
01-18-2008, 04:09 PM
|
|
Mental Jujitsu
|
|
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 672
|
|
|
how well DiM's theories work in real life
If DiM's mastery of the law is so great, how does he explain this?
from http://www.trial.com/Blogger/2001_08...logarchive.htm
Quote:
Saturday, August 18, 2001
Judge casts out man's suit against Jesus
Karen Abbott -- Rocky Mountain News Staff Writer -- Aug. 18, 2001
David Merrill and his motor scooter are really unhappy with Jesus Christ. They sued him in federal court Wednesday.
Denver U.S. District Judge Edward Nottingham was really unhappy that they did.
He threw the case out Thursday.
Nottingham's written order called Merrill's lawsuit a "rambling, nonsensical, incoherent blotch on this court's docket."
The judge then quoted a one-line book review by the satirical writer Ambrose Bierce.
"The covers of this book are too far apart," Bierce wrote.
"So, too," wrote Nottingham, "were the beginning and end of this pleading."
Merrill, 43, declined to be interviewed.
He and his motor scooter -- named as plaintiffs in the filing -- also sued the United Nations, the El Paso County sheriff, the Colorado Springs police chief and the Sanhedrin -- the highest court and council of the ancient Jewish nation at the time of Jesus' crucifixion.
The lawsuit is laced with obscure legal terms. It also contains references to Dutch settlement in North America; Nazis; Jews; obscure mathematical texts; a speech in May by President Bush about Social Security; and some darkly mysterious organizations whose secret agents allegedly hold powerful positions.
A careful reading, however, disclosed that Merrill didn't sue the real Jesus Christ.
He sued someone he thought was posing as the savior in a prank telephone call in May 2000, when Merrill had been given 10 days to redeem his confiscated car.
"This man addressed me by name and told me that he, 'Jesus Christ' did not like to see 10-day notices, that they made him look bad," Merrill's lawsuit said.
Then Merrill's motor scooter was seized on grounds that he was driving it with expired license plates, no proof of insurance and no driver's license. Merrill has a history of similar driving-related charges in El Paso County.
Convicted by a jury, he spent some time in jail. When he didn't pay impound charges to redeem his motor scooter, it was scheduled to be sold.
Merrill wants it back. He also wants $5,000 for his confiscated car. He wants several other things, too, and if he doesn't get them, he wants $12.6 million from someone working at the New York Stock Exchange.
"Jesus Christ of Nazareth paid the ransom in blood for me on the cross and my motorcycle is part of the eternal inheritance in general," Merrill wrote in his complaint.
He signed it with his thumbprint.
|
Gee, Dave, what happened with the jury trial? Why couldn't you "abate the nuisance" to make the prosecution go away before it even reached the trial stage? And why couldn't you convince a jury of the soundness of your legal theories?
Your blather may sound good to those who don't know any better, but in the real world, your theories don't amount to a hill of beans.
__________________
We reject Skurdal's argument that he is a "free man" exempt from the laws because he has "no contracts" with either the state or federal governments...No persons in Montana may exempt themselves from any law simply by declaring they do not consent to it applying to them...Accepting Skurdal's assertion of exempt status is an invitation to anarchy. We decline that invitation. - State v. Skurdal, Supreme Court of Montana, 235 Mont. 291, 767 P.2d 304 at 308 (1988).
|