FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE November 12, 1997
Paul Mitchell Wins Civil Verdict
against Accountant for Embezzling $3,000
Tucson, Arizona. Paul Andrew Mitchell, Counselor at Law, federal
witness, and founder of the Supreme Law Firm and Supreme Law
School, was awarded more than $3,000 in actual damages today from
a jury of eight who agreed that Neil and Evelyn Nordbrock had
embezzled funds entrusted to their care and management.
Mitchell was invited by the Nordbrocks to change plans and
move to Tucson in late February of 1996, when they met at a
conference on common law in Albuquerque, New Mexico. A scheduled
speaker failed to show, and Mitchell was asked to address a full
audience instead. The Nordbrocks were so moved by Mitchell's
lecture, they offered him an office in Tucson, Arizona, to
continue his research there. That office was a single room,
without windows, in the administrative headquarters of the New
Life Health Center.
Soon after arriving in Tucson, Mitchell was invited to
lecture at the Elizabeth Broderick Seminars in Palmdale,
California, where Broderick claimed to have perfected huge
commercial liens against government agencies like the County of
Orange, California. Broderick even took credit for precipitating
the largest municipal bankruptcy in the history of America, when
the County of Orange floundered under Treasurer Robert Citron's
failed financial management of overly leveraged derivatives.
Broderick then issued phony bank checks against these bogus liens
to all attendees of her biweekly seminars. An estimated 5,000
people received her warrants at these seminars.
Broderick's checks were collected at FBI headquarters in Los
Angeles, California. From there, the checks were handed to a
property forfeiture team, with headquarters in the Department of
Justice. Mitchell has recently filed a formal OFFER TO PROVE
RACKETEERING in the Superior Court of the State of Arizona,
alleging that DOJ aided and abetted Broderick's racket, by using
the phony checks to entrap Broderick's naive seminar attendees.
Broderick has since been convicted of 26 counts of bank fraud and
mail fraud. All her co-defendants were likewise convicted.
While Mitchell was beginning to build an early foundation
for Broderick's defense, his efforts were quickly scuttled when
the Colton office rented by Adolf Hoch, a Broderick associate,
was gutted of all computer and related equipment, leaving only
the carpets and empty desks. At the same time, Mitchell was
loaned a car with tampered front brakes. A Colton auto mechanic
invited him to inspect the car, while it was on the rack and the
brake assembly was at eye level. Adolf Hoch was asked to pay for
the repairs, but he complained that the mechanic was gouging him.
At that time, Hoch was driving a new Buick Riviera worth $35,000,
and the estimated brake repairs cost less than $500.
A related case was also heating up while Mitchell was in
Colton, attempting to assemble a major defense strategy for
Broderick and her co-defendants. The New Life Health Center in
Tucson, Arizona, was served with a grand jury subpoena for all
business records. The general manager of New Life, Eugene A.
Burns, had used several Broderick warrants, "flushing New Life
with much needed cash," as Adolf Hoch had confided to Mitchell,
on one of several trips from Broderick's San Bernardino office to
the Essex Hotel in Palmdale, California. En route to Palmdale,
Hoch was speeding at 90 mph, and nearly missed a small car as it
crossed the highway, failing to anticipate the high speed of
Hoch's new Buick in the dark desert. Hoch made a habit of
holding the wheel with one hand and a cell phone in the other,
while weaving recklessly through rush hour traffic.
Mitchell returned to Tucson and turned his attention to an
aggressive attack on the grand jury subpoena, and on the Internal
Revenue Service which had initiated DOJ's attempt to obtain New
Life's records. With strong encouragement from Neil Nordbrock,
Mitchell conceived a powerful defense which was recently
published in the Supreme Law Library, an Internet-based archive
of all key cases Mitchell has litigated as a Counselor at Law.
That library is available at Internet URL http://supremelaw.org.
To facilitate court appearances, Mitchell was appointed to
the office of New Life's Vice President for Legal Affairs, at the
recommendation of New Life's accountant, Neil Nordbrock, and that
appointment was recognized, and placed into evidence, by United
States District Judge John M. Roll in Tucson. With this
authority, Mitchell wrote a flurry of 25 pleadings which
overwhelmed the federal judge and sent the IRS and DOJ running
for cover.
One of those pleadings exposed, for the first time, what
Mitchell now calls "The Kick-Back Racket," a defunct federal
program called Performance Management and Recognition System,
which awards illegal cash payments to prosecutors and judges, for
getting indictments from grand juries against tax protestors.
Mitchell all but proved that a perjury racket was, and still is,
rampant within the DOJ. On a motion by the corrupt prosecutor,
Robert L. Miskell, the federal judge then struck all of
Mitchell's 25 pleadings, after obstructing their delivery by the
U.S. Postal Service to the federal grand jury convened in that
case. Mitchell even used Registered U.S. Mail, but the return
receipts were signed by Judge Roll's secretary, instead of the
grand jury foreperson.
