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Turner v. Rogers, October 2010 Term, Docket 10-10

For the Judge James Arnold politically motivated arrest warrant, scroll down to the middle of the page

US Supreme Court, Turner v. Rogers 

SCOTUSblog Turner v. Rogers, Docket 10-10

Supreme Court Of The United States Blog

TURNER v. ROGERS, Slip Opinion, 564 U. S. ____ (2011)

TURNER v. ROGERS ET AL, No. 10–10
Argued March 23, 2011 - Decided June 20, 2011
10-10 Turner v Rogers.pdf
Adobe Acrobat document [226.4 KB]

Turner v. Rogers
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Turner v. Rogers, 564 U.S. __ (2011) is a case decided by the United States Supreme Court on June 20, 2011, that held that a state must provide safeguards to reduce the risk of erroneous deprivation of liberty in civil contempt cases such as child support cases. The decision, however, stopped short of requiring that a state provide counsel to indigent defendants in civil contempt cases. Read more here

Supreme Court Finds No Automatic Right to Counsel in Child Support Contempt Proceedings

Supreme Court Finds No Automatic Right to Counsel in Child Support Contempt Proceedings
ABA Journal Law News Now
by Debra Cassens Weiss
June 20, 2011

The U.S. Supreme Court has found no automatic right to counsel for indigent civil defendants facing jail time, though it ruled on behalf of a father who served a year in prison for failing to pay child support.

The father, Michael Turner, was deprived of his 14th Amendment right to due process, the Supreme Court ruled in a 5-4 decision.

Free lawyers aren't required in such situations, but states must have procedural safeguards in place to help determine whether the parent is able to comply with the support order, according to the majority opinion (PDF) by Justice Stephen G. Breyer.

Turner had told the trial judge who sentenced him to prison that he was unable to pay because "dope had a hold to me" until he broke his back and was laid up for two months. "And, now I’m off the dope and everything," he told the court. "I just hope that you give me a chance."

The judge sentenced Turner to a year in jail without making an express finding about his ability to pay. Turner's appeal, brought with the help of a pro bono lawyer, argued he had the right to counsel at his contempt hearing.

Breyer's opinion found that Turner did not get due process in his case, but said a lawyer was not an automatic requirement.

The 14th Amendment’s due process clause allows a state to provide fewer procedural protections to civil contempt defendants than in a criminal case, which is governed by the Sixth Amendment, Breyer said. He noted that both parties in a child support case are often unrepresented by lawyers, and providing a lawyer to just the noncustodial parent "could create an asymmetry of representation" altering significantly the nature of the proceeding.

He also noted the argument of the Solicitor General that alternate procedural safeguards can help reduce the risk of wrongful incarceration. They include: notice that ability to pay is a critical issue, the use of a form to elicit financial information, an opportunity for the defendant to answer questions about his financial status, and an express finding by the court on ability to pay.

Breyer said his opinion does not address a situation where child support is owed to the state, possibly as reimbursement of welfare payments to the parent with custody. Nor does the opinion address the due-process requirement for counsel in a particularly complex case.

Four dissenting justices agreed there is no right to appointed counsel for indigent defendants facing incarceration in civil contempt proceedings. They would not have reached the issue of the need for alternative procedural safeguards.

The ABA had argued in an amicus brief that poor people should have the right to a lawyer in civil contempt proceedings carrying a threat of jail time. The case is Turner v. Rogers. Read more here

ABA Brief Supports Right to Counsel for Civil Contempt Defendants Facing Possible Jail Time

ABA Brief Supports Right to Counsel for Civil Contempt Defendants Facing Possible Jail Time
ABA Journal, Law News Now
By: Debra Cassens Weiss
January 12, 2011

The ABA argues in a U.S. Supreme Court amicus brief that poor people should have the right to a lawyer in civil contempt proceedings carrying a threat of jail time.

The petitioner in the case, Michael Turner, served a year in prison for failing to pay child support. The South Carolina Supreme Court ruled the sentence was coercive, rather than punitive, and Turner had no right to a lawyer.

According to the brief (PDF), the ABA has concluded that low-income people should have a right to counsel in adversarial proceedings where basic human needs are at stake, such as those involving sustenance, safety, health, or child custody determinations. The rationale underlying this position also supports a right to counsel in civil contempt cases where an indigent defendant faces possible jail time.

 

The ABA also notes the ABA Standards for Criminal Justice support a right to counsel when incarceration is a possibility. “The line between civil and criminal contempt proceedings has become increasingly blurred,” the brief says, “and thus cannot provide a useful basis for determining the right to counsel where personal liberty is at stake.”

