft would be sending refund checks to their electricity users, the first refund ever since 1906 I might point out. Idiots that they are, they could have made an adjustment on the regular monthly statement and saved the expenses. Then when everyone was going goo goo gah gah over the checks they received in the mail the city council passed the rate hike on water. They taxed it.  Okay, we can play that way too. The average home owner saw through it all. I will meet with the television stations soon. This will not pass. In regard to the Chippendales being busted here, the powers that be left the chief of police to hang out to dry, he came out looking like the goon he is. In case you missed the CNN news story flashed around the world.  I learned of it from Australia first, with the inquiry "What is wrong with your folks in Lubbock Gandi."  Hell Elvis made the same swivel hip moves 30 years ago here, they did not arrest him.  Lubbock, Texas the shame of the West. More to come, love you all.
 

 
 
 

KLLL and the Dixie Chicks

After doing my radio bit today I got with the TV station news director and directed  attention to the fact that KLLL-FM is not playing a five time Grammy winner, a member of which grew up here.  The is the twist, when I worked for KLLL AM and FM we were the number one country and western music station in the nation!  We cut a record at Don Caldwell's with the Maines Brothers, the father and uncle's of Dixie Chick Natilie Maines.  We called ourselves the News Brothers. On the record were Mike Corbin, Johnny (Derick) Walker, Richard Griffing and yours truly.  The nightly news TV ambush went well and the controversy is on.

Dixie Chicks

I did a radio bit on AM 950 this morning defending the Dixie Chicks for they slammed Lubbock on thier album which just won five awards on the Grammys.  This town does not support local talent and as a matter of fact it just so happens the Chicks are and were right.   The truth hurts and it seems the town has great difficulty in accepting that fact.  Natililie Maines grew up here I made a record with her father and hope some day I can post it on the net.    http://3dixiechicks.spaces.live.com/
Peace,                                 
Gandalf

Water War page 3

 One small victory for our side, the city has announced it is postponing the proposed water rate increase.  When I asked the water department representative how would she like if I brought a TV station into my dispute with them, I doubt very seriously she envisioned me being on the news calling them thieves.  Oh boy to be continued.

Peace
Gandalf

"Man's character is his fate.": Heraclitus - (c.540-480 BC) Greek philosopher

The Day the Music Died first week of Feb.

Feb 1 Forces lead by Khomeini take over Iran (1979)
Feb 1 RCA Victor unveils the 45 rpm record playing system, 1949 Feb 2 Candlemas
Feb 2 Graham Nash is born in Lancashire, England, 1942 Feb 3 Gertrude
   Stein born, 1874
Feb 3 The Day The Music Died; Buddy Holly, Richie Valens, and the Big
   Bopper are killed in a plane crash outside Mason City, Iowa, 1959
Feb 4 Cybernet inaugurated, 1969
Feb 4 Independence Commemoration Day in Sri Lanka Feb 5 Alex Harvey
   (SAHB) is born in Glasgow, Scotland, 1935 Feb 5 Constitution Day in
   Mexico
Feb 5 Patricia Hearst kidnapped by Symbionese Liberation Army (1974)
Feb 6 King George VI of UK dies; his daughter becomes Elizabeth II
   (1952)
Feb 6 New Zealand Day
Feb 7 Fellowship leaves Lorien (LOTR)
Feb 7 Independence Day in Grenada
Feb 7 Steven Stills makes the first digitally recorded rock album,
   1979
Feb 7 The Beatles arrive in America for the first time, 1964
 
"These are the days when men of all social disciplines and all political faiths seek the comfortable and the accepted; when the man of controversy is looked upon as a disturbing influence; when originality is taken to be a mark of instability; and when, in minor modification of the original parable, the bland lead the bland." : John Kenneth Galbraith - (1908- ) Canadian-born economist, Harvard professor. Source: The Affluent Society, 1976

letcture on J.R.R. Tolkien Gnosis of Our Day

scroll down the page and on the left click on the lecture with the title above.  If you want to get a deeper understanding of Tolkien and what he was telling us this should be an eye opener for you.  Love Peace and as John Lennon put it "Imagine"
Gandalf

The Hobbits

 The tiny skeletal remains of human "Hobbits" found on an Indonesian island belong to a completely new branch of our family tree, a study has found. The finds caused a sensation when they were announced to the world in 2004.

But some researchers argued the bones belonged to a modern human with a combination of small stature and a brain disorder called microcephaly.

That claim is rejected by the latest study, which compares the tiny people with modern microcephalics.

LB1 has a highly evolved brain. It didn't get bigger, it got rewired and reorganised, and that's very interesting


Dean Falk
Florida State University


Microcephaly is a rare pathological condition in humans characterised by a small brain and cognitive impairment.


In the new study, Dean Falk, of Florida State University, and her colleagues say the remains are those of a completely separate human species: Homo floresiensis.

They have published their findings in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The remains at the centre of the Hobbit controversy were discovered at Liang Bua, a limestone cave on the Indonesian island of Flores, in 2003.

Researchers found one near-complete skeleton, which they named LB1, along with the remains of at least eight other individuals.

The specimens were nicknamed Hobbits after the tiny creatures in JRR Tolkien's Lord of the Rings trilogy.

Computer model

The researchers believe the 1m-tall (3ft) people evolved from an unknown small-bodied, small-brained ancestor, which they think became small in stature to cope with the limited supply of food on the island.

The little humans are thought to have survived until about 12,000 years ago, when a volcanic eruption devastated the region.

The Hobbit has forced a re-think of human evolution


LB1 possessed a brain size of around 400 cubic cm (24 cu inches) - about the same as that of a chimp.


Long arms, a sloping chin and other primitive features suggested affinities to ancient human species such as Homo habilis.

Professor Falk's analysis used the skulls of 10 normal humans, nine microcephalics, one dwarf and the Hobbit.

The brain leaves a mirror image imprinted onto the skull, from which anatomists can reconstruct its shape. The resulting brain cast is called an endocast.

