Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Leap Day Fears

This leap day started when tornadoes destroyed the area my youngest daughter and her family reside in, leaving death and destruction in it's wake. It's hair raising to have loved ones in danger, but by sunrise my daughter notified everyone that they were alright, a lot of property damage yet they were unsure if the horses were alright.

Thank God they are safe and sound, but my heart bleeds for the families who lost a loved ones, my daughter said that three, and not one, have died and three are missing. Which potentially means that six human beings have died.


At Least One Person Is Dead And Others Injured As Tornado Hit's Ozarks.
National Weather Service meteorologist Mike Griffin said at least three tracks have been identified: one running from the Buffalo area east to Lebanon, another from Kimberling City through Branson into Taney County and a third from Pittsburg, Kan. to the Lamar and Stockton areas.

Some of the most severe damage appeared to be concentrated north near Buffalo and south near Branson, where a reported tornado hopped along the Missouri 76 strip and through Branson Landing.
Griffin said the tornado near Buffalo caused injuries and the one fatality reported so far.
The death happened when a possible tornado hit a mobile home park in southwest Missouri, south of Buffalo, said Lt. Dana Eagan of the Dallas County Sheriff's Office. Another 13 people at the trailer park were injured, she said. Crews would begin searching the area once the sun came up, Eagan said.

Jason Wendlandt, the director of Dallas County Emergency Management, said the worst of the damage seems to be in the area two miles south of Buffalo.
Wendlandt said initial search and rescue operations have been completed. He expected to begin a secondary search around 10 a.m.

The damage continued to the east, according to Griffin from the weather service. He said the Tracker Marine facility in Lebanon was reported hit, as well as a number of homes in that area.

South of Springfield, another reported tornado tore through Stone and Taney counties, hopping from Kimberling City through the Branson strip and east to Power Site. Griffin said numerous theaters and businesses have been significantly damaged by the twister.

No life-threatening injuries have been reported in the Branson area, but one person was transferred to a Springfield hospital. Skaggs hospital remains open to provide urgent care.

School was cancelled in Branson, as it was Buffalo, due to the lack of power and difficulty getting staff and students to school.
Empire Electric said they had 6,000 customers without power in the Branson area. Depending on the damage it could take anywhere from a couple of hours to several days getting that restored.

White River Electric - which serves many people outside Branson in Taney County - had 8,700 customers without power at one point, but the number was down to 7,200 as of a 7 a.m. news conference.

Authorities were working to clear roads as quickly as possible, but many, including the 76 strip, were barricaded.
Two shelters have been opened for people whose homes have been damaged. One is the Branson RecPlex, for homeowners. People who live in area hotels are to Branson Towers on Shepherd of the Hills Expressway. The RecPlex also is a place to take pets for temporary shelter.

Staff from the Greene County Office of Emergency Management were in the Buffalo and Branson areas. A structural response team from Springfield Fire Department also headed to Branson, where there were reports of a number of people trapped in their homes.

Facebook pages titled "Branson, MO Recovery" and "Branson Tornado Info" are among those tracking storm damage and recovery efforts.

In Kansas, Gov. Sam Brownback declared a state of emergency late Tuesday after an apparent tornado struck Harveyville.


The declaration covered Wabaunsee County, southwest of Topeka. A news release from the governor's office said one person was critically injured and "a number of homes" and a church were damaged, and trees and power lines were down.

Earlier, the National Weather Service reported brief tornado touchdowns southwest of Hutchinson, Kan.
I think I feel the temperature more when I am nervous, scared and worried because I was shivering uncontrollably in 40+ degrees, so cold it went right to the bone. Even when the temperature rose into the lower 50's I couldn't stop shivering ... I was frozen.

Seeing as Andreas was going to be working outside I took the opportunity to go to Carrizozo to speak with Judge Martha Proctor about the ranch hay trailer. En route back I stopped and met with Jan and we both went to Capitan before heading back to Nogal. I didn't get back to Alto before the sun was starting to set.

