Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Eyes Wide Open: The Nightmare Keeping Tommy Awake


The fog rolling off the Tellico River into Madisonville carries a distinct chill this January 2026—the scent of a regime facing an inevitable sunset.  For over a decade, the political architecture of Monroe County has rested on a single, precarious pillar: the ironclad silence of 
Brian “Wormy” Hodge. But as the "Three Amigos" legacy begins to crumble, the man who once famously "took the hit" for the machine is staring into an abyss where his old protectors can no longer reach.

To understand why the lights may be burning at the Justice Center at 3:00 AM, you have to look back to 2017.  Federal Prosecutor Bart Slabbekorn stood in a Knoxville courtroom, his frustration palpable.  He had Hodge dead to rights—caught on a secret FBI recording sitting in a Monroe County Sheriff’s cruiser, in full uniform, bragging about orchestrating an absentee ballot-buying ring for the 2014 election.

Slabbekorn knew Hodge wasn't the architect; he was the engine. The Feds wanted the names of the those who paved the way for Tommy Jones to ascend.  But Hodge stunned the DOJ:  He chose five years of federal probation and a witness tampering charge over betrayal.  He looked the FBI in the eye and became the ultimate "fall guy," shielding the very foundation of the current administration.

The EMS Paycheck "Protected Asset" Exposed:
The machine’s reward for Hodge’s silence wasn't just a pat on the back—it was a spot on the public ledger.  In a move that defines the county’s "administrative track record,"  Hodge didn't just fade away after his federal conviction.  He was remarkably re-integrated into the county payroll,  serving as an employee at the Monroe County EMS Station.

This wasn't just a job; it was a statement of immunity.  However, that immunity shattered on October 2, 2024, when the TBI arrested Hodge for Sexual Battery—an assault alleged to have occurred right there at the EMS station while he was on the county clock. This is the "Catch-22" haunting the courthouse:

The Slow-Walk: The case has been noticeably sluggish. If the local system buries this felony, they confirm a decade of "state-funded corruption" to federal investigators.

The Breaking Point: If Hodge realizes he is no longer "untouchable," he becomes a legal nuclear option.

The Warning from a Neighbor, Dan Rawls and the 3-Minute Clock:
The refusal to see the writing on the wall was put on full display in August 2025.  Former Bradley County Commissioner Dan Rawls—a man who spent his career sounding the alarm on police misconduct—crossed county lines to offer a prophetic warning to the Monroe County Commission.
Rawls knew exactly what was coming.  He had watched neighboring Bradley County endure a mountain of lawsuits and federal scrutiny following the corruption-heavy term of former Sheriff Eric Watson.  He came to warn Mayor Mitch Ingram and the commissioners that Monroe was on the exact same trajectory.

But the reception was icy. The "ringleader" of the commissioners, Paulette 'So' Summey, begrudgingly allowed Rawls a mere three minutes to speak.  As the clock ticked down, the disrespect was palpable—no "thank you for visiting," no acknowledgment of his expertise,  just a cold silence as he was ushered away.  They treated the messenger like an intruder, ignoring the fact that his warning was a road-map for their own survival.

The Isbill Catalyst and The End of the Old Guard:
While the Hodge case is slow-walked and Rawls’ warnings are sidelined, the Lester Isbill tragedy has ripped the doors off the Justice Center.  In late 2025, the grand jury indicted seven jail staff members—including nurses Courtney Woods and Greg Mills—for the death of a 74-year-old man in a restraint chair.  As these seven defendants head toward their 2026 court dates, the "administrative track record" Hodge was paid to protect is being dismantled in public view.  The eyes of the national media, led by the MSNBC "Silver Fox" Keith Morrison, are no longer looking for a "Secrets in the Smokies" story—they are looking for the "Truth in the Tunnels" of a system that has finally run out of excuses.

The Eyes Tell the Story:
In Madisonville, the most powerful person isn't the one wearing the badge—it’s the man who knows how that badge was bought.  Just as 23 yr. old YouTube vlogger Nick Shirley leveraged a digital lens to expose massive corruption in Minnesota,  the digital and legal paper trail in Monroe County is now a global record.

Monroe County is staring at a nightmare it can't wake up from.  If Brian Hodge decides that his EMS paycheck wasn't worth the prison time he’s now facing,  the silence of a decade is about to become a roar.

The cat is out of the bag. The silence is screaming. And in Monroe County,  the eyes are finally wide open.

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

THE HATCHETT-RUSH PARTNERSHIP & THE BRIAN "WORMY" HODGE PROSECUTION

 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE DATE: January 13, 2026 LOCATION: 10th Judicial District (Bradley, McMinn, Monroe, and Polk Counties)

OVERVIEW

The current leadership of the 10th Judicial District District Attorney’s Office faces significant legal and ethical scrutiny.  The partnership between District Attorney General Stephen Hatchett and his hand-picked ADA,  Paul Rush, may appear to some as inheriting and perpetuating the "administrative track record" of the Steve Bebb era—a period characterized by the protection of law enforcement and the public dismissal of crime victims.

POINT 1: THE "HATCHETT ATTACK" VIDEO (2014)

  • The Evidence: A televised news interview features Stephen Hatchett (then Chief Deputy under Bebb) attacking the credibility of an alleged crime victim, ADA Cindy Schemel, before any investigation into her assault allegations against Bebb had concluded.

