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ANNE MORROW in "A CASE OF INJUSTICE"
Book review by Joel M. Skousen
from World Affairs Brief Newsletter [December 21, 2001]
www.joelskousen.com
This is a dramatic and powerful account of one feisty Texas businesswoman who wouldn't quit. I don't know why she is alive today, except by the grace of God. The powers arrayed against her were and still are ruthless. This real live story is set in south Texas, an area of the US which in the 1980s became an alternate source of drug importation for the CIA and other competing drug lords--after south Florida became too hot, politically.
Anne Morrow had married into one of the first families of Dallas--the Parrino family. She had political connections and money. Life was good. After the death of her husband, she ran a successful gift shop and, in 1984, decided to expand her business down into Corpus Christi. Like any normal unsuspecting business person, she entered into a standard lease for space at a new shopping center owned by one A. C. Gilmore--a seedy, unkempt king of the florist trade in south Texas (her first mistake). Readers of the book will note that as her account unfolds, Anne makes a series of little errors in judgment, each compounding her involvement in future bad situations, and each error accompanied by those subtle nervous feelings of conscience that forewarn of trouble. She doesn't heed the little warning signs, being positive and upbeat. This mistake is made by most people basking in the illusions of "good times." For Anne, it wouldn't take long for her experiences to shatter these illusions, a hard lesson in learning to listen better to these small warning signs.
After the absentee landlord failed to fulfill certain verbal agreements dealing with the critical issue of signage, Anne tried to sue for breach of contract. During her initial investigation she found out the seedy landlord had altered the lease document in order to justify his breach--an obvious and outright act of criminal fraud. Gotcha!--or so she thought. Little did she know, the seedy, overweight A.C. Gilmore was protected by a corrupt local judicial system, intrinsically linked with local law firms. Gilmore was in fact involved in the drug trade, and was using his investments in shopping centers and other legitimate businesses to launder the profits. How many of us do business with companies every day (sometimes national chains) who appear legitimate but which may be fronts for money laundering operations or secret government operations? You may never know, but it's a much bigger problem than you think. Even major airlines and banks are involved.
The truth about a company's linkage with organized government crime may only surface if you have a significant legal problem with them and find out, in your quest for a resolution, that this particular business is beyond the law. Most front businesses are smart enough to not make a major issue of small legal matters--they settle quickly to keep their profile low. But A.C. Gilmore was a slob--he didn't care how he handled the situation because he knew he was working for people bigger than even the state of Texas. He also had local judges in his pocket and was confident they would cover for whatever he did. He was right.
This slowly started to dawn on Anne as she engaged one attorney after another in Corpus Christi. In each case, they turned from friendly one day to sour and distant the next and started giving her the run around about why they couldn't represent her, or why she didn't have a case. Somebody was turning these lawyers against her. She couldn't believe a louse like Gilmore could have this much power. Could he be buying them off? She had a near air-tight case and no attorney would take it. Convinced that Gilmore couldn't control all 650 lawyers in town, she kept trying. A private investigator stepped forward one day and offered to help--suspiciously, without charge. He and other connected politicians steered her towards an attorney who did agree to take her case--and then proceeded to sabotage it in a major way. He was talking to all her adversaries and acting on their behalf--a clear violation of attorney responsibility. When she threatened to charge him for misconduct to the Texas Bar Association, he just laughed. He was protected.
One of the keys to this story is her documentation of dealings with these attorneys. For those who distrust attorneys, this book will justify your every suspicion. It wasn't that everyone was involved personally with A.C. Gilmore. He wasn't paying them off. Most of these attorneys didn't even recognize the name of Gilmore when she initially presented her case to them. But then the following day, someone would get to these attorneys and their demeanor would change. None had the principles to blow the whistle on those applying pressure. They all folded and turned on her--every one, without exception. This means that there is an informal control system that shadows the legal profession--even in small communities. Individual lawyers never see it or know it exists until they start to handle a case that threatens some higher power. Then the phone calls come; subtle threats or warnings are uttered. Names are dropped. Potential consequences are hinted at. Lawyers are ladder-climbers in the profession. Most value their position in the legal pecking order more than their sense of justice. This is telling...and chilling.
But the good ol' boys underestimated Anne Morrow's determination. She finally went to the local elected officials with her case. Friendly at first, they too turned on her, or actively attempted to steer her into the arms of other vultures. She then went to the county prosecutor to request that he file criminal charges. He refused to even see her--ever! He had already been alerted. She bypassed him and got the same treatment from deputy prosecutors. She then went to the grand jury direct but the foreman informed her they could do nothing without the prosecutor's approval (not true). She went to the county commission--same story. When she proceeded to the Sheriff's office, she initially did get an admission from them that the area is full of corruption. They welcomed her case, and promised to pursue it in order to clean up the county. However, within a month the investigation was shut down and they treated her like dirt.
