Financial responsibility case

McMinn’s Bryant named as 1 of 3 anti-corruption judges to eye auto insurance scam

Chancellor Jerri Bryant serves as chancery court judge in McMinn County, Tenn. The courthouse is in Athens. (Photos AOC)

CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., Monday, Dec. 9, 2024 – At the end of the business Friday I am unsure of the lodging place of my three-judge panel lawsuit, but the next day I learn a judge is assigned as jurist No. 1 to hear it.

Thinking my case “lost in the system,” I call Nashville. Mary Beth Lindsey, the chief clerk of the Tennessee supreme court, says that the case has not been submitted to the court. The administrator of the courts, or AOC, which serves the supreme court in handling all details, also has not received it, according to a spokeswoman.

Boyd Patterson, criminal court judge

The AOC would be charged with making arrangements to find judges in the state’s two other main sections.

I had talked earlier last week with a chancery court clerk who said that Judge Boyd Patterson, the chief judge in Hamilton County, had sent the case up. He had ruled against my petition in an “initial determination,” and I have been ready to make oral argument to rescue the cause.

I filed the day before Thanksgiving a 7-page “Motion to alter order on initial determination” that requested reversal and, as necessary, oral argument.

So, is Judge Patterson going to let the three-judge panel weigh in on my claims? Did my motion change his mind? Will he issue an order following up? What will the record show closing out his role in getting my case before the three judges

Meanwhile, new in the picture, a McMinn County judge. Judge Patterson asks the local chancery court clerk Donna Miller to send the two state commissioners and me a copy of his order naming Jerri Bryant to the case. She is a McMinnville chancery court judge, with the court in the courthouse in Athens.

Sauron stares down upon us — for now

The three-judge panel exists under a law that took effect in 2021 targeting state corruption and unconstitutional acts, laws, policies and programs by state-level officials. I view it as a real blessing, a release valve for corrupt activity that pervades many parts of state and local government.

To overthrow the barbaric “Eye of Sauron” program run by the department of revenue, I filed suit Nov. 1 in chancery, requesting it to invoke the three-judge panel. Suing in the name of state of Tennessee, I act as “relator” targeting the commissioner of revenue, David Gerregano, and the commissioner of safety, Jeff long. 

Together they operate a fraud since passage of section 139 took effect in 2002. Mr. Long creates mandatory insurance based on 139 and Gerregano bases his operation of EIVS, the Eye of Sauron, on sect. 139. He mines insurance companies’ “book of business” starting Jan. 1, 2017, to create tens of thousands of criminal cases against poor people who don’t buy car insurance.

Both are being run illegally as a shakedown of the public and essentially official misconduct. We have a state of 18,000 lawyers and not a one of them, and not a single judge, have actually read these laws to see how they operate and to discern that a scam is afoot, a stinking mass corporate capture fraud serving the insurance cartels with F$2 billion of “free premiums” every year.

Background on Judge Bryant

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.