NH FAMILY COURT

REMEMBER YOUR NOT ALONE. Please contact your state house representative or THE CENTER FOR REDRESS OF GRIEVANCES in NH. And watch SPEAK UP NH, who shows one NH Family Court case after another like Jamie Doherty's http://youtu.be/CIOXB21sBMY. You too can tell the public your experience with NH's Family Judicial Branch. NH's very own Family Court Records are proving that NH's Judicial Branch fully participates and supports Kidnapping and Domestic Violence; Real Estate Fraud, Mortgage Fraud, and Property Deed Fraud; Perjury, Falsifying Documents and Non Existing Issues, and above all, Obstruction of all Justice. Case file after case file showing all the evidence in multiple Family Court Records, that are filling the NH County Court Clerk Records Offices daily throughout the whole state! People are being visited by the FBI and THREATENED simply over a NH divorce case. You truly know the truth struck a nerve then. So become a part of the solution and bring them your court case file with your evidence of your experience with NH Family Court. Fear and Silence only continues to fuel what is already a corrupted government branch harming all those who pay their salaries. You are not alone. Numbers can truly speak louder than words!

Apr 28, 2018


This Is What Your Hard Earned Paid tax Dollars Are Actually Really Paying for In NH!!!!

***WARNING NH***See the domino affect of the final results of one common denominator the majority of the entire state of NH will always share.  The Decades of the NH family court's illegal justice system inflicted on families throughout the entire state.  All illegally and all unnecessary because all laws that clearly should be enforced are not!!! 

N.H. Struggling To Solve A Psychiatric Problem That Has Been Years In The Making
By Allie Morris
Concord Monitor Staff                      
Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Four years ago, mental health workers called a press conference to ring the alarm. On any given day, nine people sat in New Hampshire emergency rooms waiting for a bed to open at the state psychiatric hospital.

“Access to timely mental health care in New Hampshire is at a crisis point,” Ken Norton, the director of the state chapter of National Alliance on Mental Illness, proclaimed then.

Last Monday, 68 people were waiting – the latest record high. No one sent a press release, no one called a news conference. The wait list for admission to New Hampshire Hospital has become a new normal in state mental health care, much to the dismay of advocates. It means patients who are suicidal or in psychiatric crisis often languish for days in the hallways and holding rooms of hospitals without the treatment they need.

“What other illness would we allow people to suffer like this without treating them?” Norton said last week. “It’s absolutely inhumane.”


Plan For Mental Health Patients Awaiting Admission Stalls
Concord Monitor
By Dave Solomon
State House Bureau
April 15, 2018

CONCORD —­ Mental health patients held in hospital emergency rooms awaiting involuntary admission to the state psychiatric hospital are still being denied due process, despite the fact that Health and Human Service officials said a program would be in place early this year to address the problem.

A 90-day pilot was launched late last year involving four hospitals in the hope that the effort could be expanded to all 26 hospitals in the state in 2018.

But the four hospitals — Catholic Medical Center in Manchester, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in Lebanon, Southern N.H. Medical Center in Nashua and Speare Memorial Hospital in Plymouth — decided their emergency rooms could not accommodate a judicial process.

“I don’t think it’s going anywhere at this point,” said Ken Norton, executive director of the New Hampshire chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness.

The problem stems from a shortage of mental health beds at the state psychiatric hospital — New Hampshire Hospital in Concord — and at other “designated receiving facilities” for psychiatric patients in Manchester, Portsmouth and Franklin.

Those four locations are set up to conduct hearings in front of a judge in cases of involuntary emergency admissions. If people don’t think they need to be in mental health treatment, they have a right to a hearing.

But many mental health patients are being boarded in emergency rooms at hospitals that are not “designated receiving facilities.” Patients who protest their admission or want out of those emergency rooms can wait for weeks, even months, before they can get in front of a judge.

Held without hearing

Judge Edwin W. Kelly, chief administrator of New Hampshire Circuit Courts, testified last year before the Senate Health and Human Services Committee that somewhere between 3 and 5 percent of hearings that are held result in dismissal of the involuntary admission order.

“That means that if 50 people are sitting in emergency rooms, a couple of them maybe don’t belong there,” said Norton.

“I think the bigger point is that our country was built on protecting civil liberties, and while NAMI doesn’t want to see people who are in need of medical care released on a technicality, neither do we want to see wholesale discrimination against people’s civil liberties because of their mental illness.”

Judge Kelly evaluated some of the dismissals and warned that the state is exposed to potential lawsuits over due process denial.

