The Rant of Attorney William Zac White
Cut and paste of an email.
Ms. Lynn,
As usual your legal conclusions are wrong. You are attempting to dodge, evade, and obfuscate a valid subpoena duces tecum. I will be filing a motion for contempt on day 11 if you have not provided the information I have commanded you to produce. In any event, I look forward to returning ownership of the property to my client at the upcoming hearing. I wonder what happens to your other suits when you no longer have any claim to an interest (however untenable your claim is) in the disputed real property. I’ll be certain to reach out to those attorneys to let them know that the property is once again in the complete unfettered ownership of my client. Your days of abusing the Arkansas legal season are coming to an end, and I look forward to being a part of it. I am sure you will file a flurry of illegible and unnecessarily voluminous pleadings that will likewise fail. I just wish you would quit wasting everyone’s time and resources on your personal irrational vendetta.
##################################################################
The information he commanded me to produce:
All financial documents pertaining to me, all “intangible items” pertaining to me, and all other items pertaining to me since 2009.
And that is just #1.
Why Did Judge Billy Roy Wilson Dismiss a case Concerning the Alleged Fictionalization of a Transcript Based on Rooker-Feldman?
The short answer: Judge Billy Roy Wilson is corrupt.
The more perplexing question is “Why did the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals affirm the dismissal?”
I filed a civil rights action against Judge Susan Kaye Weaver, Court Reporter Jana Perry and Attorney William Zac White. I alleged that the three conspired to make an inaccurate transcript of a hearing in case number 65CV-21-20 in Searcy County Arkansas.
Judge Wilson granted a motion to dismiss filed by Attorney General Leslie Rutledge’s Office on behalf of Judge Weaver and the court reporter before Mr. White even filed a joinder or his own motion. Judge Billy Bob threw in a dismissal for Zac White with no prompting…that the public was made aware of.
One basis Judge Wilson cited for the dismissal was the “Rooker-Feldman” doctrine.
But,
“If a federal plaintiff asserts as a legal wrong an allegedly erroneous decision by a state court, and seeks relief from a state court judgment based on that decision, Rooker–Feldman bars … jurisdiction…. If, on the other hand, a … plaintiff asserts … an allegedly illegal act or omission by an adverse party, Rooker–Feldman does not bar jurisdiction.”
Hageman v. Barton, 817 F.3d 611, 614–15 (8th Cir. 2016)
My complaint specified that I was not asking for review of a state court decision. Though, the bizarre decisions made by Judge S.K. Weaver should certainly be overturned.
It seems to me that collusion between an attorney, a judge and a court reporter to fictionalize the record should be considered an illegal act.
Welcome to Grisham Land.
My suggestion is that if you have any assets, you don’t bring them to Arkansas. A redneck judge at the Federal or State level might decide one of his buddies should be granted your assets and it sucks to be you.
How to Declare a Signatory “Incapacitated”: Attorney William Zac White Argues Inconsistent Definitions of Incapacitated
This writer is a defendant in a suit in Searcy County Arkansas presided over by Judge Susan Weaver.
The attorney who wrote the complaint, William Z. White of Heber Springs wrote that my ex-boyfriend, Micheal Pietrczak, was “incapacitated” when he signed a gift deed of property in Witts Spring, Arkansas to a trust of which I am a beneficiary.
The case was dismissed without prejudice and refiled years later, with almost identical claims. Judge Susan Kaye Weaver appears to be bending over backwards to transfer title of the 40 acres and once stunning cabin to Mr. White’s clients.
Attorney William White filed a separate petition regarding people unrelated to me on February 1, 2022. It is a probate matter. A will drafted by “Zac” White, signed December 15, 2022 was added as an exhibit. (IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF WILLIAM E. HAGGARD, DECEASED, Cleburne County Case No. 12PR-21-20)
This is the verbatim definition of “incapacitated” as defined by Attorney White in the will.
“(d) Incapacity
Except as otherwise provided in my Will, a person is deemed incapacitated
in any one of the following circumstances.
(1) The Opinion of Two Licensed Physicians
An individual is deemed incapacitated whenever, in the
opinion of two licensed physicians, the individual is unable
to effectively manage his or her property or financial affairs,
whether as a result of age, illness, use of prescription
medications, drugs or other substances, or any other cause.