Professor Falk's team scanned all 21 skulls into a computer and then created a "virtual endocast" using specialist software.

Then, they used statistical techniques to study shape differences between the brain casts and to classify them into two different groups: one microcephalic, the other normal.

Advanced tools

The dwarf's brain fell into the microcephalic category, while the Hobbit brain fell into the normal group - despite its small size.

In other ways, however, the Hobbit brain is unique, which is consistent with its attribution to a new species.



Archaeologists had found sophisticated tools and evidence of a fire near the remains of the 1m-tall adult female.


"People refused to believe that someone with that small of a brain could make the tools," said Professor Falk.

She said the Hobbit brain was nothing like that of a microcephalic and was advanced in a way that is different from living humans.

A previous study of LB1's endocast revealed that large parts of the frontal lobe and other anatomical features were consistent with higher cognitive processes.

"LB1 has a highly evolved brain," said Professor Falk. "It didn't get bigger, it got rewired and reorganised, and that's very interesting."

This apparently contrasts with LB1's other "primitive" anatomical features.

In September last year, Professor Teuku Jacob and colleagues published a scientific study in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences which claimed the Hobbit showed similarities to living pygmies and to microcephalics.

However, a different analysis by Australian researchers, published last year in the Journal of Human Evolution, supported the idea that LB1 was a creature new to science.


water war page 2

Did a bit on AM950 on Lubbock Power and Light calling the water utility company Lubbock Power and Theft.  The issue has been hot and heavy with the TV station. Since I called the situation to light on my first television interview on said subject.  I think we are starting to get through to them finaly but we shall see.  They say you cannot fight city hall and I did have the courtesy to asked them how would they feal if I brought a TV station in on this.  I have to laugh now because all the TV stations got in on it.  Lubbock's city hall is just a bunch of crooks and we all know it.  It is only a matter of time untill their darkest deeds are seen by the light of a new day.
On the Solution Number Nine I found another sound track that folds intol the radio drama and that is when the john doe number first gets up in the morgue.  You can hear John Lennon saying "get up rise" right after the corpse is named John Doe number nine.  This seems to get more interesting as time grows on. Love Ya Peace

responce from a friend on DEA

 
HHAHAHAHAHA,
fuck those bastards, they know when your on to them... keep it cool
-Ca*******n
 
also my friend, you will see me in the next couple day .........

DEA

The lying bastards, DEA
 agent Westerman has been giving me the run around for 1.5 years as I attempted to recover the photos of my mother's funeral that the low life narcs illegally took from my camera; bastards that they are.  Yesterday giving it one more shot I called Mr. Westerman at 806-798-7190.  The secretary picked up and told me that Westerman was not available.  I then requested the bureau chief.  She explained that we do not have a bureau chief here but I could talk to the Supervisor a Mr. Mannin I believe.  He was taken back when I requested he talk to FBI bureau chief Bob Mathews and Secret Service and Homeland Security Chief Steve Barker.  It took him less than 5 minutes to call me back and tell me DEA had none of my property.  Imagine that! He did not tell me what happened to it.  I am mad as hell and the revolution solution is on.
Peace
Gandalf
"Man's character is his fate.": Heraclitus - (c.540-480 BC) Greek philosopher

Solution number nine

 It is done, I have finished production on what I believe is a solution to the question " What the hell is 'Revolution Number Nine' by the Beatles all about?"  I pulled off some tricky production by merging what I believe was the true insperation behind that cut.  I hope to figure out how I can share that production with all of you that visit this site.  That makes for two finished shows in a reletively short period of time, but damn i am tired.  MY job here is done.  Peace.
.

back on line

Serious computer crash put me out of action for a few days. It would be nice if i could put more time in on this space but right now I have a war to kill, and it is taking up most of my time. I have completed my production on the state of the war and am ready to retire, even though I am not happy with the final out come and no doubt will be re editting arain. It would be nice if I could figure out how to stream my work to you on this site. I am getting ahead of my self, imagine that. Peace

water war

 PAGE 1 
Jan. 2007
 Gandalf launches the "Water War"
        Our future depends on it.
Well yesterday I was on the news here in Lubbock on tv 13 and 28. Then this morning thay ran reruns.   I got to call the city and the water department thieves and rip offs.  They are making it costly here to have water and being very athoritarian about it.  The war is on.  Water is a major issue here in this agraculturelly dependent region.  The city has started using water as their hidden tax source and i am mad about it.  Hope all is well with all of you. Peace 
 
 In the begining this was my declaration entry starting in 2007 and today in 2009 the situation is much worse with much of the problem brought about by our civic leaders. Gandalf
 

    This is a sham and unthinkable, there is a better place for us to store our water.  It is high in the Rockies but not too far from down stream Amarillo.  If we had invested there, when this place was first discovered and made known to me in 1976, we would not have this problem today.  We have been duped and we are being ripped off, putting our future in doubt. Enough Said !
                     Gandalf
             see "water wars" in my blog  
footnote. My water bill has risen from an average of $35 per month to $135 with extra fees included in less than one decade.  Gandalf

The dark side

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/darkside/view/1.html?c=1wm "The idea of creating systems designed to threaten, coerce, and kill, and to imbue such agencies with principled legitimacy, and not expect them to lead to wars, genocides, and other tyrannical practices, expresses an innocence we can no longer afford to indulge." - Butler D. Shaffer Professor, Southwestern University School of Law June 9, 2003 .   THIS IS THE BEGINING OF MY SITE AND A DEDICATION TO PEACE AROUND THE  WORLD.
 GANDALF
 

日志


Who Called the Shots ?

 THEY LIE TO US AND TO EACH OTHER:   http://www.ttpoa.org/organization/fallen-officers.aspx

Sergeant Kevin Cox
Lubbock Police Department, TX


Cause of Death: Gunfire
End of Watch: July 13, 2001

Date of Incident: July 13, 2001

Age: 38

Tour of Duty: 16 yr

Suspect Info: Shot and wounded

Weapon Used: Rifle


Sergeant Cox was shot and killed as he and other SWAT team members entered a home during a standoff with a man known to have several weapons. Officers were initially called to the home during a domestic dispute involving the man and his wife. After the wife left the home the man dragged several pieces of furniture into the yard, doused them with gasoline, and then set them on fire. When officers arrived at approximately 1100 hours the man holed up inside of the house.