  • The Present-Day Link:  Hatchett’s documented habit of labeling victim allegations as "just politics" creates a direct conflict in the Brian "Wormy" Hodge case.  Hodge, a former Monroe County reserve deputy, is currently facing sexual battery charges. Critics argue Hatchett cannot impartially prosecute a former deputy when his own record shows a history of shielding law enforcement "bosses" by discrediting their accusers.

POINT 2: THE "GOLDEN BOY" ADA PAUL RUSH (DISCIPLINARY HISTORY)

  • The Evidence: Despite being rejected by nearly 70% of local voters in a recent judicial bid, Paul Rush was appointed by Hatchett as a lead ADA in September 2024.

  • The Censure: Rush was publicly censured by the Tennessee Board of Professional Responsibility (TBPR) for intentionally withholding exculpatory evidence from the defense in a previous criminal case.

  • The Present-Day Link: Entrusting the "Wormy" Hodge prosecution to an ADA with a history of suppressing evidence risks a massive waste of taxpayer funds.  Any verdict reached could be easily challenged or overturned due to the office’s lack of discovery integrity.


POINT 3: THE NEED FOR OUTSIDE PROSECUTION AND VENUE

  • The Argument:  To ensure a fair trial for both the victim and the state, the Hodge case should be removed from the 10th District entirely.

  • Neutral Venue:  Moving the case to a different venue separates the proceedings from the dense political web and local "loyalty culture" of the Bebb-Hatchett lineage.

  • Institutional Recusal:  The combined history of Hatchett (attacking victims) and Rush (suppressing evidence) suggests that the conflict is not individual, but office-wide, necessitating the appointment of an outside prosecutor (Pro Tem) to ensure the standard of justice is met.

  • Public Perception:  In the "Bible Belt" region where family values are paramount, Hatchett's defense of a man accused of using the DA's office to subvert custody battles for friends is a significant point of contention.  The "Hatchett Method": This early instance of Hatchett dismissing serious allegations as "just politics" establishes a pattern.  For those following prior cases, it suggests that his first instinct as a prosecutor may be to protect the "administrative track record" of the office rather than investigate the claims of victims.
  • The Pension Preservation:  The fact that Bebb resigned early to save his pension is a well-known local detail that reinforces the "good old boy" narrative. Hatchett’s televised defense of Bebb during that same period is often viewed as his "loyalty test" that helped launch his own political career.  This context reinforces the point:  if the leader of the office (Hatchett) has a history of publicly discrediting victims and spinning the circumstances of high-level corruption,  then the integrity of current sensitive cases—especially when handled by an ADA like Paul Rush with his own disciplinary record—is naturally called into question.

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

Sheriff Jones was Willing to Hire an Individual Accused of Soliciting a Witness to Lie to the FBI

Case No: 24282-CRM | State of Tennessee v. Brian Keith "Wormy" Hodge

TO: The Honorable Andrew Freiberg
Subject: Persistent Pattern of Impropriety

This letter serves as a formal demand for your voluntary recusal from Case 24282-CRM. Under the mandatory standards of Tennessee Supreme Court Rule 10, Canon 2.11, your continued adjudication of this matter presents a significant conflict of interest based on the following:


1. Deep-Rooted Conflict of Interest: This Court is well aware that the Defendant, Brian Keith Hodge, is a former reserve deputy and a long-standing political operative for the Monroe County Sheriff's Office (MCSO) hierarchy. Mr. Hodge’s history of "dirty politics"—including his federal conviction for buying votes to secure the Sheriff’s seat for your political circle's preferred candidate—demonstrates a relationship that is neither casual nor distant.

2. Pattern of Favoritism for the Jones Family: The appearance of bias is compounded by Your Honor’s prior dismissal of felony charges against Tommy Jones Sr., the patriarch of the very administration Mr. Hodge was considered for employment as a reserve deputy and operative. The public cannot be expected to believe that a judge who cleared the legal path for the "boss" (Jones Sr.) can impartially adjudicate the "operative" (Hodge).

3. Impossible Claim of Remoteness: It is impossible for the Court to claim the relationship between Judge Freiberg and the Defendant is "too remote" for recusal. Brian Keith "Wormy" Hodge was effectively a "soldier" for the very administration (Jones/White) that Judge Freiberg has favored in the past—most notably through his dismissal of felony charges against Tommy Jones Sr.

4. Drawn Out Proceedings: The indictment for Sexual Battery (Case 24282-CRM) has been drawn out for 16 months. Maintaining this case at a standstill until the February 24, 2026 docket—and potentially beyond the May 5th Primary—serves as a de facto political favor to the MCSO, keeping the Defendant’s trial testimony out of the public record during an election cycle.


5. Public Advocacy by Sheriff Jones:  In April 2017, while Brian Keith "Wormy" Hodge was under federal indictment for vote-buying, Sheriff Tommy Jones personally testified on Hodge's behalf before U.S. Magistrate Judge Clifford Shirley.Attempt to Subvert Firearms Ban:  Sheriff Jones lobbied the federal court to lift the firearm restriction on Hodge so that he could immediately place Hodge on the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office payroll (specifically to work in the jail and operate a cruiser).


