Showing posts with label Southern Pacific Pipeline Partners. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Southern Pacific Pipeline Partners. Show all posts
Bennett's Litigation Score Card - If you've ever lost a case in Contra Costa County
Pete Bennett10:58 PMBenny Chetcuti Jr., Butte District Attorney, Contra Costa Bar Association, Contra Costa District Attorney, Contra Costa Superior Court, Kidnapping, Kinder Morgan, Murder, Parental Abduction, Southern Pacific, Southern Pacific Pipeline Partners, State Bar, Suicides, The Gary Vinson Collins Witness Murder Affair, Walnut Creek, Witnesses
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The Contra Costa District Attorney
Murder for Hire
Updated: Nov. 11, 2017
Litigation Scorecard
- Bennett V. Southern Pacific - Forced Adverse Settlement
- Bennett's cabinet shop attacked with break-ins, shootings and arson - Bennett loses business
- Fang v. Bennett 1987 - down the middle losses over $35,000
- Fang Murdered in 2000
- Bennett as Witness suppressed by Lt. Lawrence refused to take statement
- Bennett V. Collins - Danville Police and Town of Danville hid Collins from service
- Documents handed to Chief Bryden on Nov 1st 2011 incriminating police officers, attorneys, and investigators plus Collins
- Weeks Later CNET Witness Collins is dead plus two other divorces - Collins knows Butler, and Tanabe from Danville PD Murder By Accident
- Tarrant v. Bennett - Counsel Dax Craven - lied that he knew my ex-wife (Mormon)
- Charter Collections v. Authentic Technologies - Don Moats - disbarred but Moats offices burned down in 2001 - FBI investigated case too bad for Walnut Creek Police
- Bennett hit with restraining orders by San Ramon Unified School District
- Bennett's attorney in Collins matter beaten, threatened and left the area
- Bennett's Attorney Moats wife murdered in Walnut Creek 1989
- Bennett's Attorney Dax Craven brother in-law Nate Greenan murdered on April 18th 2012 in Orinda
Other cases known to Bennett
- Portue v. Dan Terry Contra Costa County Sheriff - Attorney Stu Stafine forced into adverse settlement loses case - Stafine dead within days.
- Attorney Daniel Horowitz wife murdered in 2005
- Attorney suing Seeno killed in car crash
- Department of Elections two suicides connected to this department- with widows permission Bennett asks questions - you bet they didn't like those questions - The Head of the DOE suddenly announces retirement (very suddenly)
Check out "The Superior Court Murders"
Dead Witnesses: Druggist used pain patches to end his life / Walnut Creek pharmacist punished for tainted doses
Pete Bennett5:06 PMBacterial Meningitis, Bacterial Warfare, Doc's Pharmacy Incident, Kinder Morgan, Murder, safeway, Southern Pacific, Southern Pacific Pipeline Partners, Suicides, The Doc's Pharmacy Murders, Walnut Creek
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This person is technically a witness to a potential criminal case.
Druggist used pain patches to end his life / Walnut Creek pharmacist punished for tainted doses
Erin Hallissy, Jim Herron Zamora, Chronicle Staff Writers
Published 4:00 am, Friday, March 29, 2002
Despondent that he was facing punishment for a fatal meningitis (please read Meningitis as Murder Weapon) outbreak last year that was linked to his pharmacy, a young pharmacist committed suicide by overdosing himself with powerful painkiller patches, coroner's reports say.
Jamey Phillip Sheets, 32, who owned just under half of Doc's Pharmacy until it was sold last year, was discovered dead on Tuesday night by his wife, Michelle, when she returned to their Pleasant Hill home from a trip to Southern California that Sheets had refused to go on.
"Everyone is shocked by this," Sheets' attorney, John Francis Martin, said yesterday. "I really can't comprehend how desperate he must have been."
Michelle Sheets told authorities that her husband had been depressed over having his license suspended for 90 days beginning on Sunday, and over financial problems related to losing his co-ownership of Doc's, said Pleasant Hill Police Lt. Gary Ezell
According to state records, Sheets believed he was being unfairly blamed for the contaminated medication that killed three people.
Sheets had not made any suicide threats, and his wife was not worried that he'd harm himself while she traveled with their two young children to visit her mother in Oceanside, Ezell said.
"She felt that she'd allow him some space in the hopes that he'd be improved" when she returned, he said.
Instead, she found him dead in bed, with six high-dosage fentanyl patches on his neck and chest and an open can of beer nearby.
No suicide note was found. A woman at the Sheets' home yesterday said Michelle Sheets would not speak to reporters.
Fentanyl is a morphine derivative mainly used by patients with terminal cancer. The 100-milligram patch is the strongest made, and is designed to release the drug over 72 hours, said Ryan de Guzman, a pharmacist in Stockton who teaches at the University of the Pacific pharmacy school.
"I would imagine that it would be a peaceful way to knock yourself out, with no pain at all," de Guzman. "This is probably why he chose the route he did."
Although Sheets owned 49 percent of Doc's Pharmacy in Walnut Creek, most of the legal and administrative blame for the meningitis outbreak has been placed on his longtime co-owner, Robert Horwitz, a major proponent of compounding, or specially mixing medications.
Last May and June, three people died and 13 others were hospitalized after receiving spinal shots of a steroid called betamethasone mixed by Doc's Pharmacy technicians. The medicine, used to treat back pain, was not properly sterilized and was contaminated by a common bacterium.
Horwitz will lose his license for one year beginning Sunday. Sheets would have gotten his license back, with some restrictions, and then been on probation for five years. He also was ordered to pay $37,159 in investigation and prosecution costs.
Sheets had worked in the pharmacy of a Walnut Creek Safeway since August. Safeway had agreed to let him continue working in a non-pharmacy role during his suspension, Ezell said.
Sheets "wasn't happy with the result, but I didn't think he was despondent over it," his attorney said. "He had everything to live for and nothing to die for. He had a beautiful wife and two beautiful kids. He was a great young man. This was not something that would keep him back for long."
Sheets was an up-and-coming pharmacist when Horwitz, 62, recruited him with the promise that the younger man would eventually take over the business.
But Sheets, who had specialized in clinical work, had no experience in compounding medications or in retail pharmacy.
"I foolishly was led to believe that Doc's Pharmacy, being such a well- respected pharmacy and Dr. Horwitz being so well-revered by his colleagues, was following all practices to the letter of the law," he wrote the Board of Pharmacy after the meningitis tragedy.
Sheets had no direct involvement in compounding the tainted medicine, the reports say. He insisted to state officials that he could not be blamed because he had not been at the pharmacy when the drugs were compounded.
State officials found that Horwitz was ultimately responsible because he was the pharmacist in charge and established most of the pharmacy's practices.
"Mostly out of deference to and respect for Horwitz, he never thought to challenge established compounding procedures or to push hard for improved quality controls," officials found
.
Druggist used pain patches to end his life / Walnut Creek pharmacist punished for tainted doses
Pete Bennett2:41 PMBacterial Warfare, Doc's Pharmacy Incident, Kinder Morgan, safeway, Southern Pacific, Southern Pacific Pipeline Partners, Suicides, The Doc's Pharmacy Murders, Walnut Creek
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Phone: 510-460-5641
Posted: 12/18/2013
Another deceased Witness?
Druggist used pain patches to end his life / Walnut Creek pharmacist punished for tainted doses
Erin Hallissy, Jim Herron Zamora, Chronicle Staff Writers
Published 4:00 am, Friday, March 29, 2002
Despondent that he was facing punishment for a fatal meningitis outbreak last year that was linked to his pharmacy, a young pharmacist committed suicide by overdosing himself with powerful painkiller patches, coroner's reports say.
Jamey Phillip Sheets, 32, who owned just under half of Doc's Pharmacy until it was sold last year, was discovered dead on Tuesday night by his wife, Michelle, when she returned to their Pleasant Hill home from a trip to Southern California that Sheets had refused to go on.
"Everyone is shocked by this," Sheets' attorney, John Francis Martin, said yesterday. "I really can't comprehend how desperate he must have been."
Michelle Sheets told authorities that her husband had been depressed over having his license suspended for 90 days beginning on Sunday, and over financial problems related to losing his co-ownership of Doc's, said Pleasant Hill Police Lt. Gary Ezell.
According to state records, Sheets believed he was being unfairly blamed for the contaminated medication that killed three people.
Sheets had not made any suicide threats, and his wife was not worried that he'd harm himself while she traveled with their two young children to visit her mother in Oceanside, Ezell said.
"She felt that she'd allow him some space in the hopes that he'd be improved" when she returned, he said.
Instead, she found him dead in bed, with six high-dosage fentanyl patches on his neck and chest and an open can of beer nearby.
No suicide note was found. A woman at the Sheets' home yesterday said Michelle Sheets would not speak to reporters.