 

The brief argues that the added costs of appointed counsel should be balanced with the costs of incarceration and the possible increased support payments. Read more here

Concurring Opinions, Turner v. Rogers

Online Symposium on the implications of Turner v. Rogers. It is being moderated by Richard Zorza and David Udell of the Cardozo Law School National Center for Access to Justice.

Among those anticipated to participate are:

Laura Abel (Brennan Center for Justice)
Jon Asher (Colorado Legal Services)
Jim Baillie (Fredrikson & Byron)
Jeanne Charn (Harvard Law School)
Bob Echols (ABA Resource Center for Access to Justice)
Peter Edelman (DC Access to Justice Commission, Georgetown Law School)
Russell Engler (New England School of Law)
Debra Gardner (Public Justice Center)
Cynthia Gray (American Judicature Society)
Bruce Green (Fordham Law School)
Marty Guggenheim (NYU Law School)
Alan Houseman (Center for Law and Social Policy)
Jack Londen (Morrison and Foerster)
Michael Millemann (University of Maryland Law School)
Tina Rasnow (Founder, retired, Ventura County Superior Court Self-Help Legal Access Center)
Norman Reimer (National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers)
Mary Schmid Mergler (Constitution Project)
Vicki Turetsky (Office of Child Support, HHS)
Betty Torres (Texas Access to Justice Foundation)
David Udell (National Center for Access to Justice)
Jo-Ann Wallace (National Legal Aid and Defender Association)
Richard Zorza (Access to Justice Blog)

The moderators said the symposium should be comprehensive and reflective. Read more here

The Honorable James D. Arnold

The Honorable James D. Arnold
800 E. Twiggs St., Room #514
Tampa, Florida 33602
Courtroom #501

 

Judicial Assistant: Judy D. Williams
phone: (813) 272-6991



The Honorable James D. Arnold does not permit pro se litigants to appear telephonically at hearings. Pro se litigants cannot set motions using JAWS, the Judicial Automated Workflow System used by attorneys to calendar and set motions for hearings. Read more about Judge Arnold and his procedures and preferences here

 

Judge James D. Arnold wrongfully issued a politically motivated arrest warrant on the motion of Ryan Christopher Rodems in Gillespie v. Barker, Rodems & Cook, P.A., 05-CA-007205, Hillsborough Circuit Court, Fla. Read more here

 

Motion To Strike Notice of Assignment of Claims, Motion to Strike Dismissal of Action with Prejudice, Motion To Strike Settlement Agreement Made While In Custody of the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office (HCSO)


Gillespie v. Thirteenth Judicial Circuit, et al.
Case No. 5:10-cv-00503, US District Court, MD Florida, Ocala

Motion to Strike Assignment, Settlement, Dismissal
June 30, 2011, with exhibits
2011, 06-30-11, NJG Motion Strike, Set A[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [5.5 MB]
Motion to Strike Assignment, Settlement, Dismissal
June 30, 2011, without exhibits
2011, 06-30-11, NJG Motion Strike, Set A[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [657.2 KB]
Notice of Plaintiff Neil Gillespie, Former Counsel
June 30, 2011
2011, 06-30-11, Plaintiff NJG notice re [...]
Adobe Acrobat document [206.7 KB]

Gillespie v. Barker, Rodems & Cook, PA, Appeal
Case No. 2D10-5197, 2d DCA, Florida

ORDER, Appellees directed to respond within 12 days to motion to reinstate appeal
July 11, 2011
2011, 07-11-11, ORDER, appellees directe[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [255.8 KB]
Appellant’s Motion To Reinstate Dismissed Appeal (with exhibits)
July 1, 2011, Case No. 2D10-5197, 2d DCA, FL
2011, 07-01-11. Motion to Reinstate Dism[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [12.6 MB]
Appellant’s Motion To Reinstate Dismissed Appeal (w/o exhibits)
July 1, 2011, Case No. 2D10-5197, 2d DCA, FL
2011, 07-01-11. Motion to Reinstate Dism[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [457.3 KB]

Gillespie v. Barker, Rodems & Cook, PA, et al.
Case No. 05-CA-007205, Hillsborough Co., Florida

P’s Motion to Strike Joint Stipulation for Dismissal, motion only, w/o exhibits
July 6, 2011, Motion to Strike Settlement Agreement
2011, 07-06-11, Motion Strike Joint Stip[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [193.4 KB]
P’s Motion to Strike Joint Stipulation for Dismissal, with exhibits
July 6, 2011, Motion to Strike Settlement Agreement
2011, 07-06-11, Motion Strike Joint Stip[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [12.8 MB]