“I don’t know why there haven’t been any,” Norton said. “The fact is that on any given day, the clear majority of those people want help and are not asking to leave, but that doesn’t mean they should be denied immediate access to crisis care or due process.”
Seeking a solution

Last spring, Michael Skibbie, policy director for the Disabilities Rights Center, wrote to legislative leaders to warn that the issue of due process for involuntary admission can’t wait until the state creates enough new mental health beds.

“We are disappointed,” said Skibbie, referring to the fact that one year later, the situation remains unchanged. “It’s a serious problem that needs a solution both in terms of reducing the number of people (waiting in emergency rooms) and making sure the people who are held there are being treated fairly.”

The 90-day pilot program was ambitious. It called for creation of a new full-time coordinator position within DHHS called Central Involuntary Emergency Admissions Coordinator, based at New Hampshire Hospital.

A nearly $1 million annual price tag would cover an estimated $81,000 for the IEA coordinator position; $540,000 for attorneys; $108,000 for computers and software; $100,000 for technical support; and $50,000 for additional emergency room staffing.

Patients being held in hospital emergency rooms for involuntary admission to the state psychiatric hospital or other long-term psychiatric facilities would get a probable cause hearing in front of a judge within 72 hours, via video link and telephone.

The hospitals would have been required to provide a space for lawyers to meet with the patients and a secure video link that meets patient privacy standards.

Insurmountable barriers

A few weeks into the pilot, the hospitals decided it couldn’t be done.

According to a memo from DHHS Commissioner Jeffrey Meyers outlining the demise of the project, the concerns centered around security, legal liability and staffing needs.

Lauren Collins-Cline, director of communications for Catholic Medical Center, said CMC viewed the program as a potentially viable, but along with the rest of the pilot team eventually came to the conclusion that the details “presented significant challenges to the hospitals involved.”

“Chief among the hurdles were the privacy and safety of our patients and staff, especially those who would be directly involved in the hearings,” she said. “Most emergency departments, including CMC’s, are not set up to handle the logistics that we have discovered are involved with a court hearing. The emergency department lacks the secure, dedicated space needed for this proceeding.”

The state is now focusing its efforts on reducing the backlog of mental health patients in hospital emergency rooms as the best long-term solution.

New approaches

On Thursday of last week, hospitals around the state were holding 40 patients in emergency rooms awaiting admission to New Hampshire Hospital.

“The numbers are slightly down,” says Norton. “There has been a little improvement. When you are looking at 40 it’s hard to say that numbers are better, but the average was close to 50 a day, and we hit a high point of 70 last August.”

In an attempt to address the situation, the legislature last year funded 20 new mental health beds and a new mobile crisis response team, but got no bidders on the DHHS requests for proposals.

The main reason for the lack of response offered by mental health providers was lack of workforce, according to Norton.

The providers suggested there might be more interest in creating new transitional housing units for patients being discharged from New Hampshire Hospital. The state has had some success in that approach, with 20 new transitional beds created in the past year.

The money that was not used in the unsuccessful request for proposals is being reallocated in a new bill, SB 590, to more transitional housing units.

***WARNING NH***See the domino affect of the final results of one common denominator the majority of the entire state of NH shares.  The Decades of the NH family court's illegal justice system inflicted on families throughout the entire state of NH.  All illegally and all unnecessary because all laws that should be enforced are not! 

"Our families are dying", A Mother’s Plea for Help"

Research finds increase in number of babies born drug exposed in N.H.

December 19, 2017, University of New Hampshire
"From 2005 to 2015 the number of infants diagnosed with neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) in the Granite State increased fivefold, from 52 to 269, according to new research by the Carsey School of Public Policy at the University of New Hampshire. In 2015, newborns diagnosed with NAS remained in the hospital 12 days on average, compared to three days for newborns not born exposed.

"In 2015, 2.4 percent of New Hampshire births were diagnosed with NAS and that number is projected to rise," said Kristin Smith, family demographer at the Carsey School and research associate professor of sociology. "This will have implications for early intervention programs, early education programs and primary schools. Pregnancy is a time to reach out to mothers as they are more receptive to services and making a change."

Because mothers using opioids are often also using other substances like alcohol, cigarettes, and other illicit drugs as well as confronting issues related to mental health, poverty, homelessness and domestic violence that complicate recovery, Smith advocated for comprehensive policies and programs.

"Policies and procedures should not consider opioid addiction in isolation, but rather as one interconnected symptom within a larger context," she said. "Both alcohol and tobacco use during pregnancy have proven for children, and the adverse effects are magnified when combined with opiates. Getting mothers on a path to recovery is a formidable challenge facing our state but one that ultimately will help children and promote family unity."

Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center launched one of the first programs in the state to address the need for access to treatment for pregnant women using opiates. The integrated model has been successful with fewer than 25 percent of infants born to participants requiring treatment and a decrease of three days in the average length of hospital stay for the newborns requiring treatment.

