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gw !TVT Couqu-, OF COMMOW?PLEAS of TVE CommogkfwEAfTV OF PEW2 Sy-rVA7A CORYA. CORMANY V. ALEXANDRIA C. CORMANY CASENO. 0 y ` (0 14 CIVIL ACTION - LAW JURYTRIAL DEMANDED MOT-' You have been sued in Court. Ifyou wish to defend against the claim set forth in the following pages, you must take action within twenty (so) days after the Complaint and Notice are served by entering a written appearance personally or by attorney and by filing in writing with the Court your defense or objection to the claims set forth against you. You are warned that if you fail to do so the case may proceed without you and judgment maybe entered against you bythe Court without further notice for any money claimed in the Complaint or for any other claim or relief requested by Plaintiff. You may lose money or property or other rights important to you. YOU SHOULD TAKE THIS PAPER TO YOUR LAWYER AT ONCE. IF YOU DO NOT HAVE A LAWYER OR CANNOT AFFORD ONE, GO TO OR TELEPHONE THE OFFICE SET FORTH BELOW TO FIND OUT WHERE YOU CAN GET LEGAL HELP. Court Adm- inistrator Cumderrand County Bar Association Irvin Row Carlisl, PSI. 17013 79k T ME COURT' OT CO?l MOB P-C-E 1s Of CZlMBERLA??D COrUNIJY CORYA.CORMANY V. ALEXANDRIA C. COR.MANY CASENO. Cy - (01- CIVIL ACTION - LAW JUDGMENT DEMANDED CO!MP.CAgWll AMD tfEP.EBY comes, Cory A Cormany, unto and through Attorney Cdrouy, and estadlsfies causes of action pursuant a civil remedy for the adove named Defendant, wherefore tfie following is a statement set fortfi at l ngth- 1. Mr. Cory A. Cormany is an adult individuaf residing Pennsylvania. in Cumberland County, (I) 2. Ms. Alexandria C. Cormany is an adolescent individual residing in Cumderland County, Pennsylvania. 3. On or about Yune 7th, of the year 2002, Mr. Cory A. Cormany filed complaint pursuant The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. 4. On or about December 16th", of the year 200.3, Mr. Cory A. Cormany petitioned parental rght pursuant The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. 5. On or about March 2n4(,- of the year 2004, Mr. Cory A. Cormany petitioned criminal conviction pursuant the Common'wealth' of Pennsylvania. 6. Mr Cory A. Cormany is the said;- adolescent chiles natural ological father, and hereby consents social security and fife insurance supplements (2) EXHIBIT i Cory A. Cormany 1883 Douglas Dr. Carlisle, Pa. 17013 (717)243-6413 (717)243-5287 Ms. Alexandria C. Cormany 145 Kerrs Road Newville, Pa. 17241 Dear Christine, I have enclosed a notice with an exhibit in series. You may review and read these items if you so choose? The best I can do now is attempt to pursue counseling with the Stevens Mental Health Center (717)243-6033, in interest to visitation. I hope that you may come and sit with me there and talk to my counselor with me sometime in the near future? As time shall avail perhaps things may be different, and if they shall be; than perhaps it is better left for the courts to determine. I am truly sorry it has had to be this way. Please retain an interest in your school studies. Love, Dad :CAC 10M H. a.ouw. Hawn X. CacaOY BROUJOS dr GILROY, Pc. ArjoANns AT LAW 4 P409M HANOVia STXJ= CAALULN, PNNNMVANIA 17013 January 13, 2004 Cory A. Cormany law Douglas Drive Carlisle, PA 17013 Dear Mr. Cormany: TsuPnotw: (717) 2414574 PAcsM1Ls: (717) 2434227 )bm lasebr wwrilroycan b*UMy ft,pulo4si1My.com 1'NoN,ToLt " HAMAKmc Atu 717.766.1690 Our office represents John and Tiaa Adams of 145 Kerrs Road, Carlisle, PA. Please accept this letter as a notice to you that you are not to come on the property of Sir. And Mrs. Adams at 145 Kerrs Road, Carlisle, PA. This notice is effective for any and all matters and indicates that you may not come on the property of the Adams'. Any effort by you to come on the property will result with the Nino of a Trespass Action. Additionally, you are hereby notified that you should not have any verbal or written communication with Mr. Adams or with Mrs. Adana or with any of their children. Any attempts by you to contact then after this time will be deamed to be harassment and we will turn the matter over to the appropriate criminal officials for prosecution. Please note that this No Contact Provision also applies to any place of employment of Mr. & Mrs. Adams. The frivolous litigation you have flied coupled with the efforts you have made to contact the Adams family Is simply nothing more than harassment on your part and will no longer be tolerated. We will pursue all remedies with criminal prosecution and any civil remedies If necessary. Please just stay awayl sincerely y H. Gil y jmw cc: Mr. & Mrs. John Adams Pennsylvania State Police Carlisle Barracks Borough of Carlisle Police IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA 'rHE COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA C? CORY A. CORMANY 1O ?0 'm ?/ V. CIVIL ACTION - LAW JOHN D. ADAMS JUDGMENT DEMAAIDED NARAla? t °?r 1 r NOTICE Z4 SOUP 'i"ft& You have been sued in Court. If you wish to defend against the claim set forth in the following pages, you must take action within twenty (20) days after the Complaint and Notice are served by entering a written appearance personally or by attorney and by filing in writing with the Court your defense or objection to the claims set forth against you. You are warned that if you fail to do so the case may proceed without you and judgment may be entered against you by the Court without further notice for any money claimed in the Complaint or for any other claim or relief requested by Plaintiff. You may lose money or property or other rights important to you YOU SHOULD TAKE THIS PAPER TO YOUR LAWYER AT ONCE. IF YOU DO NOT HAVE A LAWYER OR CANNOT AFFORD ONE, GO TO OR TELEPHONE THE OFFICE SET FORTH BELOW TO FIND OUT WHERE YOU CAN GET LEGAL HELP. Court Administrator U.S. District Court 228 Walnut Street Harrisburg, PA 17101 FILED Ci IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF OUl3TY A?t58URG. PA COMMON PLEAS OF CUMBERLAND JAM 16 2004 THE COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA ;'-M* ti,runkh. CLEi r?r CORY A. CORMANY CASE NO. Q`1' 70 V. CIVIL ACTION - LAW =+ l TINA D. ADAMS JUDGMENT DEMANOW M j u, J You have been sued in Court. If you wish to defend against the claim set forth in the following pages, you must take action within twenty (20) days after the Complaint and Notice are served by entering -a written appearance personally or by attorney and by filing in writing with the Court your defense or objection to the claims set forth against you. You are warned that if you fail to do so the case rosy proceed without you and judgrrmwt may be entered against you by the Court without further notice for any money claimed in the Complaint or for any other claim or relief requested by Plaintiff. You may lose money or property or other rights important to you. YOU SHOULD TAKE THIS PAPER TO YOUR LAWYER AT ONCE. IF YOU DO NOT HAVE A LAWYER OR CANNOT AFFORD ONE, GO TO OR TELEPHONE THE OFFICE SET FORTH BELOW TO FIND OUT WHERE YOU CAN GET LEGAL HELP. Court Admitustmon Cumberland County Court House I South Hanover Street Carlisle, PA 17013 Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b). It is an obligation to appeal from Judgment in Civil Cases disposed on Consent of the Parties 28 U.S.C. 636(c) that the underlined have consented conformity under subsection (d) to acknowledge a visitation stanndard. 1. 1 am the natural grandfather of Alexandria Christine Cormany. 2. I am the natural grandmother of Alexandria Christine Cormany. 3. We consent to a visitation standard pursuant an order of the court. 4. We hereby voluntarily and conditionally submit an affidavit to the abolishment of adoption of Alexandria Christine Cormany. S. We understand an aboundtnent substantial the obligation of a grandchild. We the undersigned witnesses certify that we are familiar with Alexandria Christine Cormany. and that we sign our signature in relation to an indication of law and order. Witness B /? --05' Signature Witness xz I, Signature _ F-,a, Relationship ?, to Cory Alister Cormany Relationship to Cory Alister Cormany prevent "Wtity theft-- Wetect your Social Seculb+ nanlber Your Social Security Statement ftepared espeeially for Cary A. Cornamw May 18, 2001 50117 CORY A. CORMANY 1883 DOUGLAS DR CARLISLE PA 17013-4612 What Social Security Means to You We're sending you this Social Security Statement to help you understand what Social Security meant to you and your family. We hope you'll use it in Planning your financial future. Each year, about three months before your birthday, we'll send you a new Statement showing your updated earnings record and your Potential benefits. Be sure to read this Statement carefully. If you think there may be a mistake, please let us know. That's important because your bents will be based on our record of your lifetime earnings. Remember, the future's in your hands when you read your Social Security Statement. 1Rtaelcan r(h'.ia, Eft is for P@%* etas SOO... alp you whether you're young or old, male or female, single or with a family. It's there for you when you retire, but it's more than a retirement program. Social Security can provide benefits if you become disabled and support your family when you die. - Yfidc layusi a aea?e ifMire... Social Security is the largest source of income for most elderly Americans and plays a major role in keeping them out of poverty. But Social Security can't do it all. Social Security was not intended to be the sole source of income when you retire. You'll also need a pension, savings or investments. Think of Social Security as a foundation on which to build your financial future. "A ?ol d: gem m - A Social Security be there when 1 course it will. But changes you retire: ee e llrvbe needed to meet the demands of the times. and healthier lives, 79 million "n longer rs. are approaching retirement, and in about r0 years will be nearly twice as many older Americans as there are today. el See inside br your personal informefirn --i? Social Security now takes in more in taxes than it pays out in benefits. The excess funds are credited to Social Security's trust funds, which are expected to grow to over $4 trillion before we need to use them to pay benefits. In 2016, we'll begin paying more in benefits than we collect in taxes. By 2038, the trust funds will be exhausted and the payroll taxes collected will be enough to Pay only about 73 percent of benefits owed. We'll need to resolve long-range financial issues to make sure Social Security will provide a foundation of protection for future generations as it has done in the past, 9 1 hsenafranomt... Be sure to visit uww.ssa yov on the Internet to use the Benefit Planners to help you plan your financial future; calculate customized estimates of your future benefits; apply for retirement benefits; subscribe to eNmv for up-to-date news about Social Security Programs and benefits; and correct or change your name on your Social Security card or get a replacement card by requesting a form SS.5. We will continue to add online services to make it as easy and convenient as Possible for you to do business with us, Acting Commisa onerazo, Social Security 1"Wt's inside..- i Your Estimated Benefits ................. 2 V Your Earnings Record ......... . '1'' Some Facts About Social Security .. , , ...... 4 V It You Need More Information ......... . ? To Request This Statement In Spanish .. .. 4 4 (Para Solfeftar Una Declaraci6n en Espmoop 11111111111111111111111111111111111 0-51801E 02S 29 -Some Facts About Social Security About Social security .,r 1 WUW*xa... >Rocalft itmelib and x= troth Social Security pays retirement disability, family and survivors benefits. Medicare, a separate program run by ... , You can continue to work and get retirement or i ' the Health Care Financing Administration, helps pay for inpatient hospital care, nursing care doctors' fees surv vors benefits. If you re under your full retirement age, there are limits on how much you ran earn without , and other medical services and supplies to people over 65 losing some or all of your benefits. The limits change each year. When you apply for benefits well tell o or to people who have received Social Security disability benefits for two years. Your Social Security , y u what the limits are at that time and whether work would covered earnings qualify you for both programs. affect your monthly benefits. When you reach full retirement age, the earnings limits no longer apply. Here are some facts about Social Security's benefits: Rdese You ded6i to solbsi - ]fiat4aoa?t- If you were born before 1938, your Rink about your benefits for the long term. Everyone's situation is different For example be sure to consid full retirement age is 65. Because of a 1983 change in the law, the full retirement age will increase , er the advantages and disadvantages of early retirement. If gradually to 67 for people born in 1960 or later. you choose to receive benefits before you reach full retirement age, your benefits will be permanently Some people retire before their full retirement age. reduced. However, you'll receive benefit's for a longer They can retire as early as age 62 and take their period of time. benefits at a reduced rate. Others continue working after their full retirement age. They receive higher To help you deride when is the best ' e for you to benefits because of additional earnings and special retire, we offer a free booklet Social Security - credits for delayed retirement. Retirement Benefits (Publication No. 05110035), that provides specific information about retirlement. T DIsa491gr -If you become disabled before full retirement age, you can receive disability benefits after six months if you have: - enough work credits before becoming disabled; and - a physical or mental impairment that's expected to prevent you from doing "substantial" work for a year or more or result in death. V Pau* - If you're eligible for disability or retirement benefits, your current or divorced spouse, minor children or adult children disabled before age 22 also may receive benefits. Each may qualify for up to 50 percent of your benefit amount. The total amount depends on how many family members qualify. V saeelsaea- When you die, certain members of your family may be eligible for benefits: - your spouse age 60 or older (50 or older if disabled, or any age if caring for your children under age 16); and - your children if unmarried and under age 18, still in school and under age 19 or adult children disabled before age 22. if you are divorced, your ex-spouse could be eligible for a widow's or widowers benefit on your record when you die. There are other free publications that 4ou may find helpful, including: V Basic Fads (No. 05-10080) -- basic facts about Social Security and how to get more inknrniation; v Understanding The Benefits (No. 05-10024) - a general explanation of all Social Secdrity benefits, v How Your Retirement Benefit Is I (No. 05-10070) - an explanation of how you can calculate your benefit; V A Pension P)v m Work Not Coasted By Social Security (No- 05-10045) - how it affects your retirement or disability benefits; T Covemment Pension Offset (No. 05-10007) - explanation of a law that affects spouse's or widow(er)'s benefits; and V 14'hen Someone Misuses Yourmvnbtr (No. 05-10064) - what to do if you're a victim of idlntity theft. i We also have leaflets and factsheets with information about specific topics such as military sefvice, self- employment or foreign employment YoU can get our publications at uuw.ssa gov or by calling us at 1-800-772-1213. i It you aeed more Ltotsaxtba or meat to 16"Wet alts matesnrat in spaul& (PWrn •o6c+ "3e Deelmoemn,a espe").» Visit wwwssa.govh%%tater nent call us at 800-772-1213 or write to Social Security Administration, Office of Earnings Operations. P.O. Box 33026, Baltimore, MD 21290-3026. If you're deaf or hard of hearing, rill TTY 1-800-325-0778. If your address is incorrect on this Statement, ask the IRS to send you Form 8822. We don't keep your address if you're not receiving Social Security Benefits. tome WA-7005-SM-S(11-2001; 4 ¦ Earaln#s Record Accurate Help Us Keep 'IOU' You, your employe' and social Security record be for Since responsibility wort" we r rded your reported earnings derun yaw, name and Social Security mpl??. we have updated your record each time your (or you, if you're self-emplOyed) 'eported Your earnings. Remember, its Your rearnings' credits I've earned that you paid or the benefit amount When we figure that determine your benefit your average earnings over your amount, If our fare it recordons yo are wrong. You may not receive lifetime- If all the benefits to which You are entitled- V radar do AM emmiw y using your own records to make sure our information is correct and that we've recorded each year you worked Yorue re and the only know person who can look at the earnings chart whether it is complete. lass 1 may rwk Some or all of your-tanErom be shown on your Statement. It could be that we were still processing last year's earnings reports yaw Rusty" ¦wa rd at a Ghowe Your Taxed Your Tied Years You Social SecurltY Medicare Worked Eardhs E 1982 E 389 $ 389 1983 1,432 1,432 1984 2,573 2,573 1985 4,636 4,636 1986 2,165 2,165 1987 2,550 2,550 1988 1,526 1,526 1989 2,972 2,972 1990 4,799 4,799 1991 0 0 1992 2,417 2,417 1993 5,653 5,653 1994 4,913 4,913 1995 876 876 1996 4,226 4,226 _ 1997 _ 10,356 10,356 1998 0 0 1999 0 0 2000 10,559 10,559 Totals over your woeidag canon when Your Statement was prepared. Your complete wings for last year will be shown on year's Statement. NOW If you worked for more one employer during any year, or if you had both earnings and self-employment income, we combined your earnings for the year- V ym Pw ? qat dw WAWA at "~ an VA& secorw taste on& Limit VW. The increases yearly- Only the maximum taxable amount will appear on your earnings chart (For Medicare taxes, the maximum earnings amount began rising in %I. Since 1994, an of your earnings are taxed ft Medicare.) V can t1" xW aatap at 1.80o-772-1213 (7 a-are showy if any earnings for years 11 ON a LvA Sew 2 of tax return irnsorradly. If passible, have yon.1 for those years handy. (If you live outside the U.S., follow the directions at the bottom of Page 4.) Did you know... Social f3eeurlty If more than just a retirement prognum? It's here to help you when you need it noon. For instance, Social Security helps you if you become disabled - even at an early age. It is possible for a young person who has worked and paid Social Security taxes for as few as 18 months to become eligible for disability benefits. If you become disabled, you could receive valuable benefits to help you for as long as you're completely disabled. Social Security has another important feature. It is portable and moves with you from job to job throughout your career. Estimated taxes for Social Security: Estimated taxes paid for Medicare: You paid: $3,752 You paid: $882 Your employers paid: $3,752 Your employers paid: $882 Notes If you are self-employed, you pay the total tax on your net earnings. 