Restore It ALL!

The fight for what's right.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

The Honor of Kings Is To Search Out A Matter Pr 25:2



So just whose land is it? The PVA records show Vernon & Juanita Smith as owners. The problem arises however with the search warrant used to raid their home. This is an important starting point for our search. Let's take a look at this Garrard County Property Card and then we'll take a look at the search warrant.

If, as you are reading this post, you have questions about Vernon & Juanita Smith's asset forfeiture case please ask them. At the bottom of each post is a comment button. Click there, type in your question or comments, and we will do our best to post the evidence.




The Owner: Vernon & Juanita Smith
The property: Lots 27, 28, 29 Delbar Ln, Lancaster, Ky 40444
Document printed: 8/24/2009
Original purchase date: 07/1/1992
Original purchase price: $31,500



The Owner: Vernon & Juanita Smith
The property: Lots 27, 28, 29 Delbar Ln, Lancaster, Ky 40444
Document printed: 8/24/2009
Original purchase date: 07/1/1992
Original purchase price: $31,500





From the search warrant we collect other valuable information for our search.

Who: Target Oil, Mike Smith
Where: 452 Delbar Ln, Lancaster, Ky 40444
When: August 3, 2007
What: Eastern District of Kentucky

Note: there are two rectangular boxes with highlighted notes that are not part of the original document. They were added to point out information for document packages that have been sent to an array of government offices requesting an thorough investigation. 

The:Problem:
        -Target Oil's offices are not located at 452 Delbar Ln.
        -Mike Smith does not reside, nor work out of 452 Delbar Ln. 
        -Vernon Smith resides there along with his wife but neither own or are employed by Target Oil.

The comment button is just below.
What's your reaction to seeing these legal documents?
What other questions do you have?
Let's search out this matter so that we can claim a king's honor.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

An Appeal to the Judge

            If you are new to this blog you may want to begin by reading, "Mr. & Mrs. Smith" for information regarding their case.  Please write prayers and words of encouragement in the comment section of the blog at the bottom of each post.



            An array of mason jars line the picnic table on the deck. Juice, their Jack Russel terrier, is sprawled out in a wooden rocker not far from where birds eat his dog food. At the top of the handcrafted steps leading to the Smith’s back door, I look over the railing to see rows of corn two foot high. Panning the grounds, I take in the picturesque sight and undeniable evidence of men who till their land; a metal gate, a barn, rows of pole beans, cabbage, kale and tomatoes abound. The grass is freshly mown and the mid-June air is crisp as dusk approaches. With pen in hand, my notebook and a camera, my intent is to interview Mr. Smith regarding the asset forfeiture case. It’s an interview that will not happen, not tonight anyway.
            Slouched over the left side of his beige leather recliner, Mr. Smith heaves into a waste basket purposefully lined and within arms reach.  The focus changes for everyone, abruptly. Mike straps a blood pressure device on his dad’s wrist. “His heart rate is 41! It’s the stress. I told him about our meeting with the attorney today. He just can’t take it.” Mike’s voice cracks with emotion as he commandeers a rescue, “Bring me wet wash cloths, he’s burning up.” Mrs. Smith, in a wheelchair, slumps over the back of a matching recliner.