6. Judicial Rejection:  The federal court denied the request, with Judge Shirley noting that the Sheriff was willing to hire an individual who was not only under indictment but accused of soliciting a witness to lie to the FBI.


7. The Conclusion:  This 2017 squabble proves that Hodge is a protected asset of the Jones administration. Because Judge Freiberg has already granted the "boss" (Tommy Jones Sr.) a felony dismissal, he cannot impartially adjudicate the "soldier" (Hodge) whom the Sheriff has historically gone to great lengths to protect.





Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Judicial Conflict Concern: Judge Andrew Freiberg

A developing judicial ethics crisis in Monroe County has significant implications for the upcoming 2026 Sheriff’s Election.

A sexual battery indictment against Brian "Wormy" Hodge (a key member of the "3 Amigos" and associate of Sheriff Tommy Jones) is being adjudicated in Judge Andrew Freiberg’s court.

Recent developments have moved this from a local issue to a matter of statewide concern: 
Under Tennessee Supreme Court Rule 10, Canon 2.11, a judge must disqualify themselves in any proceeding in which their "impartiality might reasonably be questioned." > "When a judge has a history of clearing the Sheriff’s family and then presides over a felony case involving the Sheriff’s 'best friend' ... that judge’s impartiality isn't just questioned—it’s compromised."
  • The "Family Favor" That Won't Go Away

    The public outcry centers on one question: Why won’t Judge Freiberg recuse himself? Court records show that Freiberg is the same judge who famously presided over the case of Tommy Jones, Sr. (the Sheriff's father), which ended in the dismissal of eight felony counts, including drug delivery and official misconduct.

    Now, the same judge is presiding over one of the Sheriff’s closest political allies, "Wormy" Hodge. The optics are undeniable:

    • The Judge: Dismissed felonies for the Sheriff’s father.

    • The Defendant: A "Three Amigos" associate of the Sheriff.

    • The Goal: Keep the trial out of the headlines until the May 5th Primary is over

  •  Tennessee Code of Judicial Conduct, Canon 1 (Integrity/Impartiality) and Canon 2 (Rule 2.11 - Disqualification).

    1. Prior Relationship: Judge Freiberg presided over the criminal case of Tommy Joe Jones, Sr. (father of Monroe County Sheriff Tommy Jones), resulting in the dismissal of eight felony counts. This history creates a reasonable question of impartiality regarding the Sheriff’s associates.
    2. If Judge Freiberg used the same tactics AGAIN--blaming the DA while the trial dates slip further into 2026, critics argue the court is granting Sheriff Tommy Jones a "political shield."  If the "Three Amigos"—Jones, Hodge, and Randy White—can successfully kick this case past the May election, they effectively rob Monroe County voters of their right to know the truth before they cast their ballots.
    3.  Election Interference: By allowing delays, the Court would prevent the public from seeing evidence in a high-profile case involving a Sheriff's associate prior to the May 5, 2026 election.  The appearance of a 'judicial shield' for the 10th District’s political elite is a direct threat to the integrity of the judiciary."

  • Despite facing several felony charges in March of 2014, Monroe County TN Constable Tommy Jones Sr. won re-election before his case went to trial...if you are wondering whether justice was served, all the charges were dismissed and he remained in his elected constable position...As of 2026 he is R.I.P.

  • The presiding judge Andrew Freiberg pointed the finger at the DA's office for taking too long to bring the case to trial, and the DA's office claimed they had been ready all along.

    Regardless of where the blame lies for Tommy Jones Senior not having to answer to the serious felony charges; one can only imagine the difficulty involved in the district attorney's office prosecuting Monroe County TN Sheriff Tommy Jones' father--had Daddy Jones been prosecuted, it may have created a 'humbug chaos' with other pending criminal cases: deputies not showing up for court, contraband being lost or mishandled, and other obstructionist tricks and tactics...simply put, it could have been a worst case scenario for the legal system. 

    Seen here during a video interview admitting that... "he shouldn't comment" -- Even those who should know better than to make public comments during pending litigation often make incriminating remarks.

Sunday, January 4, 2026

Sheriff Tommy Jones Slumbers While the County Teeters on Ruin

The "Watch List" of court dates for the Isbill case is now the most-read document in the county. 

To the residents, every hearing represents a ticking clock. They see a sheriff who remains in power while the people who followed his department's culture face criminal charges—and the taxpayers are the ones expected to foot the bill for the inevitable civil "monetary damages."

Sheriff Jones, a man once known for his folksy charm, now appears increasingly out of touch. His public statements often downplay the severity of the situation, attributing the complaints to
No Problem, I Got This

"a few bad apples" or "political maneuvering."
 
Tales of unanswered calls, dismissive attitudes, and a general feeling that the sheriff's department is more concerned with its own internal politics than with protecting and serving the community.

One particularly damning report surfaced from a former deputy who, under condition of anonymity, revealed a culture of impunity within the department. He spoke of inadequate training, a lack of disciplinary action for serious infractions, and the sheriff's tendency to promote loyalty over competence. "It's a ticking time bomb," the former deputy had said, "and Monroe County is going to pay the price."

The consensus at the local diners is grim: if the lawsuits don't bankrupt the county first, the property tax increases required to pay for the "misconduct insurance" surely will.  Sheriff Tommy Jones recently avoided a direct indictment from the grand jury regarding the death of Lester Isbill, but the "no true bill" for the man at the top didn't stop the bleeding for the county. 