3111111111111111111111 Jill Jill 0518011": 02S 2964 -Your Estimated Benefits To qualify for benefits, you earn "credits" through your work - up to four each year. This year, for example, you earn one credit for each $830 of wages or self-employment income. When you've earned $3,320, you've earned your four credits for the year. Most people new 40 credits, earned over their working lifetime, to receive retirement benefits. For disability and survivors benefits, young people need fewer credits to be eligible. We checked your records to sea whether you have earned enough credits to qualify for benefits. If you haven't earned enough yet to qualify for any type of benefits, we can't give you an estimate now. If you continue to work, well give you an estimate when you do qualify. tilliait we aswesd - If you have enough work credits, we estimated your benefit amounts using your average eamings over your working lifetime. For 2001 and your earnings up to retirement, we assumed you'll continue to work and make about the same in future years as you did in 1999 or 2000. We also included credits we assumed you earned last year and this year. We can't provide your achial benefit amount until you apply for benefits. Ad dot awma sq iRr bsus do esfbaalss staledbalew besavse - (1) Your earnings may increase or decrease over the years. (2) Your benefit figures shown here are only estimates based on current law. The laws governing benefit amounts may change because, by 2038, the payroll taxes collected will be enough to pay only about 73 percent of benefits owed. (3) Factors, such as a Psvalev for weslr vat coon d by Social Security, aaate sanitary sar ice or Cma for raiiteed Pr , - t may affect your benefit amount. Generally, estimates for older workers are more accurate than those for younger workers because they're based on a longer earnings history with fewer uncertainties, such as earnings fluctuations and future law changes. These estimates are in today's dollars. As you receive benefits, they will be adjusted for cost-of-living increases. • )Retirement You have earned enough credits to qualify for benefits. At your current earnings rate, if you stop working... At age 62, your payment would be about ................................. $ 414 a month If you continue working until.. . your full retirement age (67 years), your payment would be about .......... $ 606 a month age 70, your payment would be about ................................. $ 753 a month Note. When you continue working beyond your retirement age, your benefit may increase because of your additional earnings. If you delay receiving benefits until age 70, your benefit will increase because of the special credits you'll receive for delaying retirement. This increased benefit could be important to you later in life. It also could increase the future benefit amounts your family and survivors could receive. • DimblDty You have earned enough credits to qualify for benefits. If you become disabled right now... Your payment would be about .......................................... $ 501 a month • Famlly If you get retirement or disability benefits, your spouse and children may also qualify for benefits. • Serelrere You have earned enough credits for your family to receive the following benefits if you die this year. Total family benefits cannot be more than ................................ $ 821 a month Yourchild .......................................................... $ 410 a month Yourspouse who is caring for your child ................................. $ 410 a month Your spouse who reaches full retirement age ............................. $ 547 a month Your spouse or minor child may be eligible for a special one-time death benefit of $255. • Medieare You have earned enough credits to qualify for Medicare at age 65. Even if you do not retire at age 65 be sure to contact Social Security three months before your 65th birthday to enroll in Medicare. We bared your benefit eatlosatas an these facto Your name ...................................... Cory A. Connany Your date of birth ................................. August 17, 1966 Your estimated taxable earnings per year after 2001 ............ $10,559 Your Social Security number .................. ........ 182-62-5623 2 Control Data Kducation Center NA.SQ__bnd4Qr .BL1/9 S" Suite 202 Commerce Park (Off 181) 2405 Park Drive flarrisburg, PA 17110 Insurance Testing Corporation L._&_.k_Hca th_-a-ad,TO Suite 112 Commerce Park (Off 1 81) 2601 Market Place Street flarrisburg, PA 17110 fixMdsilll: PM uaaar DENERM R'Y' CMD InautW: COR" A. CORMA14?1 Baneit Amount: a.2? 143c $501000 X$1001000 7b Caarcr Ba WOM •• Sw back aft c., In oaaa of death of the 1nwn4d rAVW on thig card... ffam Iwo= M-F &M a:m. b &OO PAWT1 ft wAt:r =.v "d?a1! O. bo made •frba ti ale w, Is note Mf W 1"Wramo. J CartlWO AaOMM CamPanY qWM - {.. r i MmW 12-1b-88 ua o+..w?co T, CUMBERLAND ?uen SUBJEi T FEMALE ALEXAN N IA CHU STI4E CORMANY FATHERS VA4E AGE .DRY ALISTER C7KMA4Y MOTHERS 4AIOE4 NAME AGE TI4A UnKEE4 LIiHTNEK 1542150-88 12-21-88 02-09-69 ire, r., . . 22 23 ilk] lmoIft Oinei?en lMw?I?Jrw i. tel74rMnnNn e?rwnn. lf.1T lmft WIrRe .y rO.i M" C ALEXANDRIA C4RISTINE C7RMANY 141 N PCTAFRET ST CARLISLE PA 17013 1 971- 3` 444* «z1 BALTIMORE CITY HEALTH DEPARTMENT NOTIFICATION OF This certifies the Bureau Baltimore C a record of YAMS OF CRILDcary DATE OF SIRTItAug,_ Id, RTH REGISTRATION e is on file in Records of the tit O??spa itY11EYLt JJ \? ? tx! nMale u. v.. 66-17269 QoB,r,,a E• ..?wr.,2arv, ?. a. C01A7A18020N8A O} H2ALTH AND "CUTRA1t Of VITAL P.P= DB PLEASE BEE: OTHER RIDE FOR RECORD OF I"" LA' T' ,r-: ut ,at aY!??,-r , :°'?1,"'r• .?'??^'1?!dd`ai.'S'?e"_'i*. .c'..? ...:•. +rf f.n,•9,•: ,.. -..rrr.?.> .r''"'?,.?'.. ' _ No 21 091 789 aSy?Ap l' ? Y +bA4? Tl?11/1C844{ V 41! ?1 ! Ni COR 00/17!1000 : ( t ?- Y 417. P :.? Ey S - ';tr"d^, r ',' rsa?i;h ;!^ aa?+'.'+:BV7•. #ssYX,r•••....•': •S"+ kauM 0311412002 Eipwe 02128/2008 v?M!Y-,#'MWrrkOaVw Nti'AeNW>:?rt,wniirW.w.s. _.::.ra,wll ?. j„Q. ` ORGAN OONOR .- .: ;,.. .. ., •....:o:,.w - :.,.. ,• . ? CORY ALISTER R . , 63 DOUGLAS DRIVE f 18 - . - -, CARLISLE PA 17013 ,. ?• t'? ...:_•:.y.n ?:x.-i+r•i J, r T? aY7i ....., ic?• ' . t,A, i : , ..... ? ( y y {y ?aY e 4vi:„a-'•.}.E•'':.iry??.,+:li:''2(^.'•"i`?:.. .kiln .... _ •+F .....r _ .. ::? ^...?r ,.? • V + ? «a i?•nY rlA(«r+.Ww?uh,v .. wY.s ?./:sy. ,..?. ... .. _ .. . en'x k.4be•I . - ,., ., .,.. :+?-.....,iJ.•i Y .'Y.r1t'. _•_ "I' C '! ^ X11 ?` . .. . . r t :. . 1 , ; : ° ' L.+'Le niMp,a( ty4ai?;;f3/ .. .. .. ; .;i: , . y . 0.. }?;, i?n• "t?"-",?' uw..1?Rr"C'?f? .. THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS CUMBERLAND COUN'T'Y THE COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA CORY A. CORMANY CASE NO. u V. CIVIL ACTION - CRIMINAL L`'W COMMONWEALTH JURY TRIAL Y_7 OTN:PA 0211500 DOCKET FILE: NT-0000620-?62 NOTICE You have been sued in Court. If you wish to defend against the claim set forth in the following pages, you must take action within twenty (20) days after the Complaint and Notice are served by entering a written appearance personally or by attorney and by filing in writing with the Court your defense or objection to the claims set forth against you. You are warned that if you fail to do so the case may proceed without you and judgment may be entered against you by the Court without further notice for any money claimed in the Complaint or for any other claim or relief requested by Plaintiff. You may lose money or property or other rights important to you. YOU SHOULD TAKE THIS PAPER TO YOUR LAWYER AT ONCE. IF YOU DO NOT HAVE A LAWYER OR CANNOT AFFORD ONE, GO TO OR TELEPHONE THE OFFICE SET FORTH BELOW TO FIND OUT WHERE YOU CAN GET LEGAL HELP. Court Administrator Cumberland County Court House 1 South Hanover Street Carlisle, PA. 17013 [YYNiY ?i141fllev qXN'. R013 Grievance and Ap peal Policy and Procedure cv: Poll The primary objective of the grievance and appeal policy is to promote a step-by-step effort at reconciliation between an aggrieved client and the Commission. Clients, family members or a client's designee may file a grievance or appeal regarding any of the following issues: 1. Length of stay in treatment 4. Determination of financial liability 2. Recommended level of care 5. Violation of client's human or civil rights 3. Denial or termination of services 6. Length of stay in intensive case management For purposes of this policy the following definitions apply: 1. Grievance - A written complaint by a Commission-funded client about any matter touching upon the relationship between the dient and the Commission relative to the six issues listed above. 2. Appeal - A written request for reconsideration of a grievance outcome decision. 1. Clients shall be given a copy of a sheet that describes the commission's Grievance and Appeal Process upon accessing services of the Commission. Commission staff will explain the Grievance and Appeal Process to the clients and respond to any questions they may have. A signed and dated copy of the Grievance and Appeal Process form shall be retained in the client's record. A copy of this form is attached. 2. The Grievance and Appeals Process form will explain to clients that they have the right to access all documentation pertaining to the resolution of the grievance within the confines of state and federal confidentiality regulations. 3. The Grievance and Appeals Process form will also explain that clients have the right to be involved and have representation by means of a client advocate, case manager, attorney or any other Individual chosen by the client at any point in the process. 4. The first level of grievance shall be made in writing by the client to the Grievance Review Board, Cumberland-Perry Drug and Alcohol Commission, 16 W. High St., Suite 302, Carlisle, PA 17013. The Grievance Review Board is made up of Commission staff. It may include care or case managers, as long as they are not directly involved in the issue being grieved. If the client is receiving intensive case management services, the Intensive Case Manager will be expected to serve as an advocate, unless the grievance is about provision of the must be sent within five work days from the client's receipt of the board's response. The Commission Executive Director will be responsible for coordinating all appeals. The letter of appeal should be sent to! Executive Director, Cumberland-Perry Drug and Alcohol Commission, 15 W. High Street, Suite 302, Carlisle PA 17013. Appeals will be considered by an Independent Hearing Panel. This panel will be made up of three people. It may include Commission board members, care or case managers from other county drug and alcohol programs, staff of other human service agencies, or persons in recovery. None of the people on this panel can have any financial, occupational or contractual ties to the Commission. 8. The Independent Hearing Panel will make a decision about the appeal within three work days. A letter will be sent to the client within five work days explaining this decision. The outcome of the appeal will also be shared with the state Bureau of Drug and Alcohol Programs within five work days using the state's Grievance Reporting Form. , f:47 RECEIPT " ealnauY?rr W uurt......^sv+an(luywL®rrfy.6vn4»..ein1? Poaa. 40.3) 0 O CWWWO Fee 42.34 ?,a " 913 ? (Er?mamRaquYW1 41.15 I ,?0 ? , ? o f ,, /+ 10.04 Tubl PPerSes Flea $ 44.42 ''..?;-12/2912uN3"? `.•N..... sM'. C1 Sara To ° `.....s.24. Snr._....l:ir?R6..nS ..._.._ .:..._.._........ ua79o1 Na aye............ 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CaktfSL ,fit 170!3 Here is the article JF wrote for Esquire in 1982. Nearly two years after the attempt on the President's life, an innocent bystander offers further testimony... Why Me? by Jodie Foster Esquire December 1982 My brothers and sisters called me Load because of the extraordinary capacity of my diapers. Apart from that fact and a few distinguishing details here and there, my vision of myself was pretty average. Not average so-so; just average... bacon and eggs, Volkswagens, southern California sun. Sometimes, though, I look back at my life, at the way it has slowly assumed shape and color, at the places I've seen and the flickers of people I've met, and wonder, Why? Why Me? Why, when the lists were made and the heads counted, was I always chosen? Why did I always find the chocolate basket on Easter morning? Mostly the applause felt good; damn wonderful, even. To this day I still redden and warm when someone compliments my work or asks me for a date. We all need huge amounts of love, some more than others. But there are times now when a very small child creeps up within me and desperately moans, "Why?" This is the "why" of the romantic, the idealist, the vulnerable, the pure. This is the "why" of the struggling woman-child scribbling down explanations, sensations, incantations in the night. This is the "why" of poetry, when a phrase bursts through and pierces my control. A balloon slowly deflates over a calm pasture. This is the "why" they never saw, they never see, they never will see. This is my "why," my final and ultimate cry. This one's for me. My summer of 1980 was spent in anticipation of what I was "going to be," how I was going to walk into the framework of the Ivy League. I bought a good deal of Lacoste clothing, pumped my three-pound dumbbells each morning, played tennis in the afternoon. I wanted to be the kind of girl who's friendly, well-liked, social. To a point, you could say that that's anonymity -- the need to be wholly accepted as an equal and yet respected for the product of your efforts. Maybe I as kidding myself. Maybe I was trying to escape from what I felt was an undeserved image. In any case, I found myself, backpack in hand, playing "Muffin" in a world I knew nothing about. I'd never been to a happy hour, a lacrosse game, a cottage on the Vineyard. For years I had been growing paler watching double features with my mom, then eating Chinese food from paper cartons. I knew everything there was to know about distribution profits and how to handle meetings at the Polo Lounge. It wasn't that I'd lost my childhood or become jaded; I just didn't have a clue as to how it felt to be out of control, completely lost, without prior experience. Yet there I was, never having stayed anywhere for more than three months, neverhavinghad to cultivate friendships with people my own age. I had but one childhood friend, Clara Lisa. She was a mover too -- to Paris, to Tahiti, to God knows where. Whenever we could, we'd meet places, giggle, and jump on beds. Yale was different from any of this. I wanted to be approved of. I attended every freshman event, every college game to make them feel that I was okay, normal, just like they were. But as the weeks went by I realized I really wasn't. I had a job to go back to, lawyers to call, photographers to pose for. It wasn't until at least two years later that I realized it was okay to be different. Better, even. Being understood is not the most essential thing in life. As I became less and less afraid of new experiences, my personality changed. I took on a screw-the-world dress code. I hung out with people I thoughtwere unique, nonconformist, substantially complex. They were the kind you'd pass on the way to the commons and say, "That person's interesting . I want to get to know him." I had my first and last bout with tequila. I did ska dances in the street, water-ballooned singing groups, philosophized and talked dirty until five in the morning. The control I'd had all those years was self-imposed and alienating. Now I was able to make mistakes. In the beginning of school I had tried desperately to be five foot four. Now I was five foot four. I was Paqe 1 of 7 elated. It was around this time I started questioning my career. I was passionate about school. I wanted to be at Yale forever, holding people, writing down literary revelations, readingfrom tales of men long dead, smiling from inside out. The idea of returning to a dressing from in a Winnebago, being called Miss Foster, seemed foreign, unnatural. I didn't want to return those phone calls from home, from agents, from polite employers. All those scribbled messages just meant that I was still dependent, still theirs to scrutinize, to admire. Maybe I was kidding myself. In fact, I'm sure of it. I was sitting in the library in March. The first weekend of the play I was doing on campus, Getting Out, had ended. I had five more performances to do. I must have been a sight. My skin had erupted from greasepaint. My clothes were tom and rumpled. I didn't like sleeping anymore. It kept me from other things. My studies never