Legal Question in Criminal Law in California

If a community has gone to far with someone they’ve chosen to engage by harassing, stalking, invading that persons privacy, and torturing psychologically, physically, financially, and socially with the intent to destroy that person in every way possible when that person received no due process before their biased judgement, what options would that person have in order to fight back legally given the fact that this started over 14 years ago over a bad choice that the person had made but was willing to do the time for that crime back then which was 5 years? That person had an attorney at the time that can verify that the person tried to cooperate and was willing to do the 5 years that the fbi said they were facing. Over the years the person has suffered through cruel and unusual “social research manipulation/punishment/justice” and is still suffering through it over 14 years later for no real good reason especially given the fact that it’s not legal to torture anyone irregardless of what they are accused/convicted/charged with doing anywhere.


Asked on 7/17/19, 8:57 am

1 Answer from Attorneys

Terry A. Nelson Nelson & Lawless

1. A 'community' can do nothing, and can not be sued; only individuals may act and be responsible for those actions, and then only if proven to be legally recognizable as 'unlawful' or harmful.

2. Such historically reaching, heavily emotion laden, conclusory complaints are not proof or evidence. Legal causes of action and facts would have to each be proven by credible and admissible evidence to be 'legally recognizable' injuries, done within the applicable Statutes of Limitations periods, in order for there to be valid grounds for any timely legal claim / lawsuit.

If you have any real facts and corroborating evidence of harmful acts within the last one to two years, you could write up a factual based statement identifying the actors and actions, and then consult with a PI attorney local to you for an opinion.

You need to pay someone to tell you the truth, not just take your money and sympathize with your 'sad' story.

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Answered on 7/18/19, 12:57 pm


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