Judge Roy Bean wrote:David Merrill wrote:The very name you guys give me is indicative of your dissassociation from reality.
And this new reality your mind has constructed is something rational people should accept?
Why? Because someone with what could turn out to be behavioral and cognitive disorders says so?
Really, David. When it gets down to it most of what you blather on about is truly gibberish in the real world.
The pose ain't gonna work dude. You can play name games all you want and chain all kinds of words and sentences together but it won't shield you unless someone a lot smarter than you determines you aren't competent to defend yourself. Hey - institutional custody ain't any walk in the park but believe me but it at least has some protection from dedicated predators and from my experience there are ways, given time, to restore some semblance of a functional, self-actualized life as long as alcohol or chemical dependencies don't derail the process.
That's a real challenge for people with your odd kind of delusional disorder. The very people that could keep you out of hard core imprisonment you seem to have to play games with as if you have some kind of intellectual advantage over them.
I go back to something I've posited before - it seems to me there is no single David Merrill Van Pelt. If a professional had enough time and you'd cooperate the least bit I think they could help you. Any progress in that regard would also help any number of people you've sent off into the weeds with your Internet fixation.
It may not be insanity, BTW. In fact in your case, it may be a construct you've assimilated for your own legal pretense.
Does the phrase "too clever for your own good" ring a bell here?
Get help and stop trying to lure others into your fantasy world. If the help you can get in Colorado is free it's not the best you can get but the people I know who work with people in your situation aren't the gestapo. By and large they are seriously dedicated to their role in protecting people with disorders from being taken advantage of by the legal system.
Of course if it's just a scam you're running, you'd never admit to that and you'll have to face whatever comes your way.
The court order said that for me to protect the bond from going into collections, I would need to meet with Dr. John BERMUDEZ at a certain address at a certain time. The order commands the doctor to conduct the evaluation and mentions nothing about consent because the presumption is that the order carries the full force and effect of law. Ergo the first thing the doctor ascertains is whether or not I have been arraigned - and he quickly discerns that I have not yet been arraigned. So the consent is required as an arraignment tool - Ergo the title
Psychiatric Evaluation as an Arraignment Tool. But enough from the black-robed wannabees. We have I believe Judge Roy Bean, a real-life judge now... At least he sounds convincing over the years.
The most simple defense, not to traverse into the realm of the bar associations of the world, is now a scam? Well you can buy into that but you will not understand the video. I had excellent council with somebody who grew up in state administered mental health care professionally as both his parents were involved too. And I was praised about how I handled the matter too, by the same. And JRB fails to mention that as I left the courthouse I held the door open for SAMELSON returning from lunch with his mountain bike. I had just filed the R4C (Refusal for Cause) on the Order and was carrying the new falsified RoA (Register of Action) in my hands. Funny how the postal carrier was likely fired for not delivering that R4C to the federal repository.* But my point here is that it was moments after I refused to even say
You are welcome (ex parte hearings) to SAMELSON, as he would be reading the Memorandum accompanying the R4C on the Order for psychiatric evaluation and probably discovering I had the falsified RoA in my hands as I passed him (assuming he did not spot in in my hand); Well, about that time he addresses a letter directed to -
David Merrill of the Van Pelt family.
http://www.box.net/shared/static/dx6n6meiql.pdf
http://www.box.net/shared/static/ji0di35mj5.pdf
http://www.box.net/shared/static/uapu3roz3l.pdf
http://www.box.net/shared/static/4jzdhqeytq.pdf -
this one with the envelope.
It would seem that JRB still insists on calling me David Merrill Van Pelt or some such legal or full name variation thereof? Well here is a reality check for you - SAMELSON is the one pretending to be in authority to judge the matter - not Judge Roy Bean. So who exactly do you Quatlosers expect me to take seriously?
I mean really! This notion that the Statute of Limitation is actually granting prosecutors more rights, instead of protecting my right to a speedy trial may be true, but the perspective is completely subjective opinion. I have not cited the statute at all in any relationship to the case because like I have pointed out already that is just confirming authority to attorneys to adjudicate the statute constitutional or not. It comes from an unbonded general assembly and therefore I will not be calling on it any more than to assert my own subjective opinion that it protects my right to a speedy trial in the video.
http://www.box.net/shared/static/dx6n6meiql.pdf
But here you have it on the second page of the bill. SAMELSON swore on that certified fidelity bond (fungible) the he would be granting me a speedy trial. Here is how he did it...
Article II; Bill of Rights, Section 6. Equality of justice. Courts of justice shall be open to every person, and a speedy remedy afforded for every injury to person, property or character; and right and justice should be administered without sale, denial or delay.
And when I pointed out that he denied me his promise to me, he falsified the record. And at the moment he would be discovering I would be sending his indictment for falsifying the record into the "exclusive original cognizance" of the US, he corrects my name for the record.
Regards,
David Merrill.
* At first Ellen the carrier's supervisor next to the US courthouse there in Denver explained that the carrier was saying he must have hit "2" instead of "1" after reading the bar code. That would explain it away. But it turns out the carrier did not deliver the package as marked by the court.