At approximately 1515 hours officers began to clear all of the windows in the house by knocking the glass out and removing any blinds obstructing view into the home. As they did so shots were fired and Sergeant Cox was accidentally struck in the head from a shot fired by members of the SWAT team. Other officers returned fire, wounding the suspect. Officers then fired tear gas into the home, causing the man to crawl out and be taken into custody.

Sergeant Cox had been with the agency for 16 years and is survived by his wife and two children.

   
THEN BAGHDAD BILL MORGAN TELLS THE PRESS
That is so baseless and contrary to the evidence that it's an absolute insult to Kevin Cox's memory. "



- Lubbock Police spokesman Bill Morgan, calling the friendly fire theory in the botched SWAT raid "rampant rumor-mongering" to the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal on July 19. Ballistics tests have since proven that the shot that killed Cox could not have come from any of Robinson's guns.

  THE GUN IN QUESTION WAS A BLACK POWER ANTIQUE WITH NO MEANS TO BE FIRED

369 Bullets Fired In Lubbock SWAT Snafu

Crime/Corruption News Keywords: SWAT COVER-UP FRIENDLY FIRE
Source: San Antonio Lightning
Published: Wed., August 01, 2001 8:53PM Author: S. A. L. staff
Posted on 08/01/2001 18:05:11 PDT by Steve0113

The deadly SWAT attack against a Lubbock man in July unleashed an astounding 369 rounds, one of which killed an officer; and the man under siege never fired a shot, an FBI ballistics investigation has confirmed.

The F.B.I.'s Lori Bailey told the Lightning Tuesday that the tests had been concluded, and results had been returned to the Lubbock police. She would not comment on what those tests showed, but sources tell the Lightning that it pointed to a case of friendly fire.

Bailey did say the tests confirmed the investigation of local police, and she lauded LPD's thoroughness in the case.

The Lightning reported last week that sources named "one Lubbock SWAT member" as the shooter who killed Sgt. Kevin Cox, in a raid on the city home.

Though not officially released the final report faults a deadly crossfire set up by SWAT. The officer who killed Cox has not been publicly named.

In the wake of the shooting Lubbock City Manager Bob Cass put Police Chief Ken Walker on paid administrative leave, pending the outcome of the investigation.

Chief Walker has been restricted from wearing a department uniform and cannot enter the Lubbock Police Department while on leave.

"During this administrative leave, do not interfere in any way in the pending investigation into this matter," the city warned.

"You will immediately surrender your police badge, police identification, city issued firearm, and any other indicia of office to me."

Lubbock police were forced to release the man they jailed as the killer of the SWAT officer, because evidence showed he could not have fired the fatal shot.

Richard Robinson was released from jail on July 20th. Robinson, 47, had been charged with capital murder in the July 13 shooting death of Cox during a standoff between Robinson and the Lubbock Police Department. Robinson, an unemployed automobile mechanic, barricaded himself inside his home at 3229 87th St. after setting furniture and household goods on fire in his front yard.

In the confrontation with police, the details of which have been confused and contradictory, both the officer and homeowner were wounded. A second policeman received minor injuries.

Official statements early on downplayed the friendly fire possibility.

"That is so baseless and contrary to the evidence that it's an absolute insult to Kevin Cox's memory," police spokesman Bill Morgan told local reporters early this week.

"That's an absolute affront to the guys that have to live with the memory of having Kevin slain in front of them." Now, however, police have been forced to abandon that tactic, and disturbing questions have arisen about what really happened, and the police actions that followed.

Almost a week later Robinson's wife was arrested for "interfering with police," as she tried to enter the family home. An intense search of the premises for more than a week failed to find evidence which would incriminate the suspect.

* * * Copyright 2001 RG Griffing Publications

The movies Tulia and then Lubbock?

 Where would one start if they were looking for a sequel to the new movie staring Halle Berry  (see below) based on the best seller "Tulia"? It just might be Lubbock. Why? I am not sure but I think here is a good place to start if one was to be in the making.
5 Apr 6:06 am by Gritsforbreakfast
Don't expect any Monster's Ball type love scenes between Billy Bob Thornton and Halle Berry in the upcoming Tulia movie unless the scriptwriter has engaged in some SERIOUS revisionism. But I think he's a good choice for the villain's role in the film, which begins shooting around New Orleans next month according to an Amarillo TV station. Interestingly Halle Berry, who signed on two years ago to do this film, is listed as a producer as well as a star. She will play a young attorney for the... [read post]

 Lubbock County D.A. Travis Ware's Reign of Error and Terror
by Jay B. Van Story
February 10, 2005 In August 1991, Bill Hubbard was assigned to the identification section of the Lubbock, Texas Police Department. He inherited a complaint folder about Lubbock County Forensic Pathologist Dr. Ralph Erdmann.
 
