 
        Dr. Thresher v. Montana
          December 2, 2020
        Dr. Thresher v. Montana was my (Dr. Duane
        Thresher's) third foundational case; see 
IT Law
        Expertise in my 
Credentials on
        the 
Apscitu website and
        
About
        Apscitu Law and 
Casebook on
        the 
Apscitu Law
        website.  Actually, it wasn't just one case — living and
        running a business in Montana led to numerous cases.  Montana
        is perpetually at the top of the list of most corrupt states
        and this is well-earned.  A big part of the reason for this
        rampant corruption is that Montana is full of incompetents,
        particularly IT incompetents (but also lawyers, etc.);
        see 
Principles
        of IT Incompetence (IT Hiring: IT Incompetence Breeds
        Disloyalty and Corruption).
        I learned a lot of law in Montana — I had to educate
        myself extensively about it.  I even thought about going to
        law school, but in looking into it I realized the days of law
        school as in 
The Paper Chase, as I would want it
        (tough, like 
MIT was),
        were over.  Law schools had drastically deteriorated due to
        political correctness, just as their associated universities
        had.  I realized I would be much better off learning just the
        law pertinent to my cases in depth, more than general practice
        lawyers, and how to prosecute and defend cases.
        Like in 
Dr. Thresher
        v. Prof. Bedell — which actually also happened while
        I was in Montana but did not involve any Montanans — my
        time in Montana also solidified my thoughts about the high
        cost of 
IT
        incompetence.
        As my first business, I wanted Thresher Networks, which
        designed and installed entire enterprise networks (cabling,
        switches, routers, etc.), to be on a sound legal footing.
        Before even going to a lawyer, I read a lot — including
        the Montana statutes — about limited liability companies
        (LLC), corporations (Inc.), and the differences between them.
        I chose to become an LLC and went to a lawyer in nearby Great
        Falls,
        
Hanna Warhank 
           
         (of Church, Harris, Johnson &
        Williams, P.C.), to draw up the paperwork.
        However, it quickly became apparent that Hanna Warhank was
        incompetent, at least in regards to LLCs.  (Admittedly LLCs
        are a fairly recent legal invention — it was the
        mid-1990s before they were widely accepted — but even
        lawyers have to keep up in their field, which does change.)
        She insisted I expose all my LLC members by naming them in my
        articles of organization.  Everything I'd read, as well as the
        Montana Secretary of State's Office, said you don't have to do
        this; it's considered an advantage of an LLC that you
        don't.
        I dropped Hanna Warhank without paying her a penny and drew up
        my own articles of organization to become Thresher Networks
        LLC.  (Later I would use this legal knowledge and expand on it
        to become Apscitu Inc.)
        As part of my business, I had to deal, at a technical level,
        with the Internet Service Provider (ISP) in my area, 3 Rivers,
        headed then and now by IT incompetent General Manager/CEO
        
David Gibson
           
        .  Unfortunately, 3 Rivers hired only
        IT incompetent family and friends for technical positions.
        Getting any IT work done that involved 3 Rivers took forever
        and added to the cost.  It got so bad that I read through the
        bylaws of its articles of incorporation and 
ran for the 3 Rivers Board of
        Trustees, including giving a 
critical speech to a large hostile
        audience at the annual meeting, which is usually an
        extravagant costly party rather than the serious shareholder
        meeting it is supposed to be.  I also created a website
        critical of member-owned 3 Rivers: 
3 Rivers Revolt!  Of course I
        had no chance of winning since 3 Rivers was handing out jobs
        to the voters and lots of ad money to the thus very biased
        local newspapers.
        3 Rivers spends a lot of effort getting state and federal
        grants using dubious justification, like many organizations in
        Montana, including schools and libraries.  When it came to
        schools and libraries I was sympathetic to the lack of IT
        competence in Montana and did networking for them at reduced
        cost, but corruption ruined that too.
        For example, I did some networking for the Fairfield Public
        Library.  A librarian there,
        
