JIM CROW LAW
As a team, we’ve prepared this educational tool “Hound Dog News,” to teach about our own experiences suffered during the implementation of Jim Crow Laws practiced by Douglas County, Nebraska District Court Judge Duane C. Dougherty in a case that we were a party too. To point out the damages these Laws have caused us under Case No. CI 18-9530 in 2018. A case twice heard before The Nebraska Supreme Court.
This 2018 year, discloses that our situation had actually begun some 284 years after South Caroline enacted The Negro Act of 1740. In our case, team members Edward J. S. and Dora L. P. have personally experienced, firsthand, what the two of us perceived as being the oppressive segregated injustices found in Nebraska's judicial System that some might consider systemic racism, but definitely considered double standards and definitely under Nebraska legislative Slave Code Laws that codified white supremacy upon the passage of South Carolina's actions when drafting The Negro Act of 1740.
Dora and my experiences show evidence of the Nebraska state legislators illusional belief’s that their unconstitutional laws supersede those laws upheld under the due process and equal protection clauses of the 14th Amendment of the U. S. Constitution.
It is because of the implementation of the Jim Crow Laws into our case that we feel the need to address these suffering experiences side-by-side with you as tomorrow it might be you seated in front of Judge Dougherty and he just might be applying these same out dated racist laws in your case.
Personal experiences are irreplaceable. And it is because of our own experiences with these Slave Code Laws that we believe we are obligated and personally responsible for educating others about the implementation of The Negro Act of 1740 aka Jim Crow Law in the lives of others still living on this earth today.
Fortunately, you are visiting Hound Dog News and having a willingness to learn how to identify these laws and therefore considered a pupil enrolled in our classes, while at the same time having no obligations to continue with these teachings.
Back in the 1600’s the State of Virginia, a colony at the time, practiced the most restrictive Slave Code Laws of that period in time. That was of course, until South Carolina implemented The Negro Act of 1740.
During that period in time, there’d been 13 colonies and as a means of controlling their own slaves each colony practiced their own rules of law. Unfortunately, in what’s now known as the Stono Rebellion in 1739. Approximately 50 slaves rebelled and possibly killed between 20 to 30 White slave owners and others.
This 1739 rebellion known as the Stono Rebellion caused South Carolina to gather laws and Slave Code Rules from all of the other colonies to prepare and present one law which was implemented as The Negro Act of 1740. These restrictive laws were implemented one year after the Stono Rebellion on May 10, 1740.
Two of the most restrictive rules included in The Negro Act of 1740 were those rules depriving Blacks from being involved in any legal litigation involving White’s in Courts, restricting Black and White relationships, restricting White's from giving gifts to Blacks and restricting Blacks from owning real estate property and or leasing land. In Dora and my case we owned land and it's BEEN UNLAWFULLY taken away according to the laws of JIM CROW.
In this present Douglas County, Nebraska District Court Case CI 18-9530 these were implemented here in 2024 as a fraudulent case against us. So our job now is to teach others about how Jim Crow Laws work.
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