Where is Bill Windsor of Lawless America headed? Nowhere, Prison, the Academy Awards?

In 2012, Bill Windsor set out to drive to all 50 state capitals to film one victim of government, judicial, or law enforcement corruption in each state.  6,000 people showed up wanting to be filmed for his documentary film, “Lawless America…The Movie.”  William M. Windsor’s planned 120-day trip took 241 days.  He managed to film over 750 people.  He shot 1,500 hours of high-definition movie film.

Bill Windsor developed many haters, and a group of people has defamed him online in an unprecedented manner – 320 articles, 49,000 published comments accusing Bill Windsor of every crime and horrible thing you can imagine, dozens of videos, over 50 hate websites about him, an online radio show to defame him, all manner of cyberstalking, and more.  Bill Windsor has received many threats, including death threats.

One of the most vicious is a man we shall call SUSHI, an employee of the University of Montana.  Bill Windsor drove to Missoula to film an expose about him and why law enforcement and the courts protect him.  As Bill Windsor drove from Butte to Missoula, a car about 100-feet ahead of him in the right hand lane on the Interstate burst into flame and smoke.  When William M. Windsor reached his hotel in Missoula Montana, he received an email from SUSHI saying that he missed – could Bill Windsor believe how that car exploded.  The police and the courts did nothing. Bill Windsor sought protective orders against SUSHI with massive evidence of his cyberstalking, and Bill Windsor was denied in a manner that indicated SUSHI was being deliberately protected.

William M. Windsor registered his Montana filming with the Montana Film Commission, the City of Missoula, and the University of Montana.  Bill Windsor had permission to film anywhere on public property.  All he did in Montana was work on the film.  On the last day of filming, Bill Windsor was in the center of the University of Montana campus when two law enforcement officers came up and served William M. Windsor with a Temporary Order of Protection in favor of SUSHI.  Bill Windsor filmed it; he thought it would be the perfect conclusion for a one-hour TV show about corruption in Montana.  Bill Windsor was charged with stalking for filming his movie.  There was never a hearing to convert the Temporary Order of Protection to a permanent order.  The Order says it expired in mid-September 2013.

Bill Windsor sued SUSHI and the small army of cyberstalkers in Ellis County Texas court.  Bill Windsor is the sole plaintiff.  As Bill Windsor left the courtroom after a routine hearing on October 28, 2014, a group of Ellis County Sheriff’s Deputies took him to jail.  Bill Windsor had never been in jail in his 66 years.  Bill Windsor was not arrested – just detained for extradition to Montana on three felonies and two misdemeanors.  The “arrest,” incarceration, denial of bond, and denial of release was all totally illegal.  Bill Windsor provided a $100,000 bond from an Ellis County Texas bail bond company, and it was rejected.  Bill Windsor then arranged a $100,000 Montana bond, and it was rejected.  William M. Windsor fought like crazy to get the laws enforced and get released, but all types of wrongdoing by Judge Bob Carroll, Sheriff Johnny Brown, District Attorney Patrick Wilson and their employees kept him in jail for 53 days until he finally managed to get before a judge and prove all the violations.  (See 53 Days in Ellis County Texas Jail as a Political Prisoner – The Saga of Bill Windsor – Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5Part 6The Law and How it was Obliterated.)

Bill Windsor was released on a personal recognizance bond on December 19, 2014.  He will likely have to turn himself in by January 20, 2015 in Missoula, Montana.

Bill Windsor doesn’t know what he is charged with.  All he has been told is “violation of a protective order.”  It may be some other William Windsor.  It may be that Montana is claiming that Bill Windsor’s website violates the non-existent protective order, or that mailing copies of legal documents required under the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure violates the non-existent protective order.  But what Bill Windsor is really charged with is the filming of a documentary that will expose Montana as the most corrupt state in America.

Bill Windsor’s website is www.LawlessAmerica.com.  His Facebook page is www.Facebook.com/billwindsor1.  His YouTube Channel is www.youtube.com/lawlessamerica

Bill Windsor very well may be destined to die in a Montana prison.  He is looking for someone who might be interested in taking his film and completing the project.  He doesn’t care about money; he just wants the pandemic of judicial corruption exposed.

Listen to the Lawless America Show on Tuesday, December 30, 2014 — http://www.talkshoe.com/talkshoe/web/talkCast.jsp…

Bill Windsor may be reached at 5013 S Louise Ave #1134, Sioux Falls, SD 57108, windsorinjail@yahoo.com, www.facebook.com/billwindsor1, www.youtube.com/lawlessamerica, www.LawlessAmerica.com
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If you would like to have Bill Windsor publish your story about INjustice, please email your story with photos, evidence, and anything that you feel is important for people to see — windsorinjail@yahoo.com

William M. Windsor

Extradition Laws Violated in Texas – Open Letter to Ellis County District Attorney Patrick Wilson

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This is an Open Letter to Ellis County Texas District Attorney Patrick Wilson (shown here).

Patrick Wilson, you know very well who I am.  I am a person that you have been responsible for illegally detaining, illegally incarcerating, illegally denying bond, illegally blocking release, lying about in Court, and failing to uphold your Oath of Office.

My name is William M. Windsor.  I have never been arrested, have never been charged with a crime, and had never been in jail prior to October 28, 2014.  But for 53 days, from October 28 to December 19, 2014, I was detained in the Ellis County Jail in Waxahachie, Texas as a political prisoner. 

Continue reading Extradition Laws Violated in Texas – Open Letter to Ellis County District Attorney Patrick Wilson