suffered, simply because they were my first priority, the easiest responsibility to fulfill. Academics was a drop in the pond compared with the demands of the social process. The fact that I decided to do a play at Yale still astounds me. Theater scared me to death; I didn't know that first thing about it. But one of my best friends was directing and many of my buddies were in it. I suppose I did it for the wrong reasons. I wanted them to love me. The audience, the actors, my pals. I wanted to be involved in a common experience, something that would melt the already thawing barriers. The following hazy Monday afternoon I was skipping hand in hand across campus with my best friend. Someone yelled as we went by, "Hey. Did you hear? Reagan got shot." We continued on. At dinnertime everyone was asking if we'd heard what the President's condition was. Well, my radio had been busted for three months and my friend's was terminally glued to the local reggae station. "Come on. This is college. News can wait." No one seemed to mention Brady or the assailant until late into the evening. I finally sauntered home around ten-thirty. My roommate opened the door before I could get my key in. "John," she said. "John who?" "John Hinkley." "What about him? Did he write me again?" "He's the one, I think. It was on the radio." "Bullshit. You're imagining things." The phone was ringing. I answered it. My dean said, "Don't be upset." He explained that my pictures and address had been found on the arrested man. I felt the tears welling up in my eyes. My body started shaking and I knew that I had lost control... maybe for the very first time in my life. I was to meet the FBI in his office as soon as possible. "Give me a couple of minutes," I said. I ran to a friend's. I waited for her to get out of the shower as three or four loud boys listened to the news down the hall. They were drinking beer and I carried on with them for a few minutes to prove to myself I could do it. I laughed and made jokes -- like a good little actress. Then my friend closed the door and questioned me with a glance. I started to cry a bit, then my tears turned to laughter. I couldn't stop laughing. It was simply too funny, too incredibly bizarre, too painful. She thought I was going crazy. My laughter was strange and hollow, and I couldn't control it. It was beyond me. My body jerked in painful convulsions. I hurt. I was no longer thinking of the president, of the assailant, of the crime, of the press. I was crying for myself. Me, the unwilling victim. The one who would pay in the end. The one who paid all along -- and, yes, keeps paying. That kind of pain doesn't go away. It's something you never understand, forgive, or forget. It is a pain that can never be healed with a kiss from your mother's lips or a "Sssh, everything's okay." Everything's not okay! It's not. But I didn't have the time to feel it then. There were things to be done, secrets to keep. I was supposed Paoe 2 of 7 to be "tough," like cowboys, like diplomats, like "unaffected actresses" -- not because anyone asked me to but because I wanted to show them (God knows who) that I was strong. I wanted to show them all that Jodie was so uniquely "normal" and "well-adjusted" that nothing could make her fall. I think I believed all this, my subconscious propaganda. But the truth was that in the crunch, when the chips are down, in a time of crisis, you resort to strength you'd never dreamed you owned, like frantic mothers lifting their children from under two-ton trucks. The will to survive is stronger than any emotion in the human system. The next afternoon I was rushed to the home of one of the bigwigs in the Yale administration. So these grown-up Yalies -- the men in homrims and with law degrees -- were called to advise me. But nobody quite knew what to do. These academic wonders were reduced to schoolboys. There was no time for typed speeches and haughty jargon. We had to pick up the pieces, to act. I started making my calls. I talked to lawyers, to the FBI, to DAs, to anyone with some sort of experience in these affairs. They all gave me different advice and none was too sure whom I should speak to. Things were being leaked so fast that the news stations knew more than any of us on the inside. I had to read a local newspaper to learn most of the details. Maybe this is what scared me the most -- the descent of the media. They scooped up headlines and swarmed through the campus like a calvary invasion. I couldn't protect myself from being trampled. But I organized my press conference, wrote a statement, all against the will of the officials. I wanted it over with as swiftly as possible. For the press my presence was almost superfluous; it was the story that counted -- the twisted, bizarre headliner. A compromising photo, a brief comment was all they needed. I can't say that I didn't feel exploited by these friendly men and women with Nikons and with mikes clipped to their lapels. Suddenly they were allowed to destroy my established life because it was their "job." Public figures should just expect it that way, I've been told. But the interesting thing is that -- beyond their flashbulbs, note pads, and video cameras -- the reporters were scared, too. Their faces were desperately trying to mask their terror, awe, guilt. When I saw them assembled before me, I knew that these were the faces, the uncomfortable, fascinated eyes, that I would have to meet for the rest of my life. When I saw them waiting silently and solemnly for my statement, I knew I had to play cowboy -- once again. I was Mother and they were to be reassured that nothing could interrupt my flow of life. If they wanted weakness, I wasn't about to give it to them. After the details were delivered and the crews went home, it was time to fact the world. Until now, everyone had been kind, sympathetic, availing. My mother would take my hand and say, "Don't worry." The administration assured me that I was not alone and that they were available ata moment's notice. Even the reporters I'd come to know would pat me on the back and say, "Hang in there, kid." But their offerings only stressed the fact that I was completely alone. I strapped on my backpack, put on my dirtiest jeans, and headed back to university life. People were pretty good about hiding much trace of interest. Some of my friends wanted to respect my privacy of the moment, some smiled and went their way, But I knew that there were two Jodie Fosters. There was one as large as the screen, a Technicolor vision with flowing blond hair and a self-assured smile. She was the woman they had all been watching. But the second Jodie was a vision only I knew. She was shrouded in bravado and wit and was, underneath, a creature crippled, without self esteem, a frail and alienated being. I went to classes, laughed, joked, pulled all the tricks to make everyone feel comfortable. I tried not to admit that I had noticed the change. I was a returning war hero to be paraded. But I didn't want their awe. I didn't want to be a political figure, a victim of society. So I limited myself to a few companions; the boy I loved and my assigned bodyguards. With the boy I loved I sat most of the day at the window in the Cross Campus Library. We poked fun at and successfully alienated every person who walked by. We were obnoxious. This boy and I decided, in our self-destructive, eighteen-year- old subconscious, that we needed only each other, that the rest of the population was disappointingly affected by the events of the shooting. Neither of us stopped to think that it was we who were affected. We were both escaping through our intellect, not our emotions. It was I who had changed, not them. In time I asked myself, Why me? Why not someone like Brooke Shields? The questions made me feel uglier -- and the uglier I felt, the more difficult it was to resolve. Pape 3 of 7 Six days after the shooting of the President I was onstage for the second and final weekend of my play, Getting Out. The Yale police were sent to guard the auditorium. At my request the audience was frisked for cameras. The cast was instructed that the show must go on...no matter what. It was something I had to do, some damn foolish thing I had to prove to myself. No one could just change my life, my plans, without asking me. No one could keep me down. I'm really not sure whom I was trying to impress or what I was ever doing up there in the first place. I had sworn never to do theater at school. I was going to be anonymous, remember? But it was too late for that. As long as everyone was going to stare, I might was well play the game full out. The show went on, with the squeaking walkie-talkies and the general awkwardness of the crowd. It was the best performance I had given. The audience applauded for reasons I am still unsure of. The rest of the cast was shaky. They knew that the people in the seats were laughing at the wrong lines and keeping their eyes conspicuously toward my end of the stage. The crowd wasn't lying, they were simply impressed -- as I had intended them to be. They were in awe. I was embarrassed for them. Why did they clap? Did it really mean anything at all to them? The second performance of the play began. Click, click, click, I heard. I could recognize a motor drive on a professional camera better than my own heartbeat. It was coming from center left -- a perfect position for anyone who had the pluck to get past the frisk in time to choose the most advantageous seat in the house. Well, you asked for it, I thought. My most vicious lines of the play were coming up and they were to be directed to this particular spot in the house. I decided that the villain was one of three people. I directed my character's biting insults to all three, until my eyes narrowed to the bearded man in the middle. No, he was not the photographer. His hands were calmly folded and his eyes were fixed. But there was something unnerving about his emotionless stare, something I didn't trust. He became the sole subject of my dialogue's abuse; but he did not flinch -- not once. The next night, again, I heard the click of the motor drive, coming from a different position in the house. The strange man I had noticed the night before was again in the same seat. "In theater," the adage goes, "one is not supposed to glance through the audience, noticing who comes and goes, who sits where." But I only knew movies. So I noticed every light change, every yawning friend, every item of clothing worn by every boy and girl, every bearded gentleman with a ceaseless stare. At the third performance, no clicks and no bearded man were to be seen or heard. However, during intermission a note was found on the lobby bulletin board to the effect that "by the time the show is over, Jodie Foster will be dead." I imagined something was amiss when the security guards were suddenly standing with their backs to the actors, surveying the crowd. The note had proved to be a prank, a devilish trick pulled by some bitter spectator who had found himself frisked by two college jocks at the entrance. It was ten-thirty. I was still alive, no harm done. In fact, I had made a bigger ordeal over a stray photographer: "How did you get in? Who do you work for?" (This was perhaps the beginning of a flash phobia that would follow me throughout the next year.) I found out a few weeks later that he had been let in by the producer of the play. The very same producer who confided to the press that I had a few acting problems that would iron themselves out with a little help. The tactless person who said, "At least the publicity did wonders for the receipts. " And, finally, the same producer who - as the explained with a British affectation he had picked up somewhere -- let the photographer in "because ...wahl...thar was simply nawthing I could doo. Sorry, luv." A few days after the show closed, a note was delivered under my door -- a death threat in the finest sense of the term. I picked it up neatly by the corners and handed it over to the proper officials. My mother, who was leaving on the next plane to Paris, was frantic. She wanted to take me with her, "to stay ...to walk to classes with you... anything!" She desperately wanted to protect me. I told her she was only making me nervous and that the rotating bodyguards were more qualified to watch me than she. This was my first life-crisis had I had to show the world that I could take it like a pro. That's what they call you when you make it to the set by five-thirty A.M. and don't complain. The next morning I arrived at my English class a bit early Five minutes later my man with the squeaky walkie-talkie told me to stay in the corner of the class until it ended. "He has been apprehended." Ap-pre-hended, I thought. Okay, apprehended. Who? His name was Richardson, he was from Pennsvlvania, and he had a beard. The Police and Secret Page 4 of 7 Service had worked nonstop tracking down the letter writer, found him, followed him to New Haven station, where he had boarded a bus bound for D.C. He was picked up at Port Authority in New York with a loaded gun, hoping to fulfill his threat to shoot the President. I was too pretty to kill, he had said as he was arrested. He saw me in my play and simply couldn't. The bearded man in center left? Ten feet from death? Ten feet from a loaded pistol held by a sick and perhaps "insane" man? Ten feet? I don't care to know for sure. Richardson was released a year later on parole. Then it hit me. It felt like a ton of steel dropping from the top of a thirty-story building. Death. So simple, so elementary, so near. Pulling a trigger is as easy as changing the TV channel with remote control. What was I trying to prove by performing a college play three days after one of the most bizarre assassination attempts of our time? Who was I trying to impress? Why was it so important to look death in the eye and hurl victorious insults? Because I was the one who always found the chocolate basket on Easter morning? Because I always wanted to be the best, no matter what, no matter how? IN the time after Richardson's "ap-pre-hension," a great change came over me, or so I'm told. I started perceiving death in the most mundane but distressing events. Being photographed felt like being shot; it still does. I thought everyone was looking at me in crowds; perhaps they were. Every sick letter I received I made sure to read, to laugh at, to read again. People were punishing me because I was there. They were sending bullets, pulling triggers, exercising the simple law of cause and effect. They were hurtingme, intentionally, without any physical contact. They were manifesting a need to wound, and I just happened to be the victim. They could seemingly witness the falling star -- once stalwart and proud -- bend to their aggression. The words, the threats, the accusations were irrelevant. They all wanted me to react, to stop playing cowboy; they wanted to bri ng me down to their level from the great silver screen. I could feel death by alienating and insulting the people I loved or at lease enjoyed. I could feel it by hating myself so much that I hated everyone around me for liking me. I died when I looked at myself in the mirror, the body that no longer slept, the clothes I no longer cared for, the mismatched socks, the tired expression, the reddened eyes, the languid stare. My prior identity -- the actress, the enthusiastic collegiate -- no longer existed. I became suspicious of everyone. I suppose I thought they were a] informing for People magazine. there were a few, of course, who were. Maybe that People article of April 20, 1981, was the greatest death of all. An ambitious Yale senior, whom I have never met, submitted a manuscript People simply couldn't turn down. He offered a scoop: what I was in the habit of wearing, my favorite eating places, my friends, my classes, my dating habits -- the works. And this ambitious Yale senior confirmed what I was dreading -- I had been watched. I was being watched from the first day I set foot on campus. They all noticed the color of my Dolfin shorts on the day of orientation. they had noticed which chair I preferred in the library. Strangers had scrutinized and analyzed me without my permission, even without my knowledge. No, the Hinkley ordeal did not destroy my anonymity; it only destroyed the illusion of it. Every man or woman in this world had the right to stare at, point at, and judge me because... that was my job. that's what I got paid for -- to take my lumps. I can be rejected for physical reality, the audience's perception of who I am. Consequently, I become the property of my judges or I risk rejection. When my freshman year came to an end in May 1981, I packed up my remnants from the "psycho single" I had been assigned -- a single dorm room reserved for emergency security risks -- and returned to L.A. For two weeks I went hiking and stayed at a health farm in the mountains. When I descended the mountain I jumped back to work. Things were essentially "normal." People were afraid of me and for quite some time I made no effort to ease their awkwardness. I just listened and watched. I heard that Martin Scorsese had been phoned by Maureen Reagan, who expressed her condolences. Her condolences! I'd even heard he'd hired a bodyguard -- something I refused to do. When people recognized me in the street they'd say, "So what, this guy write you letters or something?" They'd say "Too bad," or they'd say "Great publicity, kid." IT all seemed so hilariously sad at the time. I smiled inside and felt pity for all of them -- all the people who either thought they understood or thought they knew me. I felt sorry and embarrassed for them as they simultaneously felt sorry and embarrassed for me. It was a confusing time for everyone. And if this was show business, I wanted no part of it. I didn't belong there. I didn't belong anywhere -- except