The haunting details of Isbill’s final nine hours—restrained in a chair, denied water, and left with a hood over his head—have paved a clear path for civil litigation. In a small county, a multi-million dollar civil rights settlement isn't just a line item; it’s a potential bankruptcy trigger.


Saturday, January 3, 2026

The 3 Amigos: The $4 Million Crack in the "Teflon" Sheriff’s Shield

In the high-stakes theater of Monroe County politics, the "3 Amigos" have spent decades mastering the art of the narrow escape. But as the 2026 election cycle ignites, the taxpayer's checkbook is finally telling the story that Sheriff Tommy Jones tried to bury. 




To understand the current crisis, one must understand the brotherhood that has gripped Monroe County’s throat for over a decade. They are a trio bound by loyalty, scandals, and an uncanny ability to survive administrative wreckage:  Who are the "3 Amigos"?


  • Tommy Jones (The Teflon): The "luckiest" of the bunch. He rose from a humble double-wide trailer to a million-dollar mansion in a gated community, avoiding the legal shrapnel that hit his partners.
  • Randy White (The Tethered): The man who won the Sheriff’s seat in 2014 only to be disqualified by a judge. Now the EMS Director, Randy is rumored to be bound by a "blood promise" to Mayor Mitch Ingram never to leave his post to run for Sheriff again.
  • Keith "Wormy" Hodge (The Target): The operative who took the fall for the 2014 vote-buying scandal.
  • Today, Wormy faces his darkest chapter yet: an indictment for rape allegations involving an incident at The Madisonville EMS Station—the very department overseen by his fellow "Amigo," Randy White. 

  • As of April 21, 2025, the Hodge case (Number: 24282CRM) was still active in the Monroe County Circuit Court. According to the court docket:

    • Current Stage: The case was listed for a Plea/Assignment hearing.

    • Status: This stage typically involves the defendant either entering a plea or the court setting a future trial date. Update: Trial Date set for 2/24/2026

    • Representation: Hodge is represented by attorney Robert L. Jolley, Jr


Nothing exposes the "Amigo" double standard like the case of Josh Woods. In Tommy Jones' Monroe, loyalty is a one-way street reserved only for the inner circle.
  • The Veteran: Woods gave 17 years of his life to the badge, maintaining a spotless record.

  • The Axe: In late 2025, following an off-duty DUI, Woods was immediately fired.

  • The Bite: While "Wormy" Hodge was protected through years of scandals, a career deputy was cast aside in a heartbeat. This summary firing—denying a nearly two-decade employee the 14th Amendment due process hearings afforded to political allies—sets the stage for a wrongful termination suit that could bankrupt the county further.

The "Amigo Tax" is no longer a metaphor; it is a line item in a failing budget. The taxpayer is bleeding for the brotherhood's mistakes:

  1. The McCreary Verdict ($2.25 Million): A jury recently slammed the county with a multi-million dollar judgment for the death of Joshua McCreary, who was denied life-saving medication. $250,000 was ripped directly from the county’s fund balance—money for your kids’ schools and your neighborhood roads, gone.

  2. The Ghost of Lester Isbill: 74 years old. Strapped to a restraint chair for nine hours. Dead.
  3.  With seven former employees indicted for homicide, the civil lawsuit "around the corner" is a ticking time bomb. The Knox County Forensic Center reclassified the death as a homicide, and the settlement will likely be the largest in Monroe history.

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

Tennessee False Emergency Alert Law--Missing Juvenile Alert Still Active Weeks After Child Found

In Tennessee, the act of intentionally continuing to circulate an alert for a child like Kayla Sherwood after the emergency has been resolved falls under the strict guidelines of Tennessee Code § 39-16-502, which deals with False Reports.

Continuing to promote a "resolved" emergency is generally prosecuted under the "Emergency" provision of the statute, which carries significantly heavier penalties than standard false statements.


When a legal violation like
Intentionally Circulating a False Report (TN Code § 39-16-502) is tied to an election season publicity stunt, the legal and political stakes escalate from a criminal offense to a matter of election integrity and public corruption.
In Tennessee, using a false emergency (like a missing child alert) to manipulate public perception during a campaign is viewed as a severe breach of the public trust.
Compounding Criminal Charges: Official Misconduct
If the person circulating the false report is a public official or candidate seeking to gain an advantage, they face additional charges under TN Code § 39-16-402 (Official Misconduct).
The Violation: Acts committed "under color of office" to receive a benefit or harm another.
The Penalty: This is a Class E felony, which can result in the permanent forfeiture of the right to hold public office in Tennessee.

Saturday, December 27, 2025

A Look Back at the 2022 Sheriff's Race--A Missing Boy Became a Pawn

The 2022 election in Monroe County wasn't just a political contest; it was the final act in a decade-long drama fueled by betrayal, legal loopholes, and the total erosion of professional loyalty.  

To understand why a 6-year-old child's recovery in early 2022 became a battlefield of optics, one must first look at the wreckage of the relationship between Sheriff Tommy Jones and the man who effectively created him, Randy White...Tommy, I'm just a 'benchwarmer.'