Last week a couple walked into TR's store inquiring about me and what had happened with the court trial.. if I had ever had the stolen money returned. I was perplexed as to whom they were or why they wold be asking. So I e-mailed a friend in Austin, Texas, to see if it was perhaps someone he knew.
The mystery remains unsolved, but I told the staff at TR's to direct the couple to this blog should they return.

It's painfully hard being homeless. You try to pretend that everything is normal and somehow you will find a way to pull out of it. In my case, make up the stolen money. But you can feel the slippery slope you are on. I'm filthy. 5 years ago I was always clean. I'm hurting - a pain etched on my face. 5 years ago I still had dreams and aspirations. So when I watched the video I understood... only too well.




Homeless in Hannibal: Following the footsteps of the homeless

HANNIBAL, MO. -- We've had a mild winter so far this year, but it's the season homeless people dread the most.

Unlike big cities, you don't see people sleeping on the streets in Hannibal. But they are there, and growing in numbers.

Freezing winter days like this are some of the hardest for Joe, who's been living on the streets of Hannibal for 20 years.

"It's a hard life and it makes us old men before our time," Joe said.

Joe calls this town his home, and roves it constantly looking for abandoned buildings, bridges and caves for protection from the biting wind.

"You know that there is no place for you to go and get warm, so you have to prepare yourself a long ahead of time," Joe said. "The Hannibal police department doesn't like you building fires. We have to keep warm. What do you want to do -- run around and pick up dead bodies?"

Dumpsters serve as his refrigerators most days, but it's meals at area food kitchens like this that give him a chance to come in out of the cold to thaw out his freezing fingers.

When he picks up his coat to leave, he gathers up everything that he values in this world.

Joe has to keep moving to keep warm and knows the end result if he doesn't. He chokes up as he talks about his friend who froze to death one winter. It's all about survival on the streets, and many times the friends he calls his family don't make it.

"It's been 20 years I've been out here. I've buried six and there was no reason for any of them to go.That's one of the reasons why I'm trying to stop doing this because I'm getting too old to. I can't bury no more people," Joe said.

There are many places Hannibal's homeless make their shelter. One of the most common is along the Mississippi River, near the old amphitheatre.

On our tour of areas inhabited by Hannibal's homeless, we just missed some people who built a fire to keep warm the night before. We found their remnants on the concrete slab that used to be the old amphitheatre. Others take shelter in the old stone city buildings nearby. In another building, Joe recalls a week in which eight or more people lined up their sleeping bags and blankets and slept on a dirt floor.

Another stone building nearby holds evidence of someone living here right now. This tarp is being used to keep the muddy floor from seeping into sleeping bags. Joe says one summer 40 people called this area home, many of them transients who hitchhiked or hopped trains to get here. But Joe says others are just people from around here who are down on their luck and hit the bottom before coming back.

"They're not drunks, bums. I know 50 people in this town who are good productive citizens and none of these normal citizens would know that they were homeless," Joe said.

While homelessness is on the rise in Hannibal, there are many local organizations that are stepping in to help. See that story Wednesday on KHQA's late news at 10.

http://www.connecttristates.com/news/story.aspx?id=724646#.T05RBPlmlFj


There has to be someone related to Robert & Sylve Huckins must have some means to reach them, if it be Michael Huckins, Dr.Kenneth Ogilvie ( Diana Huckins? Dominic Huckins? Malcolm Huckins? ) or Patricia Ogilvie-Huckins and get them to return ALL of the money they stole from us so that I can buy a home and get our lives back. I am begging anyone in this family for help.

I don't believe I have EVER witnessed any none vio
lent crime that can be as devastating as stealing someone's home. I am walking in Dorothy McKeevers footsteps, day by day, month by month, year by year.

Liam Griffin, I sat in your law office with two witnesses as you gave me your promise, your guarantee, that our money would be returned before harm came to us.