            Fighting back tears, I wonder if this is the end. Am I too late to hear Mr. Smith’s story? Several other family members arrive, but Vernon, once stabilized, gave little heed to their presence. I didn’t need an interview question to determine who the Smith’s caretaker was. Watching his son Mike, wiping his forehead, arms and chest, as he fought back his own tears and fears, was enough for me. Later, when the medical scare subsided, I knew how crucial the timing had been. I also knew, the ailing Mr. Smith was particular about whose help he would receive.
            Today, Mike was called again, this time by his sister, to persuade his dad to go with her to the doctor. I found out later, Vernon Smith would prefer a visit with his guineas over medical attention. “Mike will take me when he gets back,” he declared as he pulled himself onto a golf cart and rode away. The doctor’s appointment would have to wait until Mr. Smith’s attendant-of-choice returned from the attorney’s office.
            I was introduced, once before, to Vernon Smith when I first joined the Halcombs (Ford and Bonita) on a visit in January 2011. We came to pray. We came for Bible study and we came because Mike’s wife, Cede, is Ford’s niece. Weekly, the Halcombs drove the thirty plus miles holding a Bible study for Mike and Shaun while under house arrest. On many occasions, I accompanied them. For hours we poured over the scriptures and poured out our hearts to God. With twenty years on the mission field, I was accustomed to times of refreshing from the Word of God. But honestly, I was surprised as I monitored the Smith’s attention each time we sat around the kitchen table. You see, I’ve led Bible studies before, holding someone’s attention for forty-five minutes is a major challenge. Yet, they gathered around that table like little chicks under their mother’s wing for hours as Ford or I expounded the Word.
            The most telling evidence I’ve accumulated about Mike & Shaun Smith, I found reflected in each Smith family member.  The Smiths, all of them, never pass up an opportunity to say thank you. The gratefulness of this family as they face an ordeal of this magnitude should be introduced as evidence in this case. I’ve not calculated the total number of hours I’ve spent in the last six months around this family but I know first hand as an observer, by nature, the little things. Things like, their story never changed. Questions we asked in the beginning still get the same response today. There was one question, however, that I’ve asked and continue to ask. Again, it arises from my people-watching observations. How have the Smiths maintained such solid relationships under the hounding pressure of legal battles?   
            With each visit my curiosity has been peaked as I observe Vernon & Juanita, Mike and Cede, Shaun and Tracy, Chris and his wife. I look at them and I ask, what kind of super glue are they using to hold their marriages together. I’ve seen no fed-up-to-here fights of frustration, no bickering or squabbles. These are character traits that are as entrenched as the root systems of the trees on this property. I’ve seen no name calling, faultfinding, blaming or gaming amongst them. When no one is looking, Mike Smith is a principled man. He is a man of the land.
            I look out over the carefully maintained acreage of their land and I’m reminded of my own father with his third grade education. He loved his land. He was raised on a farm. He didn’t know anything except farming. After years as a tenant farmer, he bought his own land and built his own house. His life was the farm. When he and my mother divorced in the 80’s, he was forced to sell the land he worked so hard to develop. I thought it would be the end of him. That’s what I’ve come to learn about Mike Smith and his dad too. These men build houses and barns, just like my dad, with their own sweat. That accomplishment was a badge of honor for country folk like us. This manner of man, men like my dad, men like Vernon Smith and his son Mike, are men of homegrown stature. Men who pull stuck vehicles from the holler with chains and tractors and send basket loads of fresh vegetables to neighbors.
            I’ve travelled to twenty nations of the world to preach the gospel of Jesus Christ. I’ve been betrayed by ministers and churchgoers, those who profess they know the Lord, and by those who don’t. I’ve ministered to prisoners, drug addicts and influential people in high places that have tried to fool me into believing they are something they are not. Call it my homegrown upbringing, if you want, but I know when someone’s trying to pull the wool over my eyes. I’m certain you’ve seen, and can readily identify, them too. This one thing I know about Mike Smith. He’s a man, just like you. A man who’s made mistakes, more out of ignorance than intent. I understand, from court transcripts, you admitted to making a mistake too. It was last year, June 24th, 2010. It was the day, John Walls became a millionaire, and the Honorable Judge Hood, as transcribed by the court said, “it’s not so much that I made a mistake, it’s that I admitted I made a mistake.”
            Mike Smith made a mistake when he hired his first attorney. Derek Gordan made mistakes presenting this case. From what I gathered at the last hearing, the prosecution has made their own mistakes. Please, don’t let it be said, the Honorable Judge Hood made another mistake.
            Let principle, Godly principle, rule your decisions regarding these matters. 

“God’s verdict is on the lips of a king; his mouth should not err in judgment.” Pr 16:10
                                                      
  

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Mr. & Mrs. Smith



On a two-lane rural road in Lancaster sits a modest home on twenty-eight acres. Lined with a white rail fence, the property speaks a message of diligent labor, boasting a vegetable garden, cherry trees, bee hives, black berry bushes and an array of farm implements. The 1992 deed reveals Vernon & Juanita Smith as owners.