Smith also found that a recent change to the state's Child Protection Act may have a "chilling effect on women seeking prenatal care, their willingness to disclose during pregnancy and reporting by providers." The change was intended to give the Department of Children, Youth and Families discretion and encourage treatment as a way to keep families together when possible.

The report can be found here: https://carsey.unh.edu/publication/opioid-nas-nh. It was funded by New Futures Kids Count."

Apr 23, 2018

***WARNING NH***See the domino affect of the final results of one common denominator the majority of the entire state of NH shares.  The Decades of the NH family court's illegal justice system inflicted on families throughout the entire state of NH.  All illegally and all unnecessary because all laws that should be enforced are not! 

Despite Initial Projections, N.H. Overdose Deaths Didn't Decline in 2017 

Tracking NH Drug Overdose Deaths
April 20, 2018  
        Apr 20, 2018

"New Hampshire politicians criticized President Trump after a transcript of a phone call with the president of Mexico published on Thursday showed he called the state “a drug-infested den.”

The remark came during his comments on the drug trade, criminal gangs and how he said they affected the state, according to a transcript of the Jan. 27 call published by The Washington Post.
“The drug lords in Mexico are knocking the hell out of our country,” Mr. Trump told President Enrique Peña Nieto of Mexico.

“They are sending drugs to Chicago, Los Angeles and to New York,” Mr. Trump continued. “Up in New Hampshire — I won New Hampshire because New Hampshire is a drug-infested den — is coming from the southern border.”

Just FYI Mr. President.  Telling other leaders of countries the only reason you could even possibly win the title and position of Commander and Chief of the United States of America was based on drug addicts, does not speak to highly about you or your own behavior.  But at least the world now knows that it was only caused by people who were clearly not in their right frame of mind.  But your one honest moment of clarity explaining how and why it could even possibly have happened, is greatly appreciated!  So what actions do you plan to take other than pointing fingers and cutting all funding required to help?


Report: Substance Abuse Costing NH Over 2B
By KATHLEEN RONAYNE, Associated Press
May 8, 2017

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — An advocacy group estimates drug and alcohol abuse cost New Hampshire $2.36 billion in 2014 in lost productivity, health care and strains on the criminal justice system.

A report released by New Futures shows the growing economic toll of the crisis — up more than $50 million from the two previous years — as well as a growth in the number of people seeking treatment under provisions in former President Barack Obama's health care law.

The report also shows that while opioid abuse is increasing, alcohol abuse remains a more significant addiction problem, with more than 110,000 New Hampshire workers experiencing alcohol dependence.

New Hampshire has one of the highest per capita death rates due to drug overdoses in the nation, with nearly 500 people dying from an overdose last year. The report estimates more than 30,000 people in New Hampshire over the age of 15 abused drugs in 2014. New Hampshire is second only to Rhode Island in the percentage of people over age 12 with alcohol and drug dependence, federal data shows.
"There's no price we can place on the lives lost," said Kate Frey, New Futures' director of advocacy.
Most of the $2.36 billion in costs comes from lost worker productivity, estimated at roughly $1.5 billion. Elsewhere, the report finds substance abuse costs the state more than $330 million in health care and more than $306 million in the criminal justice system.

The number of insurance claims for substance abuse treatment in the state jumped from 63,000 in 2012 to 390,000 in 2014, the report shows. And more than 10,000 low-income people on Medicaid expansion have accessed substance abuse treatment since the law took effect.

'Our families are dying' New Hampshires Herion Crisis
NBC News
By Victor Limjco, Daniel A. Medina, and Kate Snow
February 3, 2016

"A Town under Siege
Situated along the I-93 interstate between the state’s two largest cities of Manchester and Nashua, the small town of Londonderry is at the center of a drug-trafficking route where heroin cuts across socio-economic and political lines.

Ed Daniels has worked with the Londonderry Fire Department for 11 years. For most of that time, he says, he saw one or two overdose cases a year. He says he now sees at least one every shift. He says the victims he treats come from all demographics. “There’s no rhyme or reason to it,” said Daniels.
                 
Daniels says the numbers began to spike last summer and have continued to rise, unabated. He blames the increase on fentanyl — an extremely potent pain killer drug that is now commonly cut with heroin to produce a more intense high — and feels, at times, that there is little long-term that he can do for his patients.

"They can leave the hospital," said Daniels. "[But] once they have the addiction, where can they go for help?"

For Londonderry Fire Department Chief Darren O’Brien, who has lived his entire life in Londonderry, “it’s hard to see what’s going on in a community you grew up in.”