Patricia Ogilvie-Huckins you were present the day I signed contract with your son. You walked out of the kitchen with Sylve Huckins and your son introduced me to you. He told you that I was the British horse trainer he had told you about, the one he was going to build the home and barn for. Why didn't you say something? There may be a rational and reasonable explanation but I have spent over 3 years, homeless, not understanding it. I understand it even less knowing that though I was a total stranger, both Dorothy McKeever and Sally Canning you KNEW, and you knew what your son had done to them and others.

Dr. Kenneth Ogilvie, I contacted you and simply asked f
or a reference, not knowing that Robert Huckins was your cousin. Robert Huckins had just stolen over $30,000 from the domestic violence shelter, HEAL, yet everyone was trying to hide it. There was a history of stealing large amounts of money. $65,000 PLUS from Nancy Canning. $89,000 PLUS from Dorothy McKeever, $45,000 from Francis McKinney. The list just goes on and on and on.
Because of Robert Huckins I ended up paying
$140,000 to be homeless.. sat in the cold, emotionally, physically and financially broke. In the middle of a recession, with no way to recover the stolen funds.

Today Robert Huckins has his own home...
He also has OUR home.....
He also has a lot of people's money...
And his freedom.


Women are not banks or loan institutions. Women should not be the source of a retirement fund for people who don't want to do an honest day's work for an honest day's pay. Holding women hostage while playing with the judicial system, a horrendous game of cat and mouse extending YEARS, with the victims whose very homes, families and stability are in jeopardy is cruelty, as cruel as a physical beating. It is financial and emotional RAPE. Homelessness is not justice. It is a slow, painful death.
Please, I beg with everything I have within me, pl
ease convince Robert Huckins to stop this torture and return the building fund he stole from us so we too, can have a home.

Relevant pages:

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2010/06/shattered-dreams-endless-nightmare.html

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2010/
06/paul-harvey-once-reported-if-you-want.html

http://robert
huckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2010/06/who-is-robert-millard-huckins.html

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2010/06/so-where-is-money.html

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2010/06/criminal-defense-attorneys-woes.html

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/20
10/06/pen-is-mightier-than-sword.html

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com
/2011/02/morally-bankrupt.html

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2
011/06/robert-huckins-legal-plea.html

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2011/
07/many-faces-of-abuse.html

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2011
/07/shadow-women.html

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2011/07/price-of-crime.html


http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2011/12/w
hite-nothing-but-white.html
If there be any truer measure of a man than by what he does, it must be what he gives. ~Robert South

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

National Law Center On Homelessness And Poverty

I woke up terribly ill, so ill I had a difficult time walking outside. I wanted to sleep just to evade the pain. I was not too sure which hurt more, my head or my stomach.. but my head felt like it had been sawed off in my sleep and replaced using super glue.

The wind was simply insane. The standing joke for today was that White Sands is blowing through. Visibility is so low you can't even see across the valley.


This has been one of those days where you have NO idea what to do because you have done everything possible. A day of praying for the phone to ring saying that I have work for a day, or a week, or permanently. I spent some time getting belongings out that can be sold, trying to figure out how to protect what I have managed to hang onto for 4 years while being homeless. But for the most part it's been a day of frustration with my health and my circumstances.

People in homes don't have to consider relocating every single thing they own each time they lose a job, or wonder where they will be living while looking for work..

I finally got the prices from the printers:

Setup fee $35 min (1 time fee per design)
Screen fee $12.50 per screen (depends on how many colors / per design)
1-12 shirts $9 per shirt
13-48 shirts $8.75 per shirt
49-96 shirts $8 per shirt
97-144 shirts $7.25 per shirt
145 + $6.50 per shirt

Now it's a matter of deciding if I dare jump in and try to make additional funds this way. I have never been one to shy away from anything, but trying to put a roof over your head after having gone through so much makes you very wary fearing that you will lose more ground.