During the course of studying New Life's records, Mitchell
also discovered that his appointment to the office of Vice
President had been faked by a rubber stamp trustee. In a very
confidential memo to Neil Nordbrock, long-time accountant for New
Life, Mitchell predicted that a fictitious trustee would cause
enormous legal problems for New Life, if it was not corrected
immediately. Nordbrock never answered Mitchell's memo on this
subject, and observed passively as Eugene A. Burns, a former
racketball champion, fell into a full blown panic when the FBI
put pressure on Burns to jettison Mitchell from the case.
Mitchell was abruptly terminated from New Life one month after
Nordbrock received this confidential memo. Mitchell concluded
from this that Nordbrock had conceived and/or maintained the
fictitious trustee, from the beginning.
The Pima County Justice Court, in which Mitchell sued
Nordbrock, refused to allow this confidential memorandum into
evidence, in addition to four full boxes of other documents. The
judge in that case, Walter U. Weber, also decided to disallow
Mitchell's claim that the Nordbrocks had breached a contract for
legal services Mitchell performed for them after his wrongful
termination from New Life. Weber ruled that Mitchell had
practiced law by providing legal services to the Nordbrocks.
Mitchell plans to appeal that portion of the case, to make
precedent based in part on the original 13th Amendment, and the
Contract Clause in the U.S. Constitution. Mitchell also
maneuvered Weber into a bona fide controversy over the provisions
invoked by Weber's oath of office to support that Constitution.
Neil Nordbrock had retained Mitchell to commence a quiet
title action against the IRS, but Mitchell referred that case to
Vern Holland in Tulsa, Oklahoma, a recognized quiet title expert,
after Mitchell was invited to defend the Montana Freeman on
location in Billings, Montana. Mitchell highly recommended
Holland to the Nordbrocks, who did retain Holland to prepare the
initial complaint to quiet title to a business office once owned
by the Nordbrocks, but now forfeited to the IRS for unpaid
federal income taxes. Neil Nordbrock had tendered a bogus
Montana Freeman warrant to the IRS for the sum of $398,000,
during the month before the Albuquerque conference.
Upon returning from Montana, Mitchell learned that the
Nordbrocks were about to switch attorneys once again, and retain
a local Tucson bar member, after complaining bitterly and often
to Mitchell about the bar monopoly practices. The Nordbrocks
then paid the new attorney's retainer with money they embezzled
from Mitchell. That $3,000 was all the money which Mitchell had
in the world, at that point in time, and the embezzlement put
enormous pressure on Mitchell just to survive. A private
mediator even had to loan Mitchell money, just to buy food.
Other generous Americans have quietly helped Mitchell climb out
of the deep hole caused by DOJ's outright economic retaliation.
Neil Nordbrock has already been convicted on two felony
counts of falsifying federal income tax returns, and a lifetime
injunction prevents him from preparing tax returns. Evelyn
Nordbrock, his wife, makes a living doing tax returns for Neil's
former clients, despite their low opinion of the IRS. Clearly,
they have mixed feelings about Mitchell's admitted plans, and
highly successful efforts thus far, to dismantle the IRS. Evelyn
Nordbrock will need to find other work, if Mitchell succeeds.
Mitchell also plans to sue Eugene A. Burns for wrongful
termination, and a host of other claims arising from his practice
of refusing Mitchell's frequent legal mail, and defaming Mitchell
with obnoxious insults on the outside of refused envelopes.
Under pressure from Mitchell to subpoena Eugene A. Burns for
additional testimony, however, Walter U. Weber explained that
Burns was no longer available. Why, he did not say.
Weber had also threatened Mitchell with prison and hard
labor, during the first day of trial, because of all the
sensitive issues raised by Mitchell's voluminous pleadings.
Mitchell types 140 words per minute, and shares huge quantities
of email on the Internet. A motion to change judge was denied.
Mitchell has filed a criminal complaint against Weber anyway,
because Mitchell is a recognized federal witness under 18 U.S.C.
1513, the federal law which prohibits retaliating against any
federal witness. The penalties for violating this criminal
statute are quite severe.
Mitchell is now awaiting a ruling from a federal bankruptcy
court in Phoenix, Arizona, to lift the automatic stay on
litigation against Burns and his company, and to issue a
declaratory judgment on the validity of Mitchell's appointment to
the office of Vice President for Legal Affairs. Mitchell's
research has already uncovered numerous irregularities in the
original bankruptcy petitions by Burns and New Life, including
false appraisals of 4 rare South American macaw birds which Burns
regards as his special pets. Magoo and the other macaws
accompany Burns to and from work every day, and daily screech at
high decibels, while people are trying to work, and talk on the
telephone, in the same office space.
Burns paid Mitchell $100 per week initially, upping that to
$500 per week during the height of the grand jury litigation, but
stiffed Mitchell for over $2,000 in back pay, when Mitchell
discovered that "Sheryl Smith" is a fictitious trustee. Burns
routinely paid New Life's former attorney, James J. Everett, at a
rate of $175 per hour, before Everett upped that rate to $200 per
hour. Burns is now reported to have sued Everett for fraudulent
invoices; this report remains unconfirmed.
email: supremelawfirm@yahoo.com
website: http://supremelaw.org
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