Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Attorney client privilege? Georgia USA, corrupt justice.

"My client marches to the tune of a different drummer," - Kenneth H. Schatten, Cobb County divorce court, September, 1999; / Sniffen vs. Sniffen

"If you know of any more of those people in Kentucky who have Lear Jets, send them to me," -Kenneth Schatten, outside divorce court, September, 1999.

"Your divorce is final. I'll be sending you a check this week," - Kenneth Schatten, after divorce court, September 1999

"Judge Grubbs, Attorney Michael Broadbear and myself were at a Christmas Party last night laughing about you and your case."
- Kenneth Schatten, December, 1999 (responding to yet another call as to why he hadn't sent the check.)

Is there any hope for Georgia's citizens?

"We believe your husband murdered your son." -Kenneth Schatten, April, 1999 in his office, witness: P.I. Billy Carter




"They're trying to drive you crazy––and I know the game." E. Begley, Jr. Harrodsburg, Kentucky, 2001


4 comments:

Medawar said...

There is a test, "Geographical Provenancing", which can determine, even on the basis of old bones, where a person grew up and lived most of their life.
see:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/sussex/8357060.stm

There may be more on the Crimewatch page of the BBC website after tomorrow. It would be interesting to see where the person in your son's grave actually grew up and lived.

This test was developed to cope with the torso of a little African boy found in the river Thames after a "Muti" sacrifice designed to help a paying customer of a witch-doctor have a better life. About a dozen suspects for that, so far. All of whom are astonished and indignant that the full power of the British State has been turned on them over the death of an insignificant little boy, for whom they paid a fair enough price.

Every repository of scientific knowledge from the Atomic Weapons Research Establishment to the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew, contributed to the investigation. As a result, murderers the world over have more to fear. Sooner or later, even the FBI will join the 21st century and start using this test.

"The Earth shall reveal the blood shed upon her face, and make all murders plain."

michelle l. said...

Thank you so much for your comment. The problem is, with overwhelming evidence presented to attorney generals, district attorneys and authorities that foul play is involved, and forensics reports clearly record characteristics suggesting errors in body identification, still there is a reluctance–– even refusal for authorities to consider the evidence and open an investigation.

The question is, what does it take to encourage authorities to consider clear and obvious evidence that foul play is involved in any suspicious death?

The FBI and coroners of America might have the most modern tests, but how do honest, everyday people break through the bureaucratic barrier to get the truth?

Court order? And if that court order is attempted in a state like Georgia, what will determine the judge's decision?

Let's hope the prophesy holds true. If so, there will be more than this death to shock the world.

Medawar said...

See:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/crimewatch/appeals/index.shtml

you have to scroll through to "Sussex Headless Body" and the film describes the sort of thing that could be deduced from the isotopes in the man's bones. Ie: it associates him with a soil type for the seven years before his death, and toenail tests associate him with a different soil type for the year before his death.

The would probably be quite sufficient to differentiate Gerrard's body from someone who grew up mainly in Kentucky, or Georgia, for example.

The reason why parts of England test the same as the German/Dutch border is because it's the same geological formation, which dives under the North Sea and comes up again. Which is also why you can grow "Champagne" in Kent.

But North Carolina and Virgina not the same as Kentucky and certainly not Georgia, which has some very distinctive soils; more like Rwanda than neighbouring American states.

michelle l. said...

It's fascinating, but It doesn't matter whether they tested, if they can falsify results, which is done in this country. It has been done in my case in several medical areas, and with the dogs and veterinary statements. There is an underlying mafia here that can alter any outcome, and some would say it's the CIA.

I say it's the mafia, maybe with a little help from some rogue, dishonest, but experienced CIA agents, and "bent" cops.

When in December I received word my son had "killed himself" in Alabama, word from my attorney at that time, George C. Childs, was delivered the body would be cremated.

Cremated? I thought back a few months to "Grandpa's" my father-in-law's death.

He had phoned my husband and said, "Gerry I don't want to live anymore, I'm in pain. Take care of your mother." And then a week later she called and said, "He's dead!!" They said it was a heart attack. At the time I thought it might have been suicide.

But when we went to Grandpa's Matthews, NC funeral, his body wasn't there. And strange nobody came from Long Island to the funeral.

At our wedding there had been 30 or so family members from New York. At his funeral were the Catholic priest, his three children, grand children and a couple N.C. neighbors. That's all!

So, his widow said the urn of ashes would be taken to Long Island and buried in the family grave yard in the spring, but it never happened. She kept the ashes on the fireplace mantle.

My family didn't believe in cremation, and his family was devout Catholic. I'd never heard of any of them speak of cremation in all the years we were married.

I was suspicious of all of it, even the untimely death of Gerard J. Sniffen, Sr. ("Grandpa") And so at that time I knew the only way to find out what they've really done would be through exhumation.

So I demanded my son's remains be buried and not cremated.

The problem is, you have to spend a TON of money and get a judge to allow exhumation and identification. The money wasn't the problem at the time I was considering it. But even then after all I'd been through with false medical diagnoses, and false arrests, could I even trust the results?

It would just be another way for them to take money and then do nothing, which seems to be a part of this little game they're playing. One of the reasons they spanned states with the death, funeral and burial they knew well it would take lawyers able tp practice in three states to track anything down. EXPENSIVE!

The problem is in this country it doesn't matter what the evidence is, or what the facts are, a judge can do anything he wants to do.

And I knew I'd lose, even in my hometown of Roanoke, where my son, Gerard J. Sniffen, III body is SAID TO BE buried beside my grandparents.

Attorney Gatewood Galbraith, whom I had hired for the exhumation, said it best, "You have no lawsuits. There's too much money against you."

I've never found out whose money it was and who all was getting paid.