Today’s message is going to be; Moving On. I want to start with this nice quote from a lady named Miss Robinson here at Madison Correctional. She’s one of the ATs that helps a lot of inmates with getting quotes and information and things about positive inspiration. She’s one of the people that actually sits down and helps inmates.
This is from her. Sometimes you just have to step forward. Move on. No questions, no doubts, no looking back, just move on. Well, today’s message is moving on.
So I want to start with saying this. So, I have told you guys in the past about my condo situation. What happened is a nonresident moved in after my mother died and was paid to pay our taxes, and he didn’t pay the taxes, and he sold everything in the house. Well, I’ve been traveling through everything in order to talk to all the people. I’ve talked to the sheriff’s department; I’ve talked to the FBI; I’ve talked to every law enforcement agency that they’ve sent me to, and I went through this whole chain of command and everything, and it got right back to the same thing.
They said, basically, this is what the FBI said, “Well, we checked it out. There’s nothing that we can do because there’s a crime in there somewhere, but I don’t know what it is because I’m not a lawyer.”
He says, “You probably should get a lawyer, have them investigate it and then sue to get your money back but as far as somebody going against the sheriff’s department or so forth, it would have to be a lawyer in order to file the paperwork.”
And the way that the law works is basically these people do the investigation. They take it to a prosecutor, the prosecutor is who decides whether or not to file charges. So with that being said, they know that they’re not going to take the time and resources in order to figure it out, what they would file charges on, because the place was put up during a sheriff’s auction.
So therefore, basically, the government is responsible, so the government’s not going to investigate the government. And that’s why I’ve been told to get a privately retained attorney. Well, with that, I just got to move on. Because I’m in prison I don’t have the resources. I don’t have people to make phone calls for me. I don’t have any family. I don’t have any friends. I’ve been gone 20 years. Everybody I know is dead, on drugs or so forth, or got families and don’t care about somebody in jail.
But I still have God, I still have hope, I still have a chance to turn my life around and do good. And maybe one day I’ll be able to get out and keep other people from making the mistakes I did, and keep them from this. So therefore, even when there’s no hope and your back is against the wall, you still have the fact that you can affect somebody else’s life so they don’t go through what you did. With that, this is Faluch Bigsby signing off. God bless.
These commentaries are recorded by Prison Radio.