Plaintiff’s Motion To Quash Writ Of Bodily Attachment And To Recind Warrant For Plaintiff’s Arrest

Plaintiff’s Motion To Quash Writ Of Bodily Attachment And To Recind Warrant For Plaintiff’s Arrest
June 16, 2011
2011, 06-16-11, P's Motion Quash Writ Bo[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [448.0 KB]
Notice of Appearance, Eugene P. Castagliuolo
June 16, 2011
2011, 06-16-11, Notice of Appearance, EP[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [71.5 KB]
Transcript of Hearing, Motion to Quash Writ
June 16, 2011
2011, 06-16-11, TRANSCRIPT, Judge Arnold[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [67.8 KB]

Hearing On Civil Contempt With Incarceration

actor portrayal actor portrayal

 

 

 

Link to the Hillsborough Clerk of Court docket. Search for case 05-CA-007205 on "Case Number Search". Gillespie v. Barker, Rodems & Cook, P.A.  

Active Arrest Order, Warrant No. 22044323
June 1, 2011
2011, 06-01-11, Active Arrest Order, war[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [39.0 KB]
Writ of Bodily Attachment, Gillespie
June 1, 2011
2011, 06-01-11, Writ of Bodily Attachmen[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [49.8 KB]
Order Relieving Public Defender, Gillespie
June 1, 2001
2011, 06-01-11, Order Relieving Public D[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [54.9 KB]
Public Defender Motion For Clarification
June 1, 2011
2011, 06-01-11, Public Defender Motion F[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [182.3 KB]
Transcript of Hearing, Show Cause
June 1, 2011
2011, 06-01-11, TRANSCRIPT, Judge Arnold[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [43.1 KB]

Gillespie's Letter to Judge Arnold, cannot appear unrepresented at contempt hearing

May 27, 2011

The Honorable James D. Arnold
Circuit Court Judge
Circuit Civil Division J
800 E. Twiggs Street, Room 514
Tampa, Florida 33602

RE: Gillespie v Barker, Rodems & Cook, PA, Case No. 05-CA-7205, Circuit Civil Division J, Hillsborough County, Florida

Dear Judge Arnold:

Please find enclosed courtesy copies of the following:

1.    PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL, ADA ACCOMODATION REQUEST, and MEMORANDUM OF LAW

2.    VERIFIED NOTICE OF FILING DISABILITY INFORMATION
OF NEIL J. GILLESPIE

Please note that Mr. Rodems mislead you during the hearing about my attempts to resolve this matter. Please read the motion for appoint of counsel, and my letter to Mr. Rodems dated November 8, 2010, copy attached with notice of filing. Mr. Rodems also mislead you about my disability and ADA requests. Please see the notice of filing disability information.

I cannot appear at any contempt hearing without counsel. I cannot have unmoderated contact with Mr. Rodems, his partners or employees. I may file an emergency stay with the US Supreme Court. If the hearing is not canceled or I do not obtain counsel I may file chapter 7 bankruptcy which will dispose of defendants’ judgment.

Thank you for your consideration.

Sincerely,

Neil J. Gillespie
8092 SW 115th Loop
Ocala, Florida 34481
(352) 854-7807

cc: Mr. Rodems, letter only

Enclosures 

Gillespie Letter to Judge Arnold, cannot appear unrepresented at contempt hearing
May 27, 2011
2011, 05-27-11, NJG to Judge Arnold, can[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [542.9 KB]
Verified Notice of Filing Notice Disability Information
May 27, 2011
2011, 05-27-11, Notice, NJG disability i[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [123.4 KB]
Plaintiff’s Motion For Appointment of Counsel, ADA Accommodation Request, and Memo of Law
May 24, 2011
2011, 05-24-11, P's Motion For Appointme[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [308.7 KB]
Plaintiff’s Motion For Appointment of Counsel, ADA Accommodation Request, and Memo of Law
May 24, 2011, with Exhibits 1-45
2011, 05-24-11, P's Motion For Appointme[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [26.5 MB]

Plaintiff's Amended ADA Accomodation Request, 2007

Plaintiff's Amended ADA Accomodation Request
March 5, 2007
2007, 03-05-07, Plaintiff's Amended Acco[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [320.7 KB]

Perjury Complaint Against Mr. Rodems to Tampa Police

Perjury Complaint Against Mr. Rodems, Tampa Police
February-March 2010
Perjury complaint against Mr. Rodems to [...]
Adobe Acrobat document [2.9 MB]

Read more about the perjury complaint against Mr. Rodems here

NAMI, National Alliance on Mental Illness

National Alliance on Mental Illness

From its inception in 1979, NAMI has been dedicated to improving the lives of individuals and families affected by mental illness.

