In Re Prewitt

280 F. Supp. 2d 548, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24450, 2003 WL 22080212
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Mississippi
DecidedJuly 23, 2003
Docket4:96MC1-M
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 280 F. Supp. 2d 548 (In Re Prewitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Prewitt, 280 F. Supp. 2d 548, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24450, 2003 WL 22080212 (N.D. Miss. 2003).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

MILLS, District Judge.

This matter comes before the court after an April 1, 2003, hearing for George Dunbar Prewitt (“Prewitt”) to show cause why he should not be banned from the third floor of the United States District Court located at 305 Main Street in Greenville, Mississippi — and a hearing on June 12, 2003, for Prewitt to show cause why he should not be banned from all federal courthouses in the Northern District of Mississippi. Prewitt, who is proceeding pro se in this matter, is a member of the Mississippi Bar Association and the bar of this court.

*551 Prior to April 1,1996, Prewitt frequently appeared on the third floor of the Federal Courthouse in Greenville to file pleadings and use the law library. On April 1, 1996, Magistrate Judge Bogen concluded that Prewitt posed a security risk and rewarded him with an order banning Prewitt from the third floor of the federal building in Greenville. Prewitt had accused the Magistrate Judge by word of mouth of harboring racial animus against him. Prewitt had also directed slanderous and anti-Semitic remarks toward the Magistrate Judge and Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals Judges.

George Dunbar Prewitt’s Prior Litigation

George Dunbar Prewitt became a member of the Mississippi Bar Association on December 19, 1988. Soon thereafter Prewitt became fairly active in appearances before judicial officers and their staff members. Prewitt has become adept at punishing those with whom he has a personal conflict by filing and pursuing frivolous lawsuits against them. Prewitt has been sanctioned several times in the Northern District of Mississippi for these practices. A review of some of his juridical sparrings are documented in part by the following incidents. 1

In a May 16, 1995 letter from Prewitt to Judge Gray Evans, a state court judge, Prewitt complained that Magistrate Judge Bogen (who was then a Mississippi circuit court judge) had removed Prewitt from the list of those attorneys who serve as public defenders, saying: 2 It is my belief that a religious war, using racism as a wedge to separate White Christians from African Christians, is being conducted by non-Christians and the descendants., of non-Christians against the Christian people in America and in Mississippi. [Now United States Magistrate] Judge Bogen and George Kelly are descendants of non-Christians, and they apparently are interested in destroying the lives of as many African Christians as possible, before the non-Christians turn their attention to the White Christians.

It is my belief that so venal a hatred from Christians by non-Christians is rooted in the 8,000 year old enmity between Western culture and Asian culture.

Thus, all those who attempt to restore and maintain the rights-based theory of jurisprudence, which is the heritage of Africa and Greece, always find themselves confronted, in secret, by the forces of Asian utilitarianism. Asian utilitarians, as a group, simply want to tell everyone else when to go and come, while Western Christians believe that community harmony is best fostered by equality of opportunity for the individual. Asian utilitarians want the group advantage of attacking Westerners as individuals, and so they hide their unity of purpose and their Asian ancestry.

In a June 13, 1995, “Response to Defendant’s Motion for Sanctions, Inter Alia ” in a case before the Northern District of Mississippi 3 , Prewitt argued the following:

*552 Mississippi Valley Gas Company and Rodney Huggins once again move this court for sanctions against the plaintiff. It is merely a continuation, on the part of certain nouveau riche and big shot Caucasians, of their effort to drive the African plaintiff and his family from an integrated neighborhood in Greenville, Mississippi.
It is apparent that the big shot, Caucasian controlled public utilities have used the plaintiffs property as a conduit for their various money-making enterprises, and that to continue their illegal trespasses, the public utilities have decided to drive the African plaintiff off his property and out of Greenville, Mississippi.
Judges Eugene Bogen, Gray Evans, and the Washington County Public Defender, however, believed in obtaining pleas of guilty from as many African-Americans as possible, with or without attention to constitutional and statutory rights.
After my termination [as a public defender in Washington County], Judge Bogen refused to allow me to represent indigent clients in my private practice of law, and now Judge Bogen’s wife, Lanier Sykes Bogen, is attempting to develop homes in and around the very street in which I and my family reside.
I have attempted to comply with the orders of this court in every way possible, and it is the Caucasian attorneys in this matter who are permitted to flaunt the rules of discovery by reviewing a deposition without notice to the deponent and before the review of the deponent, all in violation of the rules surrounding depositions.
Since the attorney’s clients summoned the police for me moving my sod on my property on January 5, 1994, I suspect that I would have been sentenced to life imprisonment had I obtained a deposition under the same circumstances as did the attorney in this case.
These allegations, if permitted to be aired before a Mississippi jury, will also point out the conspiracy of a few, big shot Caucasians against the voting rights of Africans in Mississippi, against the plaintiff, and against any effort of Africans and Caucasians in Mississippi to live in peace and harmony in integrated neighborhoods.

In a continuation of his unique interpretation of ordinary events, Prewitt stated, in a filing before the Mississippi Supreme Court, “It appears to be no small coincidence that the Bogen Real Estate Firm, headed by Judge Bogen’s wife, was arrogant and cruel enough to even leave a business card at my door during this same period. This may have been Bogen’s way of telling me to get out of the neighborhood.” (“Petition for Order of Mandamus to Eugene Bogen, Circuit Judge,” submitted to the Mississippi Supreme Court in May of 1995). In this same petition, Prew-itt continued:

In my opinion, Judge Bogen refuses to appoint any attorney, to represent criminal indigents, who seeks to prepare a constitutional and statutory rights-based defense. Instead, Judge Bogen tries to implement the ideal society through implementation of his innate utilitarianistic views, ie. plead as many African Chis-tians guilty as possible, so that people from a non-Christian, non-African, Asian background can teach the rest of us *553 common Christian folk how to structure our lives.

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Related

Collins v. Combs
320 S.W.3d 669 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 2010)
Brown v. State
986 So. 2d 308 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
280 F. Supp. 2d 548, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24450, 2003 WL 22080212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-prewitt-msnd-2003.