An individual is deemed restored to capacity whenever the
individual’s personal or attending physician provides a
written opinion that the individual is able to effectively
manage his or her property and financial affairs.
(2) Court Determination
An individual is deemed incapacitated if a court of
competent jurisdiction has declared the individual to be
disabled, incompetent, or legally incapacitated.
(3) Disappearance, Absence, or Detention
An individual is deemed incapacitated whenever, in my
Trustee’s sole and absolute discretion, he or she cannot
effectively manage his or her property or financial affairs
due to disappearance, absence, or detention (including
incarceration).
A person’s disappearance, absence, or detention (including
incarceration), may be established by an affidavit of my
Trustee describing the relevant circumstances. A third party
dealing in good faith with my Trustee may rely on the
affidavit as conclusive evidence of incapacity.”
In the complaint of Micheal Pietrczak v. Rural Revival Living Trust and Laura Lynn, 65CV-21-20, the plaintiff gave no evidence that two professionals deemed Pietrczak “incapacitated” at or around the time he signed the deed. No professional mental health practitioner deemed Mr. Pietrczak incapacitated.
There was no court order stating Pietrczak was incapacitated at or around the time he signed the deed.
Mr. Pietrczak was present when he signed the deed.
It is interesting to note that W.Z. White represented one son, Colt G. Haggard, and the decedent wrote his second son out of his will entirely about 18 days before his death.
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.
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
- The Plaintiff, Marion Spence is a resident of Hot Spring County, Arkansas whose
current address is 23555 Highway 51, Malvern, Arkansas 72104. - Defendant, William “Zac” White is an Arkansas attorney whose address is 706
West Quitman Street, P.O. Box 1087, Heber Springs, Arkansas 72543. - This Court has jurisdiction to hear this matter and is the proper venue for this
Complaint.
RELEVANT FACTS - 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. - 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. - 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). - An extension to respond was granted which made the Response to the Motion for
Summary Judgment due on February 8, 2019. - 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. - 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. - 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. - 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. - “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). - 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. - 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. - 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 - 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. - 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. - Defendant’s conduct fell below the generally accepted standard of practice when
he failed to file a Response to the Motion for Summary Judgment. - As a result of the negligence of Defendant, judgment was entered against Plaintiff
and Plaintiff’s claim was dismissed with prejudice. - 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. - 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. - 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.
Judge Susan K. Weaver Appoints Attorney William Z. White KING OF THE COURT
Hear ye, Hear ye!
Searcy County Circuit Court Judge Susan Kaye Weaver has refrained from granting a motion to quash a ridiculous subpoena issued by Mr. White of Heber Springs. The subpoena demanded me to produce all tangible and intangible items that pertain to me or three trusts or my former partner since 2009.
I’m still scratching my head, trying to figure out how to produce an “intangible” and wondering how to print out all the blog posts, emails, receipts, contracts, letters, complaints and evidence, litigation documents and other items that were supposed to be produced in three days.
The effect of not ruling on my objection and motion to quash is that I am not required to produce the requested items. But it leaves it open. At any moment, Judge Weaver can deny my motion to quash. (She took 14 months to rule on a motion to compel arbitration, so the subpoena may become effective some time in 2032.)
On Friday afternoon, Mr. White decided to be obnoxious again. Here is part of his email to me:
“Also, please accept this as my only good faith attempt to resolve the production of the documentary evidence I have commanded you to produce via my subpoena. You have until 5:00 p.m. Monday October 25, 2021 to begin to produce the documents I have commanded you to produce. If you fail to begin producing the commanded documentation I will move forward with a petition for discovery sanctions and contempt charges seeking among other things your incarceration. I hope you have a good weekend.”
He has “commanded” that I produce the documents. Commanded.
Black’s Law Dictionary does contain the word “command”.
command n. (14c) 1. An order; a directive. 2. In legal positivism, the sovereign’s express desire that a person act or refrain from acting a certain way, combined with the threat of punishment for failure to comply.
Well, that makes Zac White the sovereign. I best bow down, genuflect and borrow a box truck to fill with items tangible and intangible.
