Thursday, June 5, 2014

James Comey PLEASE Have the FBI in Mississippi Investigate Henry Barbour for the Thad Cochran Photo Scandal.... Bob Dickey & Gracia Martore SOMETHING "Stinks" In Mississippi & I Think It's The Reporting by GANNETT OMG!!! I can finally show how sleazy the Henry & Haley Barbour is:):) This primary is gonna be fun!!!!




2 more arrested over photo of senator's bedridden wife

USA TODAY-May 22, 2014

This is from Roll Call- Henry 





Begin forwarded message:

From: Sharyn Bovat <sharynbovat@icloud.com>
Subject: ********************I'M PUTTING TOGETHER A TIME LINE TO SHOW HENRY/HALEY LINKED TO Cochran Photo scandal... 
Date: June 5, 2014 at 1:05:20 PM CDT
To: ed@edgillespiestrategies.com, Mark Silverman <4msilverman@gmail.com>, Jonathan Collegio <jacollegio@americancrossroads.org>, jgates@jackson.gannett.com, gpender@jackson.gannett.com, tracy.woodard@nmm.nissan-usa.com, david.reuter@nissan-usa.com, "andrew.tavi@nissan-usa.com" <andrew.tavi@nissan-usa.com>, jmgaines@gannett.com, rdickey@gannett.com, rjohnston@newschannel5.com, Blake Farmer <bfarmer@wpln.org>
*******
…. I know this is still messy….  but you’ll see the connections… I’m piecing it together….There’s NO WAY those gnarly looking bloggers did the Cochran Wife stunt on their own in Hinds County (which is COCHRAN territory) - Look at the Press release that was done… the Judge was Dale Danks…A GOOD OLE BOY!!!      Happy American Crossroads did not donate to Cochran!!!    Hiring?   Jonathan: How about at the Auto place? 

The Gannett paper is obviously on the Cochran payroll & the courts let the charges drag out and gave the boys that did the dirty trick an unusually high bond…I bet the Tea Partier locked in the courthouse was a trick too. JEPPIE BARBOUR!!!!


  Seriously NO POLICE at the court house where all the ballots were?  Come on NOT all Americans have Mississippi educations- LOOK at how many stories Gannett runs… you’d think the NISSAN whistleblower issue was more important….NO it’s not important to Gannett cause NISSAN is in bed with Haley Barbour… KATRINA fraud it linked to the people connected to Cochran…. I’m gonna prove it in the next 3 weeks… cause the people that abused ME are connected to Henry Barbour and Mark Silverman verified “that” at Sambuca’s in Nashville…. He got his kid a job at NISSAN and then VW…. Yikes!!!!

Google Jeppie Barbour and see my pic... he's a BIGGER racist than Haley... actually Haley finally "get's it"...he's still corrupt but Henry's daddy is the BIGGEST racist and Constituional Clayton the Rogue blogger...

DALE DANKS ROUTINELY GAVE MONEY TO JUDGES HALEY BARBOUR APPOINTED  LOOK at the fancy press release…. Look at the court dates… Cochran ran 2 ads on the issue


So the bloggers were linked to McDaniel & could have been  misled… someone told them to do it... it was a “dirty trick”…. I’ve got lots more… just piecing it together….Jeppie Barbour is probably behind it… & he endorsed McDaniel… I’m giving the Clarian Ledger.   OMG!!!  I can finally show how sleazy the Barbour family is:):)  This primary is gonna be fun!!!!



Danks told reporters that Melton would be good and follow legal procedure before taking hammers to houses, and other usually-illegal shenanigans.
Danks' promise of better, more responsible days to come was not the end of the Ridgeway case, though. Within weeks of the state trial, reports began circling the city that federal agents were investigating Melton and his crime-fighting strategies.