For three decades, NAMI has established itself as the most formidable grassroots mental health advocacy organization in the country. Dedication, steadfast commitment and unceasing belief in NAMI's mission by grassroots advocates have produced profound changes. NAMI's greatest strength is the dedication of our grassroots leaders and members. We are the families, friends and individuals that serve to strengthen communities across the country. Read more here

NAMI on Wikipedia

NAMI on Facebook

The Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law

The Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law is a nonprofit organization devoted to improving the lives of people with mental illnesses through changes in policy and law. For nearly four decades our legal and policy advocates have engaged in impact litigation, policy reform and public education to ensure the rights of people with mental illnesses in all areas of life, including housing, employment, education, public systems, health care, the judiciary and more. Read more here

The Bazelon Center on Wikipedia

The Bazelon Center on Facebook

Misuse of Discovery - $11,550 Sanctions, Contempt, Incarceration, Forced Settlement

From the outset of this case opposing counsel has misused discovery as a trip-and-trap model to obtain sanctions, and now incarceration, to force a settlement.  In Haines v. Kerner, 404 U.S. 520 (1971) the United States Supreme Court found that pro se pleadings should be held to "less stringent standards" than those drafted by attorneys. For more, see Motion For Reconsideration, $11,550 Sanctions, June 18, 2010, below in PDF.

 

The rules of discovery are designed to secure the just and speedy determination every action (In re Estes’ Estate, 158 So.2d 794 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 3d Dist. 1963), to promote the ascertainment of truth (Ulrich v. Coast Dental Services, Inc. 739 So.2d 142 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 5th Dist. 1999), and to ensure that judgments are rested on the real merits of causes (National Healthcorp Ltd. Partnership v. Close, 787 So.2d 22 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2d Dist. 2001), and not upon the skill and maneuvering of counsel. (Zuberbuhler v. Division of Administration, State Dept. of Transp. 344 So.2d 1304 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2d Dist. 1977).

Motion For Reconsideration, $11,550 Sanctions
June 18, 2010
2010, 06-18-10, Motion for Reconsiderati[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [4.5 MB]
Notice of Fraud on the Court, Rodems, Discovery
July 27, 2010
2010, 07-27-10, Notice Of Fraud On The C[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [4.6 MB]
Cancel Deposition Duces Tecum, Order of Protection
June 14, 2010
2010, 06-14-10, P's motion cancel deposi[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [2.1 MB]
Notice of Filing Letter, Richard Lee Reporting
July 7, 2010
2010, 07-07-10, P's Notice of Filing, NJ[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [2.3 MB]
Motion For Contempt, Rodems Violated Stay Order
December 15, 2009
2009, 12-15-09, Plaintiff's motion hold [...]
Adobe Acrobat document [2.9 MB]

2008 appeal of $11,550 sanction, Initial Brief 2D08-2224

Appeal of $11,550 sanction, Initial Brief 2D08-2224
July 3, 2008 by Robert W. Bauer, Esq. (Appeal Denied)
2DCA appeal of $11,550 sanction, Initial[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [1.4 MB]

2011, Rule 22 Application, Justice Thomas, SCOTUS

In the Supreme Court of the United States
Emergency Petition For Writ of Prohibition
Application to Justice Clarence Thomas 

Application to Justice Thomas (corrected)
June 11, 2011
2011, 06-11-11, Application to Justice T[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [350.8 KB]
Reply by Clayton R. Higgins, Jr., Case Analyst
June 15, 2011
2011, 06-15-11, reply by Clayton R. Higg[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [37.8 KB]

In the Supreme Court of the United States
Emergency Petition For Stay or Injunction
Application to Justice Clarence Thomas 

Application to Justice Thomas
May 31, 2011, With exhibits 2- 4, 6, 9-10
2011, 05-31-11, Application to Justice T[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [673.7 KB]
Reply by Danny Bickell, Staff Attorney
June 2, 2011
2011, 06-02-11, reply by Danny Bickell, [...]
Adobe Acrobat document [46.7 KB]

Professor Benjamin Barton - The Lawyer-Judge Bias

Law Professor Benjamin H. Barton is the author of The Lawyer-Judge Bias in the American Legal System. Barton writes that virtually all American judges are former lawyers, a shared background that results in the lawyer-judge bias. This book argues that these lawyer-judges instinctively favor the legal profession in their decisions and that this bias has far-reaching and deleterious effects on American law. Read reviews on Overlawyered, Larry Ribstein, Glenn Reynolds, and Cato’s Dan Mitchell. Professor Barton also submitted an amici brief (PDF) with Darryl Brown in the US Supreme Court case Turner v. Rogers. 