Does anyone know where I put that dream I had on May 16, 2013?
Am I the Only One Who Notices Court Corruption?
In the last few months, Judge Weaver in Faulkner County and Searcy County has lied…flat out lied…she directed the Court Reporter to transcribe a hearing inaccurately and she has looked the other way while opposing counsel gets away with…not murder, but the unethical taking of a 40 acre property and threatening me, a 59 year old woman with incarceration.
Judge Charles Clawson in Faulkner County District Court had ex parte communications with an opposing party. He eventually recused from my case, but only after dooming it (barring one honest, just judge undoing the damage).
If they treat me this way, they must treat others like this. Please let me know your story. Send an email to bohemian_books@yahoo.com and let me know how much is confidential, or if something can be repeated but not attributed to you.
Thanks.
Arkansas Judge Allowed to Conspire With Court Reporter to Create Inaccurate Transcript
Judge Susan Weaver made up a lie. She said she made an oral order during a hearing on August 4, 2021. Then, 15 days later, she put the purported oral order into writing and claimed the adversely affected litigant had not made an opposition timely.
Five days later, the Court Reporter Jana Perry produced a transcript of the hearing. Lo and behold, the Judge was quoted as making the oral order and there was no objection from the adversely affected litigant, me.
I tried to obtain a copy of the recording of the August 4th hearing, both by a motion in the underlying case and by an independent FOIA request. (Freedom of Information Act)
Judge Weaver refused thus far to allow the recording to be played.
I filed a Federal claim under 42 USC 1983 for deprivation of my constitutional right to due process and equal protection under the 14th Amendment.
Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge’s office defended the Judge and Court Reporter.
Deputy AG Michael Mosley filed a motion to dismiss.
Mr. Mosley misstated the complaint and attributed me with saying the court waited 10 days after the written motion to grant it. I clearly wrote that the written motion was granted one day after it was written.
Federal District Court Judge Billy Roy Wilson characterized the suit thus: “Plaintiff filed a complaint criticizing how her state-court case is proceeding.” He dismissed the complaint with no leave to amend.
I was not criticizing the proceedings in state court in general. I was criticizing that inaccurate transcripts are being created, purposefully, by a judge and a court reporter.
Apparently Judge Wilson and Attorney General Leslie Rutledge believe we have no constitutional right to an accurate record of court proceedings.
Eventually the recording of the August 4th hearing may be made public.
Or maybe not.
Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge does not Agree to Meet with Plaintiff for Settlement Conference
This writer filed a civil rights action against three alleged conspirators. Two of the alleged conspirators are government employees named as individuals, so they get to be represented by the Attorney General’s office on the tax payer’s dollars.
It is alleged that Judge Susan Weaver and Court Reporter Jana Perry conspired with opposing counsel on the case of Micheal Pietrczak v. Rural Revival Living Trust, et al, to make an inaccurate transcript of a hearing on August 4, 2021.
The inaccuracies include (but are not limited to) inventing a lengthy dialogue in which Judge Weaver supposedly made an oral order on an oral motion to extend time to serve summons on the Trust defendant. Even in the fictional transcript, Judge Weaver admits she does not “normally” allow an oral motion for this. It is not normally done because it is not allowed, period. The Judge might try reading Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure 4(i)(2).
I reached out to Michael Mosley, Deputy AG representing the defendants.
There is a strong public policy to attempt to settle cases without court intervention. So I suggested a settlement conference.
Here is our email text:
On Oct 19, 2021, at 3:00 PM, Laura Lynn bohemian_books@yahoo.com
Dear Mr. Mosley,
Pursuant to Rule 1 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, I am suggesting we meet and confer to explore if early resolution of our dispute is possible.
Let me know the best day and time for you if you are agreeable.
Thank you,
Laura Hammett
Ms. Hammett, we decline your invitation. Have a nice day. Mike Mosley
Michael A. Mosley
Assistant Attorney General
Office of Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge
You can let Mr. Mosley and Attorney General Rutledge know that you think settlement is the best use of your money by writing to michael.mosley@arkansasag.gov
Or leave a comment. Thank you.