Loading video...
WATCH
Scott La Point
In Project: Brainiacs

August 6, 2011, our former Host Scott La Point reappears, this time at the Hangout, to share recent news of his work studying in Virginia to get his doctorate, and his regular attempts to get psychology academicians to recognize that brain injuries also cause symptoms that psychologists regularly categorize incorrectly as a personality disorder.

Stay tuned for more La Point family video coming soon.

Also, the Hangout goes to the Colorado School of Mines where student Harrison Ingham is NOT STUMPED on identifying the rocks that Hangout members have brought.

Don't forget the brief clip of Miranda Hook performing in the Pitkin Town Hall in a play called "The Small World of Millie McIver."

In between video, Paula wonders why Governor Hickenlooper is addressing the boards of the Colorado Worker's Compensation Division, which are completely appointed according to occupations, in violation of the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. This restriction by occupation results in boards entirely or nearly entirely seated with only people from the defense, and does not include disabled people or the public.

Paula contends Pinnacol Assurance owes some of that money to disabled people who were discriminated against in the public service of the Administrative Courts.

Also, Paula contends fair hearings are a requirement of due process rights, and that Judge Michael Harr had a conflict of interest because he is the brother of Jim Harr, a man she worked for briefly after her traumatic brain injury on the Lennar Corporation jobsite.

AND where in the world is Mike Worley, the division claims manager who helped her get certified copies of her fraudulently concealed personnel file, which she sent to the U.S. Supreme Court and the U.S. Attorney? And told Paula which court she should go to for enforcement of a Judge's discovery ORDER, which by Rule 37 b should have been a Default Judgment?

Is he being waterboarded in the dungeons below 633 Seventeenth Street? Fired? Or promoted to "subsequent injury?"

Because the penalty for this fraudulently concealment of 63 documents of her personnel file, due Nov. 9, 2003, at $500 a day, comes to more than $89 million, of which $22 million would go to the state's subsequent injury fund.

Too bad the attorney general has a contract with Pinnacol for $283,000 a year, instead of enforcing equal protection of the laws. Or did that contract expire July 2011 without another?

Stay tuned.

P.S. Where would our civil rights be without public access tv?

Published: 8/06/2011 0 Comments
Average 5 (1 vote)
Your Vote Counts
Learn More About Voting
SHOW INFORMATION:
Producer: prhoads
Locally Produced: Local Production
Theme: Community Issues and Advocacy
In Project: Brainiacs
License: Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Generic
Rating: TV-G
Language: English
UPCOMING AIRINGS: