Today the Indiana Judicial
Nominating Commission convened and interviewed potential candidates for the
position of Chief Justice of the Indiana Supreme Court. After publicly and privately interviewing the
candidates, the Commission chose Justice Loretta H. Rush to be the next Chief
Justice of the Indiana Supreme Court.
This is the same Justice who wrote a Supreme Court decision stating that
a defense attorney can waive a person’s constitutionally protected right to
free speech. Justice Rush also wrote that
taking advantage of a prosecution’s weak case or argument, by not raising
issues on behalf of the prosecution could waive constitutionally protected rights. And now Justice Rush sits on top of the
Indiana Judicial System.
Newly appointed Indiana Supreme
Court Chief Justice Loretta H. Rush ruled that someone can be convicted for
exercising a constitutionally protected freedom if the lawyer of the accused
waives the defendant’s right to exercise that protected activity. Sound odd? It should. Justice Rush wrote that my public defender’s
“strategy” in doing nothing to instruct the jury on the principle that a person
cannot be criminally convicted for defamation of character, made “it quite
possible that the impermissible criminal-defamation theory formed at least part
of the basis for the jury’s guilty verdicts, and the general verdict cannot
indicate otherwise.” Justice Rush
acknowledged that it was “quite possible” I may have been convicted of
intimidation based on constitutionally protected speech. Rather than remand the case back to trial to
ensure the First Amendment of the United States Constitution was not used as a
grounds for a criminal conviction, Justice Rush began rationalizing how it is
possible for someone to go to prison for exercising their constitutional
rights. Justice Rush wrote,
“Requesting instructions on actual
malice would have called the State’s attention to the distinction it repeatedly
overlooked between threatening the targets’ reputations under Indiana Code
section 35-45-2-1(c)(6)–(7) and threatening their safety under subsections
(c)(1)–(3).”
Rush went on to write the following
about what she perceives to be the trial strategy of my public defender Bryan
Barrett,
“Indeed, the theme throughout
[Barrett’s] closing argument was that his speech was all protected political
opinion, with no proof that he intended any of it to be threatening.”
Justice Rush described my public
defender’s non-action in properly instructing the jury on the difference
between threats to reputation and threats to safety as “strategy” yet referred
to the prosecution’s non-action, in its failure to distinguish the difference
between threats to reputation and threats to safety, as a repeated oversight. Rush wrote, “In effect, that approach sought
to exploit the prosecutor’s improper reliance on “criminal defamation” to the
defense’s advantage.” Rush somehow
determined it was advantageous to me for the prosecution NOT to inform the jury
nor the defendant exactly what conduct was considered criminal. Even more, Rush claimed my rights to free
speech were waived because my public defender did not explain to the jury which
of my actions were protected by free speech and which were illegal. Justice Loretta Rush effectively claimed that
my public defender waived my rights to free speech because Bryan Barrett did
not tell the jury that his client was guilty.
Rush rationalized her decision with the following,
“In effect, that approach sought to
exploit the prosecutor’s improper reliance on “criminal defamation” to the
defense’s advantage.”
Not only did Justice Loretta H.
Rush place the burden on a defendant to do the prosecutor’s job in instructing the
defendant and the jury on what actions by the defendant the prosecution
believes to be criminal, she rationalized her decision by stating,
“Defendant demonstrated significant
sophistication about free-speech principles long before trial in a motion to
dismiss these charges, Supp. App. 1–4, and confirmed it by his post-verdict,
pre-sentencing blog posts, Sent. Ex. 1 at 2–3.”
First it should be noted that
Justice Rush’s above claim is false.
When my public defender, Bryan Barrett, refused to meet with me to
discuss my case prior to trial, I filed three different motions on October 3,
2011, an hour before trial, to try to protect my constitutional right to free
speech, fair trial, right to an attorney, etc… Despite pleading to the court
that Bryan Barrett refused to call me, meet with me, provide me with evidence,
discuss my explanation of events related to my case, or even provide an
explanation of which of my actions constituted a crime, at no point did the
trial court, Indiana Court of Appeals or Indiana Supreme Court ever investigate
or even inquire into whether my statements about my public defender were
true. Justice Rush even acknowledged the
grand jury indictments were vague and compared my case to the case of Bachellar
v. Maryland, where there was no particular act or statement that constituted
intimidation. Rush wrote,
“Like Bachellar, the grand jury’s
indictments against Defendant here do not allege any particular act or
statement as constituting intimidation, instead alleging generally that his
conduct as a whole “between August 1, 2007 and February 27, 2011” (as to the
Doctor) and “between August 1, 2009 and February 27, 2011” (as to the Judge)
was “intended to place [them] in fear of retaliation for a prior lawful act.”
