Archive | January 2022

Who Lied Under Oath? Searcy County Arkansas Sheriff Deputy Pierce? Or Notary Brooke Hipp?

Check out the affidavit of Searcy County Sheriff Deputy Ezra Pierce posted below.

The Secretary of State website says notary Brooke Hipp is not authorized to eNotarize.

But the affidavit is signed electronically.

What’s worse, Deputy Pierce has only handed me a set of documents on October 7, 2021.

The attorney, William White would like to prove that I received two separate packets with a summons from Deputy Pierce.

I think Judge Susan Weaver is orchestrating the fraudulent activity. She called a hearing for October 7, 2021 and had four Sheriff officers present to make sure the other five people in the courtroom were safe and orderly.

Mrs. Hipp certified that the affidavit was signed in her presence in Cleburne County on January 14, 2022.

So, why is the document electronically signed?

And how do I get a Searcy County Arkansas Sheriff Deputy to drive an hour to sign an affidavit for me?!?

I can’t even get them to respond to my inquiry about what I contend is a fraudulent affidavit.

The serious questions: Why is Deputy Ezra Pierce not using a judicial council approved proof of service? Why is Deputy Pierce opining on the legal effect of handing the summons and complaint to Laura Hammett as an individual, without the designation “trustee”? Should he be charged with the unauthorized practice of law?

When the Chief Sheriff Deputy in a small town is lying on affidavits to assist an unethical judge to transfer an old lady’s assets, who does the victim report him to?

My suggestion, don’t move to Searcy County Arkansas. It has beautiful scenery and the people in the boonies are good folks, but the po-dunk lawmen and women are a dumber version of John Grisham characters and twice as corrupt.

Law Suit Filed To Help Regular Folks Obtain Legal Guidance Against Debt Buyers Like Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC

(Cut and pasted a press release. Sorry the formatting is not right.)

Landmark First Amendment Lawsuit Brought in
New York Challenges Ban on Free Legal Advice

National Nonprofit and New York Pastor bring case against New York
State to challenge unjust and unconstitutional policies that stop
low-income New Yorkers from getting free legal advice to access their

rights.

With COVID-related medical debt mounting, debt and eviction
moratoriums expiring, and student loan repayments restarting in
2022, new lawsuit aims to expand access to legal advice for people

subject to debt collection lawsuits.

New York, New York – Today, Upsolve, a national nonprofit, and Reverend John Udo-Okon, a
Pastor in the South Bronx, filed a First Amendment lawsuit (see full case) in federal court
(SDNY) against New York State to challenge laws that stop low-income New Yorkers from
getting free, safe, and accountable legal advice in debt collection lawsuits. Over 70 million
Americans have debt in collections. Each year, about 4 million of these Americans are sued for
their debt, often for debt that they don’t actually owe or for the wrong amounts. Such actions
commonly include subprime auto-loans, medical debts, or debt bought by third parties. Over
90% of Americans sued for their debt receive no legal representation. The vast majority of
low-income Americans in debt collection lawsuits cannot afford legal fees and over 70% lose by
default, where the court automatically rules against them without considering the underlying
facts at all. It is currently illegal to receive free, vetted, routine legal advice from a trained
social worker, patient advocate, pastor, or any other professional who is not a lawyer.


Upsolve is suing to change that.


Three additional New Yorkers, Liz Jurado, Chris Lepre, and William Evertson, are participating
in the case to represent the millions of Americans each year whose lives are upended because
they cannot afford legal fees.


Liz Jurado was sued for $12,000 by her anesthesiologist for a surprise medical bill she received
after a routine epidural in childbirth. Christopher Lepre, a navy veteran, was unknowingly sold a
broken car, financed with a high-interest loan from subprime auto-lender Credit Acceptance, and

then sued by Credit Acceptance for over $15,000 – even though he gave the car back to the
dealer within three months. William Evertson, a Brooklyn-based social worker, was sued by
large third-party debt buyer Cavalry for a debt that was never his.


Jurado, Lepre, and Evertson all could not afford legal fees to fight back when they were
sued. And it was against the law for each of them to choose to receive free, routine legal advice
from a trained social worker, patient advocate, or any other professional who was not a lawyer.


Each of them automatically lost their case without the court considering any of the facts. Jurado
and Evertson ended up filing bankruptcy. Lepre had his wages garnished and had to borrow
from his 401(k) to make rent.


In America, you’re only guaranteed a free lawyer in criminal cases, not the vast majority of civil
cases, which include debt collection lawsuits. And there aren’t close to enough free
lawyers—especially in light of the educational cost required—to meet the demand of every
single person who needs legal help. Yet every state in America has laws that make it illegal for
low-income people to get free, safe, routine legal advice from trained professionals who aren’t
lawyers.


Upsolve CEO and co-founder, Rohan Pavuluri, said, “We believe that this is the kind of case
all Americans can get behind. We don’t have equal rights under the law. What we have is equal
rights if you can afford a lawyer. This is one of the fundamental and urgent injustices of our
time.”


Reverend John Udo-Okon, a co-plaintiff with Upsolve, already provides social services to some
of the lowest income zip codes in New York City. Rev. Udo-Okon wants to provide legal advice
to those in his community who have been sued for their debt, but it’s illegal for him to do so.
Reverend Udo-Okon said, “Members of my community are shut out from ways to vindicate
their own rights, and are left with what feels to them like an oppressive justice system stacked
against them.”


In response to Upsolve’s lawsuit, NAACP General Counsel, Janette Wallace, said, “It is
vitally important that low-income individuals get the help they need when trying to respond to
debt collection actions. Black Americans are more likely to face these actions, and they’re more
likely to have to do so without being able to call on a lawyer. The rules surrounding the practice
of law should make it easier, not harder, to redress this problem by ensuring access to high
quality legal help for those who need it.”


The lawsuit involves a new initiative Upsolve is launching, the American Justice Movement, to
empower low-income families to get free legal advice from professionals in their communities
who are not lawyers, called Justice Advocates. The American Justice Movement is launching
with a focus on debt collection lawsuits in New York. Justice Advocates include clergy members,
social workers, patient advocates, and other frontline professionals.

The downstream consequences of losing a debt collection lawsuit can include hunger,
homelessness, poverty, and, in some cases, even jail time, which also come at a cost to our
whole society. This problem is urgent in 2022, as experts predict an onslaught of debt collection
activity.


New York’s policies making it illegal to get free legal, safe, and accountable advice are
unconstitutional given the protections enshrined in the First Amendment. Upsolve is
fighting to protect rights the Constitution already guarantees the Americans most in need – like
the challengers in Miranda v. Arizona and Gideon v. Wainwright.


In response to the filing, Senior Attorney at the Institute for Justice Robert McNamara
said, “Upsolve’s lawsuit matters to millions of people nationwide who need basic legal advice
and can’t get it. The only thing laws like New York’s achieve is ensuring that ordinary people
who most need help can’t get practical advice from people who are willing to give it.”


These policies restrict the supply of help available, perpetuate the imbalance of our justice
system towards those who can afford legal fees, and guarantee that we’ll never have equal
rights under the law.


About Upsolve
Upsolve is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, based in NYC, with the mission of helping Americans access
their civil legal rights for free and achieve economic mobility, using technology, education,
community, and advocacy. Upsolve’s first project, an online web application to help families file
bankruptcy on their own for free, has relieved over $400M in debt for families facing medical
bills and other financial shocks. Upsolve also provides free financial and legal education that
reaches about 2 million individuals per year. Upsolve funders include Jack Dorsey, the Hewlett
Foundation, Emergent Ventures at the Mercatus Center, Scott & Cyan Banister, Eric & Wendy
Schmidt, Jim Breyer, Vinod Khosla, Chris & Crystal Sacca, the Robin Hood Foundation, and Y
Combinator. In 2020, TIME named Upsolve one of the Best Inventions of the Year. Upsolve
launched the American Justice Movement in 2022 to empower low-income families to get free,
safe, and accountable legal advice from trained frontline professionals.