Yale, maybe. Maybe. In any case, I was glad that the shooting had happened while I was at school. Who knows what mistrust and violence I had avoided by removing myself from Hollywood. There's something about a freeway at rush hour and backdrops of Pane S of 7 ghost towns that make L.A. untrustworthy. It simply isn't a place you'd call familial or safe. If anything, Yale had been safe. I went back to school in the fall and found everything back to normal. I started making efforts. I dressed better, I returned phone calls, I kept my room dusted and my toys in place. But by the end of the semester I found myself watching movies every night. I was getting restless. "Just school" wasn't enough. As if by a stroke of fate, a script arrived, one I liked. A Manhattan location. Starring Peter O'Toole, A chance to sing. I was ecstatic... and, for the first time in two years, in love with a project. And Svengali proved a thoroughly fun film. It made me fall in love with acting again. It cured me of most of the insecurities; it healed my wounds. More than a year after the day of the shooting I found myself in a Washington, D.C., courtroom waiting to give my deposition. It was all very orderly, very efficient. I brought my briefcase and answered questions with a sobriety and cool that seemed appropriate. No one had told me before I arrived in Washington, of course, that Hinkley would be present. But I played cowboy and got through it all the best way I knew how, thinking this would be the end of it. The proceedings went smoothly; there seemed to be very few surprises concerning the case, or so I thought. I went to my hotel room alone, flicked on the Oscars, and watched the lights of Georgetown grow dim before me. And it was that moment, as I watched the suited dolls below my window and the Pan-Caked presenters doling out prizes, that I knew I wasn't the only one playing cowboy. I thought about how every dealing with another human being was an unconscious act of bravado. You blink; I understand that you're thinking. Human relationships are forms of acting, only the players aren't aware of it. Interaction is a form of lying. So how can anyone trust the words "I'm not scared," "I love you," "Go to hell" if they are issued from the mouth of someone who can never be aware of his true feelings, of his underlying motives? Yes, I thought, we are all liars; it's a human condition. I decided that night that good actors are essentially good liars. I raise my eyebrows, you think I'm sexy. I dart my eyes, you think I'm smart. Actors and nonactors all manipulate. An actor simply has more personalities and techniques to draw on. And more people to manipulate. But the most frightening thing is that when we "turn on" to the camera -- when we insult it, make love to it, comfort it -- we aren't only manipulating a lens and some glass fragments. We're talking to ten, twenty, or perhaps thirty million people. We're manipulating and influencing them all with every careless gesture and gleaming smile. That's art. That's mass media. A man can buy a poster, pin it on his locker, and imagine the most minute details about a slinky starlet. He'll know her through and through. He'll possess her external reality. So of course Hinkley "knew" me. That woman on the screen was digging in her bag of tricks and representing herself for everyone to assess, to get to know, to take home. The most intriguing actors are those who hold back and keep something -- whatever that may be -- for themselves. They are at once tangible and intangible, accessible and inaccessible, readable and mysterious, friends and strangers. And people are both attracted and extremely angered by something they can't quite "have," whether it be a piece of chocolate cake, a multi-million-dollar corporation, or an aloof young actress. I guess you'd call it playing hard to get. I guess that's what actors do. I guess that's why otherpeople often "love" them and sometimes feel obsessed by them. Love. Quite a word. I am sorry for people who confuse love with obsession and hurt by those who have inflicted their confusion on me. Love should be sacred. It should be uttered in a soft breath, on misty mornings, in secret hideaways. Love does not exist without reciprocation, hugging that person and feeling the meeting of two minds, two hearts, two souls, two bodies. Obsession is pain and a longing for something that does not exist. John Hinkley's greatest crime was the confusion of love and obsession. The trivialization of love is something I will never forgive him. His ignorance only prods me to say that he's missing a great deal. Love is blissful. Obsession is pitiful, self-indulgent. This is a lesson I've learned. I'll always be wary of people who proclaim their love for me. I know what love is. Do they? I've even been obsessed, which is -- you'll pardon the expression - -insane. But any emotion carried to excess is insanity. Does that make it a legal defense? If so, we all stand acquitted. Why are people so afraid to admit that they have it in them? I could pull a trigger. Am I crazy? Now it is all supposedly over. I walk down the streets, go about my business, and don't look to see who's following. I don't look over my shoulder or sweat if I ride the subway. After a period of death-dodging you learn to believe that you've been picked for survival. Someone's not going to let it happen. There have been too many almosts. Still, there are times. I was coming back from the Svengali Pace 6 of 7 set one night with tonsillitis and a broken clavicle and in a fit of depression. I'd had to dodge paparazzi by lying on the floor of the company station wagon and I couldn't talk from laryngitis. It had been a bad day. So I stopped off for a coffee before packing myself into bed for a few days. It was six o'clock, rush hour, and the place was mobbed. Suddenly a flash of light blew up four inches from my nose. At four inches,the photographer was just trying to harass me. The next thing I knew I was running down Eleventh Street, crying and tearing at this down jacket and slugging away. I slipped on the ice, right on my clavicle, and lay in the street sobbing. The photographer laughed and yelled, "I got her! I got her!" I couldn't talk because my throat and body throbbed with pain. I cried all the way home, all the way to my hotel room, all evening and into the night. I couldn't stop. It hurt so much. I hurt so much. The only thing I could whisper through my wrenching sobs was "It's not fair. It's not fair." Some days the anger and pain swell up in my and I can't hold it in any longer. My mother will hold me tightly, my fists clenched around her neck, my tears staining her blouse. She'll say "Sssh. I know. Everything's going to be all right." All I know to say is "It's not fair! It just isn't." Someday I will look back and muse upon the curiosities of history: acting and politics all mixed up together. Anything's possible in a world in which media rules all. But for the time being the wounds still ache, the battle goes on. It seems that things calm down just as you think you can't take anymore. then something else happens, some new event, and I find myself "taking it" once again. A stranger will approach me in the street and say, "Ain't you the girl who shot the President?" Page 7 of 7 Sworn Statement I, Alexandria Christine Cormany (Bdams) do hereby confirm and dispose that I wish to establish a negotiable visitation with my said, natural biological father, Cory Alister Cormany (Straford), until and when at such time a liberty is equally abounded. 1. Such implied visitation is prenuptial in agreement. 2. Such implied visitation is obligatory in agreement. 3. Such implied visitation is statutory in agreement. WHEREBY the undersigned sets forth her signature with consent on this -------- day of --------------------- in agreement to the foregoing, and until and when such time law permits. fllesandria Christine Cormany Cory fluster Co y IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA COMMON PLEAS OF CUMBERLAND COUNTY THE COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA CORY A. CORMANY CASE NO. v 'Y - q )- G,'v: j lcn-s,, V. LYLE M. HERR CIVIL ACTION - LAW JUDGMENT DEMANDED You have been sued in Court. If you wish to defend against the claim set forth in the following pages, you must take action within twenty (20) days after the Complaint and Notice are served by entering a written appearance personally or by attorney and by filing in writing with the Court your defense or objection to the claims set forth against you. You are warned that if you fail to do so the case may proceed without you and judgment may be entered against you by the Court without further notice for any money claimed in the Complaint or for any other claim or relief requested by Plaintiff. You may lose money or property or other rights important to you. YOU SHOULD TAKE THIS PAPER TO YOUR LAWYER AT ONCE. IF YOU DO NOT HAVE A LAWYER OR CANNOT AFFORD ONE, GO TO OR TELEPHONE THE OFFICE SET FORTH BELOW TO FIND OUT WHERE YOU CAN GET LEGAL HELP. c? Court Administration Cumberland County Court House 1 South Hanover Street Carlisle, PA 17013 =iY T i . IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA COMMON PLEAS OF CUMBERLAND COUNTY THE COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA CORY A. CORMANY V. LYLE M. HERR CASE NO. 04-927 CIVIL ACTION - LAW JUDGMENT DEMANDED PETITION AND NOW comes, Cory A. Cormany, Plaintiff; and sets forth causes of action against the above named Defendant, whereas the following is a statement: 1. Plaintiff is Cory Cormany, an adult individual residing in the Cumberland County Community, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. 2. Defendant is Lyle Herr, an adult individual residing in the Cumberland County Community, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. 3. The subject matter is a United States District Court Sun unons petitioning the clerk of courts to quash an expungement Case No. I:CV-04-454. 4. Mr. Lyle Herr is said to be responsible for the criminal conviction sustained in the Court of Common Pleas Cumberland County, substantial the Miscellaneous Term Case No. 95-0310. (1) 5. Mr. Cory Connany is said to be convincible for the criminal conviction sustained in the Court of Common Pleas Cumberland County, substantial the Miscellaneous Term Case No. 95-0310. 6. Mr. Jeffrey Rudolf is said to be liable for the criminal conviction sustained in the Court of Common Pleas Cumberland County, substantial the Miscellaneous Term Case No. 95-0310. 7. Ms. Tina Cormany is said to be victimized for the criminal conviction sustained in the Court of Common Pleas Cumberland County, substantial the Miscellaneous Tenn Case No. 95-0310. 8. On December 1st, of the year 1988, the plaintiff is said to have married the said; victim, pursuant the Court of Common Pleas Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. 9. On December 1st, of the year 1989, the plaintiff is said to have divorced the said; victim, pursuant the Court of Common Pleas Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. 10. On December 10th, of the year 1990, the defendant is said to have submitted petition pursuant the Court of Common Pleas Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. 11. On February 26th, of the year 2002, the plaintiff is said to have submitted report pursuant the U.S. District Court Middle District, Pennsylvania. (2) 12. The Defendant Lyle Herr is said to have investigated the Plaintiff Cory Cormany, and is said to have arrested the incident in question, respectfully submitted exhibits A through E. WHEREFORE, the Plaintiff; Cory A. Cormany, claims from the Defendant; Lyle M. Herr, full liability, considerate the commonwealth, at which time the record shall reflect conviction. (3) YFRTF'ICATION I, Cory A. Cormany, Plaintiff in the above captioned action, hereby verify and state that the facts set forth in the Petition against Mr. Lyle Herr are true and correct to the best of my information, knowledge and belief. I understand that false statements herein are made subject to the penalties of Pa. C.S.A. Section 4904, relating to unsworn verification to authorities. Dated ah OLq Witness / X4. '-'(", By Cory A. Cormany By %' J K'?? ?pl? r1} Notary ??P?A?Mti WWwA?s oU?JC ?Cb?M?Yly? <yYM 11ra4 ?.90W (4) EXHIBIT A ?s? IN RE: EXPUNGEMENT OF IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF CORY A. CORMANY CUMBERLAND COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA 95-0310 MISCELLANEOUS TERM ORDER OF COURT AND NOW, this 30th day of October, 1995, a Rule is entered against the Commonwealth (District Attorney) to show cause why the expungement should not be granted. Rule returnable forty-five (45) days after service. By the Co Edgar B. ayley, District Attorney's Office Cory . Cormany, Pro se 1 Douglas Drive arlisle, PA 17013 :sea COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA VS CORY A. CORMANY (N.me of Defendant) IN THE CRIMINAL COURTS OF THE COUNTY OF Cumberland Criminal Action No. 02 68 of Criminal 19 89 _ ORDER AND NOW this 13th day of November 1991 Upon consideration of the foregoing motion: 1. ? The motion is returned to defendant for amendment as follows, such amendment to be made on or before ,_ 19 2. ? A rule is granted upon the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to show cause why a hearing should not be granted. The rule is returnable on or before 19 I 3. ® The request to proceed as a poor person, without the payment of costs, is ® granted ? denied. I I 4. Upon finding that defendant is unable to obtain a lawyer Christopher Houston, Esq„ is appoint- I ed to represent him. 5. ?] The Clerk of this Court is ordered and directed to do the following forthwith: (a) To serve a copy of this motion and this order upon the District Attorney of CurnhPrland County. (b) To send a copy of this motion and this order to Christopher Houstc&q„ the lawyer for the defendant. (c) To send a copy of this order to the defendant. 6. © A hearing on the above matter is set for Monday, January 13, 1992, at 10:00 a.m. in Courtroom Number 4, Cumberland County Courthouse, Carlisle, PA. ORIGINAL -5/ A. llR-? Rovin A. Aacs 7 1. PROBATION OFFICE CUMBERLAND COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA KENNETH W.BOLZE Chief Probation and Parole Officer 30SEPH L. OSENKARSKI Supervisor - Juvenile Services JOHN H. ROLLER Supervisor - Adult Services BARRY E. HAIR Office MSr./Collections Supvr. Probation and Parole Officers 11 S. GARETH GRAHAM DAVID L. MYERS COURT HOUSE P.O. BOX 592 CARLISLE, PENNSYLVANIA 17013 HAROLD E. SHEELY - President Judge GEORGE E. HOFFER - Judge EDGAR B. BAYLEY - Judge KEVIN A. HESS - Judge WARRANT TO COMMIT AND RETAIN Probation and Parole Officers ELIZABETH D. BAKER THOMAS A. BOYER DENNIS M. DRACHBAR MICHAEL J.DUNSMORE DOUGLAS M. DURNIN A. KERRY GORMAN DEBORAH D. GRAEFF LYLE M. HERR CHARLES R. McKENRICK PAUL S. MEURON GREGORY S. MILLER SAMUEL E. MILLER 1R. HENRY J. THIELEMANN MICHAEL D. VARNER To the Sheriff, Superintendent of the Prison or House Of Correction, or any officer of the Court of the Commonwealth, Municipal Court, Police Department, Constable, etc. - GREETINGS: By virtue of the authority given to me under the Act of August 6, 1963, P.L. 521, Sec. 1, 61 P.S. 309.1, you are hereby authorized and directed to commit and retain for violation of probation or parole CORY A. CORMMY HAKE 358 CRIMINAL 86 NO. YEAR until his case shall be heard or there shall be an Order by the appropriate authority to release him. 10-1-89 DATE PROBATION OFFICER List all alleged new charges or technical violations: 1) Use of alcohol. Based on observation and admission 2) Arrest for Criminal Mischief and possibly Criminal Trespass 3) Failure to comply with conditions of "Home Contract" Telephone Adult Probation (717) 2404255 Teephone Juvenile Probation (717) 260-6265 Cons/Fitses (717(260.6275 DUI Pra s Toll Fm Shivw burg (717)532-7286 kem (717)260-6280 _ Toll Free West Shore (717)697-0371 f No. 114 gym.' 119 COMMONWEALTH Of ?ENNMVANIA MARRIAGE LICENSE A?IUCATION eu/u<Arswvuwwse )p?5?gg _ _ r: ee4111. ?ewMNe LN:RNit { •. o/ntluwr, "' -- Cumberland I •. ••NG Pau!a P.Correal 2. ILAG• al RAW... lcrrr. wwq TeWlOI•I" I lGtluwrrl Cariisle,Penna. f Cumb. `oru District Austice w aArf oI MAbrwii IMOMTM. wy. YERwI Dec, 1, 1988 C. OIFOMINwrION CTAT[YOMY aI OFL. erwrOM{Mf O1 I\MAIi _??-_ L/VLr.FwMf ARE aT IVLLFAMO Rif Cory glister Cprmeny 22 Tina Doreen LIghtner 23 .. NAIUN. AOOM4DN to. smumMR ADVISER i6 W. YQfitratSt., ?1 yG{?,1 pomf rat 9t.. j RSYOEwCa, ) a. COU.Tv ? Jfleae NO (IITD N COUMTY A. {TAY[ Penn Cumb . A. STATE POnnA •?_ Cumb. C. LOCATION C. {YG.tnOM II CITY a/ PI C.YY a/ _al•OFVOM OI 92-r1 1 is la IH aOwaYOM O/ Carlisle lal TOrFaFl101 IJI TOWMON,I OI •. OCCYIAboM •. PAGE fa, OCCYMTION -?- ar. RACE Manager Mh iee Store Manager White Iw GATE a 1.41. . 1, ILAcm alftvm at. DA E el aIDf.1 fi. slot"O"C ? ,,AAs E17. 196 1aa Ne? g m /,Me AMa7iNl?l??fe A#- ? T I7 UAX9, 1965 `O eI IR10A I ?a•..F ... w o1 rw1eN .... I.... 0 M4rwIAEE. 0 _ l a. CAUat(La 11 DIVORCED n. C&UNRI&1 I- DIVORCED m O1VON^No WRMAMi Ow IATMGM .0. *OVUM AMOWMRAN-?EON[p RnhwrrO tl.rn?'mR {?1{7Cfnt?(?L L?g?y; II Y[n wN fYwNAMG OI OTXOM jT. OIYiF .iNO Y wM F QQi?11Ar, l nnpp {p1 f`nrmA ny Doreen M. Lightner v, nM%ISEN NAlia 4P MDYNia W YAIpEM MARC OR N to Mn allj Mf•er Knits! 11. RESIDENCE OI rATXew a\. AEf10EMC1Oi FATHER 206 WyEHIlIIB'lv;nia AVG.. Downingtown.pa. 47 B. it., Car11sle,Penr,a• IS REVORMCE 0I M0 OEM !wM{Mosseve 660TMRR --?? same game 11. Awes OF IATw Ew 'n. RAte OP IwrMaR IAhiea 1/hito a. w+ee aI NDT.R. q. ONCE or rOrMsw b. bLTION yII,Ii?wI or I?+TNTGA •s, eCG41AT1aN 0?_PATNax 'ax bFYf,i.. ?. OiIJ.lia1! S?-hnni ?i e?rict jl.114np {a Nerwaw Housewi f It Ifnj?.llvrtl°ea n. A.wTNrL+GS a IATNU 1 u, •u w P (AIRES Chambersburg Lpenna. Car.liale,Penna. 1l. AIwTN/ues el rs NEw N. SINT"LACt OI NOTMOM Carlialp.Pnnna. T.m!k HAvRn?