Monday, January 18, 2010

Josh McCown, Wharton County (TX) District Attorney picks on the wrong person.

Wharton County District Attorney Josh McCown may have met his match...yours truly.

As McCown, Keith E Miller MD (former Chairman of Texas Medical Board Disciplinary Process Review Committee), and Mari Robinson (Executive Director and "next to go" of the Texas Medical Board) altered government documents and shared them, the Forces of Righteousness march forward.

In August, although he did his best to convict me of aggravated assault of a law enforcement officer in the line of duty, with a deadly weapon (my car, as I was fleeing for my life), the Wharton jury, which rarely bucks law enforcement, acquitted me.

In a brazoned display of prosecutorial misconduct, McCown vowed to my attorney that he would seek revenge.

But... "Vengeance is mine!" says the LORD.

Naughty Josh...

Here I file a Motion for Mistrial based on Prosecutorial Misconduct.

Pigott Wharton Motion for Mistrial Based on Prosecutorial Misconduct of Wharton County (TX) District Attorn...

...naughty Josh...

That b-a-a-a-d boy took advantage of my disability. I am a proud advocate for persons with psychiatric diagnoses and don't think state medical boards and state attorney generals should pick on me because I have one. It is actually a badge of honor.

Wharton County has not escaped the Dark Ages, when the mentally ill often died in dungeons.

Here is what my doctor, Dr. Matthew Brams, said about my condition:

Pigott Summary of Testimony by Dr Brams



Former TMB member Keith Miller is still retaliating against me because I called him a "medical whore" (a perjorative term doctors use for other doctors whose testimony under oath can be purchased) and gave him Texas Medical Board Watch's "Red Devil Award" two years in a row. See his feeble efforts:

Pigott Exhibit b Motion for Mistrial

Robinson, Miller, and McCown are marching onward, too. They are following the pied piper right over the cliff.

1 comment:

  1. Taking advantage of the disadvantaged...and a Dr. no less, shame be upon him.

    That is how I felt when I had the psychologist threaten me with a bad report during a court-ordered sessions....after I refused his advances. I won the battle, but his cronies and handlers had far too many hidden resources for me to protect myself completely, and I had the responsibility of a child.

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