YouTube-Video

More case documents, Gillespie v. Barker, Rodems & Cook, P.A., Case No. 05-CA-007205

Notice of Appeal, Final Summary Judgment, Count 1

Notice of Appeal, Final Sum Judgment, 2D10-5197
October 22, 2010
2010, 10-22-10, Notice of Appeal, w atta[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [1.7 MB]

Emergency Motion Disqualify Defendants' Counsel

Emergency Motion to Disqualify Defendants’ Counsel
July 9, 2010
2010, 07-09-10, Emergency Motion to Disq[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [13.1 MB]
Plaintiff's Motion for Reconsideration, Disqualify Counsel (Rodems 05-CA-7205), Dec-11-2006
Plaintiff's Motion Reconsideration, Disq[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [1.5 MB]
TRANSCRIPT, Judge Isom, Hearing, Rodems 05-CA-7205, February 5, 2007
TRANSCRIPT, Judge Isom, Hearing Feb-05-2[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [3.4 MB]
Plaintiff's Motion to Disqualify Counsel (Rodems)
February 4, 2006, Case No. 05-CA-7205
Plaintiff's Motion Disqualify Counsel (R[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [187.5 KB]
TRANSCRIPT, Nielsen J., Hearing Disqualify Counsel
April 25, 2006 (Rodems 05-CA-7205)
TRANSCRIPT, Judge Nielsen, Hearing Disqu[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [1.5 MB]

Plaintiff's First Amended Complaint, May 5, 2010

Plaintiff’s First Amended Complaint
May 5, 2010
2010, 05-05-10, Plaintiff's First Amende[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [5.3 MB]

Plaintiff’s Motion For Rehearing

Plaintiff’s Motion For Rehearing
July 16, 2008, Tanya Uhl, Law Office Robert W. Bauer
2008, 07-16-08, Plaintiff's motion for r[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [689.0 KB]

Plaintiff’s Motion For Punitive Damages, 768.72 Fla Stat

P’s Motion Punitive Damages, 768.72 Fla Stat
January 18, 2007
2007, 01-18-07, P's motion for Punitive [...]
Adobe Acrobat document [2.8 MB]
EXHIBITS, P's Motion Punitive Damages, 768.72 FS
January 18, 2007
2007, 01-18-07, P's motion for Punitive [...]
Adobe Acrobat document [11.8 MB]

Plaintiff's Motion Sum Judg, April 2006 (not heard)

Plaintiff’s Motion For Summary Judgment
April 25, 2006
2006, 04-25-06, P's Motion for Summary J[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [3.2 MB]
Plaintiff’s Affidavit in Support Summary Judgment
April 25, 2006
2006, 04-25-06, P's Affidavit in Support[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [213.1 KB]

Defendants' Answer and Libel Counterclain

Answer, Affirmative Defenses, Libel Counterclaim
January 19, 2006
2006, 01-19-06, Defendants Answer, Affir[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [512.5 KB]

Gillespie prevailed on Motion to Dismiss Jan-13-2006

Order On Defendants’ Motion To Dismiss And Strike
January 13, 2006
2006, 01-13-06, Order on Defendants' Mot[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [101.0 KB]
Second Rebuttal Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss, Strike
October 31, 2005
2005, 10-31-05, P second rebuttal to D m[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [1.3 MB]
Ds’ Reply to P's Rebuttal, Motion Dismiss, Strike
October 10, 2005
2005, 10-10-05, D reply to P rebuttal, D[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [352.8 KB]
Rebuttal To Defendants’ Motion To Dismiss and Strike
October 7, 2005
2005, 10-07-05, P rebuttal to D motion d[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [6.0 MB]
Notice of Service of Case Law, Dismiss and Strike
October 7, 2005
2005, 10-07-05, P notice of service case[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [3.8 MB]
Defendants’ Motion To Dismiss And Strike
August 29, 2005
2005, 08-29-05, Defendants' Motion to Di[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [87.4 KB]

Complaint, Fraud and Breach of Contract, Aug-11-2005

Complaint for Fraud and Breach of Contract
August 11, 2005
2005, 08-11-05, original pro se complain[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [1.0 MB]

Federal Civil Rights and ADA Lawsuit

The case is Neil J Gillespie v. Thirteenth Judicial Circuit, Florida, et al., Case No. 5:10-cv-00503-WTH-DAB, US District Court, Middle District of Florida, Ocala Division, filed September 28, 2010.