Fentanyl is a morphine derivative mainly used by patients with terminal cancer. The 100-milligram patch is the strongest made, and is designed to release the drug over 72 hours, said Ryan de Guzman, a pharmacist in Stockton who teaches at the University of the Pacific pharmacy school.
"I would imagine that it would be a peaceful way to knock yourself out, with no pain at all," de Guzman. "This is probably why he chose the route he did."
Although Sheets owned 49 percent of Doc's Pharmacy in Walnut Creek, most of the legal and administrative blame for the meningitis outbreak has been placed on his longtime co-owner, Robert Horwitz, a major proponent of compounding, or specially mixing medications.
Last May and June, three people died and 13 others were hospitalized after receiving spinal shots of a steroid called betamethasone mixed by Doc's Pharmacy technicians. The medicine, used to treat back pain, was not properly sterilized and was contaminated by a common bacterium.
Horwitz will lose his license for one year beginning Sunday. Sheets would have gotten his license back, with some restrictions, and then been on probation for five years. He also was ordered to pay $37,159 in investigation and prosecution costs.
Sheets had worked in the pharmacy of a Walnut Creek Safeway since August. Safeway had agreed to let him continue working in a non-pharmacy role during his suspension, Ezell said.
Sheets "wasn't happy with the result, but I didn't think he was despondent over it," his attorney said. "He had everything to live for and nothing to die for. He had a beautiful wife and two beautiful kids. He was a great young man. This was not something that would keep him back for long."
Sheets was an up-and-coming pharmacist when Horwitz, 62, recruited him with the promise that the younger man would eventually take over the business.
But Sheets, who had specialized in clinical work, had no experience in compounding medications or in retail pharmacy.
"I foolishly was led to believe that Doc's Pharmacy, being such a well- respected pharmacy and Dr. Horwitz being so well-revered by his colleagues, was following all practices to the letter of the law," he wrote the Board of Pharmacy after the meningitis tragedy.
Sheets had no direct involvement in compounding the tainted medicine, the reports say. He insisted to state officials that he could not be blamed because he had not been at the pharmacy when the drugs were compounded.
State officials found that Horwitz was ultimately responsible because he was the pharmacist in charge and established most of the pharmacy's practices.
"Mostly out of deference to and respect for Horwitz, he never thought to challenge established compounding procedures or to push hard for improved quality controls," officials found.
Worries over jet fuel pipeline along Iron Horse Trail get county action
Pete Bennett2:39 PMATF, BayAreaNewspaperGroup.com, Kinder Morgan, Southern Pacific, Southern Pacific Pipeline Partners, Walnut Creek
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Worries over jet fuel pipeline along Iron Horse Trail get county action
By Jason Sweeney jsweeney@bayareanewsgroup.com
POSTED: 01/10/2013 03:46:21 PM PST | UPDATED: 11 MONTHS AGO
ALAMO -- Neighbors whose fences straddle county land at the Iron Horse Trail may find they have to remove them, pay rent or buy insurance for the right. Contra Costa County officials are taking action to deal with property owners who have built bridges, fences, and other structures on county property along the trail.
Carrie Ricci, the county's manager for the Iron Horse Corridor, said encroachments by homeowners into an easement where a high-pressure jet fuel pipeline runs underground conflict with state fire marshal regulations and are a safety concern for the county and pipeline owner Kinder Morgan Energy Partners.
Ricci and Kinder Morgan representatives attended an Alamo Municipal Advisory Committee meeting Tuesday to discuss the issue and answer questions from the committee and about 20 residents who attended.
Over the next few months, Ricci said county officials will contact homeowners who are encroaching into the trail corridor. She said there are about 50 to 75 homes in Alamo where structures have been built in the corridor on county property, with about 25 of encroaching onto the Kinder Morgan pipeline easement.
Encroachments onto the pipeline easement will have to be removed, she said. Those encroaching onto county property away from the pipeline will be dealt with on a case-by-case basis. Owners could be asked to remove the encroachments or pay a fee and buy insurance for using county property.
For those who don't comply, the county could begin abatement proceedings that could result in the county removing the encroachment at the homeowner's expense, she said.
The county bought the Iron Horse Corridor from the Southern Pacific Railroad Company in the 1980s. It is about 19 miles long and stretches from Concord to the Alameda County line. Today, it is known for its popular paved trail but it is also used by a number of utilities, including Kinder Morgan, whose pipeline carries gas, diesel and jet fuel from Concord to a terminal serving Mineta San Jose International Airport.
Questions about the age and fragility of the pipeline were raised during the meeting.