__________
When Public Safety Commissioner Stephen Simpson announced Dr. Steven Hayne's services would no longer be needed by the state in August 2008, not everyone thought it was good news. Now, this opinion by state Attorney General Jim Hood, requested by Yazoo County Coroner Rickey Shivers, opens the door for Dr. Hayne to get back in the business of performing autopsies on a statewide basis.
Hayne, who conducted 80-percent of all criminal autopsies in Mississippi for nearly two decades, lost his state job amid complaints by The Innocence Project. The advocacy group claimed he provided bogus and misleading autopsy reports resulting in wrongful convictions of two men on felony charges. Those men were released from prison in 2008.
_______________
Attorney Dale Danks represents Dr. Hayne. "The A-G's opinion simply says if two or more adjacent counties enter into an agreement among themselves, that they can create what is known as, called regional medical examiner's districts. And the A-G's opinion also says that once that district is created, two or more adjacent counties, they can retain the services of any qualified pathologist to perform autopsies in those respective districts."If everything goes as planned, Dr. Hayne will be doing autopsies at American Mortuary Services on Terry Road in Jackson and not in the state crime lab. Owner John Davis said, "We're gone be jumping and jivin' here in a little bit!” Davis says he's looking forward Dr. Hayne's increased case load.  Said Davis, "He's been doing private autopsies here since him leaving the state crime lab.”
_____________
Frank Melton's libel trial in Meridian. Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics agent Jimmy Saxton and former agent Robert Earl Pierce sought compensatory damages from the former M.B.N. chief for inflicting emotional distress when Melton leaked a memo to a Clarion-Ledger reporter in 2003. The memo listed a string of accusations against both men, including suggestions that Saxton inflated overtime numbers for his friends, and Pierce wrongfully disposed of overnment property. Most of the allegations were never substantiated, and Melton's lawyers said he knew they were uncorroborated even when he leaked the memo.  "I had an agreement with that reporter that she wouldn't print that until she corroborated based on journalistic standards and he told that directly to the Clarion-Ledger editor, and said don't print that story," said Dale Danks, Melton's lawyer. The original memo even mentioned Senator Trent Lott, but he was quickly cleared of any wrongdoing

DALE DANKS LINKED TO HALEY BARBOUR FROM REAGAN ERA

Hood's case was only the opening act of a larger courtroom drama surrounding Melton's activities on Ridgeway Street. A Hinds County grand jury also indicted Melton and his bodyguards, Recio and Marcus Wright on Sept. 15, 2006, of multiple felony charges in the Ridgeway Street demolition, including burglary, conspiracy and the inducement of a minor to commit a felony because Michael Taylor, then 16, and other teens allegedly helped destroy the duplex.
Melton's continued moonlighting around town, and his taunting of the Upper Level Nightclub, violated the condition of his probation during the course of the Ridgeway Street trial, and he found himself facing arrest and jail time. Hinds County Circuit Judge Tomie Green, acting on information provided by bonding agents, issued an arrest warrant for him.
Former Mayor Dale Danks Jr., and Melton's long-time friend and attorney, moved ferociously to remove Green, accusing her of withholding information and false filings, to get her off the case.


DALE DANKS WAS MAYOR OF JACKSON 3 TERMS DURING REAGAN ERA AND HIS “BEST FRIEND” & CLIENT (WHO KEPT HIM VERY BUSY)WAS HEAD OF THE WAR ON  DRUGS IN MISSISSIPPI & was fired by Haley Barbour…. huh?  but then became MAYOR
Republican Gov. Haley Barbour replaced Musgrove in January 2004 and immediately ousted Melton as MBN head. MBN's arrest record for drug crimes had dropped during Melton's tenure, but then crept back up after his departure.  THE Melton became MAYOR- and his donors all linked to Haley Barbour client….  Were getting into KATRINA fraud too


 Declared In Melton Libel Suit
By Cheryl Lassetercheryl@wlbt.net
Plenty of tense moments during closing arguments Friday at Frank Melton's libel trial in Meridian. Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics agent Jimmy Saxton and former agent Robert Earl Pierce sought compensatory damages from the former M.B.N. chief for inflicting emotional distress when Melton leaked a memo to a Clarion-Ledger reporter in 2003. The memo listed a string of accusations against both men, including suggestions that Saxton inflated overtime numbers for his friends, and Pierce wrongfully disposed of overnment property.
Most of the allegations were never substantiated, and Melton's lawyers said he knew they were uncorroborated even when he leaked the memo.  "I had an agreement with that reporter that she wouldn't print that until she corroborated based on journalistic standards and he told that directly to the Clarion-Ledger editor, and said don't print that story," said Dale Danks, Melton's lawyer. 
The original memo even mentioned Senator Trent Lott, but he was quickly cleared of any wrongdoing.  "It also alleges misconduct by a sheriff and senator and you don't think that's gonna be published? You don't think that's gonna be on page 1A the next day?," said Mel Coxwell, Saxton's attorney.

Mysterious Death of Melton 2….

Death[edit]

On election night, Melton was rushed to the hospital. He had suffered a cardiac arrest at his Jackson home. He died shortly after midnight on Thursday, May 7, 2009,[1] less than two days after losing the election. His wife, Dr. Ellen Melton, was at his side. He died at St. Dominic Jackson Memorial Hospital in Jackson, MS.

