Ontario Agriculture

The network for agriculture in Ontario, Canada

Video from a farmer in jail.

 

Views: 291

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Article in The Sun Times on this:

To read the whole article click here


George Bothwell held in custody

News
By SCOTT DUNN, SUN TIMES STAFF
Posted 36 minutes ago


A dozen or more placard-waving supporters of George Bothwell greeted visitors to Owen Sound's courthouse Monday.

The 63-year-old farmer from the former Sydenham Township has been in jail since Nov. 1, when he was arrested for failing to appear in the Superior Court of Justice.


Bothwell was in court that day to set a date for a jury trial on charges concerning a run-in he had with police on the eastern fringe of Owen Sound in May 2009, but he wouldn't respond when his name was called and he wouldn't walk past the bar -- which separates the public from the jurisdiction of the court -- when the clerk summoned him at the direction of Justice Robert Thompson.

Accordingly, Bothwell had been in custody for seven days until brought back into court Monday morning to face Thompson again.

The judge banned publication of details of what happened at that hearing until after Bothwell's trial. The publication ban was made under the bail release provisions of the Criminal Code.

Bothwell remains in custody and is to appear in court again next Tuesday.

Three or four uniformed police controlled access to the courtroom before the case was called. Access was permitted only after all electronic devices were surrendered or otherwise kept outside the courtroom.

Bothwell faces two charges of obstructing police and one count of assault while resisting arrest from an incident after a traffic stop May 14, 2009, in Owen Sound.
He is seeking a common law trail as this country is suppose to be one or so it is claimed. which is your right. The reason why the Judge is keeping the public out of your courts, to witness the faud. The court wishes to charge him, under Unversal Commercial Code, which the government uses to create acts and statues.
It would appear that the legal system definitely views as a serious threat those who think this way.

As they well should.

The "Freemen of the Land", as they are known, may well be the tip of the iceberg that reflects a growing sense of disenfranchisement felt by many Canadians who are getting sick of an overwhelming and under-performing government.

The National Post recently ran an interesting story about Freemen - see the link below.

http://www.nationalpost.com/Canada+freemen/3748349/story.html

Reply to Discussion

RSS

Agriculture Headlines from Farms.com Canada East News - click on title for full story

New Holland Unveils R4 Autonomous Robots

New Holland’s R4 concept robots aim to revolutionize specialty crop farming by automating repetitive tasks like mowing and spraying, reducing labor dependency, and delivering sustainable, precision-driven solutions.

AgFiniti Update Simplifies Guidance Line Management for Farmers

AgFiniti’s latest update makes guidance line management easier than ever.

Boosting Milking Efficiency

DeLaval’s new MM100 milk meter combines advanced FreeFlow™ technology with real-time data tracking to help dairy producers improve milking speed, throughput, and herd health.

Kubota TIM System Enhances Fertilizer Field Precision

Kubota’s TIM technology helps tractors and spreaders work together automatically, improving fertilizer accuracy, reducing operator workload, and maintaining top performance in all field conditions.

New Satellite Insights for Soil Health

A NASA Acres study shows how satellites can track changing tillage practices across Kansas fields, offering clearer insights into soil management, conservation efforts, and long-term productivity.

© 2025   Created by Darren Marsland.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service