Additional Resources Links are given on the American Justice movement website
Website: AmericanJusticeMovement.org
● See Full Case (Filed Jan 25, 2022)
● Press Kit Images
● We Need a New Civil Right (CNN Opinion, Joe Kennedy III & Rohan Pavuluri)
● Civil Justice for All – Recommendation #4 (American Academy of Arts & Sciences)
● Give People the Law (Democracy Journal, Vivek Maru)
● Legal Advice from Nonlawyers (Stanford Journal of Civil Rights & Civil Liberties,
Rebecca Sandefur)
● Unauthorized Practice Of Law’ Rules Promote Racial Injustice (Law360, Rohan Pavuluri)

Open Email to Searcy County Arkansas Sheriff Kenney Cassell

Dear Sherriff Cassell,


Why is the Searcy County Arkansas Sheriff’s Department refusing to respond to my Freedom of Information Act Request for recordings of calls between my telephones and the Sheriff?


The requestor does not need to inform the provider with the purpose of the information. I will tell you, in part, anyhow.


My request is made in part because the information is pertinent to a civil case presided over by Judge Susan Weaver, in which I am a defendant, 65CV-21-20.


I can subpoena the same information, perhaps, but I believe Judge Weaver is colluding with Plaintiff’s counsel William Zac White of Heber Springs.


The Court may delay issuance of the subpoena. Mr. White has refused to comply with requests for production of documents and interrogatories. I filed a motion to compel and Mr. White and the Court ignored my motion.

 
Production in a FOIA request is required within three days.


If I want a court or law enforcement to help me compel the production, or award me damages for the failure, I can go to a Federal agency or court, rather than to the unethical Searcy County judge.


Mr. White’s office also filed an affidavit that looks like it was approved by Chief Deputy Ezra Pierce on its face. The notary who works for Mr. White attested that Deputy Pierce was physically present, but the signature looks electronic. The notary is not licensed to eNotarize documents.


The affidavit does not use language found on the Judicial Council approved forms.


There is language in the affidavit that sounds like Chief Deputy Pierce gave a legal opinion, that a summons was “duly” served on the Rural Revival Living Trust.

 
The summons handed to me by Chief Deputy Pierce on October 7, 2021 was directed to “Laura Lynn Hammett”. Not “Trustee”. It was served on an individual, not a trust.


The affidavit claims Chief Deputy Pierce served summons on the trust on October 12, 2021. I did not see Mr. Pierce on October 12, 2021. As far as I know, that is an outright lie.


I mention the affidavit in the same email as the FOIA request because I have a reasonable suspicion that the failure to provide the information requested is caused by the same reason the faulty affidavit was filed and your office has not corrected it. That reason is probably an intent to deprive me of my Constitutional right to equal protection under the law and to help transfer title of 9985 Lick Fork Road to Micheal Pietrczak who will then transfer title to someone else. I am concerned the transfer will be to Mr. White, Judge Weaver, or a straw buyer.


I am not certain when I will file my complaint against you and the Sheriff’s Department, but I will post this email chain on my blog immediately.


Looking forward to a response from you.


Laura Hammett


On Thursday, January 27, 2022, 02:03:41 PM CST, Laura Lynn <bohemian_books@yahoo.com> wrote:

To Sheriff Cassell,


I filed a FOIA request in the email attached hereto.


It has been more than three business days and I have not received a response.


Please call me before close of business today and inform me of when you will have my request fulfilled.


According to the Attorney General’s Freedom of Information Handbook, 19th Edition page 31, “A person who ‘negligently violates’ the FOIA is guilty of a Class C misdemeanor. Ark. Code Ann, [section] 25-19-104.”


Regards,


Laura Hammett (760) 966-6000


On Friday, January 21, 2022, 11:03:18 AM CST, Laura Lynn <bohemian_books@yahoo.com> wrote:

To Searcy County Sheriff’s Office,


This is a Freedom of Information Act request for copies of all recordings to 911 or (870) 448-2340 from (870) 496-2653 and (760) 966-6000 from January 1, 2015 to present.


Please tell me if you have a form I must fill out. The “Forms” page on your website is blank.


Also tell me what charge I will incur and how I may pay.


Thank you,


Laura Lynn Hammett

Monster Alan Friedenthal is Dead!

Thank you to my sister victim of the corrupt family law system in Los Angeles, California, for sending an obituary from the August 18, 2020 death of Alan Friedenthal.

It was interesting to read the glowing tribute by the Met-News, a rag in the Democrat run state that caters to the legal community.

What do you say about an alleged pedophile who destroyed children’s lives and collected lots of money doing it?

The Met-News steered clear of Alan’s history in the family law court, claiming he worked primarily in dependency and delinquency cases.

Maybe they wanted people to believe his cases were sealed, so as not to read through them.

Maybe it sounded better to say Alan separated children from their parents in dependency and juvenile court, where they would have legal counsel protecting the families’ rights. In “family law” the unethical commissioner was able to violate parental rights of anyone who did not have enough money to pay an attorney, or who was outlawyered by Friedenthal’s cronies.

The Met-News did apologetics for the buffoon ex-commissioner concerning the “severe public admonishment” the monster received for making impermissible rulings from the bench against five families. The Met-News discounted the disciplinary action taken by the Commission on Judicial Performance and the California Supreme Court by claiming one of the mothers who was separated from her child completely by Alan Friedenthal made antisemitic comments to the secular Jewish judicial officer.

According to a story by Fox News that featured this writer’s work exposing Alan Friedenthal, there were hundreds of people who complained about the court commissioner.

One of my sources who worked in law enforcement said the rotund man was investigated for inappropriate sexualized conduct toward one of the boys he separated from the child’s biological mother.

My faith is challenged to the limits when I write these words that I know I should say with sincerity:

May he rest in peace.

Judge Susan Weaver Sues Gun Maker Who Failed to Deliver Deeply Discounted AR 15 For Daddy

Judge Weaver is a self-described “daddy’s girl”, according to an interview in the Arkansas Democrat Gazette.

The Faulkner County judge tried to buy an AR 15 for her Dad’s 70th birthday, as you can read in court documents posted below.

Michael Varner, who worked for a gum manufacturer, agreed to build the gun before Mr. Weaver’s birthday at his employee discount rate, $715, according to Mr. Varner.

Unfortunately for Mr. Varner, there was a supply side problem with the parts.

The judge had to make her father’s birthday present a picture and a promise.

Mr. Varner said he agreed to return the $715.

But that was not enough for Judge Weaver. She filed a small claims suit against the Deer, Arkansas gunsmith and won $3,090.00 plus $115 in costs.

Plaintiff Weaver said she bought the gun directly from Wilson Combat for $2,797.20.

The court documents give no explanation of what the extra $290 was for. I guess pain and suffering.

Don’t believe me? Read the court docs posted below.

Judge Weaver garnished Mr. Varner’s wages, according to court documents.

Do you think Judge Weaver is fair and compassionate? Or a greedy tyrant who uses her position of power and influence to line her pockets?

Judge Susan Kaye Weaver Stealing Babies?

This reporter has a definite bias against Judge Susan Kaye Weaver.

The bias is caused by my belief that Susan Weaver is committing honest services fraud against me.

Because of my strong faith, I do not act maliciously toward people; not even those who spitefully abuse me.

That Christian tenant does not give license to my abuser to continue the abuse or abuse other victims.

I asked for other people to share stories about Judge Weaver of Faulkner County, Searcy County and Van Buren County, Arkansas.

One reliable professional, whose professional license is unmarred by any ethics violation, told me the professional’s observations in a dependency case presided over by Judge Susan Weaver.