The Complaint is on the litigation page

This lawsuit is about the basic requirements of justice, fairness and equality that we should all expect from our courts. The ADA part of this lawsuit is relevant to persons with disabilities and access to courts. The Civil Rights part of the lawsuit is important to all pro se litigants. Judge Isom’s essay, Professionalism and Litigation Ethics, 28 STETSON L. REV. 323, describes a two-tier legal system in Florida that favors certain attorneys. Read more here

Gillespie v Thirteenth Judicial Circuit, et al.
Federal Civil Rights, ADA, September 28, 2010
2010, 09-28-10, federal complaint, Gille[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [1.3 MB]
Plaintiff’s First Amended Complaint
May 5, 2010
2010, 05-05-10, Plaintiff's First Amende[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [5.3 MB]

Indigent Determination

Allison Raistrick of the Clerk’s Indigent Screening Unit determined that I was indigent May 27, 2011, under section 27.52 Florida Statutes to appoint the public defender. Judge Arnold relieved the public defender from representing me stating current law does not provide for counsel to represent indigent persons in this situation, a civil contemnor facing incarceration.

Under section 27.52 a person is indigent if their income is equal to 200% or less of the federal poverty guidelines. The federal poverty guidelines for a single person household is $10,890 per year per the US Department of Health and Human Services. 200% of that amount is  $21,780. My disability income is $1,741 per month x 12 months, or $20,892 annually. So my indigent status is borderline. See the following:

The Clerk of the Court denied my indigent status under section 57.082 Florida Statutes, and even refused to proved the application form to determine indigence.

Under section 57.082(1) a person seeking relief from payment of filing fees based upon an inability to pay must apply to the clerk of the court for a determination of civil indigent status using an application form developed by the Florida Clerks of Court Operations Corporation with final approval by the Supreme Court.

Pursuant to 57.082(1)(b) The clerk shall assist a person who requests assistance in completing the application.

Pursuant to 57.082(2) The clerk of the court shall determine whether an applicant seeking such designation is indigent based upon the information provided in the application and the criteria prescribed in this subsection. The Clerk failed to make the determination based on the application. 

Pursuant to 57.082(a)1. An applicant is indigent if the applicant’s income is equal to or below 200 percent of the then-current federal poverty guidelines prescribed for the size of the household of the applicant by the United States Department of Health and Human Services.

Pursuant to 57.082(d) The duty of the clerk in determining whether an applicant is indigent is limited to receiving the application and comparing the information provided in the application to the criteria prescribed in this subsection. The determination of indigent status is a ministerial act of the clerk and may not be based on further investigation or the exercise of independent judgment by the clerk. The clerk may contract with third parties to perform functions assigned to the clerk under this section. Since the clerk has not received or reviewed my application, its determination that I am not indigent is unlawful. The Clerk wrote that the Court should make the final determination of indigent status.

Read my email with the Clerk of the Court about the foregoing, below in PDF.

Email, Clerk of Court, Indigent Determination
Email, Clerk of Court, denied indigent, [...]
Adobe Acrobat document [402.7 KB]

Community Legal Services of Mid-Florida, Ocala, determined that I was indigent, see the letter below in PDF. Community Legal Services of Mid-Florida referred me to Bay Area Legal Services, Inc. of Tampa who determined that I was not indigent. Read below PDF.

Community Legal Services of Mid-Florida
June 3, 2011
2011, 06-03-11, Glenn Shuman to NJG, ref[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [67.2 KB]
Bay Area Legal Services, Inc. of Tampa
June 6, 2011
2011, 06-06-11, letter from Joan Cain Bo[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [69.9 KB]

Gillespie was declared insolvent within the meaning of chapter 57, Florida Statutes, by The Second District Court of Appeal, Florida, and the 2dDCA waived fees in three cases: 2D10-5197, 2D10-5529, and 2D11-2127. The Florida Supreme Court waived Gillespie’s fees in case SC11-858.

More Stories of Injustice and The Courts

Thomas James Ball self-immolated, could not pay child support

 

David Bardes was subjected to Cold Cell Torture while incarcerated for child support arrears not owed.