In 2014, Randy White was the insurgent who toppled the incumbent Bill Bivens.  At his side was Tommy Jones--a man White had plucked from a humble background and a low-level position to be his Chief Deputy.  White provided the ladder; Jones simply climbed it.  But when a lawsuit from the ousted Bivens triggered a POST Commission technicality regarding White's full-time experience, a ruling by Judge Don Ashe made the "people's winner" legally erased.

Randy White

In the vacuum that followed, the County Commission didn't call for a new election; they appointed the apprentice.  Tommy Jones was no longer the deputy; he was the King.  
In a role-reversal deal worked out, White had now become Jones' chief deputy.

The moment Randy White cleared his legal "glitches" and signaled his intent to reclaim the office he felt was rightfully his, the "moral compass" didn't just spin--it broke. Jones fired White, the very man who had mentored him as second-in-command--this was a cold-blooded reality: Jones was using the authority White gave him to ensure White could never use it again.

2022: When a Miracle Child Became a Prop

By the time the search for young Alijah Kensinger gripped the county in January 13th and 14th 2022, the Jones-White rivalry had reached a fever pitch--Randy White was the EMS Director.  In a healthy jurisdiction, the safe recovery of a child is a moment of pure relief.  In Monroe County, it was a Public Relations arms race.

The Anatomy of the "Information Embargo"

In a high-profile missing child case, the "Golden Hour" of recovery is typically met with immediate public relief.  Keeping the news media--and by extension, the community--in the dark until next day "late morning" served a specific political agenda.

Controlled Narrative

By delaying the announcement, the Sheriff's Office ensured they were the only source for "good news."  This allowed them to stage the announcement at a time that maximized viewership and ensured the Sheriff was front and center for the cameras. The 'wait' made the law enforcement effort look more Herculean than it might have been if the "child found" notification had been made quickly and quietly.  Alijah was found soon after the search-
began, sitting under a tree, about a mile from home.  

In Tennessee, pretending an emergency is still active after it has been resolved is legally viewed as Intentionally Circulating a False Report, which is often penalized more harshly than simply making a false statement.

To continue spreading an alert for Alijah or any other child after the emergency has ended, you could face the following under Tennessee Code § 39-16-502: -- 

The "False Emergency" Charge (Class C Felony)

The law specifically targets those who "intentionally initiate or circulate a report of a... past, present, or impending... emergency, knowing that the report is false or baseless."

  • The Penalty: This is a Class C Felony, punishable by 3 to 15 years in prison and fines up to $10,000.

  • Why it applies: Even if an emergency did exist in the past, circulating it as an active event knowing it is over meets the "false or baseless" criteria.

Obstruction of Justice & Resource Diversion

If pretending the emergency still exists causes the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office (MCSO) or the TBI to take action (e.g., reopening a file, deploying deputies to a "sighting," or diverting 911 dispatchers):

  • The Charge: You may also be charged with Interference with Government Operations.

  • The Cost: In many jurisdictions, the court can order the defendant to pay restitution for the full cost of the man-hours and equipment (helicopters, K-9 units) wasted due to the false report.



When a leader uses a community's collective trauma as a "waiting game" for better PR, they aren't just lacking a moral compass--they are actively misusing their authority.  For the residents of Monroe County, finding out they were "bluffed" while a child was already safe is often the moment when political skepticism turns into genuine resentment.
Alijah appeared relatively clean, calm, and fresh while carried by Jones in the staged and dangerous trek on a busy state route.  If he had actually been lost in the woods in 30*F temperatures for 18 hours, medical reality suggests he would have been shivering, potentially hypothermic, and dirty.

EMS Director Randy White had announced they would carry Alijah to the waiting ambulance, the EMS order was ignored--instead he was carried like a trophy (notice the full-size truck) traveling northbound at highway speed near 'Big Bubba' (Jason Fillyaw) next to Sheriff Tommy Jones.

The Cost of Negligence

In emergency medicine, the "hand-off" and transport are high-risk moments. Ignoring a directive to carry a patient (likely to prevent further trauma or stabilize a critical condition) opens the door for:

  • Civil Liability: If the patient's condition worsened due to the transport method, the "deliberate indifference" standard becomes much easier to prove in court.

  • Financial Impact: Monroe County has already faced significant financial hits. Multi-million dollar awards are often the result of juries finding that leadership failed to enforce basic safety standards or allowed a "culture of defiance" toward proper medical care.

The publicity stunt may have violated several federal laws -- also, the Sheriff's Dept prevented EMS from joining the post-incident debriefing.
"The Homeland Security Act" was amended in 2006 adding hr5852,   (5) which includes provisions for inter-agency inter-operabilty and cooperation to 'conduct extensive outreach to foster the development of interoperable emergency communications capabilities by State,  regional,  local governments,  and public-safety agencies.'

It also describes ways to (8)  'promote the development of best practices to facilitate the sharing of information for achieving,  maintaining,  and enhancing inter-agency cooperation capabilities for such response.'


Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Would an Optimus Robot Have Saved Pastor Isbill?... The Case for Automated Prison Oversight


74-year-old retired pastor Lester Isbill died after being restrained in a chair for over nine hours without water, food, or bathroom breaks, with a hood over his head. His autopsy was later amended to show death from heart disease complicated by dehydration and restraint, changing the manner of death to homicide.