It was rumored that whatever powerful Lubbock County Criminal District Attorney Travis Ware wanted from Dr. Erdmann, Ware got. Prosecutors provided the findings, the testimony, and their theories of a case to a jury, and Erdmann's autopsy reports and additional testimony made the pieces of the case fit perfectly. Maybe a little too perfectly. Red flags were first raised about the connection when an assistant prosecutor in Ware's office hit and killed a pedestrian, Darlene Hall, while the prosecutor was driving drunk. Officer Pat Kelly attended the autopsy of Hall, which was performed by Erdmann. Erdmann commented to Kelly that there was no strong odor of alcohol, adding that there probably would be if Hall had been drunk. No blood was taken from the body for testing, according to Kelly.
However, after conferring with Ware, Erdmann later contended that Hall had a high concentration of alcohol in her blood. Kelly strongly suspected that Ware, or someone in his office, had instructed Erdmann to fabricate this information in order to minimize the drunken prosecutor's civil and criminal liability, and save the D.A.'s office embarrassment. Ware's office had been trying to direct the investigation from the outset.
Dr. Ralph Erdmann would come to have a detrimental effect on many cases in the late 1980s and early 1990s. His sloppiness, incompetence and apparent falsifications were not only tolerated by Ware's office, but apparently encouraged. As a result, guilty people went free, and innocent people went to jail.
As Bill Hubbard became more and more concerned about Erdmann's shortcomings, Ware finally agreed to meet with him and his chain of command on February 5, 1992 to discuss the problem. Ware loved to lecture cops and he always did it from a mindset of superiority. The February 5th meeting was no exception. For fifteen minutes Ware went on and on extolling the supposed virtues of Dr. Erdmann. They heard over and over about how hardworking Erdmann was and how he was “one hell of a witness who has gotten us some great convictions.” With what Hubbard had learned about Erdmann, he had no doubt that was indeed the case. Erdmann was putty in a prosecutor's hands.
At the end of the meeting, Ware asked the cops to keep quiet about the meeting. "If we don't, the defense attorneys will have a field day," Ware said.
Hubbard sensed then that truth and doing the right thing were not nearly as important to Ware as avoiding anything that might reflect poorly on him or his office.
In April 1992, Hubbard was scheduled to testify at a capital murder hearing in Canyon, Texas. The night before, Ware tried to influence and direct Hubbard's testimony in an effort to cover-up Erdmann's misdeeds and Ware's part in them. Hubbard felt this was another sign Ware was not concerned with the truth nearly as much as protecting his image and his career.
At the Canyon hearing, Hubbard courageously testified about Erdmann's incompetence and fraud, and Ware's involvement in it. News or Hubbard's testimony was the number one story on all three network television stations in Lubbock.
The day after Hubbard's revealing testimony, Ware met with police chief Don Bridgers and police captain Frank Wiley. Ware tried to "refresh" Wiley's memory about what had occurred at the February 5th meeting. Ware's "recollection" didn't mesh with Wiley's. Ware asked Bridgers to participate in a joint press conference to announce that no cover-up had occurred. Bridgers declined.
Frustrated, Ware's next move was to go to Hubbard's other superiors and ask for sworn, notarized statements refuting Hubbard's testimony in Canyon and stating that no cover-up had been attempted by Ware. There were no takers. Meanwhile, Ware, his first assistant Rebecca Atchley, and her husband Randy began secretly planning to have Hubbard indicted. Randy Atchley was a police officer who once worked with Hubbard, and he had an axe to grind. He hadn't gotten along with Hubbard, who could be blunt and strident at times.
Around this time, an investigator in Ware's office, Carrie McClain, told of how Travis Ware had called her into his office, launched into a tirade against Hubbard, and threw grisly and explicit photos of homicide victims into McClain's lap, saying, “The people who do this sort of thing are the ones Bill Hubbard is trying to get off.” According to Ware, Erdmann wasn't the problem, Hubbard was. Ware used a particularly vulgar term ("motherf----r") to refer to Hubbard over and over. He said Hubbard had lied on the witness stand in several cases, and that Hubbard had psychological problems. He told McClain that he had gone to all of the county and district judges to warn them that Hubbard had no credibility. McClain knew none of this was true. It was a transparent and deceitful attempt by Ware to discredit Hubbard. McClain was very upset that Ware would slander her good friend Hubbard in such a manner. She knew Hubbard was nothing like Ware had described.
By this time, dozens of cases in Ware's office were being brought into question and were in danger of being overturned, and Dr. Erdmann was under indictment or being investigated in several counties for criminal violations.
It was learned that a man had been wrongfully jailed on child abuse charges because of an autopsy Erdmann had performed on the man's infant son that accused the man of inflicting blunt force trauma on the child. An autopsy by another pathologist showed the child had died of accidental drowning. The father was released from jail. The tragic loss of a child because of an accident had been turned into a double tragedy for the wrongly accused, father. He was eventually awarded $15,000 for the months of false imprisonment he had endured before the truth came out.
On November 10, 1988, the court of appeals overturned the murder conviction of Zane Lee Ham. His conviction had been based largely on the testimony of Erdmann, who had told the jury that: the injuries to the child victim had been inflicted fifty-five hours before her death. Other forensic experts later stated that to pinpoint the injuries to the hour was “medical nonsense.” The only way Erdmann could have given such false testimony would have been if Ware or Atchley had told Erdmann exactly what to say, since the “fifty- five hour” testimony so perfectly fit with the prosecution's theory that the victim was in the sole custody of Ham at the time the injuries were received. Ware and Atchley regularly fed Erdmann the false testimony they needed to get convictions.
Ware continued to try and discredit and silence Hubbard. He told Lubbock City Manager Larry Cunningham that if he did not “do something about Hubbard,” he and Rebecca Atchley would get Hubbard indicted. Ware told Cunningham that if he told anyone about this, he “would know where it came from,” implying that Cunningham would be next to be indicted. However, Cunningham refused to get involved in Ware and Atchley's scheme against Hubbard.
Lubbock Police Detective Ronnie Goolsby made the mistake of questioning a suspect about a prior federal investigation of Ware's alleged cocaine use and dealings. The next day, Goolsby found himself barricaded in the D.A.’s office. Along with Ware, he faced Rebecca Atchley. Ware repeatedly called Hubbard a “motherf----r” when referring to him. Ware told Goolsby that Hubbard was "about to be indicted" and that Goolsby was coming precariously close to going along with him.
Lubbock County's new forensic pathologist, Dr. Jody Nielsen, got a call from Ware. He wanted her to meet with Rebecca Atchley about the "problems with Hubbard." Dr. Nielsen said she got the feeling that anyone who crossed Ware could wind up in jail. On October 22, 1992, she resigned. She said there were problems in Lubbock she wanted no part of.
One day later, an investigator in Ware's office resigned, named Carrie McClain. She said, “I'm willing to flip hamburgers to get away from Travis Ware and his office. I'm leaving because of the lack of honesty and integrity in the criminal district attorney's office.” In retaliation, Ware accused McClain of theft. This was later proven to be untrue.
Ware arranged a plea bargain for Dr. Ralph Erdmann. This was very advantageous for Ware. It kept his name from being dragged into the Erdmann mess in court. Rod Hobson, the president of the Lubbock Criminal Defense Lawyer's Association, lashed out, "It's outrageous and suspicious that a matter of this importance to the integrity of the judicial system is being settled behind closed doors."
One of Hubbard's attorneys said, "Travis Ware has gone too far this time. If he can do this to you and get away with it, who's going to be next?" The public took notice of Ware's misconduct, as well. A college student went so far as to have buttons produced urging people to "IMPEACH TRAVIS WARE." They caught on like wildfire. A poll conducted by the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal newspaper asked the question, "Is the Criminal District Attorney's office operating effectively and ethically under Travis Ware?" The results were: Yes 31%, No 69%.
Reports filtered in about Ware flashing an Uzi full-automatic machine gun at a television station conference, and threatening and intimidating reporters who wrote stories that displeased Ware.