The case is under seal, so I cannot verify the facts. (This is a good argument for making dependency cases open to the public.)

As the professional’s career may come to a screeching halt if judge Weaver knows who leaked the information, the professional will remain anonymous, and the facts will be kept vague purposefully. The professional did not tell me the name of any of the other people involved in the case.

This is not a court of law. You may judge the veracity of this story about a judge, as you weigh arguments against any elected official. Then use your judgment when you see the elected official on any ballot in the future.

The professional told me of a child who was taken from his mother by Judge Weaver. During a hearing for reunification, the mother had a witness present to attest that the mother had complied with all the court ordered treatment, classes and testing required for reunification.

Judge Susan Weaver refused to let the witness testify. No reason was given for excluding this evidence.

The mother and child were not reunited.

The professional thought Judge Weaver’s demeanor on the bench and ruling was “bizarre”.

Judge Susan Weaver is often quoted and has posted on the internet that she loves children. But the judge was married and divorced young, never remarried and has no children of her own.

She either does not understand that a child will be harmed if the maternal bond is destroyed, or she is an incredibly evil person who is using her elected position of power to purposefully destroy lives. Maybe both.

*****************

I’m not saying that lack of a mother – child bond guarantees a tragic life.

There are situations in which no mother is preferable to the mother God used to bring a child into the world. Foster parents and adoptive parents can be wonderful, loving parents to those whose biological parents don’t want the child or are unable to care for the child.

But, we as a society should not deny anyone’s Constitutional right to a familial relationship without giving the parents every opportunity to put forward evidence on their behalf.

Too often judges in the family law and dependency courts are jaded or just ignore the rule of law. From my own experience and the story conveyed above, I fear Judge Susan Weaver is one of the judges who separates children from their mothers without following the law.

What Can I Do About A Corrupt Court?

This is not legal advice. This writer is not an attorney. She is a public relations professional.

Court Commissioner Alan Friedenthal is no longer serving on the bench. This is a major victory for the people of California who might have otherwise had their lives and their children’s lives destroyed by the judge wanna-be.

In California, judges are elected. But commissioners are appointed and have the same authority as judges. Alan Friedenthal attempted to get elected twice and failed but was still appointed to his position of power.

I do not know why Alan retired from his commissioner paycheck and position of power. It looks like he went back into practice as an attorney and was involved in the production of a movie.

My hope is that my public relations campaign to have him removed from office helped influence his decision.

One major battle won in my efforts to rid Los Angeles of this corrupt family law “judge” was helping Fox News produce a series called “Lost in the System”. You can watch some of the series by clicking here.

So, what can you do if you are having a problem that lands you in court and you have a corrupt judge?

First, if you can afford an attorney, your chance of receiving justice in court improves by 1,000%.

If you are a regular person, you can’t afford an attorney.

Let’s rewind.

Before you get to the point of filing lawsuits…try to live a conflict free life.

There is Biblical wisdom that says, paraphrased, if another Christian harms you, speak to him first, before taking him to court. Implied is that if you harm a person, you should make them whole and be apologetic while doing so.

Goodman Manufacturing Company, L.P. built a crappy heating and air-conditioning unit. Advantage Service Company in North Little Rock installed that unit in my home. A large retailer I’ll call “Good Guys” sold me the faulty equipment and arranged for Advantage to do the installation.

When the HVAC failed, advantage came out to repair it several times. They demanded payment each time. When we reached close to a thousand dollars in repair bills, I looked up warranty law and found that pursuant to the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act of 1975, all three companies involved must repair the unit for free.

Skipping a few steps, I eventually filed a lawsuit against the three companies for violating the Mag-Moss Warranty Act, fraud, conversion and violating the Arkansas Deceptive Trade Practices Act.

The Good Guys reimbursed me then for the repairs and the cost of the unit.

But the Goliath manufacturing company and its parent and partners refused to apologize or compensate me in any way. Instead of reimbursing $1,000 for the repairs, Advantage Service Company altered invoices to try to create an alternative universe.

First lesson of the day: If you have to cheat to win, don’t play.

Part of the process, one of the steps skipped above, was a small claims judge named Charles Clawson having ex parte communications with Goodman Manufacturing Company, L.P. When I went for a 1:30 PM hearing at 1:10 (always be early), I caught the judge and a tall man talking to each other about the case. I shyly raised my hand and said I was the plaintiff. The judge supposedly summarized what they were talking about before I arrived and sent us home.

Later Judge Clawson had email communications with me and a Goodman representative regarding the case. Before I filed a complaint with the judicial disciplinary committee in Little Rock, the judge recused himself. He had a bad attitude and was snarky when he recused himself, but he did recuse.

So, how to deal with corrupt courts?

Besides staying out of court, the second most important action you can take is to make a good record.

Court clerks have altered and removed docket entries on my cases before. The small claims clerk on the Goodman case took $12 from me to send my complaint and summons certified, then sent the wrong papers by regular mail to defendant Goodman. Goodman jumped from the bushes after 120 days and said “Gotcha! You served us improperly and the case must be dismissed”.

Instead of owning up to their error, the clerk altered the docket to show they had refunded my money, then they thought better of it and reversed the alleged refund document.

Had I not kept my receipts, the clerk would probably have lied.

Keep receipts.

Object in writing to all fishy legal maneuverings.

Keep all emails.

If you send a letter, send it certified.

If your court system allows it, sign up for electronic filing. That way, the time you are served is documented.

Next, brainstorm alternatives to litigation.

You may be able to convince a wayward company to settle with you. Everyone benefits by settlement, except corrupt judges who take bribes. If you have a corrupt judge, the settlement will need to be less than the bribe. Unfortunately, once a company gives one bribe to a judge, you will have no settlement power available against that company or their attorneys. The judge must continue to rule for the briber.

If you are lucky enough to have an honest judge assigned to your case, you will go to ADR, Alternative Dispute Resolution.

I had one company agree to pay the entire bill for ADR.

Realize that mediators and arbitrators are big business friendly. Individual plaintiffs will usually have few cases during a lifetime. Big companies are sued and sue often. They are repeat customers for the “neutral” adjudicator.

You may be able to find other regular people who had or have similar problems with your adversary.

Look at records kept by your court. Most of these are online now.

You can find contact information for similarly situated victims on their complaints.

People are usually happy to share their stories with anyone who will listen.

Write on the internet.

This blog had about 600 posts in 2013. (I wanted to retire and took them all down; alas I have been forced out of retirement.)

When I was getting dozens or hundreds of hits per day, I built a network of other litigants who were having the same troubles with Alan Friedenthal and his ilk. We swapped emails, talked on the phone, met for lunch and worked on three projects together, including the Fox News series “Lost in the System”.

Most jurisdictions have a judicial ethics commission.

File a complaint. Don’t expect too much.

The Commission on Judicial Performance in California took about three years to admonish Alan Friedenthal for an appearance of bias on my case and four others. The damage was done and irreparable.

But knowing they are being investigated might slow down the smarter corrupt judges.

Contact news media.

You can email well written pleadings to the local paper’s reporter that covers the courts.

Chances are better that a blogger like myself will be interested and repost your story.

I am trying to remove Judge Susan Kaye Weaver from her position as Circuit Court judge of Searcy County, Faulkner County and Van Buren County, Arkansas.

She is a dangerous and well connected woman. She has a reputation for playing favorites. She has a reputation of not understanding the subtleties of civil litigation. I suspect she understands every word and is trying to funnel finances from regular people who can’t afford attorneys to her pets.

If you think Judge Weaver is corrupt, please contact the JDDC in Little Rock and contact me. I promise confidentiality to those who want it.

Together we can establish a pattern and practice of corrupt acts by this wayward judge.

Will Judge Susan Kaye Weaver Continue to Allow Her Pet Attorney to Plunder Old Ladies’ Trusts?