Murphy said the pipeline was built in 1965 and operates under a pressure of 1,300 pounds per square inch. "If we think the pipeline is fragile in any area, we dig it up and remove it," he said.
The Alamo committee asked the county to put permanent survey markers on the boundary of its property and for a list of properties deemed to be encroaching.
In 2010, a 90-foot oak tree just south of La Serena Avenue and parallel to the Iron Horse Trail was removed because it was thought to be a danger to the pipeline.
In 2004, five workers were killed and four injured when the pipeline exploded in Walnut Creek after being punctured by a backhoe.
Contact Jason Sweeney at 925-847-2123. Follow him at Twitter.com/Jason_Sweeney.
Contra Costa Bar - How my outside attorney was beaten
Pete Bennett6:12 PMAttempted Murder, Contra Costa Bar, Cover-up, Donald Gene Moats, Greenan, Kinder Morgan, Murder, murder by Accident, Southern Pacific, Southern Pacific Pipeline Partners, Tamara Moats, Walnut Creek
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Contra Costa County Bar Association
The Legal System has been compromised one case at a time and it took years of sifting through cases to tie the knot together.
Finding an attorney should be simple for many but in my case when the wagons drawn as almost every attorney in Contra Costa County has said no. They are scared to be involved. I have a case against the Bar Association and know it.
Several decades of observations
Some hard facts about my story:
It's clear as day to me that the Bar has been hit a witch doctor who has them under a spell. Someone has needles in the asses of attorneys as the Attorneys that will speak to me tell me to move away.
You want some good examples of how some Contra Costa Dynasties behave just take a look at my other blog here >> .
The San Ramon Valley Unified School district who's employees hid my children from me in 2006 by hitting me with restraining orders. Not only did they take my sons via this court hearing but it turns out the bailiff turned was none other than Tanabe. Tanabe threatened me in court with arrest saying I'd made terrorist threats. My paperwork was hidden by the clerks which thwarted my "move away prevention orders" as they never reached reached the judge.
In 2004 while living at 161 Valle Vista Danville CA an intruder arrived accusing me is stealing paintbrushes from a job site at 252 Remington Loop Danville CA. Even though I vehemently denied his allegations along with demands that he leave the property instead I was attacked, beaten and outsize by 120 lbs and 6 inches.
I was lucky to survive the attack. The Danville Police arrived but said he was justified to come over to collect his paintbrushes but during the altercation I had idea I was fighting a friends of the Danville Police Department and Contra Costa County Sheriff Apparently Collins has family inside CCSO which I'll detail in future articles where you will find my theory on another local murder.
ss Gary Vinson Collins who at the time was Danville Building Inspector who was contracted to the city via LP2A (now defunct). Mr. Collins fell down an elevator shaft a few weeks after documents linking CNET officers were handed over to Walnut Creek Chief Bryden. Collins fell on December 5th 2011 then died from his injuries on 19th. The last time I saw Collins he was inspecting a house on Waverly Drive Martinez. His hair was dyed RIT Black but trust me I've got more to say about the name Collins.
On February 12th 2013 I wrote an email to the Contra Costa Bar herein as "The Letter" which drives a point home that I cannot find counsel. My statues are expiring, my losses significant and the harassment nearly endless.
My sons live in a trailer that in my opinion could be rigged to explode just like my truck was rigged in 2004. The Eiko Sugihara murder was a gruesome arson where someone took the life of an 85 year old woman by leaving her to burn to death in her car.
Personally my case is about saving my sons from harm as I know of several other arson cases that occurred over 30 years ago. Nothing has changed but in my universe the only way these events would go unchecked in that Contra Costa Law Enforcement is turning the cheek to the truth. Just ask a few homeless black gay men found hanging from trees if you could get an answer from them.
That's Contra Costa County signed sealed and delivered.
My Personal Experience -
The Legal System has been compromised one case at a time and it took years of sifting through cases to tie the knot together.
Finding an attorney should be simple for many but in my case when the wagons drawn as almost every attorney in Contra Costa County has said no. They are scared to be involved. I have a case against the Bar Association and know it.
Several decades of observations
- In litigation against Southern Pacific (1992) forced into adverse settlement
Some hard facts about my story:
- CNET is my story - that's Chris Butler, Former Officers Lombardi, Wielsch, and Tanabe who was as Danville CA neighbor.