Tracie Roeder
           
        , fancying herself a computer expert,
        used some grant money to buy a bunch of computers from a
        vendor of her choice, but then the setup and networking was a
        disaster and I stepped in to help.  While checking out these
        computers I discovered that the vendor,
        
Quint Billings 
           
         of Missoula Computes, was a
        registered sex offender, a pedophile who had spent 5 years in
        prison for raping a boy (Billings's photo here is his
        mugshot).  Turns out Roeder had chosen Quint Billings without
        any research — a simple Google search of his name
        brought up his sex offender registration first thing for me
        — and had picked him only because his isolated shop was
        conveniently on the way to her kids' orthodontist.
        I discovered some questionable hidden software on these
        computers that seemed to connect back to Missoula Computes; I
        immediately reformatted all of their drives and reinstalled a
        clean operating system.  Quint Billings advertised that he
        specialized in providing computers for schools and libraries
        (even while he was not allowed near schools or other places
        children gathered; his business is in an
        
isolated building
           
        ).  I warned dozens of library,
        school, and state officials in Montana about him, but not a
        single one was interested.  Tracie Roeder herself was angry at
        me for pointing out Billings was a pedophile.  Corruption is
        so bad in Montana they don't even care about protecting
        children.  (During one election, Montana Attorney General
        
Tim Fox
           
         hypocritically ran on an
        anti-sex-offender platform.)
        I was able to make it a little harder for Quint Billings to
        attract the business of schools and libraries though.  As
        advertised on the Missoula Computes website, Billings was a
        certified Lenovo Business Partner.  Lenovo is a Chinese
        computer manufacturer, headquartered in Beijing, that acquired
        IBM's personal computer business (Thinkpad's etc.) in 2005.
        Their computers are cheap so attractive to schools and
        libraries.  I contacted Lenovo and had this certification
        removed — like many such contracts there is a moral
        turpitude clause in it.
        I did a larger networking job for the Greenfield School.  This
        turned out to be corruption from beginning to end — led by
        Principal
        
Paul Wilson
           
         and abetted by the school board
        — and all at the expense of the children.  Again,
        corruption is so bad in Montana they don't even care about
        protecting children.
        Evidence in this case can be found on the website I created
        about it at the time titled 
Criminal Activity by
        Greenfield School Montana Officials.
        Due to IT incompetence, the computer network of the Greenfield
        School was a shambles, particularly regarding computer
        security, which exposed the students to dangers like pedophile
        