Back when Arkansas Circuit Court Judge Susan Weaver had just been elected as a District Court judge, she gave an interview that feigned wholesomeness and small-town values.

But there was one paragraph foreboding of things to come.

“I find tax and estate planning interesting. I don’t have any money, so it’s fun to play with somebody else’s,” she said, laughing. – as quoted by Tammy Keith in the Arkansas Democrat Gazette.

“Playing” a game where the winners are decided in advance and are lawyers, Judge Weaver let at least two lawsuits progress against trustees of old ladies’ trusts that were not served summons.

Mine is one of them. (The other is a pair of suits regarding Richard Gawenis and the Zelda Walls trust, that is now on appeal.)

Maybe Judge Weaver thinks it is fun and funny to “play with somebody else’s” retirement and legacy.

It does not seem funny to me.

Here is a response to a motion to have an insufficient service of summons deemed “perfected” that I filed today. Judge Weaver gets to decide my financial future, so it does not look too promising for me.

(Sorry the formatting doesn’t translate, so the numbering is not as in the original.)

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF SEARCY COUNTY, ARKANSAS CIVIL DIVISION

CASE No.  65CV-21-20                                                          

 MICHEAL PIETRCZAK                                                         PLAINTIFF v.                                         

RURAL REVIVAL LIVING                                                                                                 

TRUST; AND LAURA LYNN                                              DEFENDANTS

LAURA LYNN HAMMETT                                                COUNTER-

                                                                                                    CLAIMANT  v.

MICHEAL PIETRCZAK                                                  COUNTER-

                                                                                                  DEFENDANT  

LAURA LYNN HAMMETT AN INDIVIDUAL’S RESPONSE TO MOTION TO DEEM SERVICE UPON DEFENDANT RURAL REVIVAL LIVING TRUST PERFECTED AND EMBEDDED BRIEF

Comes Now, Laura Lynn Hammett, an individual (“Hammett”), and for her Response to Motion to Deem Service Upon Defendant Rural Revival Living Trust Perfected, states:

  1.    A Motion to Deem Service Upon Defendant Rural Revival Living Trust Perfected was filed by Attorney William Z. White on January 14, 2022, Called herein “Pietrczak Motion”.

   Though filed at “16:53:32” on January 14, 2022, the clerk did not accept and therefore notify Hammett of the Pietrczak Motion until 7:49 AM on January 17, 2022.

   Prior to January 14, 2022, Hammett filed several motions that addressed the issues addressed in the Pietrczak Motion that went undecided by the Court and one went unanswered by the Plaintiff completely.

   The most recent of Hammett’s motions regarding the same issues presented in the Pietrczak Motion are Hammett’s Motion to Strike a Summons, Find Complaint Void for Improper Caption and Summons and a More Definite Statement filed October 8, 2021, called “Oct. 8 Mtn”, and Hammett’s Motion to Dismiss for Failure to Name and Serve a Necessary Party filed December 29, 2021, Called “Dec. 29 Mtn”.

   Hammett has a pending motion for the recusal of Judge Susan Kaye Weaver filed September 27, 2021 and supplemented September 28, 2021. (This is a motion for reconsideration, the original motion to recuse denied on September 24, 2021.) Hammett realleges that it is not proper for the Hon. Susan Kaye Weaver to preside, because of Canon 2 of the Arkansas Code of Judicial Conduct, 2.11(A)(1) and Matter of Est. of Edens, 2018 Ark. App. 226, 19, 548 S.W.3d 179, 190–91 (2018).

   Additionally, the fact that the Pietrczak Motion was posted and thereby served at 7:49 AM on Martin Luther King Day, a state and federal holiday, adds to the appearance that the Court is favoring Mr. White and trying to allow Mr. White’s client to prevail on a technicality, rather than reaching a jury verdict on the merits.

   Both the file stamp and the certificate of service of the Pietrczak Motion show a date that would allow one less day for Hammett’s response than the day of notification and service.

   Rather than being challenged to produce evidence of the disputed date, and convincing the Court to reconsider her decision, Hammett is filing her response early.

   Hammett claims all rulings made by a judge who has an appearance of bias, after the bias is claimed by the litigant in a motion for recusal, are a violation of the aggrieved litigant’s Constitutional Right to due process and equal protection under the fifth and fourteenth amendments.

   Hammett has a pending motion for Summary Judgment filed August 27, 2021 (“MSJ Aug. 27”).

   Hammett argued that Mr. White filed the complaint on behalf of “Walter Pietrczak, Power of Attorney-in-Fact [f]or Plaintiff, via attorney, William Z. White” and that requests for admission signed on behalf of “Michael (sic) Pietrczak” denied that Walter Pietrczak had a power of attorney when complaint was filed. (MSJ Aug. 27)

   In the Pietrczak Motion, Mr. White states he filed “on behalf of the Plaintiff, Michael (sic) Pietrczak”. There was no motion to substitute the plaintiff. Such a motion, if made, must be denied.

    “The Rule of Civil Procedure on relation back of amendments to pleadings, which is expressly written in terms of amendments or changes to the party against whom a claim is asserted, does not apply to allow amendments or changes to plaintiffs as well. Rules Civ.Proc., Rule 15(c).” Bryant v. Hendrix, 375 Ark. 200, 289 S.W.3d 402 (2008)[1]

   “Where an action is brought in the name of a non-existing plaintiff, an amendment of complaint by substituting the proper party to the action as plaintiff will be regarded as the institution of a new action as regards the statute of limitations.” Id.

   “[A]ccording to Rhuland [v. Fahr, 356 Ark. 382, 155 S.W.3d 2 (2004)], whenever an amendment to a complaint substitutes a new plaintiff, such amendment is a new cause of action and does not relate back to the original complaint.” Id.

   Hammett has already argued that the Complaint should be dismissed on statute of limitations and was ignored by the Court. Any amendment that does not relate back exceeds the statute of limitations by over a year.

   Micheal Pietrczak’s attempt to adopt the complaint that was filed on behalf of his supposed power of attorney is an admission by Micheal Pietrczak that he committed fraud on Laura Lynn Hammett.

   Some of the evidence of fraud was presented at the hearing of October 7, 2021 by testimony under penalty of perjury by Laura Lynn Hammett that went unrebutted.

   Hammett was willing to give Pietrczak half the value of the property when they parted, but she was not aware of how calculated his fraud was until he started lending his name to this lawsuit by allowing Mr. White to change plaintiff from Walter Pietrczak as POA [f]or Micheal Pietrczak to Micheal Pietrczak.

   Attorney White should be foreclosed from writing “on behalf of Micheal Pietrczak” instead of “Walter Pietrczak as Power of Attorney…” and the Complaint should be dismissed as per the MSJ Aug. 27. (A.C.A. § 16-62-102 and McKibben v. Mullis, 79 Ark. App. 382, 90 S.W.3d 442 (2002))

    This would render the Pietrczak Motion moot.

    The entire Pietrczak Motion should be denied as it is an impermissible attempt to add arguments in responses to the Oct. 8 Mtn and the Dec. 29 Mtn.

   On August 20, 2021 the Court filed a letter dated August 19, 2021 (“Aug. 19 Letter”)

   The Court stated: “Consider this letter a friendly but stern warning that this court fully expects all parties to comply with the Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure and the Arkansas Rules of Evidence during this case.” (Aug. 19 Letter)

   The Court also stated, referring to the oral motion for extension of time to serve summonses: “It has been over 10 days since the oral motion was made and to date, Defendant failed to file any motion or response opposing the oral motion to extend.” (Aug. 19 Letter)[2]

   In the lawsuit under 42 USC 1983 Hammett filed against Judge Susan Kaye Weaver as an individual, 4:21-cv-00857-BRW, dismissed pursuant to Rooker-Feldman, etc., Judge Weaver stated: (on brief Document 4, page 2)

“[Hammett] then claims that the Judge granted the motion [for extension of time to serve summons on the Rural Revival Living Trust], finding that 10 days had passed since Mr. White filed the written motion and Plaintiff had not responded.”

