Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#1
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My unique hobby.
I have brought this up before. On February 25, 1976, the boy behind me told me that we were getting a substitute because Mrs. Mitchell's daughter had been murdered the night before. I told him that was a very sick joke. Denial. The substitute did eventually arrive but we remained in shock. This was the day after my birthday of 2-24-1976. This was at Earl Wooster High School in Reno, Nevada. The Northern Nevada media was on this murder very heavily for weeks creating quite a panic as Mr. Mitchell's daughter Michelle was that of two English teachers and was a nursing student at the University of Nevada, Reno. Some of my fellow Earl Wooster HS classmates were questioned as suspects. They never got to me as I did not know Michelle Mitchell and I had been celebrating my birthday that night with my family.
That weekend I went to the Washoe County Central Branch library in downtown Reno to look for practical materials to help my fellow Earl Wooster High School classmates and myself cope. I found nothing and over the years since that weekend in February 1976 while looking in many libraries of all types in many different cities in many different states for practical materials to help survivors/victims of crimes get through their experiences. Now, students of a woman Mrs. Barbara Mitchell whose daughter was brutally murdered are not "victims" under law statutes that I have checked but some do go through many of the emotions that someone defined as a "victim" by these statutes does. I got 4 degrees to hopefully get practical materials into libraries but had my mental health OFTEN put into question when I based my concerns on real life experiences rather than hypothetical theories. So I fought and fight for materials in libraries of all sorts for survivors/victim of all kinds of crimes. This is a broad and not a legal definition of "victim" as we are talking about practical materials to help in a matter of public health. I have been doing something on this matter-- my 224 613 Project-- since that weekend of February 28, 1976 in Reno, Nevada. This is about 39 years. 224 is my birthday as I mentioned. 613 is the number I had in a 17 week study on stress on the unemployed at the University of California San Francisco Health Sciences Campus in 1992-1993. I had interviewer Myra Young. Who did I try to get involved with helping with this 224 613 Project? You name a group with any connection to victims and survivors and I have probably contacted them-- US Governors, US Senators, the US Supreme Court, various Presidents, movie studio PR people and others, comedians, singers/songwriters, athletes, judges, various lawyers, librarians of all kinds, etc. Facebook allows me now to communicate with all kinds of people about this. This is a hobby. Something I do to relieve stress even though it has often lead to stress to people around me. The Western Interstate Commission on Higher Education did count this "hobby" of mine as doing librarianship in the State of Nevada in 2000 to cover the Stipend Grant I got to go to the rather expensive private school the University of Denver to get my MA in Librarianship and Information Management (Class of May, 1984). I worked my way through schools pretty much to get my two BAs at the University of Nevada, Reno (Philosophy 1980, History 1981) as well as my Law Degree from the University of Minnesota Law School (Class of 1989). I do think this has done far more good than harm trying to get practical information into libraries or accessible through libraries. It is still very relevant in 2015 because technology changes create new kinds of crimes and criminals and new kinds of survivors/victims of crimes. They did probably finally solve Michelle Mitchell's murder. It seems to be related to the Gypsy Hill killings near San Francisco in the 1970s. The main suspect of these 6 or more murders is Rodney Halbower. He has not been prosecuted yet for this 2-24-1976 murder. They did exonerate a mentally ill woman who gave a false confession to the murder probably because she wanted to get a better room at her mental health facility in Baton Rouge, Louisiana at that time (around 1979). She was let out a few months ago. This is not something I always want to talk about as real life experiences bring up a lot of very emotional memories. I have posted a lot of backup documents on Facebook as the University of Minnesota Law School law professors did teach me that when you are dealing with lawyers, politicians, bureaucrats and others not exactly known for their honesty you get everything you can in writing. Many librarians are also more politicians than educators especially when they are fighting for state and/or federal monies. Last edited by Taltarzac725; 06-24-2015 at 07:27 PM. |
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#2
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Quote:
You can see a lot of these documents on my Photobucket array on Facebook except for the many e-mails I lost. Some of these will surface every once in a while out of the blue such as one I wrote to The Justice a Student Newspaper at Brandeis University. This showed up again around May 31, 2011, 22:05 even though I had written it on January 27, 2003. (1/27/03 9:27:47 PM EST) It was on the Internet for three or four years and then disappeared again. Last edited by Taltarzac725; 06-27-2015 at 08:42 AM. |
#3
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There are some other of these e-mails that show up every once in a while. I have no control over what shows up and what does not. There was something that Snopes.com put up when I sent them some e-mails asking for help. They stuck these in the Tinfoil Hats blog and I was basically ripped to pieces by all the wisenheimers, trolls, idiots, etc., except that I could not get on there to defend myself and I did not know who these people were. I must have written Snopes.com a thousand times to remove these postings from their blog but they never did. When they got old and no longer of much use as entertainment they modified these posts.
I hope that people will think about what I was trying to do-- empower victims/witnesses in various sittings so that they would have less chance of being manipulated by people with superior connections, knowledge, etc. I always thought that was one of the most important reasons for having law libraries which are open to the public. But if everything is in gobbledygook (i.e. something you need a JD to really understand) that is not helping anyone but maybe the lawyers and the law librarians who want to keep their jobs as holders of the keys to the kingdom. I love Facebook as I can control what stays up and what does not as far as my own words. Last edited by Taltarzac725; 06-29-2015 at 06:13 PM. |
#4
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I had some hope about this 224 613 Project when I visited DC for six days back in May 2015. Received some nice smiles from strangers while I was touring many Smithsonians and other attractions around the National Mall. It helps to try to get as many organizations, people, associations, companies, etc., involved in helping survivors/victims of crimes get access to practical materials. I do feel that much of this is because of all the work I have put into this on Facebook and hopefully getting the documents I put on there seen by more and more people while keeping in mind the security and safety issues because of the current state of the world.
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#5
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If you want to help with this 224 613 Project-- and I do need it and some would say other kinds of help as well-- look at the web-sites of the libraries and police departments where you moved from to get to the Villages. Do they have useful information for someone without legal training who is looking for practical information about the rights and services available to them? How about their having materials to help you to educate people about mental health and accessibility to services in this area? Also look at Sumter/Lake/Marion County police department web-sites as well as library web-sites. How easy are these to use for someone again with no legal training but common sense? I have been dwelling on this subject on-and-off here on TOTV since 2007 but trying not to overdo it. Gary Corsair formerly of The Villages Daily Sun did an article about my efforts that ran in the Lifestyles section of The Villages Daily Sun back around Memorial Day of 2007. He wanted to see my correspondence that I described a little bit but I did not know him having just met him while he was in our Lynnhaven neighborhood looking for stories. He talked to my mother who was out weeding. These documents or at least some of them are up on Facebook and you should not have much trouble finding these if you use common sense and have a desire to see these. One of these is the 2007 Memorial Day Gary Corsair Villages Daily Sun article with me with my late dog Sport on my lap while I am on my computer.
Last edited by Taltarzac725; 07-02-2015 at 10:17 PM. |
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