Quint Billings 
           
         of Missoula Computes (see above).  I
        offered to design and install a new computer network for
        $15,000 — much less than the job was worth — as
        part of an $80,000 new construction project at the
        school.
        This new construction was to take place during the summer, to
        avoid interfering with school, and vice versa.  I could not
        start until it was finished and also would be greatly slowed
        if school was in session.
        Construction thus should have started the day after the last
        day of school in May.  However, choosing a builder was still
        going on then.  This was because Principal Paul Wilson and the
        school board were desperately trying to give the job to a
        friend, Brian Burton of Burton Finish Carpentry, by allowing
        him weeks past the deadline to put together a legitimate
        proposal, even though another company, Detailed Construction,
        had already submitted an excellent proposal by the deadline.
        Principal Wilson had arranged to make extra money by working
        for Burton on the project, in violation of his full-year
        school contract, but OK'ed by school board member Michael
        Hager.  This was clearly just a bribe to get the
        contract.
        Burton never could put together a legitimate proposal and
        Detailed Construction threatened a lawsuit, so they got the
        job.  Even so, construction started only in mid-summer and by
        the time it was finished and I could start, school was just
        days away from starting.  Mostly I had to work around school
        being in session.  Plus I had to work with 3 Rivers (see
        above).  Progress was difficult to say the least.
        While this was going on, I discovered other corruption at the
        school — at school board meetings that parents weren't
        informed of so didn't attend — and felt compelled to
        act:
        1. Principal Paul Wilson and the school board tried to cheat a
        student out of rightfully-earned scholarship money because
        they didn't like the student's parents.  I reported this to
        the parents; they complained and got the
        scholarship.
        2. Through incompetent planning, Principal Paul Wilson and the
        school board ended up having to cram all the 2nd-graders into
        a tiny room never meant to be a classroom, which violated fire
        codes and endangered the children.  I reported this to the
        Fire Marshal.
        3. School board member Mervin Carper of Merv's Floor
        Installation was "awarded" the flooring contract.  He was
        incompetent and, particularly on the large inside ramp at the
        front door, he made the floors so slick children were
        literally falling all the time.  I pointed out that this was a
        serious insurance issue and Carper fixed it at his own
        cost.
        At this point, near completion, I was fired — supposedly
        for not finishing on time — and barred from setting foot
        on school grounds, even to collect my tools, under threat of
        arrest by the sheriff, another friend of Principal Paul Wilson
        and the school board.
        To accomodate the school's budgeting I had required only
        $3,600 up front.  Principal Paul Wilson and the school board
        gave the job, and the remaining $11,400, to an IT incompetent
        friend's company, an electrician who illegally ran his
        business out of 3 Rivers (see above).  He only needed to do a
        few days of work before it was declared finished.  (The
        school's computer network was then no safer than it was,
        because security settings are done at the end of the network
        installation, had not been done by me yet, and the electrician
        was IT incompetent.)  Ridiculously, this was presented to me
        as proof of how much more efficient the electrician was
        compared to me, completely ignoring the fact that I was
        already near completion.
        With intense study I learned how to sue as a pro se (no
        lawyer) litigant, since I didn't trust any local lawyers,
        given my experience with them (see above).  Ultimately I did
        not submit my complaint because I realized it would have to go
        to the local court and in researching the judges there I found
        out they were, yet again, friends of Principal Paul Wilson and
        the school board.
        I also made this corruption public with the mentioned 
website and 
ran for the Greenfield
        School Board.  Of course I had no chance of winning since
        the school and the aforementioned businesses handed out lots
        of ad money to the thus very biased local newspapers, half of
        whom refused to print my running for Greenfield School Board
        ad.
        When Obamacare (HealthCare.gov), itself an IT security fiasco
        (see 
HealthCare.gov
        Hacked), was implemented, the 
Montana
        Department of Public Health and Human Services (MT DPHHS)
        provided the health insurance for children, including mine.
        In one of the largest data breaches at the time, MT DPHHS
        IT-incompetently lost all their information — names,
        ages, addresses, medical records, etc. — to hackers.
        They pretended the only concern was identity theft — so
        they only had to offer free credit monitoring for a year
        — but with children the concern is abduction (by
        pedophiles like
        
Quint Billings 
           
         of Missoula Computes for example;
        see above).  Again though, corruption is so bad in Montana
        they don't even care about protecting children.
        I demanded state officials, including Montana Attorney General
        
Tim Fox
           
        , and federal officials, including
        U.S. Attorney General
        
Eric Holder
           
         and FBI Director
        
James Comey
           
        , investigate, but I got no response
        from anyone; see 
FBI
        Hacking Investigation Negligence Lawsuit.
        I thus investigated the data breach myself.  It was the first
        time I looked into how Freedom Of Information Act (FOIA)
        requests worked (like the federal government, state
        governments have FOIA too).  It was then that I learned how
        long these can take and how unsuccessful they often are; see
        
FOIA:
        That's Some Exemption, That Exemption 6.
        Instead, I created webpages about the MT DPHHS 
data breach and 
coverup, which exposed the IT
        incompetent MT DPHHS officials involved.  These got a response
        from a source working in IT inside the MT DPHHS.  He confirmed
        what I had written on the webpages: that the MT DPHHS data
        breach was caused by rampant IT incompetence there; again,
        many IT incompetent family and friends hired for technical
        positions.  He was hired from out-of-state and was moving back
        after the incident.
        These IT incompetent MT DPHHS officials included
        
