CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., Saturday, Nov. 30, 2024 — The attorney general and others in the Gov. Bill Lee administration appear caught off guard in being exposed in a $2 billion shyster project and are scrambling to figure out how to become honest.
The Gnomes — Christopher Sapp my midstate raio bureau chief, Ed Soloe the feral handyman and chain smoker — have caught them in flagrante delicto, in the middle of an adulterous orgasm, as it were, shafting hundreds of thousands of Tennesseans since 2002 with improvements in the rape and pillage Jan. 1, 2017. The Gnomes are the common working people who have uncovered the No. 2 scandal in state history, with No. 1 being Covid-19 coup against constitutional government March 12, 2020.
And that is their fraud policy serving the insurance cartels, members of an exclusive club, a “nonprofit, unincorporated legal entity” called the Tennessee automobile insurance plan. T.C.A. § 33-12-136. Two billion bucks in “free premiums” are at stake, and millions in state of Tennessee tax skims on insurers selling auto policies.
The desperation is evident in e-mail correspondence with Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti.
I sent Mr. Skrmetti three long letters over the course of my contested case filed in department of revenue July 26, 2023, even sent him filings in the case to put him on awares of criminal oppression under his nose. Having done nothing to halt oppression, he now is in the enviable position of defending it in court as mere operation of law.
Now, Mr. Skrmetti and the officials are abuzz about how to deal with my extensive litigation demanding honest government services. We are threatening the white legal politial establishment’s well-oiled fraud that has not been challenged by any of the state’s 18,000 attorneys nor its hundreds of judges, nor any minority rights activists whom you’d think would care about ending abuse of the poor and the citizenry in general.
Desperation in air
Effectively, says Mr. Skrmetti, via staff attorney Nick Barca who’s handling the grunt work, we’ll give you F$20 worth of stamps if you give us more time in the federal case I filed Oct. 15 in U.S. district court in Nashville.
The department is willing to accept service of the signed summons and the complaint by email to me in exchange for having 60 days to file an answer, response, motion, or other filing.
Mr. Skrmetti says by email.
When I sent the department a lawsuit by U.S. registered mail, I inadvertently put into the packet a summons unsigned by the U.S. district court clerk in Nashville.
Mmmmm, let’s evaluate the offer
In other words, we’ll give you $20 in stamps if you let us, meanwhile, send 96,000 first-class inquiry or revocation notices to members of the motoring public in that eight weeks without any interruption.
Revenue stands out 6,000 notices under its rogue program every Monday, and 6,000 every Wednesday, says Jennifer Lanfair, a DOR manager, in a deposition. That’s 12,000 letters to poor people a week, no doubt a program of mail fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1341.
Do you think this offer is fair? Give us 60 days to figure out how to elude your net, we get to harass another 96,000 people in the four-notice sequence prior to revocation, and you get a little breather in the case. You are enriched with $20 worth of stamps and get to send us an e-mail, and save big for Christmas.