[Pnnna jL II A./11Cw NT AIILICTEO NITM AMY TRAMOMIN1aLC plElw{EI ll. 1E AIILICANT wIeLICTED W ITN AMy TRwNOMIfEIALC p1EEAAEt ESQ nn t1. 00[O AHLIL'wNT MTIaIT A LL MO VIMOwf IM 1[MNq W ANIA'O lw OOEf AMICAMT aATIfTT ALLIgO VINOwI Iw IANwav LYAxlwf 0...1.4. LANG IMwaCLeW1 TEOQ MO (1 RAIMOAM LAWY INS 0E6OY1 1WEQ .0D bR ITE.•t M, wNO!\. OwI.CIAL MYN OST[RYINa If EITHER or TNa ^..,1CAMM AT we TIYS 0I 4/ v.vw. I, 101OAA[MSO,fM1ANG. ON OI VNOOYMp NIM, s. A ul ow THE Illmu"CO OI IMT4MICwTIMO IJaVOM O. MAA• wAt aaaM NYMIM /IVS YaAWf AM INMATE OI AF INOTY CpTIG OwVO. E Moo TYTION row MROOMS WMO RRS WEAI{YlNewo. IYMwE OI ? NAa ESN DIYO.GEO sy NIa 4. NE. .Pa.. ...S. ON CO•I•iTNMAYI AYTM•OP11E?IINVR GE OOOwOOA LIi/C IN{• TO ?NEN *00" N p, MY% ANO OTw wMY WIPE Is STILL LV11NE. AA.LICANT. Is tw[ wMLICwNTtI faOIYs"100,SITR.O1.wESOIGOMYNOVMTTOw... .NTy. bOMATV w. 011AM[wT OM o VMOUM OI V IMO COINEMT, N.EOYIRwO Ip OMATYRAO/ MRawT Ow OYAlIO1wM OI V IXD GONS.NAI/ N.R V IMO ME. INS UNCENO04Np. IN ACGO.OANCE WIT" -RETRY [MEMTO XaAa1RAITlR COMTwIN[O. TNa IACTf AO EtT aDAT...... IN Wx wM0 {AGM Of YE OO EOLRMNLy SEVERE AM. TUE AMO COw.[OT TO TNf ERIC, OUR ANOWL[DOM AND I{LIaI p0 MANE APILICwT10• Ttl THE CL[wM OP OWPw.NS' COUNTY' MwN.YR. _ RIOJfV?°A Ew.PLICANy i l{p1?AT?II+La AIPLICANT L q/C2(/vi??y??V/?J Cy Gj (L910P 41L {MOAN IND IVIMCPIS[O ID -a'-*' ME IN'S DAY or, Mau M.+L Owv LlcsMa rM lEwlO !/a?. a+.19SP _ i EXHIBIT 3 (6) SNELBAKER & FLICKER A PROFESSIONAL COR P-ATION RICHARD C. SNELBAKER E. ROBERT ELICKER,A CHARLES D. VANCE, IR. KEITH O. BRENNEMAN ATTORNEYS AT LAW Cn WEST MAM STREET MECHANICSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA 17055 717-697- 8526 P. O. BOX 318 FACSIMILE !7177 697-7881 February 28, 1990 Mr. Cory A. Cormany Cumberland County Prison 1101 Claremont Road Carlisle, PA 17013 Dear Cory: Enclosed are copies of letters exchanged between me and Mr. Herr which I think you will find self-explaining concerning costs and restitution. I also enclose a copy of your wife's handwritten list of items destroyed which I obtained at the time of your preliminary hearing. It appears that Mr. Herr is referring to the same list. I am sending a copy of this letter and its enclosures to your parents in order that they may be aware of your financial obligation. By sending this copy to your folks, I am not making any recommendation as to how the obligation is satisfied. Since it appears that my work is now completed on your behalf, I will be closing my file with final billing to your parents in due course. Should you need anything further at any time, please let me know. In the meantime, I extend to you my sincere best wishes in your efforts to resolve any underlying problems which have caused the difficulties with "the law". It is obvious to me that you have the ability to cope with and conquer any such matters and come out of this entire situation with a new direction and resolve. With best regards, I am, s, '*4ci and C. Snelbaker RCS:pjt Enclosures cc: Dr, and Mrs. Robert Cormany T 4crn S CL.25}(OLff & o Qrbp-rt of Ti (r- Cof mun y W \nej? Sit «•. Qrp?er t?? tar, aid- ?C? c et C\o z v\ ?Fura.-b e?[cr do-OD t ?vr. ?eJ. c? u_C c. 39, x 3b'- k(r) lrto ?ursVW4ko S ?Y17P? ?3? 1k c c y? s? cc\ \uLsse> bou tt ?lun i vi)l.n ???xtfe S O ?• u a 3?.0o b v.?'.q ?e c1.CS?. = J?f{ ?rDm vny ?Yark?m??lur ?U n, -k d17-G.U? t n a?\u.rt Stuv?c?. - q ?} ?'J?Jn1 Y11y?VtO??t( fi'? rx 5? Zl Ot) c\ti? r b \<ec bona L belve rf urray- uJuni?J, uJ?rEwfs ? .w a?V.Sit %0 IL \L. _ ,Hib l? tom besttr,trrt LC?r?V- c.h?:? =zu a??erpur??t??n ? \00 \tA w. ? ? ?pyA?'1,,+rla yG .5 ?,CD `MCAC\A\e_ eotis?ce- SV? ?-Lb4 L)6A I tJ,i'1lUo( Q?IJ. a •t1 : p.OJ ?! vc, c- co, \o\ . v,c?, $\e?ti s ?ht cJ f °kpar4two 3?.?o C C w.o c C? r?? r o\ D 1 J 110ou3 t SNELBAKER 8 FLICKER A MOFIIMIOHAL COIUO ON RICHARD C. SNELBAICER E. ROBERT ELICKERE CHARLES D. VANCE. )R. KEITH O. BRENNEMAN ATTORNEYS AT LAW qd WEST MAIN STREET MECHANICSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA 17055 717-697.8526 February 14, 1990 Mr. Lyle M. Herr, Cumberland County P. O. Box 592 Probation/Parole officer Probation Office Carlisle, PA 17013 Re: Commonwealth v. Cory A. Cormany 2068 Criminal 1989 Dear Mr. Herr: P. O. BOX 318 FACSIMILE M7) 697-7681 First, please accept my personal thanks for your special interest in Cory's case. I appreciate the time which you have given to this matter and the professional judgment which you have exercised obviously to Cory's ultimate benefit. In passing sentence on February 13, the Court ordered payment of costs of prosecution. Please advise of the amount. Judge Hess also ordered Cory to pay restitution of $300.00. At the preliminary hearing, Tina Cormany acknowledged receiving $500.00 in restitution. Cory's parents provided this almost immediately after the incident. Am I correct that the restitution requirement has been satisfied (if not overpaid by $200)? Thank you again for your interest on Cory's behalf. Very truly yours, Richard C. Snelbaker RCS:pjt PROBATION OFFICE CUMBERLAND COMM, PENNSYLVANIA KENNETH W DOM Probation and Parole Officers Chief Probation and Parole Officer ELIZABETH D. BAKER THOMAS A. BOYER JOSEPH L OSENKARSKI DARBY L. CHRISTLIEB Supervisor - Juvenile Services DENNIS M. DRACHBAR ROLLER JOHN H COURT HOUSE MICHAEL J. DUNSMORE . Supervisor - Adult Services P.O. BOX 592 A. KERRY GORMAN DEBORAH D. GRAEFF CARLJSLE, PENNSYLVAMA 17013 HERR LYLE M BARRY E HAIR Once MSUCOBections Supvr, . CHARLES R. MCKENRICK HAROLD E. sHEEIY - RaiWMJUdge PAUL S. MEURON Probation and Parole Olflcan II GEORGE E. HOFFER - Judge GREGORY S. MILLER S. GARETH GRAHAM EDGAR S. BAYLEY-Judea SAMUEL E. MILLER. JR. DAVID L MYERS KEVIN A. HESS-Judge HENRY J. THIELEMANN MICHAEL D. VARNER February 23, 1990 Richard C. Snelbaker 44 W. Main Street Mechanicsburg, PA 17055 RE: Cory A. Cormany 2068 Cr. 89 Dear Mr. Snelbaker, The costs in Cory's case total $122.80. This amount does no include restitution due the victim, Tina Cormany. Tina submitted itemized damage estimates totalling $800.00 and did acknowledge a payment from the Cormany's of $500.00. That left the $300.00 balance that Judge Hess ordered as restitution. According to our records, Cory owes a total of $422.80 as a result of this offense. Sincerely,, 1 Lyle M. Herr Probation & Parole Officer LMH:dja Telephode Adult Probation (717) 240-6255 Telepbart Juvanile Probedon (117) 240.6265 Costs/Fines (717)240.6275 DU: Pmv{ (717)240.6280 Toll Free Shle barb (717) 512-7286 Tell Free West shore (717) 697-0371 n? . o E r h Wi (aj 0 f C ru _ n: . • +MI?' r ^O r? 7-1 ?r ?.. ; P3 .l' iS iii EXHIBIT C c?? CUMBERLAND COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA PROBATION AND PAROLE OFFICE December 10, 1990 Cory A. Cormany 602 West Pennsylvania Avenue Downingtown, PA 19335 Mr. Cormany, COURTHOUSE P O BOX 592 CARLISLE. PA 170 t> Based on on-going problems between you and Tina Cormany, and at her request as the victim in your current parole case, your parole conditions have been revised as follows: 1. You are to refrain from any and all contact with Tina Cormany outside of the set visitation hours on Saturdays and Sundays. This means you may not call her or write her or have anyone else call or write her at her place of employment or at her home. This condition will not prevent you from maintaining visitation rights already established by your respective attorneys. A violation of this condition or any previously imposed parole conditions, will result in your being scheduled immediately for a Court appearance at which time your parole may again be. revoked. Please call me with any questions you may have. Sign the bottom portion, which simply acknowledges your receipt of this condition, and return it to me immediately. The copy is for your file. Sincerely, Lyle M. Herr Probation & Parole Officer LMH/clb ------------------------------------------------------------------ I understand this additional condition. Signed: Sign and return to: Lyle M. Herr, c/o Cumberland County Probation, P.O. Box 592, Carlisle, PA 17013 Telephone Adult Probation (717) 240-6255 Telephone Juvenile Probation (717) 240-6205 Cos15/Fines (717) 240-6275 Toll Free Shippensburg (717 532-7286 DUI Programs (717) 2a0-6260 Toll Free West Shore (717) 697-037t EXHIBIT D cgs r RE: Attorney General Defendant: U. S. District Court Lyle Herr 228 Walnut Street Samuel Coover Harrisburg, PA 17101 Dirk Berry I, Cory A. Cormany, being a citizen of the United States of America, do hereby state and swear that at or about April 16th, of the year 1986, and through and about a judgmental action, the above named defendant did commit the following crimes: 1) 901. Criminal Attempt - a person commits an attempt when, with intent to commit a specific crime, he does any act which constitutes a substantial step toward the commission of that crime. 2) 2701. Simple Assault - a person is guilty of assault if he: (1) attempts to cause or intentionally, knowingly or recklessly causes bodily injury to another; (2) negligently causes bodily injury to another with a deadly weapon; or (3) attempts by physical menace to put another in fear of imminent serious bodily injury. 3) 2705. Recklessly Endangering Another Person - a person commits a misdemeanor of the second degree if he recklessly engages in conduct which places or may place another person in danger of death or serious bodily injury. 4) 2706. Terroristic Threats - a person is guilty of a misdemeanor of the first degree if he threatens to commit any crime of violence with intent to terrorize another or cause evacuation of a building, place of assembly, or facility of public transportation, or otherwise to cause serious public inconvenience or in reckless disregard of the risk of causing such terror or inconvenience. 5) 2709. Harassment - a person commits a summary offense when, with intent to harass, annoy or alarm another person: (1) he strikes, shoves, kicks or otherwise subjects him to physical contact, or attempts or threatens to do the same, or (2) he follows a person in or about a public place or places; or (3) he engages in a course of conduct or repeatedly commits acts which alarm or seriously annoy such other person and which serve no legitimate purpose. 6) 2902. Unlawful Restraint - a person commits a misdemeanor of the first degree if he knowingly: (1) restrains another unlawfully in circumstances exposing him to risk of serious bodily injury; or (2) holds another in a condition of involuntary servitude. 7) 2903. False Imprisonment - a person commits a misdemeanor of the first degree if he knowingly restrains another unlawfully so as to interfere substantially with his liberty. 8) 2906. Criminal Coercion - a person is guilty of Criminal Coercion if with intent to unlawfully restrict freedom of action of another to the detriment of the other, he threatens to: (1) commit any criminal offense; (2) accuse anyone of a criminal offense; (3) expose any secret tending to subject any person to hatred, contempt or ridicule; or (4) take or withhold action as an official; or cause an official to take or withhold action. 9) 3105. Prompt Complaint - a prompt reporting of public authority is not required in a prosecution under this chapter: Provided, however, that nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit a defendant from introducing evidence of the alleged victim's failure to promptly report the crime if such evidence would be admissible pursuant to the rules of evidence. 10) 3107. Resistance Not Required - the alleged victim need not resist the actor in prosecution under this chapter: Provided, however, that nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit a defendant from introducing evidence that the alleged victim consented to the conduct in question. 11) 3126. Indecent Assault - a person who has indecent contact with another not his spouse, or causes such other to have indecent contact with him is guilty of indecent assault a misdemeanor of the second degree if: (1) he does so without the consent of the other person; (2) he knows that the other person suffers from a mental disease or defect which renders him or her incapable of appraising the nature of his or her conduct; (3) he knows that the other person is unaware that an indecent contact is being committed; or (5) the other person is in custody of law or detained in a hospital or other institution and the actor has supervisory or disciplinary authority over him. 12) 4111. Fraud in Insolvency - a person commits a misdemeanor of the second degree if, knowing that proceedings have been or are about to be instituted for the appointment of a receiver or other person entitled to administer property for the benefit of creditors, or that any other composition or liquidation for the benefit of creditors has been or is about to be made he: (1) destroys, removes, conceals, encumbers, transfers, or otherwise deals with any property with intent to defeat or obstruct the claim of any creditor, or otherwise to obstruct the operation of any law relating to administration of property for the benefit of creditors; (2) knowingly falsifies any writing or record relating to the property; or (3) knowingly misrepresents or refuses to disclose to a receiver or other person entitled to administer property for the benefit of creditors, the existence, amount or location which the actor could be legally required to furnish in relation to such administration. 13) 4114. Securing Execution of Documents by Deception - a person commits a misdemeanor of the second degree if by deception he causes another to execute any instrument affecting or purporting to affect or likely to affect the pecuniary interest of any person. 14) 4305. Dealing in Infant Children - a person is guilty of a misdemeanor of the first degree, if he deals in humanity, by trading, bartering, buying, selling, or dealing in infant children. 15) 4501. Definitions "Harm" - loss, disadvantage or injury, or anything so regarded by the person affected, including loss, disadvantage or injury to any person or entity in whose welfare he is interested. 16) 4702. Threats and Other Improper Influences in Official or Political Matters - a person commits an offense if he: (1) threatens unlawful harm to any person with intent to influence his decision, opinion, recommendation, vote or other exercise of discretion as a public servant, party official or voter. 17) 5107. Aiding Consummation of a Crime - a person commits an offense if he intentionally aids another to accomplish an unlawful object of a crime, as by safeguarding the proceeds thereof or converting the proceeds into negotiable funds. 18) 5108. Compounding - a person commits a misdemeanor of the second degree if he accepts or agrees to accept any pecuniary benefit in consideration of refraining from reporting to law enforcement authorities the commission or suspected commission of any offense or information relating to an offense. 19) 5301. Official Oppression - a person acting or purporting to act in an official capacity or taking advantage of such actual or purporting capacity commits a misdemeanor of the second degree if knowing that his conduct is illegal, he (1) subjects another to arrest, detention, search, seizure, mistreatment, dispossession, assessment, lien or other infringement of personal or property rights; or (2) denies or impedes another in the exercise of enjoyment of any right, privilege, power or immunity. 20) 5302. Speculating or Wagering on Official Action or Information - a public servant commits a misdemeanor of the second degree if in contemplation of official action by himself or by a governmental unit with which he is associated, or in reliance on information to which he has access in his official capacity and which has not been made public he: (1). acquires a pecuniary interest in any property, transaction or enterprise which may be affected by such information or official action; (3) aids another to do any of the foregoing. 