
David Gerregano, commissioner of revenue, talks to employees of the department. (Photo DOR)
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., Thursday, March 13, 2025 — My personal pleadings to Tennessee revenue commissioner David Gerregano appeal to the 10 commandments in an attempt to waken his conscience to the evil of his “mandatory insurance” program under what my court cases dub “the Eye of Sauron.”
“I pray for you,” the letter states. “I encurage you to obtain good conscience and make use of all the instruments of law I have laid out in our case.”
The letter focuses on my first case to end Eye of Sauron and undo his illegal revocation of my 2000 Honda Odyssey minivan under color of the Tennessee financial responsibility law of 1977. I am in a second administrative case for his revoking my 1999 Toyota RAV4. I am also suing him in official capacity in chancery court in Davidson County, and in personal capacity in U.S. district court in Nashville.
With private individual donor support, I have fought since July 2023 to overturn his corrupt program, a monstrosity of oppression that hearing officer Brad Buchanan says intends to force poor people off the roads.
‘A good extraction is a reproach to him who degenerates from it’

This page is the first of a three-page letter sent Mr. Gerregano by first-class U.S. mail. He got it Tuesday or Wednesday, the envelope insisting it was a private communication.

I describe his program as “churlish and intractable policey.” I cite the 5th, 8th, 9th and 10th commandments and the prohibition from God regarding the removing of landmarks. The landmark he’s removed since Jan. 1, 2017, is the constittional right to due process and the proper operation of law upon his executive branch agency. Gov. Bill Lee, attorney general Jonathan Skrmetti and comptroller Jason Mumpower refuse to end Eye of Sauron, despite many communications.
David runs a totally personal nonprofit fighting and mercy ministry. He thanks you for checks sent directly to c/o 10520 Brickhill Lane, Soddy-Daisy, TN 37379. Also at GiveSendGo.