Summary: Indian Hill Case defendant is told to stop the telecommunications harassment.
What does the law hold in its arsenal to handle social justice warriors, or their ilk, who would vigilante their opponents rather than letting established legal precedents solve matters? Well there’s always jail. Crystal Pleatman has been threatened with just that after continuing to harass Gran Troja via texts.
Two years ago, Pleatman and her husband backed out of buying a house because they discovered their new neighbor would have been a man convicted of attempted murder. The homeowner, Troja, owner of over 60 Arby’s, sued her for breach of contract. Since then, Pleatman has used her phone and the internet to commit telecommunications harassment, the opposing counsel is claiming.
“I’m going to make this crystal clear,” said Judge Fanon Rucker. “If there is proof that you continue to contact people, you will be jailed. And you will sit in jail until this case is over.”
And so she has been barred from discussing the matter over Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, or, “if it comes back,” Myspace.
“We can’t stop her” rued Gwen Bender, chief assistant prosecuting attorney for the state.
One of Pleatman’s lawyers have motioned to dismiss the charges against her saying they were given without “due process of law.”
News Source: Cincinatti.com