901 - 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 2701 - 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 2705 - 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 2706- 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 2709- 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 2902- 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 2903 - 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 2906- 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 3105 - 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 3107- 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 3126- 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 4111 - 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 4114- 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 4305- 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 4501 - 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 4702- 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 5107- 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 5108 - 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 5301 - 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 5302- 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. I, Cory Cormany, hereby verify that the facts set forth in the above are true and correct to the best of my knowledge or information and belief and that any false statements herein are made subject to the penalties of Section 4904 of the Crimes Code (18 Pa. C.S. 4904), relating to unworn falsification to authorities. Dated / L r C) By C, (' / ?ory A. Corms y INCIDENT REPORT Criminal Attempt: In that Lyle Herr, Samuel Coover and Dirk Berry did intentionally attempt to commit a crime substantial a Defendant or constitutional the Defendants. Simple Assault: In that the Defendants did knowingly and recklessly cause a person bodily harm by a physical menace which did cause an individual imminent fear, also useful a weapon: Recklessly Endangering Another Person: In that the Defendants did cause another person to be put in danger of death and serious bodily injury directional an engagement. Terroristic Threats: In that the Defendants did cause serious inconvenience reckless a violent intent substantial a public place. Harassment: In that the Defendants did repeatedly annoy and alarm an individual subjecting physical contact which did serve no legitimate purpose. Unlawful Restraint: In that the Defendants did support and expose another person to an involuntary servitude conditional a risk of bodily injury. False Imprisonment: In that the Defendants did knowingly interfere with the liberty of an individual substantial a policy. Criminal Coercion: In that the Defendants did unlawfully cause the restriction of a freedom contemptual the commission of a crime and accussive an official action and hatred. Prompt Complaint: In that the Defendants did construe the prosecution of an indecent evidence within a timely requirement. Resistance Not Required: In that the Defendants did introduce evidence consensual a questionable conduct and reliable a victim. Indecent Assault: In that the Defendants did appraise a course of conduct capable an indecent contact, that did cause a nonconsensual supervisory disciplinary authority to impair another person substantial the prevention of a resistance and a custody. Fraud in Insolvency: In that the Defendants did institute the misrepresentation and appointment of a required fund otherwise beneficial a creditor, and did obstruct a relative information entitled an administrative composition factual a rental property, and liable an existing location encumbersome a claim and submissive a legality. Securing Execution of Documents by Deception: In that the Defendants did affect or purport the pecuniary interest of a person likely a deceptive instrument. Dealing in Infant Children: In that the Defendants did barter in a humanity that did affect a buying and selling of a custody arrangement concerning an infant child. Definitions "Harm": In that the Defendants did take advantage of a person whose welfare they were interested. Threats and Other Improper Influences in Official or Political Matters: In that the Defendants did influence a person intentional a recommendation and unlawful a discretionary vote. Aiding Consummation of Crime: In that the Defendants did intentionally aid one another to accomplish an unlawful objective negotiable a public fund. Compounding: In that the Defendants did accept pecuniary benefits in consideration of refraining to report or represent the suspected commission of a relative offense. Official Oppression: In that the Defendants did purport an official capacity subjective an illegal conduct that did deny and impede another in the exercise of a right and enjoyment; powerful a detention, search, seizure, mistreatment, dispossession and assessment. Speculating or Wagering on Official Action or Information: In that the Defendants are public servants and did contemplate a governmental action reliant an information, and did acquire pecuniary interests in property and transactions intentional the case term 1:CV-95-0844 and the docket files NT-187-00, NT-188-00, NT-189-00, NT-190-00, NT-205-00, NT-748-00, NT-770-00 and NT-839-00 proceeding CR- 574-01 and the case numbers 97-0174 and 01-2091. I petition that a warrant of arrest or a summons be issued and that the Defendant be required to answer the charges I have made. I verify that the facts set forth in this complaint are true and correct to the best of my knowledge or information and belief. This verification is made subject to the penalties of Section 4904 of the Crimes Code (18 Pa. C.S. 4904), relating to unworn falsification to authorities. Dated ? ter; C Signature r Dated 5 gtiature Notarial Seat Helen D. Sneed, Notary Public Middlesex Twp., Cumbedantl Counry My Commission Expires June 24, 2002 Member, Pennsylvania Association 01 Notaries AFFIDAVIT On April 16, 1986, I, Cory A. Cormany, did recognize a criminal complaint, problematic an episode and an incident, to Mr. Lyle Herr regarding an alleged altercation said to have occurred in the Borough of Carlisle. Pursuant thereto my acknowledgment, and relevant therein my recognition, the Defendant Lyle Herr did petition the courts of the common pleas, despite my assertive well being, nonjustifiable the commission of a crime. The Defendant did state that I had violated a local law, contrary to my due process rights, and did circumvent a detention powerful a constitutional dilemma and the outcome of a trial. Proceeding and prescient the aforementioned circumstance; I was probated and accused a resolution consensual a timely engagement, and was subjected a series of tests that could in no way be responsive a positive outcome. The Defendant Lyle Herr did lie on several occasions, and did also appraise me applicative an assessment causing me fear, harm and endangerment relative a weapon, and a confinement. On March 28, 1989, I, Cory A. Cormany, did once again recognize a criminal complaint, debatable a traffic offense, to Mr. Lyle Herr regarding an alleged driving under the influence of alcohol said to have occurred in Upper Allen Township. Again pursuant thereto my acknowledgment, and relevant therein my recognition, the Defendant Lyle Herr did petition the courts of the common pleas, despite my assertive well being, brutal the commission of a crime. The Defendant did state that I had violated a local law, contrary to my due process rights, and did endorse a mistreatment suppressive a constitutional dilemma and the outcome of a trial. Preceding and pursuant the aforementioned situation; I was probated and annoyed an accomplishment, nonconsensual a child custody arrangement, and was subjected a pecuniary action reliant an information, and a series of transactions proprietary a right, and contemptual an official hatred. The Defendant Lyle Herr did alarm me and did interfere a risk of bodily injury conditional an involuntary servitude substantial a liberty, and a timely reconciliation. On October 1, 19891 1, Cory A. Cormany, did remand a domestic incident significant my ex-wife, to Ms. Tina Cormany argumentative an alleged trespass said to have occurred in the North Middleton Township. Prior therein my petition, and prescient thereto my advisory, the Defendant Lyle Herr did conversate with Ms. Tina Connany informing her that she should leave me because I drank and drove an automobile. The Defendant did litigate a stipulated response unlawful a restricted time span, and did seriously inconvenience both my ex-wife and myself sufficient a document, and deceptive an official action. The Defendant Lyle Herr did detain and influence both Ms. Tina Cormany and myself intentional a recommendation and political an opinionated vote, costly a careful situation and circumstance. Mr. Lyle Herr is alleged to be a Probation Officer or Supervisor in the Cumberland County. On February 23, 1991, I, Cory A. Cormany, did presume a visitation agreement, consensual my ex-wife, to Mr. John Adams questionable an alleged altercation said to have occurred in the Borough of Carlisle. Prior therein my consent, and pursuant thereto my employment, the Defendant Lyle Herr did obstruct an evidence deceptive Ms. Tina Cormany and informative a statement submissive an official action, and speculatory a negotiable fund. The Defendant did again litigate a stipulated response unlawful a restricted time span, and did seriously risk bodily injury prescient a privilege and a right credited a property. The Defendant Lyle Herr did acquire a pecuniary interest in both my ex-wife and myself powerful the reported commission of a crime and considerate the buying and selling of a humanity. Mr. John Adams is alleged to be a Convicted Drug Dealer or User in the Cumberland County. On February 19, 1995, I, Cory A. Cormany, did submit a criminal complaint, compliant a hospitalization and an affair, to Mr. Samuel Coover allegary a said commitment to the Cumberland County Prison. Prescient thereto my intentions, and relevant therein my imprisonment, the Defendant Samuel Coover did supervise an authority reckless a conduct that did cause bodily injury and indecent resistance punctilious a prompt response. The Defendant did provide weapons and instruments that did cause and do inflict serious bodily harm factual a freedom, and unlawful a liberty, proceeding the outcome of a trial constitutional an involuntary servitude. Proceeding and prescient the aforementioned circumstance; I was probated and pursued a resolution nonconsensual an adoption term case number 64; that was subjected a negative outcome responsible an official action. The Defendant Samuel Coover did direct and implement detention and assessment exposing and threatening physical conduct which did serve no legitimate purpose evenditiary a video tape, and influential an illicit threatening propaganda. On June 21, 1997, I, Cory A. Cormany, did once again remand a criminal complaint, sadistic a treatment, to Mr. Samuel Coover important a said commitment to the Cumberland County Prison. Prior thereto my arrest, and pursuant therein my recognition, the Defendant Samuel Coover did once again exercise an authority influential a conduct that did cause bodily harm and indecent resistance truthful a prompt consideration. The Defendant did again unlawfully supervise an outcome that did expose and subject me to serious bodily injury, factual a freedom and suspicious a liberty, proceeding the issues of a trial constitutional an involuntary servitude. Preceding and pursuant the aforementioned situation; I was brutalized and impeded an accomplishment relative the commission of a crime. The Defendant Samuel Coover did procrastinate and wager a series of incidents which did dispose and infringe a prejudicial action malicious a local law. Mr. Samuel Coover is alleged to be a Training Specialist or Supervisor in the Cumberland County. On July 24, 2001, I, Cory A. Cormany, did order a summary hearing, significant an appeal, to Mr. Darrell Dethlefs capable an alleged action said to have occurred in the Borough of Carlisle. Prior therein my commitment, and pursuant thereto my detention, the Defendant Samuel Coover did collaborate and conspire with a C. O. Frank Teaney, and did harass me threatening the evacuation and unlawful transportation of my person consistent a physical contact on October 2, 2001, in Cumberland County Prison. I was restrained and subjected servitude and assaulted prescient and pursuant to September 12, 2001, and again seriously annoyed and alarmed. The Defendant did concur an official ramification costly a civil action preparatory the common pleas court; criminal case term number 01- 0494, which did terrorize me affectionate a loss and a disadvantage. Pursuant such contemplation I was searched and denied my property rights relevant an information and several pecuniary transactions, safeguarding a Ms. Marcia Kuhn and the said; Mr. Darrell Dethlefs, whom did officially misrepresent me considerate a Mr. Dirk Berry. Mr. Darrell Dethlefs is alleged to be a Public Defender or Attorney in the Cumberland County. Ms. Marcia Kuhn is alleged to be an Accounts Officer or Accountant in the Cumberland County. On December 7, 2001, 1, Cory A. Cormany, did once again order a summary hearing, objectional an appeal, to Mr. Dirk Berry reportorial an alleged incident said to have occurred in Middlesex Township. Pursuant thereto my acknowledgment, and relevant therein my commitment, the Defendant Dirk Berry did inform me that criminal elements concerning the offenses defined did not matter and were irrelevant to the disposition of a hearing petitioned by a Ms. Paula Correal. The Defendant did state that the aforesaid matter would be bound over to a higher court and did litigate a common pleas court case term number 01- 0432. Proceeding and prescient the aforementioned documentation; I was not notified of a future release date from prison, nor petitioned aware of such said factual case term numbers, nor serviced and summoned knowledgeable a scheduled Formal Arraignment or said Charge. I had pursued a "Legal Service", relevant a child custody matter, allegory hereto and prior the aforementioned. The Defendant Dirk Berry did inform me pursuant January 25, 2002, that I was serviced circumstantial a case term number 01-2536 and charged with resisting arrest in light of a previous numeric deception, or mistake, and a said; summary acquittal. During or about the aforesaid ramification the Honorable Judge Guido of the Cumberland County Courts allegedly posted a bail imposition, and did schedule a pre-trial and trial for matters documented in the Common Pleas Court of Pennsylvania. Mr. Dirk Berry is alleged to be a Public Defender or Attorney in the Cumberland County. Ms. Paula Correal is alleged to be a District Justice or Magistrate in the Cumberland County. I, Cory A. Cormany, on thisti day of of the year 2002, do hereby swear as a citizen and a voter of the Commonwealth of the United States that the above facts are true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief. ory A. Cormany Dated Witness Notarial Seal Helen D. Sneed, Notary Public Middlesex Twp., Cumberland County My Commission Expires June 24, 2002 Member, Pennsylvania Association of Notaries EXHIBIT (9) ORIRIs =0 ? 2 y AO 440 (Rev. 10/93) Summons in a Civil Case United States District Court MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA Cory A. Cormany V. .Jeffrey W. Rudolph. To: (For the name and address of defendant(s): (SEE COMPLAINT) SUMMONS IN A CIVIL CASE CASE NUMBER: 1: CV-04-454 YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to serve upon PLAINTIFF'S ATTORNEY (name and address) Cory A. Cormany. 1883 Douglas Drive Carlisle, PA 17013 (717) 243-5287 an answer to the complaint which is herewith served upon you, withir,20 (Twenty) days after service of this summons upon you, exclusive of the day of service. If you fall to do so, judgment by default will be taken against you for the relief demanded in the complaint. You must also file your answer with the Clerk of this Court within a reasonable period of time after service. MARY E. D'ANDREA. Clerk e ;-?4 .? u ' clerk DATE:A?4 0-46ke / IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA THE COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA CORY A. CORMANY V. JEFFREY W. RUDOLF CASE NO. CIVIL ACTION - LAW JUDGMENT DEMANDED . y OAI? 4 You have been sued in Court. If you wish to defend against the claim set forth in the following pages, you must take action within twenty (20) days after the Complaint and Notice are served by entering a written appearance personally or by attorney and by filing in writing with the Court your defense or objection to the claims set forth against you. You are warned that if you fail to do so the case may proceed without you and judgment may be entered against you by the Court without further notice for any money claimed in the Complaint or for any other claim or relief requested by Plaintiff. You may lose money or property or other rights important to you. YOU SHOULD TAKE THIS PAPER TO YOUR LAWYER AT ONCE. IF YOU DO NOT HAVE A LAWYER OR CANNOT AFFORD ONE, GO TO OR TELEPHONE THE OFFICE SET FORTH BELOW TO FIND OUT WHERE YOU CAN GET-,kXGAL HELP. Court Administrator U.S. District Court 228 Walnut Street Harrisburg, PA 17101 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA THE COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA CORY A. CORMANY V. JEFFREY W. RUDOLF CASE NO. CIVIL ACTION - LAW JUDGMENT DEMANDED PETITION AND NOW comes, Cory A. Cormany, Plaintiff, and sets forth causes of action against the above named Defendant, whereas the following is a statement: 1. Plaintiff is Cory Cormany, an adult individual residing in the Cumberland County Community, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. 2. Defendant is Jeffrey Rudolf, an adult individual residing in the Cumberland County Community, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. 3. The plaintiff is previously employed through Hess Corp. of Carlisle, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. He is a taxpayer and registered voter of North Middleton Township. 4. The defendant is employed through North Middleton Police Department of Carlisle, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. He is an officer and captain of North Middleton Township. (1) 5. Plaintiff Cory Cormany is a high school graduate in attending Boiling Springs High School. He is also academically achieved through a Bachelor of Education Program at the Pennsylvania State University as of the year Nineteenhundred and Ninetythree, and is enrolled-partly in a Master of Economics Program through the Penn State Dickinson Campus of Carlisle as of the year Nineteenhundred and Ninetynine, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. 6. The subiect mater is a criminal conviction sustained in the Court of Common Pleas Cumberland County, it is substantial a second degree felony and defaces prima facia cause. 7. Mr. Jeffrey Rudolf is said to be liable for the criminal conviction sustained in the Court of Common Pleas Cumberland County, substantial the Criminal Tenn Case No. 89-2068. 8. Mr. Cory Cormany is said to be convincible for the criminal conviction sustained in the Court of Common Pleas Cumberland County, substantial the Criminal Term Case No. 89-2068. 9. Mr. Lyle Herr is said to be liable for the criminal conviction sustained in the Court of Common Pleas Cumberland County, substantial the Criminal Tenn Case No. 89-2068. 10. On October 1st, of the year 1989, the defendant is said to have apprehended the said; plaintiff, pursuant the Court of Common Pleas Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. (2) 11. On October 29th, of the year 1995, the plaintiff is said to have filed petition pursuant the Court of Common Pleas Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. 