Ron Baldwin
           
        .  He was for years MT DPHHS Chief
        Information Officer (CIO), including before the data breach
        was publicly reported (10 months after the fact); he was
        clearly responsible for the conditions that allowed the data
        breach.  Ron Baldwin was then appointed the state CIO for
        Montana, responsible for all of state government IT; for yet
        another IT incompetent Montana CIO see 
IT
        Incompetent Attorneys General v. Google.
        On our way out of Montana, to the Silicon Valley area in
        California to start 
web
        programming work on an idea I have for an innovative
        social networking website, we needed to store some of our
        stuff in Montana to get later.  Being an 
Air Force
        brat who had moved a lot, I chose a storage facility,
        U-STOR-IT, near Malmstrom Air Force Base in Great Falls,
        thinking it was thus most likely to be reputable.
        A couple of months later in California I was contacted by
        Detective Lieutenant
        
Scott Van Dyken
           
         of the Cascade County Sheriff's
        Office in Great Falls, Montana.  He informed me that some of
        what we had in storage had been recovered from a theft ring
        — U-STOR-IT had been robbed.  Being incompetent, Van
        Dyken was very irritated that I had not provided better
        contact information in our stolen goods and he had had trouble
        finding us.
        Det. Lt. Van Dyken demanded a list of what we were missing,
        knowing how hard it would be to put together.  We
        painstakingly managed to put a list together for him though,
        and asked when we could get our stuff back.  He never
        responded.  Unclaimed recovered items are typically sold off,
        with the police getting first pick.  Later, I discovered that
        the Cascade County Sheriff's Office itself was under criminal
        investigation for theft, which resulted in several successful
        prosecutions of its officers.
        U-STOR-IT knew of the numerous thefts at its facility due to
        its poor security — they advertise camera surveillance
        but due to IT incompetence can't operate them properly —
        but did not inform any of its customers, many from Malmstrom
        Air Force Base and not often visiting their storage units.
        They tried to continue to charge us rent until we could get
        back there, itself a big expense.  When we didn't pay all the
        rent, they sold off all of our stuff and sent the remainder of
        what they say we owed to a shady Montana collections agency,
        Credit Associates.  I threatened to sue Credit Associates and
        they never bothered us again.
        Looking up U-STOR-IT at the Montana Secretary of State showed
        it was owned by JKW Enterprises Inc., which sounds impressive,
        like a corporation you wouldn't dream of suing.  However,
        looking up JKW Enterprises Inc. at the Montana Secretary of
        State showed it was owned by James D. Workman of 4901 2nd Ave
        N, Great Falls MT 59403, which is just the address of the
        U-STOR-IT facility.  This is just the classic dummy
        corporation tactic used by corrupt companies.  Note that
        incorporation does not protect a company's officers from being
        personally sued if they have acted unlawfully; they lose their
        indemnity.
        There were many other incidents in Montana involving
        illegality and IT incompetence, but the above should be more
        than enough proof of my initial premise.
          
        From this case I learned all about LLCs and corporations and
        how to soundly become one without a lawyer.  Most importantly,
        I learned how to prosecute and defend cases as a pro se (no
        lawyer) litigant.  Along with 
Dr. Thresher
        v. Prof. Bedell, from my muckraking websites above I
        learned defamation (usually libel) law (New York Times
        Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964) and subsequent cases are
        the most important precedents), as well as the difficulty of
        FOIA requests.  From these websites and those I did for
        customers, I learned more about copyright law and about buying
        domain names.  Finally, and also along with Dr. Thresher
        v. Prof. Bedell, this case solidified my thoughts about the
        high cost of IT incompetence, including that states (and
        nations) that are too incompetent, and thus too corrupt, are
        unworkable (this may apply to the United
        States).