  Hammett has never said there were 10 days between when the written motion was filed and the order was issued. It was one day.

   It would be a violation of Hammett’s Constitutional Right to due process and equal protection to allow Plaintiff to introduce arguments against the Oct. 8 Mtn and the Dec. 29 Mtn by filing his own motion belatedly.

   Should the Court be allowed to preside in spite of the appearance of  favoritism toward Mr. White and whoever he represents, the Pietrczak Motion must fail anyhow.

   Pietrczak Motion ¶ 2 states: “Pietrczak made an oral Motion for Extension of Time to Perfect Service during the August 4, 2021, hearing, which was granted by the Court.”

   Hammett has a pending motion to settle the record filed August 29, 2021, in which she stated that the transcript of the hearing of August 4, 2021 is significantly inaccurate.

   The main inaccuracy concerns the oral motion for extension of time to serve a summons. During the hearing Judge Weaver left the bench. When she returned, she said the “AOC” told her that the motion to extend must be in writing and that Hammett must have an opportunity to respond in writing, which is consistent with ARCP Rule 4(i)(2). The court reporter deleted part of that exchange and inserted a statement that Plaintiff did not hear.

   If the unheard statement was made, it would be legal error. The Court is supporting Mr. White’s contention that the Court said she would grant the oral motion, though she does not “normally”.

   Hammett wrote a letter and a motion on August 5, 2021 asking the Court to put the order made at the hearing of August 4, 2021 in writing.

   The Court did not put the supposed orders made on August 4, 2021 in writing, except a few words on the docket: “Final Hearing Continued”.

   Mr. White did not file and serve a written motion for extension of time to serve until August 18, 2021.

    The Court signed the order for extension of time one day later. This denied Hammett the time to respond dictated by A.R.C.P. Rule 6.

   It is important to read the entire letter and motion filed August 5, 2021. Hammett painstakingly asked for clarification of the order for continuance which was just a few words on the docket but does not mention the order for an extension of time to serve. This is because in Hammett’s academically gifted mind, there was no memory of a motion for extension of time to serve being granted in the hearing of August 4, 2021.

   Hammett distintly remembers the Court repeating the AOC’s correct admonition of A.R.C.P. Rule 4(i).

   This Court is required to settle the record in regard to the hearing of August 4, 2021 before granting this Pietrczak Motion. (ARAP 6(e), Craig v. State, 64 Ark. App. 281, 282, 983 S.W.2d 440, 441–42 (1998))

   Pietrczak Motion Exhibit 1 is the Motion to Extend Time to Perfect Service. Hammett draws attention to paragraph 8. “Michael Pietrczak has been unable to locate Laura Lynn and/or the Rural Revival Living Trust because of their continued attempts to evade service.” Bold added.

   There was only one summons total issued for both defendants as of August 4, 2021.

   No attempt at service was made prior to Hammett finding the complaint and responding without being served.

   The Plaintiff was hoping the Court and the appellate Court would agree with him in the face of glaring evidence to the contrary.

    To her credit, this Court told Mr. White to remove “because of their continued attempts to evade service” before she granted his written motion.

    Still, it was an abuse of discretion to find “good cause” shown for the failure to issue summons to the Rural Revival Living Trust and Hammett.

   “[Plaintiff] did not make a diligent inquiry into [defendant’s] whereabouts and therefore did not satisfy rule permitting service of process by warning order issued by the clerk [an accommodation similar to the extension of time to serve], thus rendering default judgment entered against seller void, in action for damages [].” Scott v. Wolfe, 2011 Ark. App. 438, 384 S.W.3d 609 (2011)

   “Judgments by default rendered without valid service are judgments rendered without jurisdiction and are therefore void.” Id.

   Pietrczak Motion Exhibit 2 is the Order Granting Extension of Time to Perfect Service. The Court granted the extension “to serve the (sic) Laura Lynn and the Rural Revival Living Trust” (P 11).

   When one person is a party to a lawsuit in two capacities, two summonses must issue.

   The one summons served improperly on October 7, 2021 was directed at “Rural Revival Living Trust” and “c/o Laura Lynn Hammett”.

   Because Hammett was named as an individual and should have been named as “trustee”, she was confused about which defendant this one summons was directed toward. Hammett explained this in the Oct. 8 Mtn, which is incorporated by reference here as if set forth in full verbatim.

  The Court, in her usual appearance of bias, failed to clarify which party was served.

   Mr. White did not respond to the Oct. 8 Mtn to clarify whether the summons was issued to the individual or the trust.

   Mr. White, who claims that he believed he had until December to perfect service, did not amend the summons to say “trustee” and send by certified mail to the address the Lick Fork property taxes were mailed to or the address Hammett repeated in open court on August 4, 2021.

    As explained in the Oct. 8 Mtn and not rebutted, Mr. White probably intended to have Hammett incarcerated for violating the rule that one must be licensed to serve process and licensed to practice law. If he could convince Hammett to serve the summons on the trust, he could gleefully have her arrested.

     In both the motion and order for extension of time to serve, paragraph 9 states: ”Michael Pietrczak needs additional time to attempt to locate and serve Defendants, Laura Lynn and/or the Rural Revival Living Trust.”

   “And” means both. “Or” means either or both. Because the summons handed to Hammett on October 7, 2021 was addressed to “Rural Revival Living Trust” and “c/o Laura Lynn Hammett” and neither name included the word “Trustee”, Hammett could understand this as being the summons to the individual.

    In Pietrczak Motion paragraph 6, Plaintiff’s counsel stated that Chief Deputy Pierce served a summons on Hammett on “October 12, 2021”. This is a typo or a lie.

    The Affidavit attached to the Pietrczak Motion as Exhibit 4 (“Affidavit”), incorporated here as if set forth in full, repeats the typo or lie that Chief Deputy Pierce handed a summons to Hammett on October 12, 2021.

    Assuming it was a typo, it shows that the Affidavit was probably prepared by the same person who wrote the Pietrczak Motion.

    The Affidavit is not signed by Chief Deputy Pierce. It has an electronically generated block letter printing of Deputy Pierce’s name on the signature line. It appears that Ezra Pierce was not present for the “signing”.

    Brooke Hipp is the notary.

    Brooke Hipp works in the Law Office of William Z. White.

    Brook Hipp is not licensed or authorized to perform electronic notarization. (As per the Secretary of State Website)

    More importantly, the affidavit that appears to be drafted by someone in the office of Plaintiff’s counsel, purports that Chief Deputy Pierce is authorized to practice law. He swore, if the notarization is valid, that “the Defendant, Rural Revival Living Trust, was duly served, pursuant to Rule 4 of the Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure, with the Summons and Complaint for Damages personally.”

    Hammett could find no bar number for Ezra Pierce in Arkansas.

    Chief Deputy Pierce is allowed testify to his actions, such as the sentence: “I served the Summons issued to Defendant Rural Revival Living Trust and the Complaint for Damages upon Laura Lynn Hammett in the courtroom of Hon. Judge Susan Weaver on October 12, 2021.”

    Chief Deputy Pierce is not allowed to deem the legal effect of his actions.

   In Pietrczak Motion paragraph 8, Plaintiff stated: ”Hammett admitted in her most recent Motion to Dismiss that she was served with the summons for Trust. ”

    In the Dec. 29 Mtn, the most recent motion to dismiss, Hammett did not admit she was served with the summons for the trust. She said the summons handed to her on October 7, 2021 did not have the word “trustee” after her name and she assumed it was directed toward her as the individual. She was reiterating the arguments made in the Oct. 8 Mtn. (Dec. 29 Mtn ¶ 7 and Pietrczak Motion ¶ 8)

  In Pietrczak Motion paragraph 7, Plaintiff refers to a summons issued on behalf of Hammett as an individual to “LAURA LYNN HAMMETT as TRUSTEE of the RURAL REVIVAL LIVING TRUST”. (Pietrczak Motion Exhibit 5 is incorporated here as if set forth verbatim.)