O’Brien noted that there were 82 reported overdoses last year — nearly three times the 31 reported cases in 2014. “I’m hoping we can get a handle on it,” he said.

"Our families are dying", A Mother’s Plea for Help

.

Apr 22, 2018

***WARNING NH***
NH government not only ignores state laws, but writes illegal rules on how to brake the law, and our states Constitution Bill Of Rights too.  Our State Constitution’s Bill of Rights (Part I, Article 14), says that everyone is entitled to a certain remedy for all injuries they may receive and that they are to obtain it “completely, and without any denial; promptly, and without delay.”  NH's Judicial Family Branch of government has been corrupt for decades.  Now NH 's only resolution is to now only give them another excuse to continue doing so.


'On the brink of callapse': Hillsboro county prosecutors request $500K budget increase

By MARK HAYWARD
New Hampshire Union Leader
April 21, 2018

Hillsborough County's top prosecutor has asked for a budget increase of nearly $500,000, money he said is needed to hire more prosecutors, victim-witness advocates and support staff to rescue a "department on the brink of collapse."

Hillsborough County Attorney Dennis Hogan used the ominous words - seldom seen in the dry world of budget spreadsheets - to highlight the difficulty of retaining staff amid the heavy caseloads of one of the busiest prosecutorial offices in the state.

Hogan, a Republican, wants his budget increased 19 percent, to $5.47 million.

His office - the only one in the state to cover two superior courts - has lost 25 percent of its prosecutors in each of the last two years, he said. A key reason is workload, he said.

Hogan said his office is unable to recruit and train staff quickly enough to keep up with the attrition. As a result, police departments in the county don't get all the attention and training they need, he said.

The Hillsborough County Attorney's office lacks the technology to keep up with the demands of the court system, which compounds staffing issues.

Hogan subtitled his PowerPoint pitch "Budget Request for a Department on the Brink of Collapse."

"To use a baseball analogy, we are on the warning track, we have not run into the wall. That is why I am giving warning," Hogan wrote in an email.

The county attorney said the drug epidemic fuels an increase in crime, arrests and prosecutions.

"The drug misuse leads to more bad behavior like violence, which includes sex crimes, all the varieties of thefts, and poor driving with its large range of problems from unlicensed driving to deaths," he said.

Manchester police did not respond to a request for comment on this story. Nashua Police Chief Andrew Lavoie said he did not want to comment on Hogan's dire assessment or budget request.

Two weeks ago, Hillsborough County officials began their budget approval process, a lengthy endeavor that includes review by several boards before state representatives from Hillsborough County meet to approve a budget in late June.

In an initial budget review with Hogan, county commissioners kept two new prosecutors, a new victim witness advocate and a new legal secretary, but provided only $1 for two other prosecutors, telling Hogan he could fund them with savings.

Hillsborough County Commissioner Toni Pappas, R-Manchester, said total budget requests for Hillsborough County add up to a 13 percent increase.

"We're going to be decreasing (the budget) as much as we can. The taxpayers are our biggest concern, so we're going to be reducing the numbers," Pappas said.

She noted that Hogan received a double-digit percentage increase last year, which was supposed to go toward new staff.

Hogan said other factors have put pressure on his prosecutors. Felonies First, the reorganization of the arraignment system, increased his office's caseload by 400 cases in the first six months of its operation, he said.

According to Hogan's PowerPoint, Felonies First has resulted in unmanageable deadlines and has forced prosecutors to spend more time in court for hearings. Victims require more time because their trauma is more recent, and legal secretaries have more work because they have to provide discovery materials to defense lawyers on an incremental basis.

Additional pressures come from drug courts, Right-to-Know requests, violations of probation, criminal annulments and post-trial motions and hearings, the county attorney said.

In total, Hogan wants to add five new prosecutors to his staff, three victim witness advocates and five legal secretaries. He also wants to increase salaries to remain competitive, increase supervision and mentoring, and update technology.

Technology upgrades include scanners and a server that would allow secretaries to email and upload documents.

According to Hogan's presentation, Hillsborough County prosecutors average 130 cases a year, compared to about 90 in Rockingham and Merrimack counties.

Hogan also provided data that shows the total cost per case falling from $2,044 in 2011 to $1,290 in 2016, the last year he provided.

Courts lack drug abuse resources, too
It’s not only prosecutors who complain about a lack of resources in Hillsborough County.
Last week, at a Concord panel discussion on the legal system’s response to the opioid crisis in New Hampshire, a Superior Court judge said the services available to help offenders with addiction issues can vary widely from county to county.

Judge Jacalyn Colburn said that in Hillsborough County, where she sits, “My menu is very limited.”