Anne then turned to the State of Texas and charged the county prosecutor with prosecutorial misconduct. A major investigation by the Texas state Prosecutorial Council began. At first the investigators were on her side. But once again, after all the incriminating evidence was gathered and presented to the State Legislature, orders came down from "above the State" to kill it. The Council was disbanded for good. Over the course of the next 10 years or so, she took her story to the FBI (in many different states), to Congressmen, Senators, and others, pulling every political string she had. Same story--everyone protected the surly A.C. Gilmore. Anne's description of the hostility she received at the hands of the FBI, even as she went from one state to another, tells volumes about how completely the dark side controls this once-sterling agency of justice.
It was obvious to me, after reading halfway through her story, that A.C. Gilmore had more power than a simple south Texas drug lord. He had risen from a nobody to a multi-millionaire in less than 3 years. You can do that as a local drug lord, but you don't get the protection of the state of Texas, the FBI, and members of Congress unless you are working for the feds. In this case I presume A.C. Gilmore was working for the CIA drug pipeline.
Certainly, not all of the players who stonewalled Anne's case were guilty of direct conspiracy, or even had knowledge of the underlying conspiracy. But one thing was certainly happening: people with federal power at a very high level were calling down to the State level and telling them to shut down Anne Morrow's case--probably in the name of "national security," that ubiquitous cover that stops anyone from asking further questions. Everyone stupidly snaps-to and salutes, "Yes, sir!" Anne was also surveilled throughout this ordeal--and not by mafia thugs. She was shadowed and watched by clean cut federal agent types, and still is today to a lesser degree. That takes a lot of expensive resources, even for the dark side of government
Anne Morrow still fights on. She wants closure, but she will never get it--not, at least, in terms of ultimate justice. I have tried to console her with the thought that she has done us all a great service simply by putting up the valiant fight, and having the courage to name names and document the extent of collusion and criminal behavior of the entire justice system. Her book can do much to wake up sleeping America. But the media isn't about to help. The 4th estate, which should have been sympathetic to this case of extreme prejudice toward a woman businessperson, has scorned and betrayed her. We can only make her sacrifice meaningful if we buy the book, read her story and pass it on. Order A Case of Injustice online at www.palatinepress.com. It's available as a hardcopy, or half price as an E-book download to your computer. It's a must read.
What good will it do? Plenty. All of us, even conservatives, need to have our illusions of honesty and goodness on the part of local government shattered. It is true that not every town is as bad as Corpus Christi, Houston, Denver, Chicago, SF, NY, or LA, but every city is being worked on and is under pressure, and every city is slipping ever closer into the federal grasp. Read on for another sobering example.
Woman
Overcomes Threats, Indifferent Publishers to Weave Harrowing Tale of
Governmental Misconduct
Reviewed
by Lawrence W. Myers
INVESTIGATIVE REPORTER, MEDIA BYPASS MAGAZINE.
One
of the most disturbing new books about corruption in the American justice
system has been produced by a Texas woman who lived in fear, and on the
run, for more than five years as she tried to get someone to hear and
investigate her story.
Her
effort met with scorn and ridicule from the Texas media, and rejection
from several publishers due to the chilling allegations made in this book,
which took several years to write.
This
true story began when the author, Anne Morrow of Dallas, attempted to
start a small business in the Texas coastal town of Corpus Christi in
July 1984.
Morrow alleges that she subsequently was asked to cooperate in
an investigation into alleged criminal activities involving her landlord,
including money laundering and drug trafficking.
Although Texas authorities refused comment concerning charges made
in the book, documents and statements therein are a virtual indictment
of Texas politics.
After
getting accidentally involved in the investigation, the author's life
turned upside down.
Over the next few years, Morrow would lose her business and everything
she owned as she got caught up with a judicial and political system in
the state, with implied corruption going all the way to Washington.
Her
book makes some very disturbing charges about a number of public officials
in Texas, and includes more that 100 pages of documents and affidavits
to support her story.
The
experiences of a private citizen dealing with big government, including
the incredible arrogance of the FBI in public corruption cases, are outlined
very well in this 500-page book.
As Morrow went into hiding after making serious criminal charges
against several public officials, and attempted to get federal law enforcement
involved, more and more details about her own life became obscured.
Among
other things, the book addresses falsehoods associated with vital statistics
documents.
The author learned that official government documents are not always
accurate, or particularly official for that matter.
Morrow's entire life, including her true name and origins, became
muddled after it was established that her birth certificate, for example,
is probably a forgery.