12. The Defendant Jeffrey Rudolf is said to have arrested the Plaintiff Cory Cormany, and is said to have investigated the incident in question, respectfully submitted exhibits A through E. WHEREFORE, the Plaintiff, Cory A. Cormany, claims from the Defendant; Jeffrey Rudolf, fill responsibility, considerate the commonwealth, at which time the clerk of courts shall quash expungement. (3) VFRTFICATION I, Cory A. Cormany, Plaintiff in the above captioned action, hereby verify and state that the facts set forth in the Petition against Mr. Jeffrey Rudolf are true and correct to the best of my information, knowledge and belief. I understand that false statements herein are made subject to the penalties of Pa. C.S.A. Section 4904, relating to unsworn verification to authorities. Dated rz 1/0 ? 2 By Cory A. Cormany? Witness By Notary WrxMLsaL Axr Pu®uc CUNNO e86MO16 CUMbWIWW C" (4) EXHIBIT A ?s? J. MICHAEL EAKIN DISTRICT ATTORNEY OFFICE OF THE DISTRICT ATTORNEY CUMBERLAND COUNTY COURTHOUSE CARLISLE. PENNSYLVANIA 17013 February 2, 1990 Cory A. Cormany Cumberland County Prison Carlisle, PA 17013 RE: COMMONWEALTH V. CORY 2068 Criminal 1989 Charge: (C) Criminal Dear Mr. Cormany: A. CORMANY Trespass r (717) 240.8210 (717) 887-0371, Ext 8210 (717) 832-7288, Ext. 8210 You are hereby notified to appear in Court Room No. 1, Fourth Floor, Cumberland Count Co t HOuse, C r1 sle, Pennsylvania, on Tuesday, February 131 y 1590 at %r o'clock A .M., before the Honorable Judges of said Court, at which time matters pertaining to the above case will be heard. Very truly yours, For sentence. ` ?-Jl J. Michael Eakin District Attornev CC: File Richard Snelbaker, Esquire Cpt. Jeffrey Rudolph Lyle Herr, P.O. RE: District Attorney Defendant: Cumberland County Stephen L. Margeson, the Court House Square Administration and Staff of Carlisle, Pa. 17013 the Carlisle Police Department 1, Cory A. Cormany, being a citizen of the United States of America, do hereby state and swear that in and about the actions and incidents stated herein, and through and about a judgment stated hereto, the above named defendant did commit the following crimes. 1) 902. Criminal Solicitation - a person is guilty of solicitation to commit a crime with the intent of promoting or facilitating its commission he commands, encourages or requests another person to engage in specific conduct which would constitute such crime or an attempt to commit such crime or which would establish his complicity in its commission or attempted commission. 2) 2504. Involuntary Manslaughter - (a) General rule - a person is guilty of involuntary manslaughter when as a direct result of the doing of a lawful act in a reckless or grossly negligent manner, he causes the death of another person. (b) Grading - Involuntary manslaughter is a misdemeanor of the first degree, where the victim is under 12 years of age and is in the care, custody or control of the person who caused the death involuntary manslaughter is a felony of the second degree. 3) 2705. Recklessly Endangering Another Person - a person commits a misdemeanor of the second degree if he recklessly engages in conduct which places or may place another person in danger of death or serious bodily injury. . 4) 2709. Harassment - a person commits a summary offense when, with intent to harass, annoy or alarm another person: (1) he strikes, shoves, kicks or otherwise subjects him to physical contact, or attempts or threatens to do the same; or (2) he follows a person in or about a public place or places; or (3) he engages in a course of conduct or repeatedly commits acts which alarm or seriously annoy such other person and which serve no legitimate purpose. 5) 2902. Unlawful Restraint - a person commits a misdemeanor of the first degree if he knowingly: (1) restrains another unlawfully in circumstances exposing him to risk of serious bodily injury; or (2) holds another in a condition of involuntary servitude. 6) 2903. False Imprisonment - a person commits a misdemeanor of the second degree if he knowingly restrains another unlawfully so as to interfere substantially with his liberty. 7) 2906. Criminal Coercion - a person is guilty of criminal coercion if; with intent unlawfully to restrict freedom of action of another to the detriment of the other, he threatens to: (1) commit. any criminal offense; (2) accuse anyone of a criminal offense; (3) expose any secret tending to subject any person to hatred, contempt or ridicule; or (4) take or withhold action as an official, or cause an official to take or withhold action. 8) 3923. Theft by Extortion a person is guilty of theft if he intentionally obtains or withholds property of another by threatening to: (1) commit another criminal offense; (2) accuse anyone of a criminal offense; (3) expose any secret tending to subject any person to hatred, contempt or ridicule; (4) take or withhold action as an official, or cause an official to take or withhold action; (5) bring about or continue a strike or boycott or other collective unofficial action, if the property is not demanded or received for the benefit of the group in whose interest the actor purports to act; (6) testify or provide information or withhold testimony or information with respect to the legal claim or defense of another; or (7) inflict any other harm which would not benefit the actor. 9) 4114. Securing Execution of Documents by Deception - a person commits a misdemeanor of the second degree if by deception he causes another to execute any instrument affecting or purporting to affect or likely to affect the pecuniary interest of any person. 10) 5101. Obstructing Administration of Law or Other Governmental Function -- a person commits a misdemeanor of the second degree if he intentionally obstructs, impairs or perverts the administration of law or other governmental function by force, violence, physical interference or obstacle, breach of official duty, or any unlawful act, except that this section does not apply to flight by a person charged with crime, refusal to submit to arrest, failure to perform legal duty other than official duty, or any other means of avoiding compliance with law without affirmative interference with governmental function. 11) 5301. Official Oppression - a person acting or purporting to act in a official capacity or taking advantage of such actual or purporting capacity commits a misdemeanor of the second degree if knowing that. his conduct is illegal, he (1) subjects another to arrest, detention, search, seizure, mistreatment, dispossession, assessment, lien or other infringement of personal or property rights, or (2) denies or impedes another in the exercise or enjoyment of any right, privilege, power or immunity. 12) 5302. Speculating or Wagering on Official Action or Information - a public servant commits a misdemeanor of the second degree if in contemplation of official action by himself or by a governmental unit with which he is associated, or in reliance on information to which he has access in his official capacity and which has not been made public he: (1) acquires a pecuniary interest in any property, transaction or enterprise which may be affected by such information or official action; (2) speculates or wagers on the basis of such information or official action; or (3) aids another to do any of the foregoing. 13) 5726. Action for Removal from Office or Employment - any aggrieved person shall have the right to bring an action in Commonwealth Court against any investigative or law enforcement officer, public official or public employee seeking the officer's, official's or employee's removal from office or employment on the grounds that the officer, official or employee has intentionally violated the provisions of this chapter. If the court shall conclude that such officer, official or employee has in fact intentionally violated the provisions of this chapter, the court shall order the dismissal or removal from office of said officer, official or employee. 902 - 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 2504 - 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 2705 - 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 2709 - 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 2902 - 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 2903 - 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 2906 - 1972, Dec. 6, F.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 3923 - 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1487, No. 934, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 4114 - 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1; effective June 6, 1973. 5101 - 1972„ Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 5301 -.1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 5302 - 1972, Dec. 6, P.L. 1482, No. 334, 1, effective June 6, 1973. 5726 - 1978, Oct. 4, P.L. 831, No. 164, 2, effective in 60 da ys. I, Cory A. Cormany, do hereby verify that the facts set forth in the above are true and correct to the best of my knowledge or information and belief, and that any false statements herein are made subject to the penalties of Section 4904 of the Crimes Code (18 Pa. C.S. 4904), relating to unsworn falsification to authorities. Dated By re? l L. V ?- Cory A. Cormany SWORN STATEMENT 1. On or about June 25, 1985, during the late morning hours, the Plaintiff, Cory Cormany, was walking from the PX Center, at the Army War College, along the first block of West Louther Street with an associate in the Borough of Carlisle. 2. At or about the aforesaid date and time the associate, Thomas Hoon, was abruptly and directly stopped by the Defendant David Fones, a member of the C.P.D., being said he was allegedly carrying an unopened case of Budweiser Beer. 3. Proceeding the alleged confrontation stated in the aforesaid statement the Defendant did inform Thomas Hoon, that; he was going to take the unopened case of Budweiser Beer, that he was to be carrying and; that, he could then be on his way. 4. After and about the time the Defendant David Fones did announce that he was going to take the property, mentioned in the aforementioned statement, the Plaintiff Cory Cormany did then deny him the privilege to proceed, having had payed for the product at the Army Post. 5. At or about the aforesaid date and time the Plaintiff did retrieve and take up his unopened case of Budweiser Beer, off the sidewalk, and proceeded to walk west on the Louther Street Sidewalk towards his place of residence. 6. Proceeding the actions taken in the aforementioned statement the Defendant David Fones did tackle, punch, and scratch the Plaintiff Cory Cormany in the face, abdomen, arms, and leg areas, then did bondage him and turn him over to other members of the C.P.D. whom did continually brutalize him and allegedly arrested him. 7. The Plaintiff did sustain numerous scratches and bruises and was scared under his nose during the aforesaid deprivation period, and was verbally instructed in contradiction as to what to do and expect by the Defendant and his associates, pursuant transportation to an elementary school. 8. The Plaintiff Cory Cormany asserts he was not informed of his due process rights during and throughout the Defendant's actions, however was arraigned before a District Justice and the unopened case of Budweiser Beer returned to him, and asserts that his associate, Thomas Hoon, was not allegedly apprehended or detained. 9. In and about or pursuant 1986, during the late evening hours, the Plaintiff, Cory Cormany, was walking through a church parking lot while returning home from a party at a friend's house in the Borough of Carlisle. 10. At or about the aforesaid date and time the Defendant David Fones, a member of the C.P.D., did pull an automobile adjacent to the Plaintiff's foot-path and did step out of the machine addressing him by name; while turning on the overhead emergency lights and drawing attention to his sidearm. 11. Preceding the aggressive and intimidating actions and behavior demonstrated in the aforementioned statement the Plaintiff Cory Cormany did stop walking, and did turn to the Defendant in question; in response to the calling of his name. 12. After and about the time the Defendant David Fones yelled the Plaintiff's name he did quickly approach him and began pushing him in the stomach and chest area, asking him what he had and what he thought he was doing, almost knocking him to the ground. 13. At or about the aforesaid date and time the Plaintiff Cory Cormany did turn about, from the Defendant's position, and did proceed quickly off running in the opposite direction of the aggression described in the aforementioned statement in fear of life and limb. 14. Prior to the Defendant David Fones claiming the Plaintiff had been smoking marijuana, and prior to him bondaging him and allegedly or intentionally pushing at him yelling obnoxiously loud verbal commands or endangering his life or limb, the Defendant did apprehend him. 15. The Plaintiff was channeled and detoured, then prevented from going home, while the Defendant did almost run him over with an automobile and did pursue and throw him over the hood of the auto- mobile to the roadway, accompanied thereto by several other associates and the uses of firearms and bondage devices. 16. The Plaintiff Cory Cormany did again sustain numerous scratches and bruises and was alleged to have been drinking beer, being said he was to be in possession of an unopened can of Budweiser, however was arraigned before a District Justice and then released under bail imposition after never having been marandized or instructed as to the wants and demands of those individuals involved, and was imprisoned. 17. On or about October 1, 1989, during the early morning hours, the Plaintiff, Cory Cormany, was allegedly apprehended, restrained and subdued in his place of residence in North Middleton Township. 18. At or about the aforesaid date and time a colleague of the Defendant Jeffery Rudolf, an associate of the C.P.D., did transport the Plaintiff Cory Cormany to the North Middleton Police Department after responding to a verbal complaint made by the Plaintiff's wife's mother; whom resided in the Borough of Carlisle at that time. 19. Prior to the report described in the aforementioned statement the Plaintiff was alleged to said to have a severe; head injury, and to have broken several items in the place of residence described, claiming it was because his wife was out all night possibly with another man. 20. Proceeding the actions taken in the foregoing the Defendant Jeffery Rudolf reported to the North Middleton Police Station that morning and did dispose of a summary issue concerning criminal mischief, pronounced by his colleague, and did transport the Plaintiff Cory Cormany back to his place of residence. 21. After and about the time the Defendant did drive the Plaintiff back to the North Middleton Residence he did then speek with the Plaintiff's, wife, and her mother, instructing him to wait in the automobile in which they arrived. 22. Proceeding the communications directed in the aforesaid statement, and the arrival of the Plaintiff's mother-in-law, the Defendant Jeffery Rudolf did inform the Plaintiff Cory Cormany that he was going to be arraigned before a District Justice and probably committed to prison, after checking his criminal record. 23. The Plaintiff was advised and told that he was not allowed back into his place of residence that he had leased and contributed money towards, and was transported to Cumberland County Prison proceeding formal judiciary matters circumstantial a parole situation and detrimental a corroborated detainment. 24. The Plaintiff Cory Cormany did confer with his wife pursuant the issues stated within; and was threatened out of house and home by the Defendant, without warrant or miranda warnings, his wife was physically and emotionally coerced and intimidated into testimony and financial despair, and both were judiciously and criminally interrogated before they were permitted to return home. 25. On or about February 23, 1991, during the.early evening hours, the Plaintiff, Cory Cormany, was allegedly apprehended, restrained and subdued outside of an apartment complex, located in the Borough of Carlisle. 26. Prior to the aforesaid date and time the Plaintiff was involved in a physical confrontation regarding the uses of illegal narcotics, and the confirmed visitation of his said minor child, at his ex-wife's place of residence. 27. Proceeding the altercation litigated in the aforesaid statement the Plaintiff Cory Cormany had been attempting to envelope a visit with his said daughter during his established visitation times, however was side tracked by the attentive indulgences of his ex-wife's boyfriend, and the custody arrangements set forth between her and her mother. 28. At or about the aforesaid date and time the Defendant Brent Griest, a member of the C.P.D., was summoned by a Police Dispatcher because of the actions involved the Plaintiff and an identified individual named John Adams, and his alleged girlfriend's emergency phone message. 29. The Plaintiff did submit to the implications set forth by the assailant John Adams, noting his assertive denial regarding communication, and was not able to verify the uses of illegal narcotics at the time of the aforementioned confrontation on the account of his inability to establish a miranda, precarious the relationship between him and his ex-wife. 30. The Plaintiff Cory Cormany did sustain numerous scratches and bruises and was transported to the county prison pending a parole stipulation, applicative an arraignment procession before a District Justice, and did file a grievance and did not achieve his visitation objective prescient the event in common. 31. On or about June 10, 1992, during the middle afternoon hours, the Plaintiff, Cory Cormany, was arguing with his ex-wife, then pursuant thereto was taken and coaxed into custody and served with an affidavit in the first block of East High Street in the Borough of Carlisle. 