 

Bardes made a Petition for Writ of Certiorari to the United States Supreme Court, see link below.

Man Self-immolated, Could Not Pay Child Support

YouTube-Video

Thomas James Ball self-immolated - Free Keene.com

Free Keene.com

"I have 21 years of Army service going back to the Vietnam War. My loyalty to the government should be a given. It is gone. I am certain it will never return regardless of how long I might have lived." -Thomas James Ball in his "last statement" before he self-immolated in front of the courthouse that was integral in destroying his life. Read more here

Thomas Ball Thomas Ball

Thomas James Ball self-immolated, could not pay child support


Thomas James Ball reached his breaking point. Driven to desperation by a system that bankrupted him and destroyed his family, Ball walked up to the main door of the Keene County, New Hampshire courthouse, doused himself with gasoline, and lit himself ablaze. Hardly anyone seems to have noticed. Read more here

Cold Cell Torture For Child Support Arrears - Petition for Writ of Certiorari to the United States Supreme Court

David Bardes David Bardes

David Bardes was subject to Cold Cell Torture while incarcerated for child support arrears not owed. When his ex-wife moved their children to another state, Bardes followed. Since the children lived in three states over a short period of time, all three states charged him child support, resulting in mistaken arrears. Bardes says he never willfully withheld child supportRead more here

David Bardes sustained Hypothermic Cold Cell Torture, and a gunshot, while in jail over a family court/child support matter. David wrote a free Pro Se Guide to Family Court in an effort to help others benefit from his experience.

In the guide David Bardes acknowledged his own mental illness, beginning on page 20, and described how this matter got out of control:

  • "My depression, that started when my wife ran off with the nannies husband, took two years and lots of medication to crawl out from, came back with a furious roar when I was wiped out. I was broke and disabled with mental illness."

 

  • "Another problem I had was that three states were charging me with child support and I had no money for any of them. Federal law only allows one state to charge child support at any given time, but states don’t like the federal government and have no interest in following their laws."

 

  • "Pennsylvania, North Carolina, and South Carolina all had me in arrears and that triggered five trials in three states, as well as all the order to show cause hearings, pretrial hearings, pretrial conferences, and contempt hearings. I had to drive back and forth between all three states to attend their trials and hearings."
Free Pro Se Guide to Family Court
by David A. Bardes, April 2011
FreeProSeGuideToFamilyCourt.pdf
Adobe Acrobat document [588.4 KB]

David Bardes made a Petition for Writ of Certiorari to the United States Supreme Court, December 29, 2010. 

Petition for a Writ of Certiorari, SCOTUS
David A. Bardes, Petitioner, December 29, 2010
Petition for a Writ of Certiorari, SCOTU[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [1.5 MB]

Tortured For Child Support He Did Not Owe
Examiner.com
By Teri Stoddard
September 4, 2009

David Bardes was left in a hypothermic jail cell for 32.5
hours, 31.5 more hours than Bush's torture memo allows

Hypothermic Torture Chamber Hypothermic Torture Chamber

While pundits around the country discuss the United States' torture of suspected terrorists, one U.S. torture victim has gone unnoticed.   United States child support collection problems are common, and in David A. Bardes' case, almost deadly. 

Part One

Bardes, who lost 126 friends in the World Trade Center attack on September 11, wanted nothing more than to be a good dad and equal parent to his son and daughter.  He didn't ask his wife to have an affair with the nanny's husband.  And when his ex-wife moved their children to another state after the divorce, Bardes followed, twice. Due to the children living in three states over a short period of time (PA, NC, SC) Bardes had all three states charging him child support, resulting in mistaken arrears.  Bardes says he never willfully withheld child support, and documents related to his Federal court case (#02:08-487-PMD-RSC) support his claim. 

David Bardes, in his own words David Bardes, in his own words

Bardes developed severe depression after being treated like a criminal. He says they "seized assets, destroyed my credit ratings, destroyed my business and income, and my mental health."  He lost so much weight he was "skin and bones."  This man who once made $180,000 a year now had a hard time finding employment. Read more here

Tortured For Child Support He Did Not Owe
September 2009, by Teri Stoddard
2009, Sept, Tortured For Child Support H[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [475.4 KB]

The doctors found a bullet in my hip
by David Bardes
December 10, 2011

You can add being shot with a gun by those thugs in South Carolina too.  I was rear ended and shattered  my hip today, that is not the problem.  The doctor called me over to the image machine and asked me if I have ever been shot with a gun. I said no, not that I knew of, I think I would know that.  He said there is a bullet in your other hip bone.  You can see for yourself.  You can see the left hip ball shattered, but on the right hip you will see the bullet…