Mr. Smith, who turns 88 in July, stares out the living room window in easy reach of his nebulizer. He is a survivor, his childhood indelibly marked by the Great Depression. He worked in the coalmines of Letcher County earning paltry wages and the dreaded black lung disease.


His wife, Juanita, welcomes us with a smile, her words barely discernable, the effect of three strokes. The Smiths are no strangers to adversity having weathered many storms during their marriage. This Father’s Day, Mr. & Mrs Smith who require round the clock care, are enduring, yet another, tumultuous battle, their land and life savings at stake.


In August of 2007 men cradling machine guns invaded their family home. Panic-stricken, they reached for breathing devices, unable to fathom, nor stop, the intrusion. Held at gunpoint as unmasked strangers ransacked their belongings, Vernon was forced to navigate a flight of stairs to unlock the home safe.  With garbled words, Mrs. Smith offered her guests the watermelon on their kitchen table, unwilling to allow the bandits to confiscate her deeply rooted southern hospitality. An hour later, the watermelon  was untouched but the intruders helped themselves to the Smith's life-savings. In the ensuing four years  urgent medical care has been put on hold, their only income being the meager black lung and social security checks. Earlier this year, the Smith’s received a breath of hope when they hired a new attorney. The gang of thieves came to the bargaining table offering to settle. But, weren't willing to make full restitution. A different saga unfolds next door as Father’s Day approaches. His son, Mike, and grandson, Shaun, are under house arrest.
The metal entrance gate at the neighboring house has no button-pushing entry maneuvers nor announcements over an elaborate speakerphone broadcasting arrival, just a simple chain, easily accessible from either side. If you were expecting opulence you’ll be disappointed.  The breezeway hosts an array of rocking chairs, work boots and yard implements, convincing evidence that no snubbed-nose highfaluting city-slickers live in this stately, yet moderate, two-story home. These are down-home folks, the ones that invite you in the back door offering a glass of ice tea or lemonade. Inside the back door, a window air conditioner cools the kitchen, another thought provoking anomaly. The occupants, Mike and Cede Smith, along with their son, Shaun are facing a raging battle. The real war, you’ll discover, has more to do with honor and honesty, traits instilled in the Smiths for generations, than it does the court battle that has already robbed the family of seven years of their lives and mocked the unalienable rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness promised by our fore-fathers. The father-honoring character of three generations of Smiths is being challenged in an unimaginable way as Father’s Day draws near.
This Father’s Day four Smith men, spanning three generations, will contend for the Smith name, their character, and their liberty. Federal agents were the culprits who invaded Vernon Smith’s home four years ago. Vernon & Juanita Smith are the legal owners of both houses and the 28 acres of land, yet the search warrant had someone else's name.



Did they ask for identification? Did they verify the owner of the property? A signed statement by the Postal Inspector assured the warrant issuing judge of accurate information. But was it? A trip to the court house convinces us otherwise. Is anyone concerned that they, Vernon and Juanita, committed no crimes? Does the government have a right to seize an innocent couple's assets and include them as part of the plea deal for someone else? It's unimaginable but it's happening here right before our eyes in Kentucky. How can things like this be happening? When will it stop? Who will stand up against the injustice?

Do you believe it? Do you need more evidence?





Statement 
Of
 Nadine Strossen, President, 
American Civil Liberties Union 
On
 The Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act
 before The
 Committee on the Judiciary 
Of  The 
United States House of Representatives
 June 11, 1997

http://www.aclu.org/drug-law-reform/nadine-strossens-congressional-testimony-civil-asset-forfeiture-reform

 Will you lift your voice with us? Post your comments and pass this story on.

Do you know someone or some organization that we need to contact? Do you know someone fighting a similar battle? Please let us know. We will continue to tell the Smith's story until they RESTORE IT ALL! Otherwise, the American Dream may become the American Scream.

I'm asking you to forward this link to a minimum of twenty people on your address list. In three days, most people in The United States of America will have the message.  

This is more frightening than the 9/11 attacks where 3000 lives were lost on one day compared 5000 lives ruined every day through asset forfeiture. Which is more heinous? Does that make you want to scream? It should.  Join us in making a mighty noise across this land, "RESTORE IT ALL!"