Thursday, March 11, 2010

Denny Hardin is a model prisoner, except for all of those lawsuits

Posted by Peter Rugg on Thu, Mar 11, 2010 at 9:00 AM

Denny_Hardin_thumb_200x178.jpg
Denny Hardin's going to sue his way right out of jail. Just you watch!
​Whenever I needed to call the Moberly Correctional Center about Denny Hardin, head of the Americans Republic Party, whoever I talked to would always say somewhere near the end of the conversation, "He's an interesting guy, isn't he?"

The subject of this week's print feature, "Don't Tread On Him," Hardin's at the start of a five-year sentence for violating his probation. Oddly enough, his crime was fraud for starting his own bank and writing more than $160 million in bonded promissory notes to pay off people's home loans (which he did).

In 2006 Hardin tried to arrest Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder on the steps

of the capitol building in Jefferson City for violating the U.S.

Constitution. But Hardin ended up in handcuffs himself. When deciding

the terms of his probation, the courts thought it would be better if he

stopped providing the legal counsel to his friends that led them to

believe ambushing a public official was a good idea. Hardin didn't

agree, and putting him behind bars has only surrounded him with people

eager to get a free consult.

According to Dean Minor, the Moberly warden, Hardin's days are mostly spent in the law library, alternately working on his own case as well as filing motions for the inmates around him. Hardin insists the inmates haven't really committed a crime if no one was hurt and no property was damaged. Shocking that he could find an innocent man in jail, right?

"We have inmates who've actually trained to be law clerks, and that's their job while they serve their term. Denny hasn't done that," Minor says. "We certainly don't encourage inmates to use him. We can discourage someone's legitimacy, but there's no rule against it. Sometimes the inmates don't always trust us to provide the best legal help either.

"Other than suing me every day, Hardin's actually a pretty good inmate. I get something in the mail pretty regularly. I forward it on to our attorneys and they deal with it. I don't know how sound his lawsuits are, but we have to deal with them. He's sued most of the people in the government. ... I think all the way up to the federal level. But other than that, he behaves very well."

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Keith Suttie

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Posted by Norbert Sadoski on 06/30/2010 at 10:33 AM

Actually he was arrested on the Senate floor from an unsigned warrent from Jackson county and had nothing to do with Peter Kinder. All these facts Mr. Rugg could have obtained from the court transcripts and legal files. The judge that set up the indictment recused himself because of a conflict of interest. He had been Mr. Hardins' attorney previously and Mr. Hardin had fired him. Mr. Hardin has not ever provided legal counsel to anyone. He and mutual friends discussed constitutional issues and mandates.Mr. Hardin's only crime was to state he would abolish a corrupt court.The states witness said Mr. Hardin said demolish but didn't know the difference in the meaning of the two words on the witness stand. The Pitch wants everyone to believe Mr. Hardin is anti-goverrnment, WHY? Because he believes in the Constitutions and the laws set forth in them? Why is it that the courts are sitting on a habeas corpus and ignoring it when their own Missouri Supreme Court rule states in rule 91.05 that it is to be addressed without delay? My question is who are the real criminals?

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Posted by Melinda1 on 03/16/2010 at 12:30 PM

You say "oddly enough his crime was fraud" but I think you mean wasn't rather than was. Makes a huge difference.

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Posted by Michael on 03/13/2010 at 12:13 PM

Sometimes the inmates don't always trust us

Jeez, I can't imagine why.

I'd be much more likely to trust one of the inmates than someone who voluntarily chooses to work for a prison.

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Posted by Realist on 03/11/2010 at 11:40 AM
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