The core failures here were fundamentally human judgment failures:
    Compassion and recognition failure - Video reportedly shows a nurse laughing while in the cell and another employee making an obscene gesture toward the camera. The problem wasn't lack of monitoring - it was lack of humanity, protocol violations, and instructions for the restraint chair: State detainees shouldn't be left in it more than two hours. Staff were checking on him periodically but chose not to provide water, medical care, or release him.Discretionary judgment - He was arrested for disorderly conduct, a low-level misdemeanor for which people usually are released on their own recognizance within hours.
A robot would have:
  • Documented the same deterioration
  • Perhaps alerted supervisors more systematically
  • But couldn't override human decisions, provide compassionate care, recognize a medical emergency requiring intervention, or exercise the discretion to say "this elderly, confused man with a pacemaker needs a hospital, not a jail cell."
The tragedy here wasn't insufficient monitoring - it was a systematic failure of human compassion, medical judgment, and accountability. Those require fixing through better training, oversight, accountability systems, and cultural change within corrections, not technological substitution.

A robot with proper medical sensors could have provided continuous vital sign monitoring - tracking his heart rate, blood pressure, body temperature, and hydration levels in real-time. Unlike periodic human checks, it could have generated automatic alerts when his condition deteriorated. He was restrained for over nine hours, and automated systems might have flagged the violation of the two-hour restraint chair protocol more insistently than human staff who chose to ignore it.

A robot might also have created an unambiguous, timestamped record of every interaction (or lack thereof) - making it harder to downplay or obscure what happened.

But the fundamental problem remains:

The staff knew what was happening. Video shows personnel in his cell, with one nurse reportedly laughing and another employee making an obscene gesture. They were aware he'd been restrained for hours without water or bathroom access. The issue wasn't a lack of information - it was the decision not to act on that information.

Even if a robot had sent alerts saying "detainee vital signs deteriorating," "nine hours in restraint chair exceeds protocol," or "severe dehydration risk" - those alerts still go to the same human staff who were already ignoring his condition. If people are willing to ignore an elderly man's obvious distress and medical needs, they can silence or override robotic alerts too.

This tragedy required either (1) someone with authority to intervene despite staff indifference, or (2) real-time external oversight with enforcement power. Technology alone can't create accountability when the humans in charge choose cruelty over care.

A robot wouldn't have:
  • Laughed at a dying man
  • Made obscene gestures at cameras
  • Participated in the cruel mockery that characterized this case
  • Brought personal biases, frustration, or callousness into the situation
That matters significantly because it speaks to something deeply broken in the culture of that facility - staff who had become so desensitized or actively cruel that they could mock someone suffering. A robot would have maintained professional neutrality and followed protocols without the deterioration of empathy that apparently occurred there.
In that sense, yes - robotic guards might prevent some forms of active cruelty and abuse. They wouldn't escalate situations out of anger, retaliate against difficult inmates, or engage in the kind of dehumanizing behavior captured on that video.

However, the trade-off is crucial:

While a robot wouldn't mock Pastor Isbill, it also wouldn't have the capacity that a good human guard would have - to recognize "this man is seriously ill and needs help NOW" and override standard procedures to get him emergency medical attention. It wouldn't exercise compassion or give him water even if not explicitly instructed to do so.
The real tragedy is that we're weighing "at least robots won't be actively cruel" against "but humans could show mercy." The solution shouldn't be choosing between cruelty and indifference - it should be accountability systems that ensure guards act with basic human decency.

Friday, December 19, 2025

​Online Bullying Raises Questions Beyond Social Media

The recent change in the forensic ruling in the death of Lester Isbill—from natural causes to homicide has drawn renewed attention to how criminal cases are evaluated and prosecuted. In that context, public statements by a husband-and-wife social media team claiming they have current District Attorney, Steve Hatchett, “on speed-dial” have raised additional questions.

There is no allegation that these claims are accurate or that any improper conduct has occurred.  However, when individuals publicly brag/assert personal access to a sitting prosecutor while one being the subject of a felony criminal complaint as recently as 2013, a time when current DA Hatchett was the 'Chief Deputy DA' during the scandal filled tenure of former DA Steve Bebb--it can prompt broader concerns about the role that perceived influence may play in criminal prosecutions...Did the current DA drop the prosecution in 2013, essentially giving a them 'slap in the hand' and they are now showing how eternally (grateful and connected) they are to the DA?

Maintaining public confidence in the justice system requires not only fair outcomes, but assurance that prosecutorial decisions are insulated from real or perceived external pressure.

Given the heightened public interest following the revised forensic ruling, these statements may warrant closer examination to assess their accuracy and any implications for public confidence in the justice system.  


Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Before you Judge Sheriff Jones, "Remember what Sheriff Bivens and DA Bebb Got Away With"

 

Fake Lawyer Scandal--Their Actions Described as: "egregious, illegal, and abhorrent" 


This scandal involved one of the most egregious violations of constitutional rights in Monroe County’s recent history. Here are the key facts:

While current controversies deserve scrutiny, the public should remember that the Bivens administration oversaw one of the most egregious and intentional violations of constitutional rights in Tennessee legal history - a deliberate scheme that multiple officials knew about and allowed to continue.”

