Jennings, Gary Don

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 2015
DocketWR-84,229-01
StatusPublished

This text of Jennings, Gary Don (Jennings, Gary Don) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jennings, Gary Don, (Tex. 2015).

Opinion

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110.‘ w 10_-7;__1`278,1<(11) A_ ’ WR~eq,ziq-Q/,_ 13 1 ._ __., / \

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Ex parte

*’"‘ ';

Gary Don Jennings

¢ .r‘ ` REBHTTA` __,C.our~t 01 C¢imilunl QPPQ¢:\'§ Of States' Response to ‘of Hu$HA/f&x&§ j.z\pplicanc'$ 11.07 wrir ’

To the Honorable Judge of said court. comes now Gery Don

Jennings, pro se, to present this "rebuttal" of the Honorable Distriot Attorney, Susan Hawk's state's response to Application

for Writ §f Habeas Corpus. Do wish to impress upon the Court, the fact that Petitioner is a laymen of the law, without any acdaim c§rtification, and therefore, askthat the Court accept

- his rebuttal and thus construe it liberally

_“"”"‘M”'"““_~ T%L»¥e¢stren¢be1sg wi hout~legaf Founsel or assistance ask

.¢_`._, -<~ ,1~,..‘.,, "““ 'W**¢>~¢<»»~ .~_¢-.¢,_-.~,,..z_,<_.]_ `__

that the Court §rovide such legal"Counsel to assist in the proper manner to proceed 1n pursuant to exhausting his -constitutionally

protected 'liberty interest rights'.

Furthermore, the Petitioner hereby request that the Honorable Court forward him'the conclusive fStatment of FactsV upon the

Coutt's disposal of the Petitioner's herein rebuttal.

RECEIVED |N COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS

DEC 16 2015" Gary Don Jennings

Rebuttal to State’ s response ' ABQFACQ§QQ_C~IGFK

sanders Esc'é"s U`n11 1105) Hwy 1807 . _ _ Venus, Tx 7668 `? ; 11,.1»

W10-71278 K(A)

In The_Criminal Distritt

G Don Jennin s any g court No#4 of Dallas County, 'B¢

,REBUTTAL __ _ `OF STATE"S RESPONSE TO APPLICANTS;" "Writ of Habeas Cor;ms

In accordance with PLRA requirements - insofar es having exhausted necessary legal remedies, in hope to resolve such con~ stitutional and state legislative violations via YAppeal" of the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles' decision to "deny" release to Mandatory Supervision - which proven futile. Wherefore, Petitioner herewith, present a "rebuttal" to the State' s Response to Applicants ll. 07 writ for Habeas Corpus relief. In pursuant to 28 U. S C 2254 Federal Habeas Corpus relief; such venue made available as in - _Prei`ser v. Rodriguez, 411 U.S.C. §75, S_OO,. 933. Ct 1827; which addre- sees the Fact or duration" of an individuals' imprisonment. ‘

'State or Federal habeas corpus relief cannot be granted unless

the Petitioner alleges he has been deprived of some rightsemned to him by the United States Const_._itution - or upon basis established by records of State legislature'.

The herein case involves the extent to which the Honorable Trial“

Court/_Appellate Court may judicially review the Texas Board of Pardons

and Paroles's "amended" Sept 1, 1996 7& legigislative House Billl&33 that governs the "Discretionary`Mandatory Supervi.sion." (DMS) rule and

process. upon such basis, the Betinioners' 11.07 writ claim -Gonstitu -

tdnml protected liberty interest rigths entails three grounds:

1) due process violation; Z)Ex post Fac'to; and , 3) Cruel unusual plmishment;

from which the Petisioner seek relief.

(1~0§-335

/, 1

PRocsbuRAL DEFAQLT

`ln most instances for the expressed purpose of eliminating discrepancies,contradictions and/or inconsistencies, the bulk of case law is quite redundant; and further, as strict measures against

misunderstandind, ambiguity, or to curtail the complexity of appeal, a method of repti»»tiouet:case citing is employed. Whereas, the Petitioner, for the sake of brevity - strains to avoild burdening the Honorable

court with such excessive legal jargon’ or the brute monotony of

case law citings - wherever feasible. Trusting, however, thS+a copy of the Fetitioners' 11.07 writ and attached 19 page Memorandum of law is at the Courts immediate disposal to peruse and contemplate, and thus, facilitate its decision to reach a modest conclusion.

."Court must be especially careful when faced with motion/decision y to dismiss for the lack of subject matter jurisdiction - and should accord plaintiffs’ complaint a reasonable tolerance and reading - because

dismissal could preclude another suit‘~ based on any theory that plaintiff might have advanced on basis of facts giving rise to the first action.."

Fed Rule Civ. Pro. Rule 126(6) 28 U.S.C.A.

If it pleases the“Honorable court, permit the Petitioner to¢emnmss

his resilient dissatisfied sentiments,however, nothing personal in the

neighborhood of casting doubt on the `integrity, competence,

or morals of the Honorable District Attorney;

` Susan Hawk - whose decapitated method of decorum and convoluted reasonin

g exemplified along her 'Statesl Response to Applicants'

11.07 writ, was a defen§e, conducted upon the gallows of prevaricated buffoonery; assailing the Hall of Justice

from a catapult of fling doctrine formulat

ed on the basis ofjudi¢ial rhetorical evasions.

Such response entail sheer conclusory staummnts

unsupported by factual arguments. One would have to be furlous or

e Petitioners' 11.07 complaints as frivolous and of no me to dismiss;

either delirious to have deemed th

grounds of " error" Plain

rits;and thus, subjected You can't be serious!

. . . "Plain error" is clear or 'obvi were derelict in countenan assistance in detecting it..

ous that trial judge and procecutors 'cing it, even absent the defendants timely Fed Rules Civ. Proc. Sl.(b),lB U.S.C.A.

(2-0£139 )

An inmate confined in the Texas prison system is entitled to aspect that the judiciary committee: the District Clerk, the Pro- secuting Attorney(DA),and the Justice of the Feace ~ will be expert and impartial in their approach to statutory mandates. The proper 4 objective of "rules" of civil procedure is to obtain a just, fair, equal and impatial adjudication of the rights of litigants under established principles of substantive lew. To the end that this _objective~may be attained with as great expedition and dispatch and at the least expense both to the litigants and to the State as may be practicible, these rules shall be given a liberal construction. ` _ d l 'The presiding judge in such challenging disputant cases bennmn a litigant and the State, has been known to uphold a special inst- itutional virtue as a neutral referee; wherefore a modicum offair - play can be ascertained; an umpire, able to read law impartially,; to consider the factual evidence as relevant between both, the common peasant and equally the elite. When the rights of the def~ endant are disregarded in the slightest degree in obtaining relief; or

either an accused worng-doer is afflicted with the abuse of officials, the courts will hasten to grant relief in favor of the accused.

to the disadvantage of th?incarcerated a claim to a right against an official Board, it ought to be incurred the same

entitled any other litigants. In short, any shdw of abuse or cruelty

on the part of a few in power seems to discredit the the entire government infrastructure.

offenders. If someone stake as notorious as the Parole type of genre of respect

authority of

In too many cases administrative or extreme bias -

he very antics that prom

ptsd the ori ins of the current challenge with the Parole Board; no doubt. g

tions regardless ed to implement them.." U.S;C.A.¢kmst.$.

(3-0£"-33) .

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United States v. Trejo
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Jennings, Gary Don, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jennings-gary-don-tex-2015.