Hosted by the University of New Hampshire Law School and the state bar association, the program focused on how drug and family courts deal with offenders with substance abuse issues.

Audriana Mekula-Hanson of Concord, who will graduate from the law school next month and start work as a prosecutor, asked the panelists, “What alternative sentencing would you suggest that I can provide for the defendants who don’t meet the qualifications for drug court but certainly have a drug-addiction problem?”

In some counties, Colburn replied, “You have a fairly broad menu of options” for low-level offenders with substance-use disorders. But, she said, “For the largest county in the state, with the two largest cities — and presumably the highest number of (overdose) deaths again this year just like the last three years — my menu options are very thin.”

There are no court diversion programs or pre-trial services, Colburn said.

Tina Nadeau, chief justice of the Superior Court, said ideally, all offenders should have risk/need assessments done so they can be provided the appropriate services.
mhayward@unionleader.com

***WARNING NH***

NH government not only ignores state laws, writes illegal rules on how to brake the laws, but now our states Constitution Bill Of Rights too.  Our State Constitution’s Bill of Rights (Part I, Article 14), says that everyone is entitled to a certain remedy for all injuries they may receive and that they are to obtain it “completely, and without any denial; promptly, and without delay.”  NH's Judicial Family Branch of government has been corrupt for decades.  Now NH 's only resolution is to now only give them another excuse to continue doing so.


Justice Delayed New Hampshire Court System

By Duaglas, Leonard, & Garvey, PC


Several attorneys filed suit against the State recently to try to obtain proper funding for our judicial system.  It is broken and I could not sit idly by and let it be gutted by excessive legislative budget cuts so I joined in as counsel.

Each year 230,000 court cases are filed in New Hampshire.

Certain types of court cases have specific time frames in which to act and those are set by the legislature.  For example, domestic violence cases and criminal cases require certain scheduling dates by law.  Thus, work on such cases means other cases must be delayed if judge time is lacking due to vacancies.  For instance, in 2009, there were 5,300 cases of domestic violence with hearings required between five or thirty days of filing, depending on the request.

Stalking cases were 1,470 in number, with the same time requirements.  9,600 landlord/tenant cases must be heard ten days from service of process.  Involuntary emergency admissions to the N.H. Hospital were filed 1,700 times last year and they must be heard within three days of hospitalization.
Families are also heavily affected by the lack of a judge to help decide their disputes.  7,200 juvenile cases, 10,000 new divorce or family petitions and 7,000 closed cases reopened for parenting or lack of child support issues were heard last year alone.

Judges cannot decide cases without someone processing them, scheduling them, getting orders out, and otherwise processing paperwork.  Each month thousands of orders have to go to the office of child support enforcement, various criminal law agencies, and to parties involved in marital and civil cases.

In the non-criminal area our State Constitution’s Bill of Rights (Part I, Article 14), says that everyone is entitled to a certain remedy for all injuries they may receive and that they are to obtain it “completely, and without any denial; promptly, and without delay.”

The purpose of that provision is to make civil remedies readily available and to guard against arbitrary denial of access to the courts.  It is an equal protection clause because, whether you are suing someone or being sued, you want to have your case resolved as soon as possible.

Last year there were $3.1 million of cuts out of a judicial branch budget of about $65 million, with another $2.2 million hit in May.  Concord District Court, which is a three-judge court, is now operating with one full-time judge.  Due to the reduction in personnel a form letter went out this summer canceling all civil trials.

Small claims cases were all cancelled in the Manchester District Court this summer for an indefinite period.

On July 22, Merrimack County Superior Court began closing to the public daily from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.  As of June 30, it had nearly 500 case files with pieces of mail that had yet to be docketed in the court record, with some documents dating back to March.  Another 150 trial and hearing notices had not been sent out and more than 350 files contained court orders that had not been issued.

And Hillsborough County just announced:
HILLSBOROUGH SUPERIOR COURT CLERKS TO CLOSE OFFICES
TUESDAY AND THURSDAY AFTERNOONS

Staff shortages prompt move to focus on reduction of case backlog

CONCORD, October 1 – The clerk’s office in Nashua for Hillsborough County Superior Court North and Hillsborough County Superior Court South will close at 1 p.m. on Tuesday and Thursday beginning October 5 to allow uninterrupted time for processing cases and related materials.
Both clerk’s offices, which had been closed from 8 a.m. to 9 a.m., will reopen at 8 a.m. daily, beginning Oct. 5 with implementation of the new Tuesday/Thursday afternoon closings.

After 1 p.m. on Tuesday and Thursday, no telephone or counter service will be available to lawyers, litigants or the public in the clerk’s office during those hours; the automated telephone system will be monitored so that emergency requests are addressed promptly. A “drop box” will be set up inside the courthouse at 30 Spring Street in Nashua for filing documents during the hours when the clerk’s office is closed.