Coroners want Hayne back
Posted: Aug 20, 2009 9:39 PM CDTUpdated: Dec 10, 2012 3:33 PM CST
JACKSON, MS (WLBT) - He was unceremoniously kicked off the list of medical examiners approved to conduct autopsies in Mississippi a year ago.
Now, Doctor Steven Hayne, accused of shoddy work and lacking proper credentials, is poised to make a comeback following an opinion by the state attorney general.
When Public Safety Commissioner Stephen Simpson announced Dr. Steven Hayne's services would no longer be needed by the state in August 2008, not everyone thought it was good news.
Now, this opinion by state Attorney General Jim Hood, requested by Yazoo County Coroner Rickey Shivers, opens the door for Dr. Hayne to get back in the business of performing autopsies on a statewide basis.
Attorney Dale Danks represents Dr. Hayne. "The A-G's opinion simply says if two or more adjacent counties enter into an agreement among themselves, that they can create what is known as, called regional medical examiner's districts. And the A-G's opinion also says that once that district is created, two or more adjacent counties, they can retain the services of any qualified pathologist to perform autopsies in those respective districts."
 If everything goes as planned, Dr. Hayne will be doing autopsies at American Mortuary Services on Terry Road in Jackson and not in the state crime lab. Owner John Davis said, "We're gone be jumping and jivin' here in a little bit!"
Davis says he's looking forward Dr. Hayne's increased case load.  Said Davis, "He's been doing private autopsies here since him leaving the state crime lab."
Hayne, who conducted 80-percent of all criminal autopsies in Mississippi for nearly two decades, lost his state job amid complaints by The Innocence Project. The advocacy group claimed he provided bogus and misleading autopsy reports resulting in wrongful convictions of two men on felony charges. Those men were released from prison in 2008.
Hinds County Assistant Public Defender, Matt Eichelberger, has challenged Dr. Hayne's testimony in the past and finds the new development troubling. "He was removed from that list. Steve Simpson didn't really go into any detail as to why that was so, but there certainly had to be a reason for that to happen. So, I believe this to be somewhat of an end run.", said Eichelberger.
Mississippi has not had a state medical examiner since 1995. Autopsies for the state are now performed by a medical examination business from Nashville, Tennessee.  
After the Aug. 26, 2006, destruction on Ridgeway Street, Hood hit Melton with charges of felony gun violations, though Melton's friend and bodyguard Michael Recio—who later got a temporary promotion to assistant chief from Melton—tweaked his story regarding Melton's weapon possession, which allowed Melton to plead to a misdemeanor gun violation and no contest on the felony in Hinds County Circuit Court.
Owning the Court
Melton found an ally the following month with the court's appointment of Special Judge Joe Webster to take Green's place. Webster, from the Delta, had no apparent ties to Melton, but he allowed Danks and other defense attorneys to take utter possession of the case, framing it not as a drunken mayor on a rampage (as suggested in testimony by ambulance drivers that Webster refused to allow in), but a referendum on why it's necessary—and not "evilÔ—to tear suspected drug distribution points down to the ground without a warrant.
The occupant of the home was mentally ill and had a history of "self-medicating," but Evans Welch's mental-health records, obtained by the JFP in 2006, showed that Welch did not have the mental ability to take care of himself, much less run a drug business. No drugs were recovered at the time of his arrest, although police found a crack pipe.
"I ain't had no run-ins with that man," Welch said in an exclusive JFP interview after he was released soon after the Aug. 26 incident.
"That man (Melton) has been just harassing me and bugging me since he thought he had a job down there to do these things. He's been messing around my house, messing around and up and down my street, messing with people. I guess he thought he'd just take advantage of somebody who's easily taken advantage of and thought he'd get away with it. He threw me outdoors naked, with nothing but a half pair of pants."
With the judge's acquiescence, defense lawyers employed a two-part strategy to win acquittal while admitting that the defendants had, in fact, demolished the duplex. First, they used an archaic common-law definition of "malice" to argue that the jury had to find that the defendants had evil in their hearts in order to convict. The defense asked the jury to consider Melton's motives, rather than his intent, according to Mississippi College School of Law professor Matt Steffey.
A Man Against Crime?
When the courtroom drama was complete, Danks told reporters that Melton would be good and follow legal procedure before taking hammers to houses, and other usually-illegal shenanigans.
Danks' promise of better, more responsible days to come was not the end of the Ridgeway case, though. Within weeks of the state trial, reports began circling the city that federal agents were investigating Melton and his crime-fighting strategies.

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