About a year ago I was speaking at the State Department thanks to an invite from my friend Beth Kanter. While in Washington, DC my friends at the Case Foundation invited me to stop by for a visit . As I was leaving to walk back to where I was staying I received a tweet from National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty letting me know their offices are right around the corner.

I just love social media because all the connections from Beth Kanter to Case Foundation to National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty are a result of engaging people on Twitter. I first connected with NLCHP online, and then at an National Alliance to End Homelessness conference, but I really didn't fully understand how awesome and important their work was until this interview.

As a lawyer, Maria Foscarinis could have chosen a lot of different paths other than fighting homelessness. Many of them far more lucrative than social and public service work. I have a lot of respect for her and anyone who dedicates themselves to helping others.

National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty fights for homeless people at the national and local level. The afternoon I spent visiting really opened my eyes to a different and much needed form of advocacy.
Taken from this about page:

Lawyers Working to End Homelessness

The mission of the Law Center is to prevent and end homelessness by serving as the legal arm of the nationwide movement to end homelessness. To achieve its mission, the organization pursues three main strategies:

*impact litigation
*policy advocacy
*public education

The Law Center strives to place homelessness in the larger context of poverty. By taking this approach, the organization aims to address homelessness as a very visible manifestation of deeper causes, including:

*the shortage of affordable housing
*insufficient income
*inadequate social services

Please support National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty http://www.nlchp.org and follow them on twitter https://twitter.com/#!/nlchphomeless

And still the cold wind blew all day, not stopping until dusk... as one reporter said, "sending White Sands" over the mountain. Amazingly later in the afternoon a satellite image was released showed a cloud of white sand heading from White Sands to Ruidoso .... I just want to go home.



Shaun King (HopeMob) http://www.facebook.com/HopeMob posted a link to this song by PJ Morton http://www.facebook.com/thepjmorton feat.Adam Levine that could have been written for me, and EVERY homeless person.

There has to be someone related to Robert & Sylve Huckins must have some means to reach them, if it be Michael Huckins, Dr.Kenneth Ogilvie ( Diana Huckins? Dominic Huckins? Malcolm Huckins? ) or Patricia Ogilvie-Huckins and get them to return ALL of the money they stole from us so that I can buy a home and get our lives back. I am begging anyone in this family for help.

I don't believe I have EVER witnessed any none vio
lent crime that can be as devastating as stealing someone's home. I am walking in Dorothy McKeevers footsteps, day by day, month by month, year by year.

Liam Griffin, I sat in your law office with two witnesses as you gave me your promise, your guarantee, that our money would be returned before harm came to us.

Patricia Ogilvie-Huckins you were present the day I signed contract with your son. You walked out of the kitchen with Sylve Huckins and your son introduced me to you. He told you that I was the British horse trainer he had told you about, the one he was going to build the home and barn for. Why didn't you say something? There may be a rational and reasonable explanation but I have spent over 3 years, homeless, not understanding it. I understand it even less knowing that though I was a total stranger, both Dorothy McKeever and Sally Canning you KNEW, and you knew what your son had done to them and others.

Dr. Kenneth Ogilvie, I contacted you and simply asked f
or a reference, not knowing that Robert Huckins was your cousin. Robert Huckins had just stolen over $30,000 from the domestic violence shelter, HEAL, yet everyone was trying to hide it. There was a history of stealing large amounts of money. $65,000 PLUS from Nancy Canning. $89,000 PLUS from Dorothy McKeever, $45,000 from Francis McKinney. The list just goes on and on and on.
Because of Robert Huckins I ended up paying
$140,000 to be homeless.. sat in the cold, emotionally, physically and financially broke. In the middle of a recession, with no way to recover the stolen funds.

Today Robert Huckins has his own home...
He also has OUR home.....
He also has a lot of people's money...
And his freedom.