Hubbard's defense team and Ware's critics began being attacked. Attorney Denette Vaughn's home was burglarized five times in a row. Attorney Dan Hurley's tires were slashed. A shotgun blast rang out under the bedroom window of Rod Hobson late one night, and small dead animals were found piled up under his young daughter's bedroom window. This sick behavior appeared to be more than mere coincidence. It was all front page news in Lubbock.
Hubbard and his wife ran into Travis Ware's former wife and her parents at a social function. “I'm so glad we ran into you,” the ex Mrs. Ware told them. “Ever since I heard what happened to you, I have wanted to let you know some things. You have got to understand that you are in very grave physical danger. Travis Ware has surrounded himself with people who know people who will do anything for him. I mean anything!” Hubbard later told his wife, when they got home, “You’d think I crossed the Mafia!”
Around this time, another Lubbock police officer was indicted, this time for alleged perjury. Officer Pat Kelly had testified that Dr. Erdmann had changed his statement about the intoxication of Darlene Hall, the woman who had been hit and killed by one of Ware's drunken assistant prosecutors.
Kelly testified that he believed Ware or someone in his office had been behind the change in Erdmann's statement. He had evidence of a clandestine meeting between Ware, Erdmann and others to effect the desired change.
Once Ware found out about Kelly’s testimony, Ware retaliated by persuading a justice of the peace’s secretary to provide an affidavit contradicting Kelly, in exchange for the promise of a job in Ware's office. It would later be shown that Ware had coaxed false testimony from the secretary to get a perjury indictment against an honest police officer.
Millard Farmer, a well-known and highly respected Atlanta defense attorney, was next to be indicted. Farmer made the mistake of asking someone to encourage Erdmann tell the truth. Ware arranged to have Farmer indicted for allegedly tampering with a witness.
"If the United States Justice Department were investigating these indictments, they would look at the racketeering statute to stop them," said Jonathan Gradess, executive director of the New York State Defenders Association. "It's an awful precedent and an outrageous abuse of state power. The idea that a prosecutor has the hunting license to pick off witnesses because he doesn't like their testimony is an outrage. It's absolutely criminal what's taking place in Texas."
The Lubbock Avalanche-Journal fueled the fire with a December 9, 1992 editorial which referred to the "pall of public suspicion, mistrust, and in many cases, sharp hostility" that had fallen over the operation of Ware's office. It said that somewhere along the way of being relentless in the prosecution of criminals, Ware had taken on "the appearance of an excess in relentless, period."
Gerald Goldstein, a prominent San Antonio attorney, joined Hubbard's legal team. He told Hubbard, "I believe the charges were brought in bad faith, for the purpose of retaliation against you. I want to invoke RICO." Into Hubbard's mind jumped images of the Mafia and gangsters.
Attorneys from across the nation volunteered their services in the law suit against Ware. There was Jed Stone from Chicago, J. Mark Lane from New York, and Richard "Racehorse" Haynes from Houston, to name three.
Lubbock City Manager Larry Cunningham chanced upon Hubbard at the local mall on December 17, 1992. Cunningham told Hubbard, "In all my years in public service, Travis Ware is the meanest, most vindictive man I have ever met. "
Lubbock's leading Hispanic newspaper, El Editor, called for Ware's resignation. An editorial explained that, "it remains that not only [Ware's] integrity but also his moral character and capability to represent people in our county must also be questioned." Travis Ware's lying and instigating of lying of witnesses is documented by many newspaper articles printed not only in this newspaper, but also in the Dallas Morning News and the New York Times." The paper said that Ware's abuses of power were "evident," "countless," and "documented." After weighing integrity, moral character and credibility, the article concluded that Ware had lost the ability to represent the citizens of Lubbock and therefore must resign.
A court hearing in the RICO lawsuit against Ware and others began on February 16, 1993. Larry Cunningham was the first witness called. He testified at length about Ware's attempts to get him to go after Hubbard.
When Rebecca Atchley testified, Hubbard thought to himself that just looking at her sent chills up his spine. Atchley was asked about the Zane Lee Ham case, in which the court of appeals had chastised the prosecution for using false testimony. She was asked why the D.A.'s office continued to use Dr. Erdmann's testimony for five more years after that, in numerous other cases. Atchley didn't have an answer.
During a recess, Atchley was found in the women's restroom with her ear pressed to the wall, in an attempt to eavesdrop on strategy meetings between Hubbard and his attorneys in an adjoining conference room. Goldstein remarked, "They've done wrong, they're caught, and they know it. I guess they feel they have to try to do something to win, even if it's listening through bathroom walls."
On March 4, 1993, Judge Robinson issued preliminary injunctions to prevent any further prosecution of Hubbard, Kelly or Farmer. Judge Robinson ruled: "Plaintiffs have offered substantial evidence that the prosecutions were brought in bad faith and for the purposes of retaliation against the Plaintiffs for the exercise of their constitutional rights."
By March 12, 1993, picketers were out in front of the courthouse, demanding Ware's resignation. The Friday picketing would continue for months. By December 1993, they were still at it, and Ware still hadn't resigned.
In April, Ware and his co-conspirators finally gave up and settled the lawsuit for $300,000 and the promise to not pursue any further prosecutions against Hubbard, Kelly, or Farmer. Ware was resoundingly defeated by attorney Bill Sowder in the 1994 election. He refused to call Mr. Sowder to offer his congratulations, as is customary for a defeated incumbent. But then, Ware had never been graceful in defeat. He is now in private practice. Atchley is now an insurance attorney.
Bill Hubbard reflected: “Things have changed for me after I sat on the other side of the table. I've lived the nightmare of being wrongfully indicted and charged, of being wrongly dragged into ‘The System.’ That has changed my attitude toward others accused of crime. Now, as I go about my law enforcement duties day in and day out, I am much more cautious in evaluating evidence before I ask that a criminal charge be brought against an individual.”
I was also maliciously prosecuted by Ware and Atchley in the late 1980s, when their use of false testimony was in full swing, and they still had the public believing they were honest prosecutors.
Unlike Hubbard, I didn't have a team of tough, smart lawyers. I had no choice but to try my best to defend myself. On the first day of my August 1989 trial, the alleged victim totally recanted the allegation that I had sexually assaulted her. She testified that Ware, Atchley and others had made her believe she had to falsely testify against me in order for her to be able to go home.
Little did I know at the time that I had inadvertently blown the lid off the rampant corruption within Ware's office. His reaction was swift and thorough. He suddenly became intricately involved in my case. Right after Anders recanted, Ware entered the courtroom during a recess and quietly conferred with lead prosecutor Rebecca Atchley. My stand-by attorney remarked that it became political at that point.
Please see my article, "It's a Sad Day When An Innocent Man Is Illegally Convicted" for the full account.
Ware and Atchley maliciously retaliated against me just as they did against Hubbard, Kelly and Farmer. If I had been acquitted on the basis of my defense that they had deliberately used false testimony to get me convicted, it would have brought all of their previous cases into question.
Their prosecutorial careers would have been over. So they forced a little girl (A.C.) to go back to lying, under the threat of being ripped apart from her mother forever. A.C. and I were disposable to them in their quest for a win. By deceiving a jury into illegally convicting me through false testimony, Ware and Atchley were able to hide their wide-ranging conspiracy for a few more years.
The Texas Innocence Network at the University of Houston has completed a thorough investigation of my case. Everything clearly points toward my innocence in this case. Ware and Atchley's egregious misconduct has been laid bare. The question now is, how many others have been maliciously prosecuted by Ware and Atchley? Is there a continuing cover-up that is keeping me from being released from my false imprisonment?
This article contains excerpts and quotes from Bill Hubbard's book, "Substantial Evidence: A Whistleblower's True Tale of Corruption, Death and Justice," New Horizon Press, ISBN: 0-88282-160-1, ©1998, available at amazon.com.
 
