November 4, 2000 A.D.
Officer John Barg #3640
San Jose Police Department
201 West Mission Street
San Jose 95110
CALIFORNIA, USA
Subject: Case Numbers 00-308-0798, 00-308-0956
(dated 11/3/00)
U.S.A.
v. Wishart, USDC San Jose, Docket #CR-00-20227-JF
Dear John,
Thank you so very much for
your prompt and professional assistance yesterday with the sudden disappearance
of my papers and other personal belongings.
Although Donald E. Wishart did return most of my belongings,
there are still some important papers and related things which are now
confirmed missing. I have attached a
list of those missing items.
It is evident to me that
Wishart sorted through those items, specifically to remove the written
statement that he had paid the rent for me to stay at 846 Miller Avenue in
Cupertino, through November 13, 2000.
That written statement was in my possession, until Wishart removed my
belongings from the Miller Avenue room without my permission and without my
prior knowledge.
Accordingly, please be
advised on my specific intent to file formal charges against Wishart, for
deprivation of my fundamental Rights to privacy and housing, in violation of 18
U.S.C. 242 (a misdemeanor), and conspiracy with one Joanne Tonnesen, owner of
the single-family home at 846 Miller Avenue, Cupertino, to deprive my
fundamental Rights to privacy and housing, in violation of 18 U.S.C. 241. The latter violation is a felony federal
offense.
Article 25 in the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights guarantees my fundamental Right to an
adequate standard of living, including clothing and housing. The $1,200 check which Wishart tendered to
me for professional services rendered -- full-time for 7 weeks -- was
only enough to pay the minimal deposits on the cheapest rental. Now that I have been forced to stay
in a hotel, at $85 per night, I am rendered unable to pay for food and clothing
in addition to the minimal rental deposits.
For these reasons, I
intend to charge Wishart and his accomplice, with criminal conspiracy to render
me homeless and unable to compete in a very competitive housing market.
John, thank you again for your obvious professionalism. I do not believe I could have retrieved what was returned, without your expert intervention. For your information, I have provided some written background history to the fellow officers who responded to the request I made, on your advice, for a second civil stand-by (when Wishart returned with some of my belongings).
Sincerely yours,
/s/ Paul Andrew Mitchell
Paul Andrew Mitchell, B.A., M.S.
Private Attorney General, Author
and Webmaster, Supreme Law Library:
copy: Chief of
Police
excerpt
from
Universal
Declaration of Human Rights
Article
25
1. Everyone has the right to a standard of
living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family,
including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social
services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness,
disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances
beyond his control.
Paul
Andrew Mitchell’s Belongings Still Missing:
hand-written letter from Wishart: “paid up thru 11/13”
documents and computer magazines that were piled
next to bed
U.C. Berkeley Daily Cal newspaper with
advertising insert and
color photograph of subcutaneous transponder &
British scientist