Chief Magistrate Judge John Rakowsky and Adrian Falgione ignored their South Carolina Circuit Court subpoenas to appear in Richland County Court and failed to appear at 12:00 noon hearing on 2/25.
Judge Doyet Early, III, denied James Spencer’s verbal motion that they be found in Contempt of Court, ordered their lawyers to have them there at the next hearing (within 60 days) “. . . or we will have them brought here.”
Attorneys Andrew Lindemann, appeared on behalf of Horry County, Stephanie Weissenstein, appeared on behalf of Chief Magistrate Judge John Rakowsky and Ben Bruner, Esquire, showed up unannounced in place of Adrian Falgione and requested that the subpoena be quashed. The court denied the motion without hesitation.
It was reported that Adrian Falgione had hidden in his office earlier to avoid being served the subpoena and was finally served while sneaking in the back door of a building. While Falgione was hiding, claiming he was in a meeting, he did manage to telephone and warn his cohort John Rakowsky’s counsel to avoid service of the subpoena at the moment the process servers were looking for them, according to court watchers.
It was noted that ill-prepared Stephannie Weissenstein was undaunted by Spencer’s facts presented and virtually every time she went on the court record to make a statement the statement, it was proven false by previously filed court- certified documents provided by the opposing counsel and Pro se litigant, James Spencer. Finally, as an excuse for her repetitive untruthfulness, she told the court that she was confused by all the papers she filed in this case.
Columbia, SC, lawyer, Andrew Lindemann, then took up the legal gauntlet and ignored the South Carolina Code of Ethics, which he took an oath to uphold, in wrongfully claiming there was a settlement despite the fact there was no signed settlement agreement. Mr. Lindemann slumped back down into his chair when the opposing Pro se litigant pointed out the actual law and the fact Lindeman’s ignorance of the law, either real or contrived, was no excuse for his baseless statements that a legal settlement existed.
Judge Early has also opened up Discovery for the defendants in the case with which Judge Rakowsky has refused to comply for the past eight years. (See the pages below for more astounding details of this South Carolina corruption case.)
Judge Early: Fourteen Years of Gov’t Coverups Facing “High Noon” Challenge
Spencer Runs the Table in South Carolina Corruption Case