Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Law School Letter/ Greenville

Gene Chapman
P. O. Box 295545
Lewisville, Texas 75029

January 3, 2012

XXXXXXX Dean
XXXXXXXSchool of Law
XXXXXXXXXXXXX

Dear Dr. XXXXXXX:

As I am preparing to apply to your law school, I want to address the possibility that I carry a "wreckless endangerment of myself" misdemeanor conviction in Greenville, South Carolina. You see, I am a committed Gandhian, and between April, 2003 thru April, 2004, I did 123 days of combined fasting on behalf of what has become the Ron Paul Agenda. (I have interacted with members of the Gandhi family, been quoted on the front page of "The New York Times" twice, and I even run the Mahatma Gandhi Global Library and Book Exchange with input from about 1,300 Gandhian intellectuals, students and activists from the around the world, just to set the stage for my role in what has become the Tax Honesty Movement, the Tea Party Movement and the Occupy Wall Street Movement.)

During one of my fasts in Austin, Texas, in 2003 or 2004, my FBI handler, Special Agent MXXXe VXXXXXXXr, called me on the phone one night and ridiculed me for not dying, saying, "We know you're not gonna fast to death." The fact is that I began to lose mental faculty and thus internal control of the first Austin fast about the 37th day, ending it on the 40th day, so there was a good bit of truth to his ridicule. I began immediately to study other Gandhian tactics and Duc Quang's auto cremation tactic in Vietnam came to mind.

In January, 2005, I was discussing "self immolation" on the Internet that could be done in front of an IRS Building in Greenville, South Carolina, aware that "self immolation" includes "fasts unto death" and a broad range of lesser tactics that also include "auto cremation" but that do not necessitate auto cremation. The Greenville Police Department's view was that I planned to auto cremate that special day, so they pulled me over on the way to the IRS building and placed me in a mental hospital for 36 days of evaluation. It was determined in the month long evaluation that I was depressed from my long fight with the IRS and very committed to my views; but otherwise, I was fine. Dr. CXXXXXn, my hospital psychiatrist, told me that the Fed's were gonna bury me in a mental hospital next time, if I continued my aggressive tactics against the IRS, aware that they could find nothing wrong with me. (Arun Gandhi, Mahatma Gandhi's grandson, told me earlier in my protesting to expect this type of action against Gandhian tactics.)

After the 36 days, I was transferred to the Greenville County Jail for a 28 day sentence and a court hearing on the last day. I was not provided legal council, as I'd requested. And after meeting several inmates in the county jail who had been forgotten in the system as much as 18 months past their sentence, they claimed, I opted out of a jury trial that would have been another month away for a judge only trial.

The judge explained in the court proceeding that the police officer accusing me of a propane leak in my RV had been his fishing buddy for 28 years. I explained that when I bought the RV in 2001 that I'd spent about 20 minutes trying to light the propane stove by turning every possible valve and that I have never had so much as a whiff of propane in that truck. I said, I knew that propane tank to be bone dry, so I silently concluded that I was being railroaded into a conviction with no legal council, under the duress of being forgotten in the county jail and with stated aggressive intent against me by the Fed's, who wanted me "controlled," according to Dr. CXXXXXXn.

There was a smell in my RV, but it was from stain that I had put on some wood for my then pastor's book shelf project. I carried the stained wood from his office to his home the weekend before I was picked up by the police and had not aired out the RV over the Sunday between.

I've made an effort to check my police record, but I came up clean. I want to clear my name, if necessary, and continue my effort to move America away from the Keynesian-Marxist system of slave economics (taxation of labor, taxation of property, numbering people like cattle, etc.) toward a mix of Austrian School Economics and Gandhian Philosophy and an economy of permanence in a world of peace.

Before I get too financially involved into the law school effort, I need to know how this possible conviction might impact me at your law school and in the bar exam, etc.

Most respectfully,



Gene Chapman