As of today, the Merrimack County Superior Court, which had been closed down since last August on weekday afternoons to work on reducing the case backlog, will be open for a full day on Fridays. The clerk’s office in Concord remains closed to lawyers, litigants and the public Monday through Thursday from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. to allow for uninterrupted case processing.

Several other court locations statewide, faced with backlogs and staff shortages, also have limited public operating hours to allow uninterrupted time for employees to process cases.

Superior Court Chief Justice Robert J. Lynn said the schedule will be reviewed every 30 days to determine when the clerk’s office can return to routine office hours. Reductions in the court system budget have required administrators to maintain 71 full-time non-judicial vacancies, which means court locations have fewer employees on staff to carry out day to day clerical responsibilities.
These cutbacks affect all citizens who seek justice.  I will do all I can to fight for fair funding.  If you have a delay horror story, email me at info@nojustice.org

Apr 18, 2018

***WARNING NH***
100 years of NH family court records and not one single charge of adultery can be found throughout the entire state.  This is NH Justice for you!

"2017 Infidelity Statistics 

  • Surveys show that 22% of married men have committed an adulterous act at least once in their life
  • 14 percent of married women have had affairs at least once during their married lives
  • It is in the younger generation where these values are considerably higher and the numbers of both sexes are closer together
  • The percentage of men and women who admit to having an affair with a co-worker is 36%
  • The percentage of men and women who admit to infidelity on business trips is 36%
  • The percentage of men and women who admit to infidelity (emotional or physical) with a brother-in-law or sister-in-law is 17%
  • 30% of the married women knew of their spouse’s infidelity, while for married men the number is higher and it stands at 46%
  • 90% of American believes it is morally wrong to commit an adulterous act only 61% would like to see it punished as any other crime
  • In the United States, 17% of all the divorces that occur are due to adultery on the part of either or both the parties
  • While a large number of divorces are caused by extramarital affairs most of them do not end in remarriage between the parties involved in the affair
  • 36% of the people admit to having an affair with a co-worker, with whom the usually spend more time than their spouses
  • 36 % percentage of people admits to having had an affair on a business trip
  • Statistics say that nearly 85% of the women are right when they think their partner is cheating on them while for men it is around 50%
  • 2% to 3% of all children are due to infidelity and shockingly most of these children are unknowingly raised by men who are not their biological fathers
  • 70 percent of married women and 54 percent of married men did not know of their spouses’ extramarital activity
  • Men are more likely than women to have a sexual affair, regardless of whether or not they are in a married or unmarried relationship
  • Note: Due to the secretive nature of infidelity, it is impossible to find the exact figures about cheating and extra-marital affairs. In many cases, infidelity never gets discovered.

Apr 14, 2018

***WARNING NH***

Sexual Health news - Sexual Health and Behavior

U.S. has highest STD rates among developed countries





Apr 8, 2018

WARNING NH

REPORTED JANUARY 1, 2015
Over 400 hundred NH legislators, senators, and a governor, suddenly legalizes adultery and open marriages after the adultery case of Brosor v Brosor went public in 2010.  The husband never once denied his affair and admitted becoming engaged to his 38 year old Welfare Fraud committing mistress, Laurie Ann Murry, Nernburg, now Brosor, whom he was sharing with a married co-worker.

While the mistress was actually still in the middle of completing her second divorce, He financially continued supporting this mistress with 4 children fathered by 3 different other men While still married to his own wife.  Using marital savings and their entire retirement fund, and his entire 401K, that accumulated only during a 21 year marriage. The wife requested an emergency Ex Parte hearing for temporary alimony because the husband and mistress took everything. She had no money for food and medications that were required to prevent heart attacks and strokes. Let alone rent or utilities

NH's Superior Criminal Court Judge Groff after only permitting just a 15 minute hearing, refused to accept any documents such as any paystubs or bank accounts, or the private investigator's report that already proved adultery, and that the husband along with his attorney were committing perjury, immediately denied the wife's temporary alimony request, then also ordered the immediate sale of her home and then escrowed the profits until the divorce was heard before the courts a year later. 

The only roof  she had over her head was her car in the streets. five years after the divorce the wife finally had a stroke with a blood clot that had to be removed from the right frontal lobe of her brain leaving her now permanently disabled  for the rest of her life and forced to live only off of the state.