This demonstrates that Monroe County’s law enforcement accountability issues span multiple administrations and are deeply rooted in a culture of protecting officers from consequences - making it clear that Sheriff Tommy Jones doesn’t have a monopoly on misconduct, but rather inherited a long-standing problem.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

Posing as fake attorneys wasn’t just about rogue detectives - it was part of a systemic failure that included:

∙ Sheriff Bivens being warned to stop the scheme but allowing it to continue.
∙ DA Bebb refusing to prosecute the detectives despite constitutional violations.
∙ Both officials facing no criminal consequences.
∙ Bebb strategically resigning to protect his pension when legislative removal seemed likely.

Doug E Fresh Brannon
In 2008, Monroe County Sheriff’s Detectives James Patrick Henry and Doug Brannon, working under Sheriff Bill Bivens, engaged in an elaborate scheme to frame John Edward Dawson Jr. for the 2006 murder of Troy Green:
∙ Detective Henry created two fictitious attorneys named “Paul Harris” and “Neil Fink” and worked with jailhouse informant Todd Sweet to convince Dawson these fake lawyers were representing him.

∙ Henry sent fake legal mail to Dawson in jail, treated as privileged attorney correspondence, to communicate without oversight.
∙ Sweet helped persuade Dawson to stop talking to his real public defender (Jeanne Wiggins) in favor of the fake attorneys, while detectives planted a recorder in Sweet’s shoe.
∙ Detective Brannon met with Dawson without identifying himself as law enforcement or reading Miranda rights, pretending to be associated with the fake law firm.
∙ Henry coerced witness Monte Cox to lie, offering to help Cox’s imprisoned friend if Cox would falsely say he bought a gun from Dawson.

Sheriff Bivens’ Knowledge and Inaction:

According to court records, both TBI agent Barry Brakebill and District Attorney Steve Bebb called Sheriff Bivens
I'm done with politics
in late 2008 and told him to stop the scheme involving Sweet, but Bivens allowed it to continue.  During testimony, Sheriff Bivens admitted he was vaguely aware of Henry’s plot and didn’t see “a problem with it,” though he added “if it’s illegal, of course, I don’t want to do it.” Bivens testified he had not conducted an internal affairs investigation into Henry’s conduct..

The Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals issued a devastating ruling:

“That Detective Henry would illegally pose as an attorney and arrange the circumstances of the defendant’s case to make it appear as though he had successfully undertaken legal representation of the defendant is abhorrent. That the detective would specifically instruct the defendant not to communicate the relationship to his appointed counsel… renders completely reprehensible the state action in this case.”

The court found that the “egregious actions of the law enforcement officers in this case substantially and profoundly interfered with [Dawson’s] right to counsel under the federal and state constitutions.”

This connects directly to the Dawson case because it shows why Bebb never prosecuted Detectives Henry and Brannon for impersonating attorneys. When asked why he didn’t prosecute them, Bebb testified that “the reason I didn’t prosecute them was because the motive that they did that with was to solve a murder. It was not for their personal gain, and they lost their jobs” - which turned out to be false, as Brannon remained employed and Henry continued working part-time.

As a former Criminal Court judge who campaigned as “a friend to law enforcement,” Bebb had shown an unwillingness to charge police officers for behavior that would land civilians in jail--had the Legislature successfully removed Bebb from office, it would have impacted his pension. By resigning just two months early while citing health reasons, Bebb was able to:
1. Avoid the formal removal process
2. Retain full retirement benefits
3. Claim a medical justification rather than admitting to the misconduct

Det Patrick Henry

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Brian Kelsey opened an investigation in March 2013, noting that “the only remedy available to the Legislature was removal from office” . A state House panel called for Bebb’s resignation after the investigations.

The Strategic Resignation:
On June 6, 2014, Steve Bebb announced he would retire two months before the end of his term, citing heart trouble and bypass surgery . However, Senate Judiciary Chairman Kelsey wrote that Tennessee should expect more outcomes “along the lines of Steve Bebb’s: a two-month-early retirement with full benefits” , making it clear this was seen as a strategic move to avoid removal.

Starting in August 2012, the Chattanooga Times Free Press ran a series of investigative reports alleging that under Bebb, the prosecutor’s office botched important cases through ineptness or misconduct, misused taxpayer money, and played favorites in criminal prosecutions . The allegations included:

∙ Threatening prosecution for coercive purposes, personal use of office vehicles and funds, and failure to prosecute law enforcement officers.
∙ Specifically regarding the Dawson fake attorney case, Bebb refused to prosecute Detectives Henry and Brannon despite the egregious constitutional violations.
∙ Using criminal prosecution to coerce outcomes in civil cases, including threatening a husband with wiretapping charges unless he agreed to give his wife joint custody in their divorce lawsuit.

Todd Sweet

John Edward Dawson Jr. spent four years in the Monroe County Jail before the murder charges were dismissed. When questioned in two court hearings about suborning a witness and posing as an attorney, Henry pleaded his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination and refused to answer .
This demonstrates a pattern of misconduct that extended from the detectives through the sheriff’s office to the district attorney’s office - with no one held criminally accountable despite constitutional violations that the appellate court called “reprehensible” and “unconscionable.“​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

DA Steve Bebb told the Times Free Press that he had specifically told the sheriff’s office not to let anyone talk to Todd Sweet, whom he described as “one of the best con men who ever lived,” saying “I was as shocked as anybody when I learned what they had done” .
However, Monroe County Sheriff Bill Bivens testified in court in 2010 that he didn’t remember receiving such a phone call and said he never investigated the detectives’ behavior or disciplined them.

