viewtopic.php?f=48&t=9364&hilit=Tyrone&start=1320
Now, we have this from the Houston Chronicle for Saturday, December 5, 2015 (excerpts):
Yeah, well, the government might respond with "In sending Jordan back to prison, the government never expected to be punishing Jordan for filing the liens. It was merely a strategy to provide Jordan with additional free, long-term housing arrangements."Man given 10 years in prison for false liens
By Mike Glenn
A man identified by authorities as a so-called "sovereign citizen" will spend 10 years in prison for retaliating against a federal judge and a prosecutor by filing multimillion-dollar bogus liens against them after his conviction in another case.
A Houston jury convicted Tyrone Eugene Jordan, 45, in July of targeting now-retired federal judge Hayden Head and a Corpus Christi-based prosecutor, accusing the pair of owing him millions of dollars.
U.S. District Judge Gray H. Miller on Friday ordered that once Jordan completes his 10-year term in federal prison, the Houston man will spend three years on supervised release.
Jordan was upset after he was convicted in 2010 of conspiring to commit money laundry [sic] and smuggling people, according to court papers. He was given a five-year prison sentence.
After his release, Jordan began filing fraudulent liens against Head and the prosecutor [. . . . ]
Federal prosecutors identified Jordan as a "sovereign citizen" -- an assertion denied by his attorney.
[ . . . . ]
Jordan's lawyer, Richard Kuniansky, said his client never claimed to be a "sovereign citizen" or member of any anti-government group.
"He's no terrorist. He's a helpless sap writing nonsensical letters," Kuniansky said. "He's never threatened anybody."
Kuniansky called the federal retaliation case, "a waste of judicial resources." He said it would have made more sense for the judge and prosecutor to simply toss Jordan's letters "in the trash can where they belong."
He said Jordan never expected to make any money from filing the liens. It was merely a strategy to redress perceived grievances from the government that he learned behind bars....
The article concludes with another quote from Jordan's attorney:
"He [Jordan] was sentenced as if he had committed some heinous crime," Kuniansky said. "The true moral is: You don't mess with federal judges and federal prosecutors. If you do, it's not going to be a pretty sight at the end of the day."