Women are not banks or loan institutions. Women should not be the source of a retirement fund for people who don't want to do an honest day's work for an honest day's pay. Holding women hostage while playing with the judicial system, a horrendous game of cat and mouse extending YEARS, with the victims whose very homes, families and stability are in jeopardy is cruelty, as cruel as a physical beating. It is financial and emotional RAPE. Homelessness is not justice. It is a slow, painful death.
Please, I beg with everything I have within me, pl
ease convince Robert Huckins to stop this torture and return the building fund he stole from us so we too, can have a home.

Relevant pages:

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2010/06/shattered-dreams-endless-nightmare.html

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2010/
06/paul-harvey-once-reported-if-you-want.html

http://robert
huckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2010/06/who-is-robert-millard-huckins.html

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2010/06/so-where-is-money.html

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2010/06/criminal-defense-attorneys-woes.html

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/20
10/06/pen-is-mightier-than-sword.html

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com
/2011/02/morally-bankrupt.html

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2
011/06/robert-huckins-legal-plea.html

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2011/
07/many-faces-of-abuse.html

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2011
/07/shadow-women.html

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2011/07/price-of-crime.html


http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2011/12/w
hite-nothing-but-white.html
Generosity is giving more than you can, and pride is taking less than you need. - Khalil Gibran

Monday, February 27, 2012

For Lent: I Would Like To Give Up Supporting A Convicted Felon

I was dreading this day for I have to do "something" to salvage everything I have been clinging onto, yet I am so exhausted I have no idea what to do.

I always said that if I couldn't find a resolve before this day came I would pitch a tent outside the Alamogordo court house to protest my having to support a career criminal, leaving me homeless. I can't afford to support him and myself.. I don't have the ability ~ and I have no idea how to get that through to the 12th District.


Being homeless and hanging on for your dear life while struggling but with food and gas money provided is a whole lot different than being homeless with zero means to hang on to that frayed rope that has been your lifeline. For the first hour this morning all I could do was sit thoroughly stunned.

As Rio, Gracie and Katie romped around I looked to see if the printer had responded to my request for a price quote. He hadn't.. but maybe he will later today. Before noon a violent migraine started through stress and I wanted to beat my head up against a wall.
And by 1 pm I was staggering around screaming in pain deathly ill. My ex-boss had a buyer for a trailer and some guns arrive, so I quickly got out of the way and took the time to do some thinking, and try to get the migraine under control.

By 3 pm I was well enough to drive ~ barely, so I went to Ruidoso to pick up some items for my ex-boss. While in mid-town I decided to stop in at a t-shirt store to see if any of my t-shirt designs would sell. The owners wasn't present but I had a wonderful time chatting with the store manager, a born and raised local.

It's been a half way decent day. No long term problems resolved, but no disasters or retreating in progress.

The irony of this entire situation is that I am supporting a career criminal.

1) No-one can take his home because that would be inhumane. Yet he can take ours and it's no big deal. Homelessness becomes insignificant when it comes to female victims.

2) The judge KEPT saying that he had to return our building fund with EXPEDIENCE. Yet the law cannot make him do what was demanded.

I don't want to support this criminal anymore. The cost is far too high emotionally, financially, physically and spiritually. I want to give him up not only for lent... but FOREVER.

Successes & Challenges of Feminist Arts-based Research with Street-involved women - Homeless Hub Research Summary Series

Homelessness is often seen as a “male” issue, which has often led to social service resources being directed at men. However, there is a growing number of women living in sub-standard housing or on the streets. Although similar causes of homelessness exist between men and women, such as poverty and a lack of affordable housing, women’s homelessness is largely a result of fleeing situations of domestic abuse. Although art is one of the earliest forms of communication, it has not been used much in social science research. Arts-based research is strongly related to therapy and because feminist researchers work in collaborative, participatory and social-change oriented ways to better the lives of women, feminist arts-based approaches to research offer a female-friendly approach to knowledge gathering.
http://homelesshub.ca/Library/View.aspx?id=53756&AspxAutoDetectCookieSupport=1

The itinerant US left has found its home in the Occupy movement

Far from alienating middle America, the progressive movement has captured the public and political imagination

At the auction of foreclosed homes at Queens supreme court in New York, the official carefully explained the process for one person to make an offer on another person's misery. As the bidding was about to begin on what was once the home of Valencia Williams, around 20 people stood up and started to sing: "Mr Auctioneer / And all the people here / We're asking you to call off the sale right now / We're going to survive but we don't know how."

