Matthew Cox
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Now, later, the debtor can dispute the claim in a separate filing, but they're bearing the legal expenses of that unless you have a home title lock or something like that to do it for you.
So the liens go on the books, and for these public officials, they have to undo.
Now, the U.S.
Department of Justice, I think, showed some great restraint here, but they were tired of his shit.
And they sue him civilly, not criminally, for filing false and fraudulent financing documents designed to harass, intimidate, annoy, punish, and retaliate.
The courts rule against him, against Trapper Kills Many civilly, and basically laying a restraining order on him, banning him from the courthouse.
That's how they're going to do it.
You can't set foot inside the courthouse to file these liens anymore.
He violates that restraining order.
He goes into the courthouse, and so they get a warrant for him or a state warrant for violating the restraining order.
Make sense?
They go to his cabin or house or whatever he's living, and he confronts the troopers, and he has a shotgun at his door.
He's eventually subdued, and they arrest him.
And he says, listen, I never brandished the shotgun.
It was just there.
I'm Trapper Kills Me.
I got shotguns everywhere.
That's my jam.
But ultimately, he pleads guilty to third-degree assault.
And they had more serious charges like attempted murder that they dropped that were probably a little trumped up probably.