Many things that most of us take for granted are dispelled in "A
Case of Injustice."
This
disturbing book, written by an ordinary citizen, belongs on the shelf
of anyone who has had to endure the abuses of government in America in
general, and in the state of Texas in particular.
Anyone interested in learning what happens when law enforcement
asks for a citizens cooperation, and then lies about it, will also find
details of Anne Morrow's experience in this well-written personal account
rather revealing.
Although
her work has now received excellent reviews in the Texas press, Morrow
still lives in hiding in the Dallas area, working on a sequel to "A
Case of Injustice."
NEWS
RELEASE
WHAT THIS BOOK IS ALL
ABOUT
This
book is a battle sword, stabbing at specific injustice and slashing at
corruption in high places.
But
this book is more that a sword. Between
the lines, it documents the incredible odyssey of a rare human being -- a
woman who believed to the depths of her being in the American dream, in
freedom, in righteousness, in the rule of law -- only to see her dream
shattered, her freedom scorned, her belief in right sneered at, and her
reliance on the law of the land seem to be continually misguided.
Such
a rare human being is Anne Morrow, however, that she has held onto her
beliefs, even at the cost of her health and her livelihood.
Consistently, doggedly, in spite of the rudeness, indifference,
illegality, corruption, and betrayal she encountered, she put her entire
energy and soul into an arduous search for justice -- justice not only
for herself but for all other Americans who have been the victims of corrupt
officialdom, greedy self-serving lawyers, wary and cowardly media moguls,
and governmental bureaucrats who don't want to make waves and can't see
beyond the DC beltway.
And
even this effort, which has cost Anne's health and livelihood has done no
good. All it has done is
frighten her nearly to death.
Why?
From the narration in the book, and from the extraordinary
documentation that accompanies the narration, one must conclude that the
villains of the piece had something to hide.
Who
were the villains? A
drug-dealing landlord, a duly-elected District Attorney, scores of
lawyers, a supposedly reputable judge, numerous FBI agents, and, possibly,
some legislative- and executive-branch Federal officials.
Why
was it that Anne Morrow, just because she was trying to obtain justice,
constantly had doors slammed in her face?
Why was she being followed? Why
was she threatened? All she
was trying to do was to make a living by being a business woman.
Yet she was unlawfully evicted from her place of business by a
landlord she later learned was a drug kingpin.
She sought a lawyer, because the eviction was clearly illegal and
had no logical basis. At first,
each of the scores of lawyers she consulted was enthusiastic about the
merits of her case, but each soon suddenly turned cold and refused to take
her case. Only after scores
of rejections did a lawyer take her case, but even he soon began working
against her rather than for her. She
dismissed him and found another. This
one began using delaying tactics. And
the latest lawyer she retained turned against her completely.
All were in some way or another influenced by the drug-dealing
landlord.
Also,
why was it that the District Attorney, sworn to protect the interests of
the citizens who elected him, refused to give heed to Anne's plight? Did the fact that the drug-dealing landlord (who was also in
the florist business) sent a fresh potted plant to the DA everyday have
anything to do with his refusal to so Anne or take on her case?
Why
did the Congressman from her district put her off when she apprised him of
her problem? Why did her
supposed friend, a member of the County Commission, begin to distance
himself from her? Why did
another acquaintance, the state Attorney General, refuse to help her?
Why were well-dressed men following her? Why did everyone she knew tell her she should leave town
because her life was in danger?
Most
mysterious of all, perhaps -- why did a special state commission, mandated
to investigate corruption in the state, take on her case with enthusiasm,
and then suddenly become disbanded?
So
Anne did leave town in fear. She
continued, nevertheless, to try to get the FBI, the media, and officials
from other states and the Federal government to help.
But she met with the same indifference, and rudeness, and learned
that the officials of these new states were in communication about her
with the officials who had put her down in her home state. Meanwhile, the well-dressed men still followed and watched
her.
Anne
has devoted all her waking hours to her odyssey, and most of her hours were
waking hours. An incipient
pneumonia took over. But she
continued, regardless of her fever, her fatigue, her incredulity as to how
she was being treated by officialdom.
She kept her meticulous notes.
She accumulated her documentation.
It was coming clear to her that a book was the thing wherein she
would catch the conscience of the law.
This book.
By
now Anne was literally sick and tired.
Moreover, she had used up nearly all her money.
But with incredible persistence, she wrote this book and had it
professionally edited. She
sent the manuscript to publishers, all of whom liked it, but said it was
too hot for them to handle. So
she scrounged for typesetting and printing money and has published it
herself. It is the last sword
in her scabbard.
What
does Anne Morrow want? She
wants the people (whose real names and positions are documented and named
in the book) to be brought to justice.