 "The individual is handicapped by coming face to face with a conspiracy so monstrous he cannot believe it exists" J. Edgar Hoover
 
 FORMER D.A. TRAVIS WARE: ADULTEROUS BASTARD. How many times has Ware been married and when was his last? divorce, Yep you got it, another wife has left him just recently over adultry.  Hell I lost count of how many failures for him this makes, but just talk to one of the ex's, they will tell you he will screw your wife!? He stole from me, he framed me and he fears me. If one can locate Bob Mathews former local chief of the FBI, ask him why he failed in his pursuit of Ware's high crimes, lies and theft? Can you remember Martha Stewart   (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martha_Stewart)  and her prison time for lying to the FBI? How is it that the FBI can lie to you and me and yet to lie to us is no crime? They all lie and it is from your hard earned money that they can afford to do so. The damage Travis has done to my family cannot be measured or even contemplated.  Why in Gods' name does this evil man still have a license to practice law? If you hire him or even associated with him you are a fool. Who can withstand the wrath of the lamb or the shame: on the High Plains of Texas.

Your Future Looks Grim

 

Revolution, flashmobs, and brain chips. A grim vision of the future



Richard Norton-Taylor
Monday April 9, 2007
The Guardian


Protective chemical suits
The MoD predicts more use of chemical weapons. Photograph: Paul J Richards/EPA
 


Information chips implanted in the brain. Electromagnetic pulse weapons. The middle classes becoming revolutionary, taking on the role of Marx's proletariat. The population of countries in the Middle East increasing by 132%, while Europe's drops as fertility falls. "Flashmobs" - groups rapidly mobilised by criminal gangs or terrorists groups.

This is the world in 30 years' time envisaged by a Ministry of Defence team responsible for painting a picture of the "future strategic context" likely to face Britain's armed forces. It includes an "analysis of the key risks and shocks". Rear Admiral Chris Parry, head of the MoD's Development, Concepts & Doctrine Centre which drew up the report, describes the assessments as "probability-based, rather than predictive".

The 90-page report comments on widely discussed issues such as the growing economic importance of India and China, the militarisation of space, and even what it calls "declining news quality" with the rise of "internet-enabled, citizen-journalists" and pressure to release stories "at the expense of facts". It includes other, some frightening, some reassuring, potential developments that are not so often discussed.

New weapons

An electromagnetic pulse will probably become operational by 2035 able to destroy all communications systems in a selected area or be used against a "world city" such as an international business service hub. The development of neutron weapons which destroy living organs but not buildings "might make a weapon of choice for extreme ethnic cleansing in an increasingly populated world". The use of unmanned weapons platforms would enable the "application of lethal force without human intervention, raising consequential legal and ethical issues". The "explicit use" of chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear weapons and devices delivered by unmanned vehicles or missiles.