    Hammett differentiated the capacity of the party she was serving by using the words “an individual” and “trustee”. Mr. White is a licensed attorney, so he should know that Hammett an Individual and Hammett as Trustee are two distinct “persons”.

    Because Mr. White did not use the word “trustee”, Hammett asked for him to add the clarification repeatedly.

    In Pietrczak Motion paragraph 10, Plaintiff misinterprets Hamilton v. Bank of the Ozarks (In re Hamilton Living Trust), 2019 Ark. App. 76 for the proposition that a summons does not need to name the person it is directed toward properly.

   Hamilton is differentiated from the case at bar in several ways that point to the opposite conclusion: the summons must be directed toward the person who it is meant for and not another person who is also a party to the action.

    In Hamilton, “the summons qualified as a special circumstance under rule governing official form of summons, [], beneficiary filed a timely answer, and a trust case, similar to a probate case, was not a typical lawsuit and the summons could be modified in special circumstances. Ark. Code Ann. § 28-73-201; Ark. R. Civ. P. 4(b), 10(a).” Matter of Hamilton Living Tr. Dated Sept. 22, 2003, 2019 Ark. App. 76, 571 S.W.3d 53 (2019)

    In Hamilton, the defendant “did not dispute that he was correctly identified on the summons.” Id. At *3 Hammett disputed that the trustee of the Rural Revival Living Trust was correctly identified in both the Oct. 8 Mtn and the Dec. 29 Mtn.

   The Separate Defendant Rural Revival Living Trust filed no answer to the complaint.

   Plaintiff knows the cases differed because no answer was filed by the Rural Revival Living Trust. The Pietrczak Motion includes the phrase, “by the answer that was filed in response to the summons and the complaint that the complaint was served” in paragraph 10. The response filed was in the name of the individual Laura Lynn Hammett only. The Plaintiff filed a motion for default judgment simultaneously with the Pietrczak Motion indicating that Rural Revival Living Trust did not file a response.

   Hamilton reiterates A.R.C.P. Rule 4(b) that the summons must “contain the names of the parties; be directed to the defendant”.

   A copy of the summons attached as Exhibit 3 to the Pietrczak Motion is incorporated herein as if set forth verbatim. (“The Summons”)

   The summons is directed to “c/o Laura Lynn Hammett”.

    The summons in contention in Hamilton was directed to “LARRY HAMILTON”. Mr. Hamilton was not the trustee of the Hamilton Living Trust. He was sued as an individual.

   The case at bar has two named defendants. Hammett has said repeatedly that both party names are misnomers, and the Plaintiff has failed to amend properly. Regardless, because Laura Lynn Hammett is in the name of two parties, the parties must be distinguished by the capacity in which each is referred, ie. “an individual” or “trustee” in both caption and summons.

   If there is no designation that the party is a ”trustee” or some other official capacity, the default is that the party is an individual.

    The Plaintiff in Hamilton “argues that, like a probate case, there is no traditional plaintiff versus defendant.” Id. At *8. The Hamilton Appellate Court said “we recognize that a trust-administration case, like a probate case, is also not a typical lawsuit involving a plaintiff versus a defendant.”

   The case at bar is a typical lawsuit involving a plaintiff versus two defendants. It is not a special circumstance and does not allow for the relaxed rules regarding names in the summons.

“The Trustee in [Hamilton] filed a ‘Complaint for Declaration of Rights’ specifically stating that it was requesting a declaration of rights pursuant to Ark. Code Ann. § 28-73-201(c) and alleging that the court had jurisdiction over Mr. Hamilton and Ms. Cossey pursuant to Ark. Code Ann. § 28-73-202. Those statutes are found in the Arkansas Trust Code.” Id. At *9. In the case at bar, there is no referral to Ark. Code Ann. §28-73-202 nor declaration of rights and the complaint was not filed as a trust matter. The plaintiff complained that an individual “and/or” a trust committed various torts against him.

The plaintiff’s use of “and/or” made the distinction of which defendant was allegedly acting confusing. (See Oct. 8 Mtn for a more thorough discussion of the use of “and/or”)

“In [Hamilton], the summons contained the name of the trust and was directed to Mr. Hamilton. In no way did the form of the summons fail to apprise Mr. Hamilton of the pendency of the suit and afford him an opportunity to be heard.” Id. At *11. In the case at bar, the summons was directed to the individual, not the trustee. The summons did not state the true plaintiff, Walter A. Pietrczak as Power of Attorney for Micheal Pietrczak.

Further, the complaint handed to Hammett misnamed Hammett as “Laura Lynn”.  Hammett disclosed her legal name to the plaintiff repeatedly, writing it on each of the numerous documents she filed. The plaintiff neglected to amend the complaint and it is now too late. The complaint must be dismissed, for a myriad of reasons, including the misnomer of plaintiff and defendant.

“Amendment of complaint in action for trespass and encroachment brought against adjoining landowner, to add son as a plaintiff as owner of part of the land, and to substitute plaintiffs’ husband and wife in their capacity as trustees of the family trust holding the land, replacing their original status as individuals bringing the suit, did not relate back to their original complaint, which had been filed within the three-year limitations period of the alleged trespass. Rules Civ.Proc., Rule 15(c).” Bryant v. Hendrix, 375 Ark. 200, 289 S.W.3d 402 (2008)

“An amendment of a pleading relates back to the date of the original pleading when: the amendment changes the party or the naming of the party against whom a claim is asserted if the foregoing provision (1) is satisfied and, within the period provided by Rule 4(i) for service of the summons and complaint…” id.

“We observe that our Rule 15(c) is expressly written in terms of amendments or changes to the ‘party against whom a claim is asserted [.]’ Appellants ask us to hold that the rule should be applied to allow amendments or changes to plaintiffs as well. We decline to so hold.” Id.

The authority cited in the preceding paragraph also shows that it is not acceptable to name an individual instead of a trustee of a trust, where the trust is the only owner of record on the deed to the property in question.

In Hamilton, “In no way did the form of the summons fail to apprise Mr. Hamilton of the pendency of the suit and afford him an opportunity to be heard. See Nucor Corp., 358 Ark. at 123, 186 S.W.3d at 730.”

Hammett objected to the confusing summons the first day after receiving it. (Oct. 8 Mtn)

In Hamilton, “indeed, [the defendant] does not dispute that he received the summons and complaint; he filed a timely answer.”

The Rural Revival Living Trust did not file an answer.

The exception to strict scrutiny made in Hamilton was “under these circumstances” and “this case qualified as a special circumstance.” Id.

   “Service of valid process is necessary to give a court jurisdiction over a defendant. Rules Civ.Proc., Rule 4(i).” Raymond v. Raymond, 343 Ark. 480, 36 S.W.3d 733 (2001)

“Summons is necessary to satisfy due process requirements. U.S.C.A. Const.Amend. 14; Rules Civ.Proc., Rule 4(i).” id.

“Statutory service requirements, being in derogation of common-law rights, must be strictly construed and compliance with them must be exact. Rules Civ.Proc., Rule 4(i).” id.

Hammett intends to file a response to the Motion for Default Judgment that was served to her on January 17, 2022 on February 1, 2022 which is 10 days plus legal holidays and weekends from when electronic notification was received.

