Thanks to you and others via GoFundMe, I’ve been in court 700 days on behalf of the state and her 7 million people.
Pamela Fleenor, the unjust judge in chancery court in Hamilton County, takes the oath of office for a second term Sept. 1, 2022. She is responsible for mass death because she refuses to obey state law and insist on the claims of equity. Judges thankful that she has upheld policy over the constitution elected her president of the Tennessee judicial conference. (Photo Shelia Harding Cannon)
Other donors have written generous check given me privately to cover me while I am not earning sales commissions as one in the news radio field.
Failure of the courts to stop the mass harm of untested jabs has killed 984 people, as reported to VAERS.
The actual number passes 98,400 people, given the 100x minimum underreporting factor.
Jab injuries in TN are 12,773 reported harms, or 1.27 million injuries calculated by the conservative URF.
Unjust judge Pam Fleenor, who abused me representing the state on relation 201 days, took oath of office on the Bible Sept. 1 for another term. Two judges in Nashville died suddenly over the Labor Day weekend, just after taking the oath, including Philip Smith, 62 (he “passed unexpectedly” in a press account).
Meanwhile, I await word on my petition in the supreme court to take our case, State of Tennessee ex rel. David Jonathan Tulis vs. Bill Lee, governor, et al, case no. E2021-00436-SC-R11-CV. Two judges must agree that it bears important issues requiring the court’s intervention.
Separately, I today await response to my motion for recusal and disqualification of four of the five justices who participated in the fraud, and one of whom had me arrested for trying to report on the Tennessee judicial conference Nov. 6, 2021.
If our case is accepted, I will immediately have to pay a bond (est. F$1,000) and more fees, though I haven’t nailed down the amounts by talking with court clerk James Hivner.
David Tulis is live on the air weekdays 7 a.m. to 11 a.m. on NoogaRadio 96.9 FM and other NoogaRadio Network stations, covering local economy and free markets in Chattanooga and beyond. Nothing here is legal advice; if you want legal advice, find a law firm downtown or on another planet — where the law actually matters.