As the clerk ordered them to sit down and be quiet, or face arrest, some left but others remained standing, repeating the single laconic verse. They were still singing over the clink of handcuffs, and as they were led out of the room. Each time an officer opened the door to take a protester out, the singing from the hallway would seep back in. Finally, when the room had been cleared, the auctioneer put Williams's home back on the block.

Earlier that morning, at an orientation session, the organisers spelled out their goal to the protesters. The aim was to intervene at the moment where the American dream (home ownership, individualism, social mobility) meets the American reality (poverty, corporate greed, vulture capitalism). They hoped not just to disrupt but to stop the process and force a reckoning between the antiseptic atmosphere of the auction and the grim consequences of the eviction. "We have two objectives," said one of the leaders. "To bring as much beauty to this ugly event as possible, and to shut this shit down."

The legacy of Occupy Wall Street (OWS) is still in the making. Those who believe it came from nowhere and has disappeared just as quickly are wrong on both counts. Most occupiers were already politically active in a range of campaigns. What the occupations did was bring them together in one place and refract their disparate messages through the broader lens of inequality. The occupations were less an isolated outpouring of discontent than a decisive, dynamic moment in an evolving process.

Over the last decade in the US there has been an itinerant quality to the progressive left. Activists have sought shelter in the anti-war movement, Howard Dean's primary campaign, gay rights, immigrants' rights or the Obama campaign. Each more powerful and hopeful than the last; each too narrowly focused and lacking the social or economic base to sustain it. In the occupations, these political vagrants found a home.

The trouble is (as London's St Paul's protesters, whose appeal against eviction was denied last week, can testify) that while this home offered space for debate and organisation, it was no less precarious than the house of Valencia Williams in Queens. Vulnerable to harassment and eviction by the state, it was only a matter of time before they were moved on.

But while taking over public land to advocate for the public good has had an important practical and symbolic function, it was never the sole or even primary aim of the occupations. The dismantling of many encampments has not prevented the activists who were drawn to it from continuing with the work they were doing before.

Indeed, the occupations have left them re-energised and reinvigorated, with new recruits and a broader template within which to work. Accusations that they were too vague, too white and too elitist to engage with the needs of ordinary working people have been contradicted by the many concrete actions they spawned or to which they are connected.

"The occupation was always about values,"explains Michael Premo, who was one of the founding organisers of OWS and involved in the action to block the auction in Queens. "It was about reconfiguring the relationship between people and profit so that people are privileged instead of profit. There's a natural affinity between those values and struggles over housing and land."

The radical Brazilian educator Paulo Freire once asked, "What can we do today so that tomorrow we can do what we are unable to do today?" The occupations have been central to creating new possibilities.

Organising for Occupation (O4O), which executed the protest in Queens, was working on issues of housing justice months before OWS emerged. "The campaigns are separate but there is some crossover," explains Karen Gargamelli of O4O. All those I spoke to in Queens had been involved in OWS in some fashion.

In Nashville, Occupy Our Homes, which came directly out of the Occupy Nashville movement, forced JP Morgan to back off the foreclosure on Helen Bailey, a 78-year-old veteran civil rights activist. Roughly half those involved in the campaign were housing activists before, explains one activist, the others came to it through the occupation.

In Portland, Oregon, WeAreOregon has been working against foreclosures for some time, and is now concentrating on persuading people to stay in their homes and not be intimidated by the banks. It has been joined by Unsettle Portland, which came out of the occupation. Earlier this month they packed an auction and helped delay the eviction of a single mother while she challenges the banks.

Polls have shown almost twice as many Americans agreed with OWS than disagreed with it. Far from alienating middle America, the movement has captured the public and political imagination. It has shifted the national debate from debt to inequality and the focus of the problem from victims of the crisis (the poor) to its perpetrators (the financial institutions). A Pew poll released in December revealed 77% of Americans believe there is too much power in the hands of a few rich people and corporations, while those who believed "most people who want to get ahead can make it if they are willing to work hard" was at its lowest point since the question was first put in 1994.

It also has the Republicans rattled. In his address to the Republican Governors Association in December, rightwing pollster Frank Luntz said: "The public … still prefers capitalism to socialism, but they think capitalism is immoral. And if we're seen as defenders of quote, Wall Street, end quote, we've got a problem."

The relationship between the physical space that the occupation movement has held and its political efficacy has not been settled – and perhaps never will be. Its importance doesn't lie in what it means, but in what it does. It started by changing how people think about the world they live in; now it's strengthening their confidence to change it.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfr ee/2012/feb/26/us-left-home-occupy-middle-america




http://www.unitedwayla.org/home-for-good/
There has to be someone related to Robert & Sylve Huckins must have some means to reach them, if it be Michael Huckins, Dr.Kenneth Ogilvie ( Diana Huckins? Dominic Huckins? Malcolm Huckins? ) or Patricia Ogilvie-Huckins and get them to return ALL of the money they stole from us so that I can buy a home and get our lives back. I am begging anyone in this family for help.

I don't believe I have EVER witnessed any none vio
lent crime that can be as devastating as stealing someone's home. I am walking in Dorothy McKeevers footsteps, day by day, month by month, year by year.

Liam Griffin, I sat in your law office with two witnesses as you gave me your promise, your guarantee, that our money would be returned before harm came to us.

Patricia Ogilvie-Huckins you were present the day I signed contract with your son. You walked out of the kitchen with Sylve Huckins and your son introduced me to you. He told you that I was the British horse trainer he had told you about, the one he was going to build the home and barn for. Why didn't you say something? There may be a rational and reasonable explanation but I have spent over 3 years, homeless, not understanding it. I understand it even less knowing that though I was a total stranger, both Dorothy McKeever and Sally Canning you KNEW, and you knew what your son had done to them and others.

Dr. Kenneth Ogilvie, I contacted you and simply asked f
or a reference, not knowing that Robert Huckins was your cousin. Robert Huckins had just stolen over $30,000 from the domestic violence shelter, HEAL, yet everyone was trying to hide it. There was a history of stealing large amounts of money. $65,000 PLUS from Nancy Canning. $89,000 PLUS from Dorothy McKeever, $45,000 from Francis McKinney. The list just goes on and on and on.
Because of Robert Huckins I ended up paying
$140,000 to be homeless.. sat in the cold, emotionally, physically and financially broke. In the middle of a recession, with no way to recover the stolen funds.

Today Robert Huckins has his own home...
He also has OUR home.....
He also has a lot of people's money...
And his freedom.


Women are not banks or loan institutions. Women should not be the source of a retirement fund for people who don't want to do an honest day's work for an honest day's pay. Holding women hostage while playing with the judicial system, a horrendous game of cat and mouse extending YEARS, with the victims whose very homes, families and stability are in jeopardy is cruelty, as cruel as a physical beating. It is financial and emotional RAPE. Homelessness is not justice. It is a slow, painful death.
Please, I beg with everything I have within me, pl
ease convince Robert Huckins to stop this torture and return the building fund he stole from us so we too, can have a home.

Relevant pages:

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2010/06/shattered-dreams-endless-nightmare.html

http://roberthuckinsvictim.blogspot.com/2010/
06/paul-harvey-once-reported-if-you-want.html

http://robert
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Before you act, listen. Before you react, think. Before you criticize, wait. Before you pray, forgive. Before you quit, try.~E. Hemingway