    Wherefore, the separate defendant asks the Court to order the record of the hearing of August 4, 2021 to be settled by playing the recording in open court; decide the pending motions filed by Hammett including the motion to recuse, Hammett’s Motion to Strike a Summons, Find Complaint Void for Improper Caption and Summons and a More Definite Statement filed October 8, 2021, Hammett’s Motion to Dismiss for Failure to Name and Serve a Necessary Party filed December 29, 2021, Motion for Summary Judgment filed August 27, 2021, and deny the Plaintiff’s Motion to Deem Service Upon Defendant Rural Revival Living Trust Perfected as it is an attempt by Plaintiff to respond appropriately to the motions listed here and fails regardless.

January 24, 2022                   /s/ Laura Lynn Hammett  


[1] The Bryant case illustrates how a person named as an individual and a trustee must be listed twice in the caption.

[2] Hammett objected to the oral motion during the hearing and heard the Court say the AOC told her that the oral motion must be made in writing and Hammett would have 10 days to respond to the written motion, which is consistent with the A.R.C.P.  The Court Reporter, Jana Perry, and Judge Susan Weaver would have the Court of Appeals believe that Judge Weaver made an erroneous ruling from the bench and Hammett let it slide.

What to Do About a Doo Doo Attorney: Legal Malpractice Case Against William Z. White

Most Pro Se litigants cannot afford an attorney. Sometimes though, a person hires an attorney and still loses due to attorney error.

Sometimes people lose because of a judge’s error. A good attorney will fight an errant judge in the appellate court. A great attorney will call out the judge at the trial court and persuade the judge to follow the law.

What happens if an attorney does a bad job?

Usually, nothing.

Occasionally, another attorney will represent the bad attorney’s client in a legal malpractice suit.

Following a brief introduction of an allegedly mal-practicing attorney William Z. White of Heber Springs, Arkansas, there is the full text of a lawsuit filed against “Zac” for legal malpractice. The suit was settled out of court, as are the vast majority of all suits filed. (Most disputes don’t even get memorialized in a Complaint filed in a court. They are in essence “settled” before the victim must take the drastic step of filing suit.)

Remember, I am not an attorney. This is not legal advice or legal commentary. It is a recitation of facts attributed to the people who wrote legal complaints, whether private or public.

A William Z. White was found guilty of charges against him listed on the Arkansas “Court Connect” website, twice for traffic violations and once for a criminal charge referred to as “Hot Checks”.

A William Z. White was found guilty of “Hot Checks”, WC 97-2786 in July 1997. He was 20 years old, indicating a birth year about 1977. It looks like he did not accept the invitation to court, as the docket says “NO PLEA” and “GUILTY – BOND FORFEITED”.

A William Z. White born about 1977 was found guilty of speeding on the I-630 on July 21, 2003. Oddly, the docket entries were not made until 2015.

A William Z. White born about 1977 was found guilty of speeding, Ark. Code. Ann. 16-17-136 in 2019. A docket entry says:

front moving opposite direction. was in left lane passing other vehicles and had a white SUV behind him. By the time I got up to this vehicle, the white SUV was 2 cars behind him. He tried to say that I clocked the speed of the other car,

William Z. White apparently rethought this defense, waived appearance and pled guilty.

There is an attorney named William Z. White who I allege filed a completely bogus lawsuit against me. I allege he is shaking me down with a malicious prosecution. Unfortunately, there is a judge named Susan Kaye Weaver who appears to me to be colluding with Mr. White, who goes by Zac.

Interestingly, there is a “Susan Kaye Weaver” AKA “Susan Young” who also got a speeding ticket in Arkansas in 1997, the year William Z. White was writing hot checks. She was 18 years old, meaning born around 1979. Judge Susan Kaye Weaver was also born about 1979.

A Susan Kaye Weaver AKA Susan Young also born about 1979 was ticketed for speeding in 2000. But the officer Rhonda Hance requested no prosecution. [UPDATE 1/17/2022: Birth year attributed to story by Tammy Keith in the Arkansas Democrat Gazette, June 17, 2012 and not an official record. See next paragraph.]

I don’t know how or why the Court Connect filed the Susan Kaye Weaver violations under the name Susan Young. My investigative reporter mind immediately wonders if Judge Susan Kaye Weaver’s position working for the government gave her the ability to somehow change the name in the search field. [UPDATE 1/17/2022: A story published in the Arkansas Democrat Gazette on June 17, 2012 in which Tammy Keith interviewed then District Court Judge Elect Susan Kaye Weaver said Susan Weaver “who married at 21 and divorced less than two years later…” It is possible Ms. Keith did not fact check and that the brief marriage was from 1997 (18 years) to 2001 (22 years). There was a suit for divorce filed by a Susan Young in Faulkner County in 2001 showing on Court Connect, without images of documents. This writer will try to find paper records.]

Regardless, while researching William Zac White and his apparent cohort, Judge Weaver, I came across a complaint filed against Mr. White for allegedly committing legal malpractice. It seems like a complaint my readers might find useful. (Sorry I could not put spaces between the paragraphs.)

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HOT SPRING COUNTY, ARKANSAS
CIVIL DIVISION
MARION D. SPENCE II PLAINTIFF
VS. CASE NO. __
WILLIAM “ZAC” WHITE DEFENDANTS
COMPLAINT


Comes now the Plaintiff, Marion D. Spence II, by and through his attorneys, The Brad
Hendricks Law Firm, and for his Complaint state as follows:


PARTIES, JURISDICTION, AND VENUE

  1. The Plaintiff, Marion Spence is a resident of Hot Spring County, Arkansas whose
    current address is 23555 Highway 51, Malvern, Arkansas 72104.
  2. Defendant, William “Zac” White is an Arkansas attorney whose address is 706
    West Quitman Street, P.O. Box 1087, Heber Springs, Arkansas 72543.
  3. This Court has jurisdiction to hear this matter and is the proper venue for this
    Complaint.
    RELEVANT FACTS
  4. The Defendant attorney was hired by Plaintiff to pursue a claim against Plaintiff’s
    employer, Union Pacific Railroad Company (“Union Pacific”) under the Federal Employer’s
    Liability Act (“FELA”) for shoulder injuries sustained while on the job and due to the Union
    Pacific’s negligence. See Engagement Agreement, attached as Exhibit 1.
  5. Mr. Spence’s attorney, Mr. White, filed the Complaint in United States District
    Court for the Western District of Arkansas on September 1, 2017. The case was Civil Action No.
    3:17-CV-3074 TLB. See Complaint, attached as Exhibit 2.
  6. Union Pacific filed a Motion for Summary Judgment and Brief in Support on
    January 18, 2019. See Motion for Summary Judgment, attached as Exhibit 3; Brief in Support,
    attached as Exhibit 4 (pursuant to ARCP Rule 10(d), the Brief in Support is attached without the
    large number, 229 pages, of exhibits).
  7. An extension to respond was granted which made the Response to the Motion for
    Summary Judgment due on February 8, 2019.
  8. Mr. Spence’s attorney, Mr. White, failed to file a Response to the Motion for
    Summary Judgment, despite being given an extended deadline to do so.
  9. As a result of attorney White failing to respond, the Motion for Summary Judgment
    was granted and Mr. Spence’s Complaint was dismissed with prejudice. See Memorandum
    Opinion and Order, attached as Exhibit 5, and Judgment, attached as Exhibit 6.
  10. Mr. White failed to hire an expert doctor to rebut the opinions of Union Pacific’s
    expert doctors who opined that Mr. Spence’s shoulder injuries were not work related but were part
    of the natural aging process.
  11. The Memorandum Opinion explained that a plaintiff in a FELA case must present
    expert testimony of his own to establish a causal connection between the injury and whatever
    incident is alleged to have caused the injury. See Exhibit 5, page 4.
  12. “The test of causation under FELA is much easier to prove than in state tort cases;
    it is whether the railroad’s negligence played ‘any part, even the slightest,’ in the injury that is the
    subject of the lawsuit.” Richardson v Union Pac. R. Co., 2011 Ark. App 562, 3, 386 S.W.3d 77,
    80 (2011) citing Rogers v Missouri Pac. R.R. Co., 352 U.S. 500, 506 (1957).
  13. An employee’s claim under FELA does not depend on showing that the injury was
    caused by a particular act or a specific event, but can be caused by the cumulative effect of a series
    of events or due to the employee’s weakened condition. Fletcher v. Union Pac. R. Co., 621 F.2d
    902, 909 (8th Cir. 1980). The railroad has a duty to protect the employee from further injury. Id.
  14. Mr. Spence needed an expert to opine that even if Mr. Spence’s shoulder was
    degraded by age and years of use (like all older humans), it is the lifting of ties on the railroad that
    caused the injury that required surgery and caused his serious problems.
  15. The repetition of lifting and placing at least 1000 plates per day placed excessive
    strain on Mr. Spence’s shoulders and he was made to continue doing that same work even after he
    complained of extreme pain to the track foreman and even after an injury report was filed. See
    Exhibit 2, page 4.
    PROFESSIONAL NEGLIGENCE
  16. Defendant had a duty on behalf of his client to use reasonable diligence and skill
    ordinarily used by attorney’s acting in the same or similar circumstances.
  17. Defendant’s conduct fell below the generally accepted standard of practice when
    he failed to hire an expert to rebut the opinions of the opposing experts.
  18. Defendant’s conduct fell below the generally accepted standard of practice when
    he failed to file a Response to the Motion for Summary Judgment.
  19. As a result of the negligence of Defendant, judgment was entered against Plaintiff
    and Plaintiff’s claim was dismissed with prejudice.
  20. Plaintiff would have likely prevailed on the Motion for Summary Judgment and the
    underlying case had he provided “even the slightest” connection between the injury and the work
    at the railroad.
  21. Defendant Union Pacific had already offered $100,000.00 to settle the case and, as
    often the case, settlement negotiations were on hold pending the ruling on the Motion for Summary
    Judgment. See Settlement Memorandum, attached as Exhibit 7.
  22. As a result of Plaintiff’s attorney failing to hire an expert and failing to file a
    Response to the Motion for Summary Judgment, Plaintiff suffered damages.
    WHEREFORE, the Plaintiff prays for Judgment against Defendant for compensatory
    damages in an amount greater than is required for diversity jurisdiction ($75,000.00); together with
    any and all special, incidental or consequential damages to which Plaintiff may be entitled.
    Finally, Plaintiff prays for attorney’s fees and costs and for all other just and proper relief.
    PLAINTIFF REQUESTS A JURY TRIAL.
    Respectfully Submitted,
    THE BRAD HENDRICKS LAW FIRM
    500 C Pleasant Valley Drive
    Little Rock, Arkansas 72227
    (501) 221-0444
    (501) 219-0608 (fax)
    tkitchens@bradhendricks.com
    BY: ________________________
    LLOYD W. “TRE” KITCHENS, ABN 99075

***************************************************

Coincidentally, I had Tre Kitchens agree to represent me in the case filed by Mr. White, before Judge Weaver’s bias became so apparent. Before collecting his retainer and after a slew of bad calls by the judge, such as ignoring Mr. White’s failure to respond timely to several motions, Mr. Kitchens refused to take a $5,000 check I offered to retain him. He took on Mr. White in the malpractice case above and may have prevailed at settlement, but no one really wants to take on City Hall. Especially in the backwoods, inbred culture in the Ozarks.

The Warrior Litigant: One Successful Pro Se Shares His Experience in the Legal System

It is with great pleasure that I introduce you to another person who fought for his rights and won.

Captain Curtis Anthony Hervey (retired) is a champion for Veterans’ Rights, as well as a fisher-of-men, leading others closer to their creator, and a great thinker about how to combat bigotry.

CPT Hervey has filed a few legal actions without attorney representation and “won” through settlement. Both CPT Hervey and my sister Roberta Kramer (deceased) who was an attorney in California told me that it is better to settle than to win at trial. I agree.

Before I share CPT Hervey’s wisdom, here is his Curriculum Vitae, facts taken from his Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/PDMDIA/.

CPT Hervey served over 20 years total in both the Army and Kansas Army National Guard until a 2015 medical retirement due to unfit feet (PDRL).

     CPT Hervey is a graduate of Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary with a Masters in Religious Education, Desert Storm Veteran, Distinguished Graduate of Officer Candidate School, graduate of the US Army Chaplain School at Fort Jackson, SC, former KSARNG Chaplain Candidate, and Operation Enduring Freedom Veteran where he served as Deputy Chief of Contracting in Salerno, Afghanistan.

      CPT Hervey suffered MMT when his former VA family medicine physician, who is not a licensed and trained mental health professional, retaliated against him by maliciously assigning two personality disorder misdiagnoses. CPT Hervey had filed a complaint up the physician’s chain of command.

    By the Grace of God, CPT Hervey was able to successfully have both misdiagnoses medically cleared and redacted from his official VA medical record through health record amendments and winning his health record amendment appeal before the VA’s Office of General Counsel in DC arguing that the VA physician tortfeasor was negligent since he deviated from the Diagnostic Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5) standard of care when he failed to meet the burden of proof for the General Personality Disorder criteria.

    Next, CPT Hervey embarked on a 4-fold mission: 1) clear his name and restore his honor, 2) obtain justice (punish the guilty), 3) receive compensatory damages, and 4) reform the system as intervention and prevention for other military personnel and Veterans.

    In January 2021, CPT Hervey, as a pro se litigant, successfully negotiated a malpractice settlement with the Kansas Department of Justice in Hervey v. United States (Federal District Court case #19-4033-SAC-ADM). This accomplished objective #1, to clear his name and restore his honor.

    Although CPT Hervey has yet to receive Justice (objective #2), he still seeks reform (objective #4) to avenge all those who now unjustly bear the stigmatizing Scarlet Letter P (Personality Disorder) and to prevent others from receiving this debilitating and invalidating brand of dishonor.

   Without further ado, here is helpful advice for anyone who is injured by the malicious actions of government employees or big business. You can prevail over injustice, but only if you try.

The Army Warrior Ethos will never allow me to accept defeat:

I will always place the mission first.

I will never accept defeat.

I will never quit.

I will never leave a fallen comrade.

When you take on the government or big business, you may win a substantial punitive damage award. The punitive damage award is not meant to compensate you. It is meant to punish and deter the tortfeasor. On a spiritual level, it is the deterrence that is your big win. (Of course, most people enjoy having extra money, too. But CPT Hervey and this writer both are frugal and save more than they spend. Money for us means freedom to work on improving life in this realm for all people and helping to populate the hereafter.)

We discussed my analogy of going into a court battle that is heavily stacked against the pro se litigant with living the Black experience. (This writer is of Ashkenazi Jewish descent and Captain Hervey is African-American.) I wrote that I think living with bigotry toward one’s skin color is “like walking into court or the job interview knowing you will lose no matter how right you are.”

CPT Hervey explained the paradigm shift in attitude that he suggests to bring about positive change. “Besides, the Black experience I know about is one of overcoming overwhelming obstacles and persevering under herculean societal pressure.  The Black experience is about triumph, not defeat. This society has thrown everything at us and yet we are still here.  My ancestors would be dishonored if I was a whiny quitter! The ‘Black experience’ must be redefined. And this is why I say ‘Blackness’ (like Whiteness) is a state of mind.  Thinking ‘Black’ typically means ‘walking into court or the job interview knowing you will lose no matter how right you are.’

Instead your mantra should be, “I’m going to win and you’re going to lose.”

Another strong, Black woman who mentored me in fighting for justice put it this way: “We play until I win.”

I hope you find this uplifting and encouraging. If you have a success story about fighting injustice as a pro se litigant or by using administrative procedures, please share by contacting me at bohemian_books@yahoo.com.