NH family court says this is simply just another little "irreconcilable differences" in a marriage and clearly a No Fault Divorce. The husband, Roger R. Brosor, was never ordered to pay back what was owed back to the wife. So for 100 years there has been no divorce on record for adultery in NH,  NH only clearly supports open marriages, both homosexual and heterosexual adultery that's being committed in NH according to all court records

  One major problem according to court records, is that all NH family court judges were, and still are, apparently refusing to enforce, any adultery laws throughout the state of NH.  And has been doing so for a century now.  Over 200 years of having a NH adultery law was now finally removed in 201

Do you really think NH is paying any attention as to what 21st century reality is now happening throughout the country, let alone within their own state?  Open marriages are highly supported by the NH Supreme Court and the entire NH family judicial branch of government, who will always have the last word

CDC 2015 AND 2016 STD REPORT IN UNITED STATES THAT YEAR 

Disease
Reported cases
 
HIV diagnoses (2016)
39,660


Hepatitis A (2015)
1,387


Acute Viral Hepatitis B (2015)
3,349


Acute Viral Hepatitis C (2015)
2,434


Chlamydia (2015)
1,526,658


Gonorrhea (2015)
395,216


  Primary and Secondary Syphilis
23,872


Tuberculosis (2016)
9,272



REPORTED SEPTEMBER 27, 2017
By Newser staff


                                       "cases of congenital syphilis were up nearly 28% to 628 cases, resulting in more than 40 newborn deaths, reports
CNN

REPORTED  OCTOBER1 14, 2017
By Mandy Stadtmiller

We now have rates of babies being born with congenital syphilis not seen in decades," says David Harvey, executive director of the National Coalition of STD Directors

In multiple interviews with public health advocates tracking the nationwide rise of STD's, their message was united and clear: If president Trump wants to address this public health emergency, our country needs to return to levels of STD-prevention funding once prioritized in the 1990's, when the United States came extremely close to eradicating syphilis completely

Simply put: If the STD prevention infrastructure continues to be gutted, eventually, there will be no going back

In the face of overwhelming data, if all of this doesn't inspire a call to arms, consider this factor: The United States is now seeing cases of gonorrhea for which all known treatments are beginning to fail


REPORTED ON JANUARY 1, 2011, the state of New Hampshire's entire judicial branch of government actually literally now breaks the law once again.  Continuing to support their zero I,Q.  and their own illiteracy in law.  Now by designing and implementing another little chaotic illegal rule made  only by the NH Supreme Court.  The NH Family Court Rule 1.25A.  It clearly states,  "The parties may redact all but the last four (4) digits of any account numbers and social security numbers that appear on any statements or documents."   This clearly means, for the past several years both parties have been recklessly directed to purposely commit fraud by illegally tampering with all evidence before submitting it into a court of law.  Now for all NH judges to enforce

All evidence that will tell the whole truth and nothing but the truth has, nor ever will, be seen by any NH judge in a NH court of law, throughout the entire state of NH.  Now going on for several years.  All NH Family Court Judge's rulings are based on completely no evidence and no laws while only inflicting unnecessary extended high legal costs, abuse and mass chaos onto your life
Just keep those taxes being paid in NH.  But to only literally truly see what it  is paying for.

Oh and by the way, JUST FYI TO ALL and ANY NH FAMILY COURT and ANY NH CRIMINAL COURT JUDGES,.  Your first lesson of the day is: New Hampshire Statute

TITLE LXII
CRIMINAL CODE
CHAPTER 638
FRAUD

Forgery and Fraudulent Practices Generally

Section 638:3, Tampering With Public or Private Records. – A person is guilty of a misdemeanor if, knowing he has no privilege to do so, he falsifies, destroys, removes or conceals any writing or record, public or private, with the purpose to deceive or injure anyone or to conceal any wrongdoing

Source. 1971, 518:1, eff. Nov. 1, 1973



US Code - Section 1505: Obstruction of proceedings before departments, agencies, and committee

Whoever, with intent to avoid, evade, prevent, or obstruct compliance, in whole or in part, with any civil investigative demand duly and properly made under the Antitrust Civil Process Act, willfully withholds, misrepresents, removes from any place, conceals, covers up, destroys, mutilates, alters, or by other means falsifies any documentary material, answers to written interrogatories, or oral testimony, which is the subject of such demand; or attempts to do so or solicits another to do so; or Whoever corruptly, or by threats or force, or by any threatening letter or communication influences, obstructs, or impedes or endeavors to influence, obstruct, or impede the due and proper administration of the law under which any pending proceeding is being had before any department or agency of the United States, or the due and proper exercise of the power of inquiry under which any inquiry or investigation is being had by either House, or any committee of either House or any joint committee of the Congress -Shall be fined under this title, imprisoned not more than 5 years or, if the offense involves international or domestic terrorism (as defined in section 2331), imprisoned not more than 8 years, or both