More than that, she wants to catch the attention of at least one
other human being (there should be many in America) who will help her get
those who violated her rights and beliefs convicted.
She wants to awaken the conscience of Americans.
Dallas
woman writes tale of South Texas Corruption
By Kevin
J. Shay
STAFF, INVESTIGATIVE REPORTER, DALLAS MORNING NEWSPAPER .
The image of South Texas
politics generally does not stray far from good ol' boys, corruption and
drugs. After reading Anne
Morrow's book, A Case of Injustice
(Palatine Press), my notion of that region's corrupt reputation only
intensified.
The book also lends more
evidence to people who question if this nation really is committed to
"liberty and justice for all," not to mention the so-called
"war on drugs."
The 503-page book is the
personal story of the Dallas resident's long campaign to obtain justice
after a Corpus Christi landlord -- who she says is a widely believed to be a
"drug kingpin" -- forces out her new business.
That action which Morrow says initiated from a dispute over the
landlord not erecting a directory sign at the strip center as he promised,
started a chain of almost unbelievable events, ranging from Morrow being
told by public officials that she needed to leave Corpus Christi because her
life was in danger to federal, state and local agencies turning their
collective backs on her.
"I've written this
book to describe as intimately as I can how corrupt people can literally
ruin decent, honest people's lives," Morrow, 58 writes. "I've tried to show what it's really like to be cheated,
lied to, ignored, threatened, yelled at, robbed and harassed.
I've tried to encourage people to fight.
The decent people of America and the world deserve no less."
Morrow, the widow of
Dallas restaurateur Francis Parrino, moved to Corpus Christi in August 1984
to start a gift shop business. "My
son was stationed at the city's naval base," she said in an interview.
"I knew a lot of people in Corpus Christi and was encouraged by
some prominent people and the chamber of commerce to start my business
there."
After signing a lease
at a center she liked, Morrow
was only
in business
for a few weeks when she noticed that the
directory sign that
the landlord
promised he would put up had
not been erected.
When she asked him about
it, she said he angrily told
her to move out of the center.
After she hired some people to picket the center, Morrow was evicted
-- she says
with the aid of her lease that had obviously been illegally tampered
with -- and a warrant for her arrest was issued.
That started a process
of contacting lawyers, public agencies, the media and anyone else who could
help that exists for Morrow to this day. "This landlord has used his
wealth and power to gain control over judges, lawyers, the district
attorney and many others," she charged.
"People I knew for years, good friends (including a Nueces
County commissioner), refused to help, saying the case was too big and too
hot."
Her hopes lifted in
March l985 when a special state prosecutor's council in Austin agreed
to investigate the district attorney, who in a March 11, l985
letter to the council wrote that "the matter was presented
to the Grand Jury. They found
no criminal conduct." Morrow,
who believes the matter was of a criminal nature since she says her lease
was illegally altered, writes that the DA refused to even meet with her
and had no evidence to present to the grand jury.
Two months later, the council concluded that the district attorney
did not commit any misconduct.
So it went with a state
senator, U.S. congress members, the Texas attorney general's office, law
enforcement agencies, (the FBI, DEA, IRS, Texas Rangers, local sheriff's
office), media outlets and business associates.
Morrow moved to a friend's residence in Michigan in 1986, where she
wrote her book after surviving a bad case of pneumonia..
She obtained the help of a professional editor in New Mexico, and
eventually had to self-publish the book.
The work is impressive
for a self-published version, with more than 125 pages of documents to back
Morrow's claims. "I'm
working on another edition that will contain even more details," she
said. "I hope to have that
out very soon."
The book names, which
she said could be "quite embarrassing to some people." But although she said the landlord is still untouched in
Corpus Christi, "enough time has gone by so that I don't think anyone
who helps me has anything to fear."
For instance some well-dressed men who regularly followed her and
some people who tried to help for months at a time have not been spotted in
some time, she said.
Morrow, who I met in a
local hotel after she cold-called me, said she is not asking for anything
other than justice. "I
have been sentenced to a prison in hiding for a long time," she said. "I want to be able to get on with my life."
Her book, of course,
tells the story through her eyes, although one can tell something strange
and irregular has gone on through her well-detailed documentation. Any true American, who really cares about "liberty and
justice for all," cannot help but feel some of her outrage at our
government while reading this book.
"There are a lot of
corrupt people out there," said Morrow during our interview.
"Those who really care about decency in this country need to
stand up and be counted. We
need to really wake up. I don't
fear anyone because I believe God protects me.
"Too many good
people are afraid to do anything," she continued.
"If we don't watch it, pretty soon the corrupt ones will control
everything, and there will be nothing that decent people will be able
to do about it."
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