Technology

By 2035, an implantable "information chip" could be wired directly to the brain. A growing pervasiveness of information communications technology will enable states, terrorists or criminals, to mobilise "flashmobs", challenging security forces to match this potential agility coupled with an ability to concentrate forces quickly in a small area.

Marxism

"The middle classes could become a revolutionary class, taking the role envisaged for the proletariat by Marx," says the report. The thesis is based on a growing gap between the middle classes and the super-rich on one hand and an urban under-class threatening social order: "The world's middle classes might unite, using access to knowledge, resources and skills to shape transnational processes in their own class interest". Marxism could also be revived, it says, because of global inequality. An increased trend towards moral relativism and pragmatic values will encourage people to seek the "sanctuary provided by more rigid belief systems, including religious orthodoxy and doctrinaire political ideologies, such as popularism and Marxism".

Pressures leading to social unrest

By 2010 more than 50% of the world's population will be living in urban rather than rural environments, leading to social deprivation and "new instability risks", and the growth of shanty towns. By 2035, that figure will rise to 60%. Migration will increase. Globalisation may lead to levels of international integration that effectively bring inter-state warfare to an end. But it may lead to "inter-communal conflict" - communities with shared interests transcending national boundaries and resorting to the use of violence.

Population and Resources

The global population is likely to grow to 8.5bn in 2035, with less developed countries accounting for 98% of that. Some 87% of people under the age of 25 live in the developing world. Demographic trends, which will exacerbate economic and social tensions, have serious implications for the environment - including the provision of clean water and other resources - and for international relations. The population of sub-Saharan Africa will increase over the period by 81%, and that of Middle Eastern countries by 132%.

The Middle East

The massive population growth will mean the Middle East, and to a lesser extent north Africa, will remain highly unstable, says the report. It singles out Saudi Arabia, the most lucrative market for British arms, with unemployment levels of 20% and a "youth bulge" in a state whose population has risen from 7 million to 27 million since 1980. "The expectations of growing numbers of young people [in the whole region] many of whom will be confronted by the prospect of endemic unemployment ... are unlikely to be met," says the report.

Islamic militancy

Resentment among young people in the face of unrepresentative regimes "will find outlets in political militancy, including radical political Islam whose concept of Umma, the global Islamic community, and resistance to capitalism may lie uneasily in an international system based on nation-states and global market forces", the report warns. The effects of such resentment will be expressed through the migration of youth populations and global communications, encouraging contacts between diaspora communities and their countries of origin.

Tension between the Islamic world and the west will remain, and may increasingly be targeted at China "whose new-found materialism, economic vibrancy, and institutionalised atheism, will be an anathema to orthodox Islam".

Iran

Iran will steadily grow in economic and demographic strength and its energy reserves and geographic location will give it substantial strategic leverage. However, its government could be transformed. "From the middle of the period," says the report, "the country, especially its high proportion of younger people, will want to benefit from increased access to globalisation and diversity, and it may be that Iran progressively, but unevenly, transforms...into a vibrant democracy."

Terrorism

Casualties and the amount of damage inflicted by terrorism will stay low compared to other forms of coercion and conflict. But acts of extreme violence, supported by elements within Islamist states, with media exploitation to maximise the impact of the "theatre of violence" will persist. A "terrorist coalition", the report says, including a wide range of reactionary and revolutionary rejectionists such as ultra-nationalists, religious groupings and even extreme environmentalists, might conduct a global campaign of greater intensity".

Climate change

There is "compelling evidence" to indicate that climate change is occurring and that the atmosphere will continue to warm at an unprecedented rate throughout the 21st century. It could lead to a reduction in north Atlantic salinity by increasing the freshwater runoff from the Arctic. This could affect the natural circulation of the north Atlantic by diminishing the warming effect of ocean currents on western Europe. "The drop in temperature might exceed that of the miniature ice age of the 17th and 18th centuries."

Crooked Narcs and Cops on the High Plains

 

Officer Thomas Coleman on trial in Lubbock

Brittany Barrientos

Issue date: 1/12/05The trial of State of Texas v. Thomas Coleman began Monday at the Lubbock County Courthouse. Coleman is the undercover narcotics officer who led a drug sting in Tulia, in which 46 people were arrested, according to www.crimelibrary.com.
Coleman is on trial for two counts of aggravated perjury. A third count was dropped. Coleman's aggravated perjury counts include lying about stealing gas when he was a patrol officer for the Cochran County Sheriff's Department and lying about his history of theft. Monday, Coleman pleaded not guilty to the charges. The Texas Penal Code 37.03 defines aggravated perjury as a person's making a false statement under oath or swearing to the truth of a false statement previously made. The statement is made during or in connection with an official proceeding and is material. Three motions also were denied on Monday - a motion to quash the indictment, an objection to special, or visiting, prosecutors Rob Hobson and John Nation and a motion to recuse, or replace, the special prosecutors. Coleman single-handedly executed a sting operation in Tulia in 1999 that put 46 Tulia residents in jail. Of the 46 arrested, 39 were black; the remaining seven were white or Hispanic with ties to the black community. This number accounted for more than 10 percent of the black population of Tulia, according to www.crimelibrary.com. Jury selection for the case started Thursday and concluded Monday. After questioning by both the prosecution and the defense on whether the potential jurors had formed opinions on the case because of media coverage, the 101 potential jurors were narrowed down to 12 and one alternate. The jury is comprised of seven males and five females, with a female alternate. Eleven of the jurors are white, and one is Hispanic. They eventually will decide Coleman's fate. Judge David Gleason has decided not to sequester the jury, as long as jurors do not talk to the media or follow media coverage about the case. All the participants in the trial have been informed that no statements about the trial are to be made to the media. "Call it a gag order if you want," Gleason said. Tuesday began with the opening statement from the prosecution, when lead prosecutor Hobson said the prosecution would focus on disproving two of Coleman's lies and proving the lies were not trivial. Hobson argued that when under oath, no lie is material. The defense opted not to give an opening statement. The prosecution then began calling witnesses. The first, Amber Appleton, one of the court reporters at the 2003 writ of habeas corpus trials, said she accurately took down Coleman's testimony. The prosecution called a total of 10 witnesses, ranging from Appleton to Judge Ron Chapman, the judge who presided over the 2003 habeas corpus trials. Chapman's testimony was strenuously objected to by the defense, who repeatedly requested he not be allowed to take the stand. Chapman is a retired trial judge who still sits as a visiting judge when necessary for the 5th Circuit appellate court. The 5th Circuit includes Dallas and the surrounding counties. Chapman said Coleman testified in the trials under oath, and that his credibility could have affected the outcome of the trials. According to www.truthinjustice.com, an agreement between the prosecution and defense in the cases was reached, and Coleman was found to be not credible. As part of the agreement, $250,000 was paid to the defendants. Another key witness for the prosecution was James Collier Adams Jr. Adams is the Cochran County Attorney who testified that he saw Coleman putting gas in a "vehicle that was not his own." "I know it was him," Adams said. Court will resume at 9 a.m. Wednesday. Gleason said he hopes the trial will be over by Friday. For more information on the Tulia drug bust, look at the Law.com Web site, www.truthinjustice.com or the Court TV Web site, www.crimelibrary.com.
 

