Thank-you for your reply and your suggestion that we forward any further information to the FBI in Kansas city Missouri. However the Kansas City FBI has a conflict of interest in this case and has informed us they have no jurisdiction over Lawrence affairs involving police misconduct.
This has been a deeply corrupt investigation, with conspiracy that has been ongoing since 2005. Our rights have been continuously violated, we have been retaliated against for filing complaints with frivolous Federal Indictments, false arrests and torture, planted evidence, incarcerations, warrantless searches, false press releases and more. Because of the extreme power the Federal Prosecutors have to control and influence everyone involved in this case, we fear fear for our safety and the safety of our family. We understand you cannot investigate our complaints while the criminal investigation is going on, so we only ask that an outside agency such as yours, watch over this corrupt investigation that is entering into its 5th year to insure our safety from future retaliation until we are acquitted.
The basis of the conspiracy and corruption is directly linked to the missing evidence, chain of custody issues and search warrant violations, compounded by a lack of evidence against the defendants Guy and Carrie Neighbors.
When the local City prosecutor Charles Branson refused to prosecute the corrupt case, it was forwarded to Federal Prosecutor AUSA Marietta Parker by Police Chief Ron Olin. The Federal Prosecutor immediately began to threaten the Neighbors paid attorneys with pulling their banking records and money laundering.
Lawrence Kansas Police patrol officers Jay Bialek and Micky Rantz are the lead investigators in the ongoing Federal Investigation against the Yellow House store owners Guy and Carrie Neighbors. To cover-up for the fact they are not federal investigators the two officers were approaching witnesses in the investigation and identifying themselves as FBI agents. This is supported by signed statements and affidavits by witnesses.
The Neighbors attorney Sarah Swain filed a formal complaint with LKPD internal affairs Sgt. Dan Ward, stating that Patrol officers Jay Bialek and Micky Rantz were posing as FBI agents. Sgt. Ward forwarded the complaint to AUSA Marietta Parker. Marietta Parker sent down a Kansas City FBI agent who identified himself as FBI Special Agent Bob Shaefer.
Agent Shaefer conducted a 5 day fake FBI investigation, made a public announcement to the Media through the Kansas City FBI spokesperson Jeff Lanza that the Lawrence Kansas Police officers had been cleared. The same day AUSA Marietta Parker orchestrated two more searches on the Neighbors business and home, lead by Police officers Jay Bialek, Micky Rantz, Postal Inspector David Nitz and IRS Agent Rob Jackson.
In 2007 An LJWorld reporter Ron Knox the Neighbors, along with others were all told by the Kansas City FBI, the FBI investigation by Agent Bob Shaefer into the Lawrence police misconduct complaints by the Neighbors never took place, and there was no file for the investigation. The Kansas City FBI also claimed at the time that there was no FBI agent Bob Shaefer.
Bob Shaefer later testified during a hearing in Federal Court before Magistrate Judge James P O'Hara, that his actual name is "Walter Robert Schaefer" and that his jurisdiction for investigations is the Western District of Missouri. Investigations & testimony done within his Jurisdiction are conducted under his actual name FBI Agent Walter Schaefer.
The Kansas city FBI also stated, not only had they not done an investigation, they had no jurisdiction to do investigations in Lawrence Kansas. The Neighbors were told by the Kansas City FBI not to contact them again, and that the Topeka FBI had jurisdiction over Lawrence Kansas and they should contact them for future reference.
The Neighbors then met with the Topeka FBI agents Scott Gentine and Denton Murray and gave them copies of the formal complaints connected to the missing evidence and police misconduct. The following week Dave Bryant also filed a complaint with Topeka FBI agent Scott Gentine because his guns that had been stolen during a burglary, and later recovered in a drug bust were also missing from the Lawrence Kansas Police Department evidence room, and he had found them being offered for sale in the 23rd street Pawn Shop.
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