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!

Mar 8, 2019

NH GOVERNMENT SHOWS ONLY IT's TRUE SELF ONCE AGAIN

To all NH parents, this is why your children are not safe from any branch of government.

In 2016, Kyle Tasker, a former republican state house representative, pleaded guilty to nine felonies, including four counts of using a computer to lure a minor for sex and five counts of possession of a controlled drug with intent to distribute, in Rockingham County Superior Court.

Two charges of drug possession and a charge of felonious possession of a firearm was dropped as a result of the plea agreement. Tasker could also request that his sentence be shortened by six months if he completes a sex offender program in prison.

According to the September 9, 2016 "Attorney General Report on Kyle Tasker's drug distribution at the state house":

According to one NH state house rep, "from the six large “kettles” of loose marijuana and drug-related paraphernalia in Tasker’s kitchen, and brownies and other drug supplies in his refrigerator, that Tasker was a full-fledged dealer who was operating something akin to “a dispensary.” he later learned that Tasker also sold illegal mushrooms and “molly,” which he denied using, buying, or being interested in. He was aware, however, that Tasker himself used these drugs.

According to this rep, Tasker was like the “Club Med of weed”: he had a variety of high-end strains of marijuana and charged accordingly. The representative paid about $400 for an ounce of marijuana, buying one or, at most, two ounces at a time. He also paid about $380 for two dozen brownies. Tasker would allow him to pay when he could, which resulted in him sometimes owing him several hundred dollars. He denied ever buying in bulk (though he admitted asking Tasker about bulk costs) and denied ever reselling the marijuana he purchased."


Yet the report also states, "None of the state representatives interviewed knew much, if anything, about Tasker’s illicit drug business or his other customers. None knew Tasker’s source. None said they purchased any drug or drug product from Tasker but marijuana, and all seemed to believe that Tasker was trying to help people who needed marijuana for medicinal purposes but could not obtain it legally in New Hampshire."

On March 7, 2019, Jason Schrieber, a Union Leader Correspondent reported - A judge on Thursday granted work release for former Nottingham state representative Kyle Tasker, who is expected to be paroled at the end of May after serving more than two years behind bars for drug possession and attempting to lure a 14-year-old girl for a sexual encounter.

Tasker, 33, appeared in Rockingham County Superior Court after the state prison recommended him for work release despite objections from the victim and Assistant County Attorney Stephanie Johnson.

Tasker, who has completed a sex-offender treatment program, will stay at a halfway house where he’ll work during the day until May 30, when he will be eligible to be released on parole.

While the victim had voiced concerns to prosecutors about Tasker getting out of prison early and being placed on work release, Judge Andrew Schulman said he felt strongly that the best way for someone to transition from prison to parole was through the work-release program.

Schulman said he hopes Tasker will become a “productive and healthy member of society.”

Tasker was arrested in March 2016 during an undercover police operation and resigned from the House, where he was serving his third term as a state representative.

He was also the focus of an investigation by the Attorney General’s office, which found that he had used marijuana in the State House and sold it to a handful of state legislators, occasionally bringing the drug with him to Concord and distributing it there.

However, the AG report said the investigation did not “uncover pervasive illicit drug transactions at the State House or among elected state officials.”


Tasker was sentenced to 3 to 10 years in prison after pleading guilty in May 2017 to five counts of possession of a controlled drug with intent to distribute and four counts of prohibited use of a computer.

He was given 158 days of pre-trial confinement credit and later had six months of his minimum sentence suspended for completing sex-offender treatment.

Do you really still truly believe NH government cane be trusted to handle a $340 million dollar proposal for a natural gas lines, let alone anything else for that matter, to be legally and correctly implemented throughout the southern portion of the state?  Well at least now we've answered why the 4th smallest state in the country still only remains without any reasons or solutions as to why their cancer rates are highest in the country, continuing to kill NH residents. 

Just take a good long hard look at who and what is actually running this entire state's government.
It now truly explains a hell of allot of questions about NH.  Especially NH's already "mentally unstable and/or drunks behind the bench" such as NH Judge John Pickering in the early 1800's all the way through to present day NH Judge Paul Moore, who is another disturbing mentally unstable judge in 2018, only among a list of many who can fill decades in between.

John Pickering served as chief justice of the New Hampshire Superior Court of Judicature and as a judge for the U.S. District Court for the District of New Hampshire. However, he is most remembered as the first federal officer to be impeached.

On February 10, 1795, President George Washington nominated Pickering to preside on the United States District Court for the District of New Hampshire He was confirmed by the U.S. Senate and assumed the office two months later. After five years on the bench, Pickering began to show signs of cognitive decline. In 1801, Judge Jeremiah Smith was asked to fulfill Pickering’s duties.

Pickering in the early 1800's had developed a reputation for “ravings, cursings, and crazed incoherences.” As part of his effort to remove Federalist judges from office, President Thomas Jefferson suggested that Pickering’s embarrassing conduct and alleged unlawful rulings amounted to an impeachable offense. Because Pickering refused to resign, Jefferson argued that impeachment was the only way to remove him from the bench.

Pickering was charged with mental instability and intoxication on the bench and impeached by the U.S. House of Representatives on March 2, 1803.  NH judge John Pickering was convicted by the U.S. Senate and removed from office on March 12, 1804.  The articles of impeachment stated, in part:
That whereas for the due, faithful, and impartial administration of justice, temperance and sobriety are essential qualities in the character of a judge, yet the said John Pickering, being a man of loose morals and intemperate habits, on the 11th and 12th days of November, in the year 1802, being then judge of the district court in and for the district of New Hampshire, did appear on the bench of the said court for the administration of justice in a state of total intoxication, produced by the free and intemperate use of intoxicating liquors
If Jefferson could only see the NH government today, what would he have to say?

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