 

Post a Comment

  • Name: (required)
  • Email: (required)
  • NOTE: Email address will not be published
  • Website:

Notify me of followup comments via e-mail

 

Viewing Comments 1 - 1 of 1

anonymous870

anonymous870

posted 1/14/05 @ 1:56 AM EST

this is only the beginning for coleman was not the exception, but standard practice by narcotics officers here on the plains, more to come.

bob beall
gandalf1316@cs. (
Continued…)

Strategic Bombing on the High Plains

This morning I dropped a bomb on the high plains of Texas
    I did a radio bit on AM950 "Fox Talk in the Morning" and dropped a blockbuster.  I told the community how the LPD hid or attempted to hide and withhold information along with lying to the press over the SWAT shooting, where the pigs shot there own man and tried to frame the home owner.  I let them know that the FBI was telling us they had given the ballistic results to the local lying pigs, the liars that they are, were saying they were waiting on said results in a desperate effort to stall for time and frame the innocent victim of their hideous crime.
I made mention of the San Antonio Lightning and Richard Griffing who had the recording of the FBI statement.
I then told the listeners to get a must read Bill Hubard's  book: "Substantial Evidence" which in reality only shows the tip of the iceberg. I then mentioned there is a new movie coming about "TULIA" and perhaps then the next one may be about Lubbock, Texas.
   Today I let the people know that there shame is at hand for who can withstand the wrath of the Lamb?
Peace
Gandalf
"Man's character is his fate.": Heraclitus - (c.540-480 BC) Greek philosopher   
 
Flash: "Tulia" Is Billy Bob Thornton's Next Stop March 14, 2007 07:35:51 GMT
by
Flora Jean

Set to repeat the stunning onscreen collaboration between him and
Halle Berry as seen before in "Monster's Ball", Billy Bob Thornton has signed on to once again play opposite the Oscar-winning actress in Lionsgate's dramatic feature "Tulia."

An adaptation of Nate Blakeslee's non-fiction book "Tulia: Race, Cocaine, and Corruption in a Small Texas Town", the picture finds Berry as an attorney who attempts to expose a corrupt and racially motivated rash of drug convictions in the rural town. What role Thornton is assigned to portray, however, has not yet been revealed.

Production on the film begins one day earlier from previous schedule on April 30 in and around New Orleans, Louisiana with Berry, Adam Rosenfelt, Jesse Franklin, Mike Tollin, Brian Robbins, and Vince Cirrincione all producing. "High Crimes" helmer Carl Franklin is in charge to direct from the script penned by Karen Croner that he re-wrote.

Thornton, known for his role as a mentally retarded man in "Sling Blade" which won him an Oscar for best adapted screenplay, currently can be seen in theaters playing the lead in Warner Bros. Pictures' inspiring tale of "
The Astronaut Farmer." Apart from taking part in "Tulia", he is reportedly also attached to star in "Peace Like a River" and "Manure", which will reunite him with "Farmer" writer-directors Mike and Mark Polish. 

Halle Berry was very, very excited to get her star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame! Clad in a tight-fitting, low-cut black number, she fully embraced her star--right down to kissing it.

Check out these revealing shots of Halle Berry and her star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

The woman really does have it all. Her new "star" is added to the Emmy, Golden Globe and Academy Award she already has on her mantle. But the girl from Cleveland who was named after a department store isn't jaded. With tears in her eyes she gratefully received the honor on Tuesday, April 3 in front of the Kodak Theater.

Here he is...Halle's boyfriend, Canadian model Gabriel Aubrey. (Although she swears she's never getting married again.)

"I am so emotional...as soon as I saw the crowds of people and friends here, I started to cry," she told The Associated Press. Her newest movie, "Perfect Stranger" with Bruce Willis, opens on April 13.

 
 
 
 
 

Water War page 5

 
 
Gary Boren has resigned from his post as Lubbock City Councilman for District 3. Boren’s resignation comes as documents are made public from a lawsuit filed against the city by a current employee. In January of 2005, Terry Ellerbrook was transferred from his position as Director of Public Works (the water department) to Director of Solid Waste.
A Texas truck driver is busted in Lubbock for hauling thousands of pounds of marijuana, now he will head to trial.  
On Wednesday, a federal grand jury in Lubbock indicted 41 year old Gustavo Perales of El Paso on one count of possession with intent to distribute 1000 kilograms or more of marijuana. 
 
I did two radio bits this week on Thursday and Friday. I established a clean shot at the water department and our right to bear arms and I quoted the second admendment word for word on the air. Calling our police department inept and declaring the new red light cameras a rip off.
 
Then on Friday opened with both barrels calling for an investigation as to the level of corruption down town. I also made mention of All Saints and their wonderful educational program. On Thursday's show it was the District Attorney followed by Rep. Dewlin Jones, then me followed by the Mayor. This is really getting good.