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hey I am not from JMLS but the organization
is one that is aiming to so much difference.
there should definitely be more in number.
Child Custody decisions in itself is a issue
which needs to be seriously taken care of.
More of us should be coming forward to create
sites and organizations where citizens can
come forward...Juvenile Court
proceedings are confidential. I can discuss
and post pleadings and issues that are now
part of a public record through appeals.
There are other matters to be added later
once I file additional appeals and after May
16, 2007.
Please visit www.alp
justicepact.org later today
to see updates on my appeals in Supreme Court
of Georgia and in the United States Supreme
Court---appeals to go back up with at least
two more opportunities (denial of Feb 2007
appeal in Supreme Court of Georgia and
Petition for a Writ of Certiorari after
divorce is final).
I feel like
I'm alone out here in "webspace" on this
issue. I started ALP when I was released from
serving 10 days in jail for failure to pay
child support when I am financially bankrupt
and the father earns in excess of $185,000
per year.
But I don't think
that's the real reason I was sent to
jail.
I had been protesting the
Juvenile Court decision and John Marshall Law
School's interference and involvement in
the custody trial (even at the Douglas County
Courthouse with duct tape on my mouth - which
is what I think they want from me) from
September 2006 through January 2007.
All that protesting was actually
admitted in the January 2007 hearings to show
"how I spend my time" and in support of the
father's argument that if I have "time"
and "money" to protest, I should be looking
for a job 24/7.
Well,
"protesting" on the web costs nothing
compared to public protesting, although I
plan to go back to Douglas County Courthouse
and Supreme Court of Georgia over the course
of the next few weeks and months after the
next hearing in Juvenile Court May 16,
2007.
This all began when I sent a
draft complaint to John Marshall Law School
in April 2006 explaining why I believe the
performed a "cost-benefit" analysis on the
value of my legal degree and offered
settlement only in equity (I specifically
wanted their help in the administrative
appeal of the "tentative" denial of my
fitness application). In response to my offer
of settlement grounded only only in equity,
JMLS's attorney Brian Douglas sent a
letter containing many threats, one of which
threatened "results far beyond my
contemplation”, see www.jmlsatlanta.info
(previously www.johnmarshalllawschoolinc.info - if
you've visited this site before, you will
need to delete your cache or no links will
work).
Almost two years later,
those "results" were realized in my custody
trial, which admitted more evidence in the
federal lawsuit against JMLS and my appeals
of first incarceration (neither found
frivolous and no claim yet to be dismissed),
to "show how I spend my time" with no
allegations of neglect or abuse.
Before I filed suit
against JMLS, I was a "perfect" parent, or at
least as perfect as any parent can be, but
never good enough (for me).
I
have three wonderful children, all gifted,
one attending an ivy league college on
$20,000 scholarship my 11-year old similarly
gifted, and the child in the middle of all
this mess is the most sweetest, brightest,
smartest, cutest, curious, special child. To
that end, I whave been very blessed.
There are movements
towards class-actions cases across the Nation
for domestic relations matters, in
particular, in Douglas County Georgia has a
group, which I have contacted and intend to
fully participate in.
In
any event, John Marshall Law School is not
the same as it was when I enrolled or
graduated. My main concern still is the
number of
professors who come from big
firm backgrounds (all defense attorneys for
Fortune 500 companies), and the problem that
exists when this is juxtaposed with vague and
elusive concepts of "good moral
character"---i.e., exactly what are these big
firm professors teaching about "morals" when
the "institutions" bottom line is
profit?
The ONLY (?) for-profit
law school in the country accredited by the
ABA..