It is not a good day for South Carolina either, I guess.  On April 5, 2006, at 10:32am, when the guards were beating me to kill me, after coming back to life from the first time they killed me, and then the tazor’s, one of them must have pulled out a gun and shot me.   My body was 88 degrees, I was still half dead, there was no way I could feel a bullet. That would explain the blood up in the 4th floor hospital though.  It was not just the gash over my left eye, using a bloody finger, I wrote a letter on a piece of lunch bag, and folded it up into a small wad, and shoved it deep into the electrical conduit, of the ripped out electrical outlet near the concrete floor, where they left me to die without any medical care. I wanted to leave some DNA evidence, in case anyone ever figured out I was murdered. And now shot with a gun. Read more here

They shot me with a 9mm gun on April 4, 2006
by David Bardes
December 21, 2011

After they killed me with hypothermia, during the 24 hour period I was temporarily dead, they shot me with a gun. I did not bleed out as my heart was not beating, dead bodies don’t bleed and don’t feel pain. I had no idea for six years, and they were not about to tell me, either. Read more here

David Bardes wound scar David Bardes wound scar

US Admits to "Cold Cell" Torture

US Admits to "Cold Cell" Torture
By David A. Bardes
davidbardes.com
June 2011

It ends up that something called "Cold Cell" torture was the most widely used torture technique used by the United States in the fight against terrorism. Government operatives "praised" hypothermic torture as the most effective of all the techniques they employed. When the less redacted previously released torture documents were made available to the public, the new revelations revealed how wide spread hypothermic torture was utilized, in many facilities it was used every night, all night long, and all year round.

Apparently, hypothermic torture produced the largest amount of actionable intelligence, it produced it "consistently," and it worked in the shortest amount of time. Water boarding it ends up, was the least used. The eeriest was something called the "box." With the "box" a captive would be folded up and locked into a box the size of a foot locker. No air or light could get in. After two days of sheer panic in the box, what emerged was a psychological vegetable. Read more in the PDF below.

US Admits to "Cold Cell" Torture
June 2011, by David A. Bardes
2011, June, US Admits to Cold Cell Tortu[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [59.4 KB]

Law review: Florida Civil Gideon

The 1963 Supreme Court case Gideon v. Wainwright, 372 U.S. 335 (1963) established that state courts are required under the Sixth Amendment of the Constitution to provide counsel in criminal cases for defendants who are unable to afford their own attorneys.

The concept of Civil Gideon follows this line of reasoning. Talbot "Sandy" D’Alemberte wrote about the right to legal representation in civil cases in his law review Tributaries of Justice: The Search For Full Access, 25 Fla. St. U. L. Rev 631

Sandy D’Alemberte Sandy D’Alemberte

V. Tributary Four: A Civil Gideon Fund From A Service Tax On For-Profit Legal Services.

 

"Some court opinions hint that access to legal representation in civil cases might be a constitutional entitlement. footnote 58, See In re Amendments to Rules Regulating The Florida Bar—1-3.1(a) and Rules of Judicial Administration—2.065 (Legal Aid), 598 So. 2d 41, 43 (Fla. 1992) (noting that "the right to counsel is no longer limited to criminal cases")."

"Such a proposal has already been offered which estimates that a one percent sales tax would raise $20 million each year for a proposed state Civil Gideon Fund. footnote 59, See Keith Beyler & Ronald Spears, Funding Access to Civil Justice 34 (May 14, 1992) (unpublished manuscript presented at the Illinois State Bar Association’s Allerton House Conference) (on file with author). A Civil Gideon Fund is a fund designed to help meet the legal needs of the poor."


25 FLSULR 631, TRIBUTARIES OF JUSTICE: THE SEARCH FOR FULL ACCESS
Talbot "Sandy" D’Alemberte, Spring, 1998
Tributaries of Justice, The Search For F[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [312.9 KB]
25 Fla. St. U. L. Rev 631, Westlaw
Talbot "Sandy" D’Alemberte
25 Fla. St. U. L. Rev 631.pdf
Adobe Acrobat document [201.1 KB]
Amendments to Rules Regulating The Florida Bar—1-3.1(a) and Rules of Judicial Administration—2.065 (Legal Aid), 598 So. 2d 41, 43 (Fla. 1992)
noting that "the right to counsel is no longer limited to criminal cases")
In re Amendments to Rules Regulating The[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [226.3 KB]