App. 22, 24. Nothing on the face of the indictments, then, creates confusion
between protected or unprotected acts as the basis for conviction. Instead,
like Bachellar, any confusion arises only because of how the case was argued
and how the jury was instructed.”
An important component Rush failed
to mention was the timeframe of events in the Bachellar case. Justice Rush claimed our cases were similar
because the charges did not allege any particular act of intimidation where the
prosecution relied on unspecified acts in a certain period of time. My non-defined “acts” that allegedly
constituted intimidation occurred somewhere between August 1, 2007 and February
27, 2011; a period spanning 3 years, 6 months, and 26 days. In the Bachellar decision by the United
States Supreme Court, Justice Brennan wrote,
“The prosecution arose out of a
demonstration protesting the Vietnam War which was staged between 3 and shortly
after 5 o'clock on the afternoon of March 2, 1966, in front of a United States
Army recruiting station located on a downtown Baltimore Street.”
In Bachellar, the defendant was
aware that the alleged crime occurred roughly in a two hour timeframe, on March
2, 1966, and the event occurred in front of an army recruiting station on a
downtown Baltimore Street. In comparing
my case to Bachellar, Justice Rush stated that as a defendant, I knew what
actions of mine over the course of 3.5 years constituted a crime. She supported her claim by referencing the
motions filed on the day of trial and by my post-verdict and pre-sentencing
blog posts, which were written after
the trial. Justice Rush determined my
guilt based on evidence never presented to the jury. With that being said, in Bachellar, Justice
Brennen wrote,
“Thus, since petitioners'
convictions may have rested on an unconstitutional ground, they must be set
aside.”
In my case, Indiana Supreme Court
Justice Loretta H. Rush agreed that it was “quite possible” that my convictions
rested on an unconstitutional ground yet she upheld my convictions because my
public defender did not tell the jury what he felt the prosecutor felt was a
violation of law. Justice Rush claimed
that since my public defender went with an “all or nothing strategy,” he waived
my constitutional rights because he made the argument that all my statements
were protected. Rush believed my public
defender had an obligation to assist the prosecution and tell the jury which of
his client’s actions were against the law.
Justice Loretta H. Rush believes
United States citizens can have their rights to free speech waived if their
attorneys do not represent their clients in the “correct” manner or if the
attorneys try to take advantage of deficiencies in the prosecutor’s case
against their clients. This doesn't even
take into account how Justice Rush ruled legal gun ownership may be considered
as a factor of whether a person is likely to be more dangerous than a non-gun
owner. Justice Rush also punished me for exercising my Fifth Amendment right to
not testify in my own trial claiming it was part of the trial strategy that
waived the same rights that were protected by the United States Supreme Court
in the Bachellar case. Rush wrote,
“His decision not to testify, thus
letting the case hinge solely on the sufficiency of the State’s proof, was also
consistent with an “all or nothing” defense rather than the actual-malice
defense he now says he should have had.”
In the courts of the United States
of America, the burden is on the State to prove someone’s guilt. Justice Rush claimed the prosecution
“repeatedly overlooked” the difference between threats to reputation and
threats to safety. Rush claimed the
indictments were non-specific. Rush said the prosecutor improperly relied on
the “criminal defamation” argument. By
her own account, Justice Rush acknowledges the prosecution’s argument against
me was vague and unconstitutional yet I somehow waived my rights to
constitutional protections because my attorney did not assist the prosecution
in their case against me and because I chose not to testify because I felt the
prosecution’s vague, criminal defamation argument failed to meet the burden of
proof for a criminal conviction. Justice
Rush explained the public defender’s and my “strategy” based on what she
believed was our keen knowledge of First Amendment law, which happened to be
approximately 15 pages after she corrected the Indiana Court of Appeals for not
understanding the First Amendment when they issued a decision in my case in
January 2013.
This November there is a retention
election for Justice Loretta H. Rush.
The above is every reason why people should go to the polls and vote to
have her removed from her judicial seat.
Either Justice Rush lacks the education and intellectual reasoning to
understand and interpret the Constitution of the United States of America or
she maliciously violated an oath she swore to uphold. Speak out, show up, and support the US
Constitution this fall. Vote Rush off
the Bench.
For more information, check out my
Petition for Rehearing and
Motion for Disqualification of Justice Loretta Rush; which were both denied, without explanation, by the Indiana Supreme Court. Please note there was never any mention of violence on my part anywhere throughout the grand jury process, criminal trial or at the Indiana Court of Appeals. Justice Rush stated I had a history of violence despite there never being any accusations of violent activity.