- By now I suspect most attorneys in the County know these facts
- My Attorney was beat up in Walnut Creek - no investigation
- My Truck was rigged for Arson - no record of accident or fire
- A Danville Building Inspector nearly killed me in 2004 - he's dead
- My car was totaled by a San Francisco Police Officer -no investigation
- That numerous persons near me have been killed, murdered or died suspiciously
- They all know I've compiled information about cases spanning 30 years.
- They know my former customer Dr. Kim Fang was murdered in 2000
- They know several persons near me have been murdered but several were police officers
- Who would want to step into my mess
It's clear as day to me that the Bar has been hit a witch doctor who has them under a spell. Someone has needles in the asses of attorneys as the Attorneys that will speak to me tell me to move away.
You want some good examples of how some Contra Costa Dynasties behave just take a look at my other blog here >> .
The San Ramon Valley Unified School district who's employees hid my children from me in 2006 by hitting me with restraining orders. Not only did they take my sons via this court hearing but it turns out the bailiff turned was none other than Tanabe. Tanabe threatened me in court with arrest saying I'd made terrorist threats. My paperwork was hidden by the clerks which thwarted my "move away prevention orders" as they never reached reached the judge.
I was lucky to survive the attack. The Danville Police arrived but said he was justified to come over to collect his paintbrushes but during the altercation I had idea I was fighting a friends of the Danville Police Department and Contra Costa County Sheriff Apparently Collins has family inside CCSO which I'll detail in future articles where you will find my theory on another local murder.
ss Gary Vinson Collins who at the time was Danville Building Inspector who was contracted to the city via LP2A (now defunct). Mr. Collins fell down an elevator shaft a few weeks after documents linking CNET officers were handed over to Walnut Creek Chief Bryden. Collins fell on December 5th 2011 then died from his injuries on 19th. The last time I saw Collins he was inspecting a house on Waverly Drive Martinez. His hair was dyed RIT Black but trust me I've got more to say about the name Collins.
On February 12th 2013 I wrote an email to the Contra Costa Bar herein as "The Letter" which drives a point home that I cannot find counsel. My statues are expiring, my losses significant and the harassment nearly endless.
My sons live in a trailer that in my opinion could be rigged to explode just like my truck was rigged in 2004. The Eiko Sugihara murder was a gruesome arson where someone took the life of an 85 year old woman by leaving her to burn to death in her car.
Personally my case is about saving my sons from harm as I know of several other arson cases that occurred over 30 years ago. Nothing has changed but in my universe the only way these events would go unchecked in that Contra Costa Law Enforcement is turning the cheek to the truth. Just ask a few homeless black gay men found hanging from trees if you could get an answer from them.
That's Contra Costa County signed sealed and delivered.
Business Targeting - Profit Through Intimidation
Pete Bennett8:54 PMKinder Morgan, safeway, Southern Pacific, Southern Pacific Pipeline Partners, Walnut Creek
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December 2012
My personal reasons behind my articles began many years ago but during the summer of 2011 my car was totaled - the raw reality is a retired police officer, a youth director and then the Contra Costa Sherriff's Department also known as the Lafayette Police all have a hand in these events.
In 2010 this retired cop knew about my efforst on a certain case in Contra Costa County of which I have strong opinions along with others. One officer from Alameda County told me sometimes it's best to leave things alone but Danville Councilman Mike Shimansky told me they were too powerful.
What makes Contra Costa County tick is controlling the legal system - here is why!
1992 Litigation filed against Southern Pacific suddenly caves in - case settled for pennies on the dollar
2002 - Attorney's office burned down
2006 - Attorney beaten in Walnut Creek
2008 - Petitioner attacked at Safeway 600 S. Broadway Walnut Creek
2012 - Your's truly nearly run over, police report filed and rejected
My personal reasons behind my articles began many years ago but during the summer of 2011 my car was totaled - the raw reality is a retired police officer, a youth director and then the Contra Costa Sherriff's Department also known as the Lafayette Police all have a hand in these events.
In 2010 this retired cop knew about my efforst on a certain case in Contra Costa County of which I have strong opinions along with others. One officer from Alameda County told me sometimes it's best to leave things alone but Danville Councilman Mike Shimansky told me they were too powerful.
What makes Contra Costa County tick is controlling the legal system - here is why!
1992 Litigation filed against Southern Pacific suddenly caves in - case settled for pennies on the dollar
2002 - Attorney's office burned down
2006 - Attorney beaten in Walnut Creek
2008 - Petitioner attacked at Safeway 600 S. Broadway Walnut Creek
2012 - Your's truly nearly run over, police report filed and rejected