By Pepper Fisher
PORT ANGELES – Multiple complaints have been filed in federal court by citizens of Clallam and Jefferson counties against all 19 members of both county’s Boards of Health. They are claiming the mask and vaccines mandates have hurt them in 27 ways under the US Constitution.
We were contacted anonymously by someone suggesting we contact Constitutional Lawyer Brent Arthur about the complaints and consider doing a story, and that’s what we have done.
We spoke with Mr. Arthur, who also goes by the name Brent Wilson, and learned that between 17 and 19 complaints were hand delivered to the federal court in Tacoma on November 8. He says that all defendants have also received a 30-page copy of the complaint.
“They are all on notice. They have their opportunity to cure this within 21 days. We’ll probably give them longer. And then, depending on if we receive any response from them, then what will happen is the US Attorney will just let it take its course. And the bottom line is, the the consequences of their failure to respond to this, to stop doing what they’re doing, is an 82 million U.S. dollar lien against their personal assets.”
Page one of the complaint given lists Cynthia Mitchell of Port Angeles as the Public Proxy. We asked her about her relationship to Mr. Wilson and what it means to be a Public Proxy. She told us she knows him from a group that gets together regularly called Constitutional Freedom.
“I’m not an attorney. I represent the people of my community. Actually, he’s not an attorney either, but he’s studied law extensively most of his life. So far, 19 people have filed these criminal complaints against everybody who signed off on lockdowns and masks and mandated vaccine passports, because we think this is criminal behavior, and this is a horrible thing, and it needs to stop.”
We asked Clallam County Health Officer Dr. Allison Berry if she or her attorney had responded within the 21-day deadline, which would have been November 29. She emailed this response: “I did receive Mr. Wilson’s complaint and forwarded it onto the county legal team. I’m not very concerned about it and doubt much will come from it.”
The Prosecutor’s Office emailed this response: “We are limited in our ability to discuss this matter with you because Brent Wilson is a named defendant in a pending prosecution. In addition to the pending criminal matter against Mr. Wilson, Mr. Wilson has also drafted documents against several attorneys in our office that are very similar to his documents related to the Board of Health. He has also drafted these documents in relation to our superior court judges and several defense attorneys.”
KONP made multiple attempts to contact Wilson to ask about that pending prosecution, but he has not responded since mid-November.
As for the potential $82 million award he talked about in our previous interview…
“82 million dollars in approximately 90 days will be called for from their risk pool.”
Cynthia Mitchell says she was told all 19 complainants would get a portion of that money.
“If we win, he assures us it’s like a loaded gun. There’s no way they can dispute it. So we’ll see. But it will be a considerable amount of money and, me not being Bill Gates, I don’t need two million or 5 million dollars, but I will keep a percentage of that.”