Difference between revisions of "Georgia Ethics Code Does Not Apply To Fulton Judges"
Georgia Ethics Code Does Not Apply To Fulton Judges (view source)
Revision as of 16:49, 25 March 2023
, 16:49, 25 March 2023→Unchecked Power Cultivates Judicial Back-Scratching
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This article comes as an unanticipated “Part 3” in a sequence of articles following Derrick Jackson, a man on fire who was robbed just days before Christmas of his due process rights under the Constitution by Fulton County Superior Court Judge Melynee Leftridge. After Jackson took to the media about the situation, his family was thrown out of their home located in the Country Club of the South by the Fulton County Sheriff’s SCORPION Unit without a proper court order. | This article comes as an unanticipated “Part 3” in a sequence of articles following Derrick Jackson, a man on fire who was robbed just days before Christmas of his due process rights under the Constitution by Fulton County Superior Court Judge Melynee Leftridge. After Jackson took to the media about the situation, his family was thrown out of their home located in the Country Club of the South by the Fulton County Sheriff’s SCORPION Unit without a proper court order. | ||
As is known, home values have been skyrocketing since at least September of 2021 and, at some point amidst this modern day gold rush, the seller decided he no longer wanted Jackson to buy the home and subsequently hired a company to stage an eviction, which was inevitably botched resulting in what appears to be an array of underhanded back door dealings among Fulton County Superior Court Judges, the Sheriff and lawyers—or is it all just one big coincidence? Let’s look at the facts and you be the judge. | Beginning in May of 2020, Jackson had been making payments toward the purchase of a home located in the Country Club of the South. As is known, home values have been skyrocketing since at least September of 2021 and, at some point amidst this modern day gold rush, the seller decided he no longer wanted Jackson to buy the home and subsequently hired a company to stage an eviction, which was inevitably botched resulting in what appears to be an array of underhanded back door dealings among Fulton County Superior Court Judges, the Sheriff and lawyers—or is it all just one big coincidence? Let’s look at the facts and you be the judge. | ||
==The Country Club of the South: Fulton County’s Very Own Mar-a-Lago== | ==The Country Club of the South: Fulton County’s Very Own Mar-a-Lago== | ||
The situation stems from a combination of written agreements between home-sellers Arthur M. McCracken and Julie L. McCracken and home-buyer Derrick Jackson. | The situation stems from a combination of written agreements between home-sellers Arthur M. McCracken and Julie L. McCracken and home-buyer Derrick Jackson. | ||
Jackson was purchasing 955 Tiverton Lane, Johns Creek, GA, in the luxurious gated community more formally known as the Country Club of the South, having already put $100,000 down and having made payments of $15,000 per month, paying over $20,000 in property taxes annually, paying thousands in HOA fees, and paying thousands in repairs and maintenance to the property over a period of two years. | Jackson was purchasing 955 Tiverton Lane, Johns Creek, GA, from the McCrackens in the luxurious gated community more formally known as the Country Club of the South, having already put $100,000 down and having made payments of $15,000 per month, paying over $20,000 in property taxes annually, paying thousands in HOA fees, and paying thousands in repairs and maintenance to the property over a period of two years. | ||
“Over the years, a number of celebrities have reportedly owned homes in Country Club of the South, among them retired Atlanta Braves pitcher Tom Glavine, Usher, Whitney Houston, and NBA Hall of Famer Allen Iverson. The neighborhood has 19 tennis courts, an 18-hole, golf course designed by Jack Nicklaus, basketball courts, a concert venue—and, of course, 24-hour security.” | |||
Though the McCrackens hired a property manager to execute a “staged” eviction, with an alleged rent of $15,000 per month after a $100,000 down payment, this was not a typical landlord-tenant case. Having committed to removing the buyer (Jackson), the McCrackens were determined not to let Jackson pay off his balance and drop the case despite the McCrackens failing to deliver proper legal notices before initiating the eviction process. The real estate market was getting exponentially warmer and they wanted to pocket Jackson’s investment and seek a new buyer. | |||
==The Mythical Staged Eviction: Fact Meets Fiction== | ==The Mythical Staged Eviction: Fact Meets Fiction== |
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