NH PEOPLE ARE SICK AND TIRED OF PAYING FOR NOTHING BUT UNLAWFUL JUDGES AND THEIR LAZY CHAOTIC STUPIDITY ALL ON RECORD.  ILLEGALLY INFLICTED ONLY BY THEIR LAZY, RECKLESS, AND ILLITERATE DANGEROUS STUPIDITY. THAT ONLY CONTINUES TO BE ENFORCED AND ORDERED ONLY THROUGHOUT THE STATE OF NH.  NOW, STRONGLY ATTACKING AND AFFECTING OUR WELFARE SYSTEM WORSE THAN EVER BEFORE, ALL UNECESSARILY

DOES NH PAY ATTENTION OR CARE?  NH CLEARLY SUPPORTS THAT THEY EVEN WILL ILLEGALLY DON'T GIVE A DAMN

NH really doesn't have to look that hard as to why there is an opioid crisis in New Hampshire






Apr 7, 2018

WARNING NH

Why the STD Epidemic in America Is About to Get A Lot Worse

President Trump, your “Vietnam” is getting Out of control

OCTOBER 14, 2017

STDs are like the Harvey Weinstein of public health crises,” says Chad Felix Greene, who became HIV positive a decade ago when a partner purposefully transmitted the virus—and who this week, raged on Twitter about California’s new adoption of #HIVIsNotACrime legislation, which reduces knowing transmission from felony to misdemeanor (even in cases of blood bank donation). “Think of it this way: Everyone in this country knows how bad the STD epidemic has gotten, but no one wants to face up to all these difficult conversations we need to have in order to fight the problem.” 
Indeed, nationwide, public health experts issued an urgent siren call in the wake of the CDC’s annual Sexually Transmitted Disease Surveillance Report, which revealed yet another rise (the third year in a row now) in the Big Three of tracked STDs in America: chlamydia (1.59 million new cases), gonorrhea (468,514 new cases), syphilis (27,814 new cases, with a tragic 628 cases of congenital syphilis). While HIV rates, tracked separately, reveal a decline nationwide, in several cities around the country such as Miami, Atlanta, New Orleans and San Antonio, Texas, transmissions continue to rise at startling rates. In Bexar County, Texas, for instance, HIV infections jumped by more than 50 percent in the last decade, from 234 in 2006 to 360 in 2016

San Antonio's Mayor Ron Nirenberg, announced this week at an HIV Summit:"Everyone, that means everyone, needs to follow the CDC's recommendations and get tested at least once in their lifetime."  If only president trump would follow suit in advocacy - and more importantly funding

If ever there was a POTUS who would understand the gravitas of fighting sexually transmitted diseases - and the epidemic our country now faces - it ought to be this one.  Don't forget that in 1997, Donald Trump infamously, joked to Howard Stern that he deserved the "Congressional Medal Of Honor" for his bravery in avoiding sex with so many loose and willing STD-riddled womenin an ordeal he called "My Vietnam."  But instead, the unfolding STD health travesty provoked the opposite response from our cammander-in-chief.  In what would  be a 17 percent reduction in CDC federal STD funding, nationwide

If this course is not reversed, public health experts warn, one of Trumps legacies could be what health officials call an "unconscionable" epidemic of STD's that continues to spread out as the infrastructure to fight the spread breaks down.  What would that look like?  Billions in healthcare costs and tragic public health consequences such as a rampage of STD caused infertility.  For all the lobbing about The Handmaiden's Tale with in pop culture these days, this is one epidemic where the analogy really does fit: Although, many women don't realize it, rising STD's correlate as leading cause of infertility.  We now have rates of babies being born with congenital syphilis not seen in decades," says David Harvey, executive director of the National Coalition of STD Directors

In multiple interviews with public health advocates tracking the nationwide rise of STD's, their message was united and clear: If president Trump wants to address this public health emergency, our country needs to return to levels of STD-prevention funding once prioritized in the 1990's, when the United States came extremely close to eradicating syphilis completely

Simply put: If the STD prevention infrastructure continues to be gutted, eventually, there will be no going back

In the face of overwhelming data, if all of this doesn't inspire a call to arms, consider this factor: The United States is now seeing cases of gonorrhea for which all known treatments are beginning to fail

_________________________________________________________

Sounds like California is following New Hampshire's lead and their response to this rising epidemic. NH says screw the STD rates in this country and literally legalized adultery and open marriages. California now following New Hampshire's lead, wants to lesson the charge for knowingly spreading HIV from a felony to a misdemeanor.  It says a whole lot about what hundreds of different state house representatives working collectively are capable of only coming up with.  Who knew stupid is as stupid does and still will get.  From now both, the east and west side of the USA