The Full Scope of the Fake Attorney Scheme
How the Con Worked:
Detective Patrick Henry faked stationery from the bogus legal firm of “Harris and Fink” and wrote to inmate Todd Sweet in the persona of an attorney . They created fake letters from the purported attorney “Paul Harris” for cellmate Todd Sweet to show Dawson, including one letter stating that “Harris” had arranged for Dawson’s impounded truck to be released to his wife.
Detective Henry sent a total of six letters to Dawson purporting to be from fictitious attorneys Paul Harris and Neil Fink - five were addressed to Todd Sweet and one directly to Dawson, but all were intended for Dawson. Dawson’s actual lawyer was never informed of these communications.

The In-Person Deception:
In January 2009, Detective Brannon had an in-person meeting with Dawson at the Monroe County Jail in a visitor’s booth, at the behest of Detective Henry . Brannon pretended to be an associate of the fake firm and met with Dawson in the jail . Detective Brannon did not advise Dawson of his Miranda rights or disclose his affiliation with the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office before speaking with him, and Dawson’s lawyer was not informed of the meeting.
Henry released Dawson’s truck to his wife after the meeting to reinforce his belief in the fictitious attorneys, and Henry and Brannon told Dawson not to cooperate with his lawyer and to ask his lawyer to postpone his cases as many times as possible.

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OP-ED 2

When Police Pretend to Be Lawyers, the Constitution Is Already in Crisis

Americans expect law enforcement to uphold the Constitution—not impersonate attorneys to sabotage it. Yet in Monroe County, Tennessee, that is exactly what happened.

In one of the most disturbing law-enforcement scandals in recent Tennessee history, sheriff’s detectives fabricated lawyers, sent fake legal mail, secretly recorded a jailed suspect, and coerced witnesses—all to manufacture a murder case. Their actions were later described as “egregious, illegal, and abhorrent.” What makes this case nationally significant is not just what happened, but how many people in power knew—and did nothing.


This was not a rogue incident. It was a system working as designed.

In 2008, Monroe County Sheriff’s Detectives James Patrick Henry and Doug Brannon targeted John Edward Dawson Jr. in a 2006 murder investigation. Henry invented two fictional attorneys and sent Dawson fake legal correspondence that jail staff treated as privileged. A jailhouse informant persuaded Dawson to abandon his real public defender. Conversations were secretly recorded. Brannon met with Dawson while concealing his identity as law enforcement and without issuing Miranda warnings. A witness was pressured to lie in exchange for favors.

Each step violated bedrock constitutional protections that have been settled law for decades.

The Sixth Amendment guarantees the right to counsel once formal proceedings have begun, and law enforcement may not deliberately elicit statements from a defendant in the absence of counsel (Massiah v. United States, 377 U.S. 201 (1964); United States v. Henry, 447 U.S. 264 (1980)). The Supreme Court has been explicit that the government may not use informants or deception to circumvent that right (Maine v. Moulton, 474 U.S. 159 (1985)).


Impersonating an attorney is not a gray area—it strikes at the core of the adversarial system. The Court has repeatedly emphasized that interference with the attorney-client relationship undermines the fairness of the entire proceeding (Gideon v. Wainwright, 372 U.S. 335 (1963); Weatherford v. Bursey, 429 U.S. 545 (1977)). Meanwhile, questioning a suspect while concealing law enforcement status and failing to issue Miranda warnings violates the Fifth Amendment’s protection against compelled self-incrimination (Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966)).

None of this law was unclear in 2008.

And yet the scheme continued.

Sheriff Bill Bivens was warned and allowed it to proceed. The district attorney at the time declined to prosecute despite overwhelming evidence of constitutional violations. No criminal charges were brought. When legislative removal became a real threat, the prosecutor resigned—preserving his pension. Accountability never arrived.

This is why Monroe County matters to the rest of the country.

Across the United States, public debate often centers on whether misconduct is the work of a few “bad apples.” But the Fake Lawyer scandal exposes a more uncomfortable truth: constitutional violations persist when institutions are structured to protect themselves rather than the public.

When officers can impersonate lawyers without consequence, the problem is not merely unethical policing—it is a justice system that has abandoned its own rules. When prosecutors refuse to act, constitutional rights become theoretical rather than enforceable. When leaders face no repercussions, misconduct becomes institutional precedent.

Today, Monroe County faces renewed scrutiny over law enforcement practices. That scrutiny is warranted—but it should not be selective or a historical. The culture that allows abuse does not begin or end with one sheriff or one election cycle. It survives through silence, resignation, and institutional self-preservation.

Chickens Come to Roost
The Constitution does not enforce itself. It relies on people in power to defend it—especially when doing so is uncomfortable or politically costly. Monroe County’s Fake Lawyer scandal is a warning of what happens when they don’t.

If impersonating an attorney, fabricating evidence, and sabotaging the right to counsel can go unpunished in one American county, it can happen anywhere.

That is why this story is not local.
It is national.

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Video shows a first person narrative of Marvin Young: his family was cheated out of their rightful inheritance--when shown the forged will, DA Bebb agreed there was no way the signature on the will was genuine--but chose to do nothing about it--some of the people mentioned are RIP--they will answer to God for their alleged fraudulent scheme.