32. At or about the aforesaid date and time the Plaintiff Cory Cormany was arraigned before a. District Justice, and was committed to the county prison, proceeding a warrant of arrest and other factors included his due process rights pertinent to the importance of the criminal code. 33. Prior to the incident implemented in the aforementioned statement, the Plaintiff was implicated regarding his ex-wife pursuant therein custody times and places instantaneous their minor child, relevant working and social hours, family members, and careless her boyfriend's actions and solicitations, and the Defendant Karen Finkenbinder, a member of the C.P.D. 34. The Plaintiff Cory Cormany was subjugated imprisonment and distress, and did write letters announcing child rearing problems to several local agencies and figureheads, along with verbal complaints before and after the issues stated within, and did additionally accuse his ex-wife's boyfriend of molesting his minor child contentional a forthright fact. 35. On or about November 15, 1994, during the early afternoon hours, the Plaintiff, Cory Cormany, was serviced and legally detained after attending a summary hearing at a district magistrate's office in the Borough of Carlisle. 36. At or about the aforesaid date and time the Plaintiff was arraigned and committed to Cumberland County Prison relevant the Defendant Kenton McCoy, a member of the C.P.D., and the Defendant J.J. Sancenito, an associate of the C.P.D., he was allocated with criminal offenses.' 37. The Plaintiff Cory Corrmany was judiciously and criminally processed in a court of law, and represented by and through an attorney, and did negotiate a situation and a circumstance important an official action, costly a duress and a justifiable dilemna. 38. On or about February 19, 1995, during the late evening hours, the Plaintiff, Cory Cormany, was sleeping in his bed at his place of residence when he was abruptly and unnecessarily aggressed upon in the Borough of Carlisle. 39. At or about the aforesaid date and time the Plaintiff was hospitalized and processed to county booking relevant the Defendant Larry Kell, a member of the C.P.D., and the Defendant Ronald Egolf, an associate of the C.P.D., he was allocated with criminal offenses. 40. The Plaintiff Cory Cormany was judiciously and criminally accused in a court of law, and represented by and through an attorney, and did interpret a situation and a circumstance important an official action, costly a property and a probable anguish. 41. On or about September 6, 1996, during the middle night hours, the Plaintiff, Cory Cormany, was forcibly restrained and bondaged, then serviced with an affidavit at his place of residence in North Middleton Township. 42. At or about the aforesaid date and time the Defendant David Tilden, a member of the C.P.D., did break open a screen door, accompanied by several unidentified individuals, and did push the Plaintiff's mother into a wall, knocking a planter vase from a table, then proceeded to enter the aforesaid residence., 43. Proceeding the actions stated in the aforementioned statement the Defendant alleged that the Plaintiff Cory Cormany had assaulted a female acquaintance at her place of residence, earlier the day before, in the Borough of Carlisle; whom did later recant such propaganda to the State Representative Gabaig of the 199th Legislative District. 44. The Defendant David Tilden did pummel and grapple the Plaintiff out of his house and home and into an automobile, and did transport him to a building, against his free will, located at 53 West South Street in the Borough of Carlisle, for the purpose of imprisonment, and arraignment before a District Justice. 45. The Plaintiff Cory Cormany did suffer scratches and bruises along with property damage, as a result of the foregoing incident, and was later informed that the alleged bruises around the eyes described and shown on the said victim, or female acquaintance, was caused by the removal of her teeth, displaying three infected mollars during the due process. 46. At or about June 21, 1997, during the early evening hours, the Plaintiff, Cory Cormany, was throwing away some trash in a trash dispenser, after being invited over to a friend's apartment in the Borough of Carlisle. 47. At or about the aforesaid date and time the Plaintiff was attacked and bondaged, then put in a police holding cell identified within 53 West South Street at Carlisle, and proceeding thereto he was removed from the said holding cell and criminally charged, then returned to the said holding cell and summoned and arraigned. 48. Prior the events applied in the aforesaid statement the Defendant Shane Cohick, a member of the C.P.D., and other associates, exercised discretion, the Plaintiff Cory Cormany did file a civil matter on behalf of his friend Tracy Gibson and himself in the Court of Common Pleas of Cumberland County Case No. 96-4435. 49. The Plaintiff Cory Cormany was judiciously and criminally tried in a court of law, and represented by and through an attorney, and did confirm a situation and a circumstance important an official action, costly an employment and a constitutional conflict. 50. On or about October 2, 2001, during the daytime working hours, the Plaintiff, Cory Cormany, was incarcerated at the Cumberland County Prison when he was accused of criminal offenses having allegedly occurred in Middlesex Township. 51. At or about the aforesaid date and time the Plaintiff was attacked and bondaged, then put in a prison holding cell identified within 1101 Claremont Road at Carlisle, and preceding therein he was committed to prison for summary issues and criminally charged, then ordered about submissive a policy and petitioned and arraigned. 52. Proceeding the ramifications dictated in the aforesaid statement the Defendant Mathew Kennedy, a member of the C.P.D., and district attorney, corroborated incident, the Carlisle Police Department did file a criminal matter on behalf of the Plaintiff Cory Cormany and themselves in the Court of Common Pleas of Cumberland County Case No. 01-01091 . 53. The Plaintiff Cory Cormany was judiciously and criminally accused in a court of law, and represented by and through an attorney, and did interpret a situation and a circumstance important an official action, costly an imprisonment and a discriminative fact. 54. The Defendants did cause a reasonable suspicion of doubt deliberate a requisite criminal intention, and political the solicit allegations enstated during and throughout the eventful occasions defined, wherein the Plaintiff Cory Cormany feels victimized as an individual residence of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. 55. The Plaintiff has suffered and sustained injury, abusive and negligible treatment, stressful and constant condemnation punishible other faults and prejudices involving also the uses of firearms, wherefore additional filings include a Defendant John Adams, John Porter, Terry Darr, Greg Deihl, Paul Green, Maswadeh Arafat and associates, Frank Teaney, and a Detective Franks of the Cumberland County. I, Cory A. Cormany, do hereby verify that the facts set forth in the above are true and correct to the best of my knowledge or information and belief, and that any false statements herein are made subject to the penalties of Section 4904 of the Crimes Code (18 Pa. C.S. 4904), relating to unsworn falsification to authorities. Witness Cory A. Cory Dated la21?c%/ J 1?7? J J?Lw haenat seat MWtllaeee? ?? ?PUEUC^ 1 ?' COmmbsion Exgrea Jurre 20, 240.2 Member, ?enrisyivania AseOCtabOn 01 Notaries EXHIBIT 3 (6) SNELBAKER 8 FLICKER A MOFESSIO CORF nON ATTORNEYS AT LAW as WSSr MAIN STREET RICHARD C. SNELBAKER E. ROBERT EUCKEK,e CHARLES O. VANCE. IR KE=H O. SRENNEMAN MECHANICSBURG, PENNSYLVAMf+ 17055 717-697-8528 January 9, 1990 P. O. BOX 318 FACSIMILE VIA 897-7581 Mr, Cory A. Cormany Cumberland County Prison 1101 Claremont Road Carlisle, PA 17013 Dear Cory: This will bring you up to date with the scheduling of your case. As you know, a plea of "not guilty" was entered in the formal arraignment on January 2, 1990. We did this in order to obtain some negotiating room with the District Attorney in anticipation of some type of plea bargained disposition. In the meantime, I have received a telephone call from the District Attorney indicating that his office would be willing to accept a plea to the burglary charge in satisfaction of all charges. This is merely an offer and will be the subject of discussion at the pretrial conference mentioned below. It is the District Attorney's practice under these circumstances to make a proposal for a plea bargained disposition in the hope that the case can be resolved short of a trial. He has "opened the door" to further discussion and negotiation. We have also been advised that a pretrial conference will be held with a Judge on Tuesday, January 16, 1990 at 11:00 A.M. At that time, discussions will be held as to matters which would be normally encountered at a formal trial, together with an opportunity to further bargain for a disposition of the case. Prior to that conference, I intend to meet with you at the Prison in order to discuss various options. As we discussed at the time of the preliminary hearing in the District Justice's office, there is very little point in planning for a formal trial. In a trial, the defendant takes a position that he is not guilty of the offenses charged and is required to force the prosecution to prove a case against him with an opportunity to defend. There would seem to be little purpose in going through such a procedure in this matter. CUMBERLAND COUNTY PUBLIC DEFENDER I Courthouse Square a Carlisle, Pennsylvania 17013-3387 Defenders: TAYLOR P. ANDREWS, Esq., Chief ELLEN K. BARRY, Esq. SCOTT D. MOORE, Esq. ARLA M. WALLER, Esq. TIMOTHY L. CLAWOES, Esq. H. ANTHONY ADAMS, Esq. RON TURO, Esq. November 26, 1991 Cory Cormany Cumberland County Prison Dear Cory: (717) 240.6285 from Harrisburg, 697-0371 from Shippensburg, 532-7286 I recently received a copy (or original?) of your Motion for Post Conviction Collateral Relief involving the case for which you were sentenced in February 1990. We do not represent prisoners in PCRA Petitions until we are appointed to do so by the Court. I cannot determine from the paperwork which you sent to me if this matter has yet been docketed or if the Court has yet appointed you an attorney. I question whether the petition which you have fashioned will obtain any relief for you. However, once it is docketed, you should have an opportunity to confer with appointed counsel. TPA/r Encl. BROUIOS, GILROY 6 HOUSTON, P. c. ATTORNEYS AT LAW JOHN H. BROUJOS 4 NORTH HANOVER STREET HUBERT X. GILROY CARLISLE, PENNSYLVANIA 17013 CHRISTOPHER C. HOUSTON November 18, 1991 Mr. Cory A. Cormany Cumberland County Prison 1101 Claremont Road P. O. Box 820 Carlisle, PA 17013 Dear Mr. Cormany: 717-243-4574 NON-TOLL FOR HARRISBURG AREA: 717-766-1800 FAX: 243-8227 Please be advised that I have been Court appointed to represent you on a PCRA Petition which you have filed. I will, hopefully, be out to see you in the very near future to discuss the specifics of your Petition. It is my understanding that a hearing has been scheduled for January 13, 1992, at 10:00 A.M., at which time testimony can be presented to substantiate your allegations. In the meantime, if you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact me. ve rul u hristopher ston kb BROUJOS, GILROY 8 HOUSTON, P. c. ATTORNEYS AT LAW JOHN H. BROUJOS HUBERT X. GILROY CHRISTOPHER C. HOUSTON 4 NORTH HANOVER STREET CARLISLE, PENNSYLVANIA 17013 717.243-4574 NON-TOLL FOR HAILMSBURO AREA: 717-7661690 FAX: 243.8227 November 26, 1991 Mr. Cory A. Cormany 1887 Douglas Drive Carlisle, PA 17013 Dear Mr. Cormany: I understand that you have been released from prison. Would you please contact my office for purposes of scheduling an appointment to review the Petition that you have filed. I have received a copy of it. kb Very trwlf'ourp, Christopher C. Houston BROUJOS, GILROY 8 HOUSTON, P. c. ATTORNEYS AT LAW JOHN H. BROUJO$ 4 NORTH HANOVER STREET HUBERT X. GILROY CARLISLE, PENNSYLVANIA 17013 CHRISTOPHER C. HOUSTON Mr. Cory A. Cormany 1887 Douglas Drive Carlisle, PA 17013 Dear Mr. Cormany: December 4, 1991 717-243.4574 NON-TOLL FOR HARRISBURG AREA: 717-766-1690 FAX: 243-6227 This is to confirm that I will be requesting the transcription of the guilty plea colloquy. From this we should be able to ascertain whether you had been advised that you were entering a guilty plea to a felony. I will advise upon receipt of the transcription. kb Very t yo rs, /i Christopher C. Houston JOHN H. BROUJOS HUBERT X, GILROY CHRISTOPHER C. HOUSTON BROUJOS, GILROY 8 HOUSTON, P. c, ATTORNEYS AT LAW 4 NORTH HANOVER STREET CARLISLE, PENNSYLVANIA 17013 717.243-4574 NON-TOLL FOR HARRLSBURG AREA: 717.766-1690 FAX: 243"8227 January 20, 1992 Mr. Cory A. Cormany 1883 Douglas Drive Carlisle, PA 17013 Dear Mr. Cormany: Enclosed please find a document to be filed with the Court withdrawing the Motion for Post-Conviction Collateral Relief. Please return this to me in the enclosed self-addressed stamped envelope and I will file it with the Court. Very ours, hristopher C. Houston sla Enclosure EXHIBIT cgs COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF CUMBERLAND COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA V. CORY A. CORMANY 95-0310 MISCELLANEOUS TERM IN RE: PETITIONER'S REOUEST FOR EXPUNGEMENT ANSWER OF THE COMMONWEALTH AND NOW, comes Alison Taylor, Senior Assistant District Attorney of Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, who answers the rule to show cause why petitioner's request for expungement should not be granted, as follows: 1. On October 29, 1995, petitioner filed a motion to . expunge his conviction of criminal trespass, a felony of the second degree, docketed at 2068 Criminal 1989. The offense occurred on October 1, 1989, in North Middleton Township, Cumberland County. 2. At 2068 Criminal 1989, petitioner pleaded guilty to Count C, crimipaal?tnewass, on January 16, 1990 before the Honorable Kevin A. Hess.- The plea was taken in full satisfaction of other charg?q -, ert term and number. On February 13, 1990, the court sentenced petitioner to undergo imprisonment in the Cumberland County Prison for a period of not less than two nor more than twenty months, to run consecutive to any sentence petitioner was currently serving. 3. Petitioner requests expungement for his conviction of criminal trespass because he "has completed the required probation for said allegation and has been free of incident for a period of 18 months since the allegation was instated [sic]." (Paragraph 9 of Petitioner's Motion). 4. However, on May 2, 1995, petitioner pleaded guilty to simple assault on Carlisle Police officer Larry Kell, docketed at 95-0376 Criminal Term. On May 2, 1995, petitioner pleaded nolo contendere to false swearing, docketed at 95-0375 Criminal Term. On May 2, 1995, petitioner pleaded nolo contendere to the unauthorized use of automobile. All pleas were taken in full satisfaction of other charges at those terms and numbers. The defendant was sentenced on all charges on June 6, 1995. 5. Section 9122(a) of the expungement statute applies to the expungement of non-conviction data contained in the criminal history record. Section 9122(b) applies to the expungement of the entire criminal history record, despite the disposition of the case. 18 Pa.C.S.A. S 9122(a) and (b); Commonwealth V. Cook, 359 Pa. Super. 216, 518 A.2d 858 (1986). 6. The purpose of the expungement process is to "exculpate an innocent individual from the jaws of unwarranted punishment which manifests itself and flows from the retention of one's arrest record following, e.g., a dismissal of charges at the district justice level, a finding of not guilty, acquittal on appeal or completion of an accelerated rehabilitative disposition program." Commonwealth v. W.P., 417 Pa. Super. 192, 198, 612 A.2d 438, 441 (1992) (citations omitted). "Expunction is proper only in cases [where an3 acquittal is consistent with a finding 2 (of] innocence and is not a result of legal technicalities unrelated to questions of guilt.or innocence." Id. 7. The Commonwealth bears the burden to present compelling evidence against expungement only in two instances, when (1) the Commonwealth has failed to establish the accused's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt (e.g., before the court of common pleas), or (2) the Commonwealth admits that it is unable to bear its burden of proof. Commonwealth v. Wexler, 494 Pa. 325, 331, 431 A.2d 877, 880 (1981); Commonwealth v. Checker, 320 Pa. Super. 402, 467 A.2d 386 (1983). Neither instance is present in petitioner's case, since he pleaded guilty to the offense that he now seeks to have expunged. 8. Since petitioner pleaded guilty to the charge he seeks expunged, any right to expungement must be found in 18 Pa.C.S.A. S 9122 (b)(1) or (b)(2). Petitioner does not fall within either enumerated section as he is not seventy years of age and he has not been free of arrest or prosecution (or conviction) for ten years following final release from confinement or supervision, nor has he been dead for three years. Cook, 359 Pa. Super. at 220, 518 A.2d at 860. 9. Petitioner is not entitled to expungement of his 3 conviction for criminal trespass.' See Id. (no authority for granting expungement of criminal records for an individual who has been arrested and convicted of a crime, regardless of his subsequent progress and rehabilitation). , the Commonwealth respectfully requests that this Honorable Court deny petitioner's motion to expunge his conviction of criminal trespass, docketed at 2068 Criminal 1989. Respectfully submitted, IJ, Alison Taylor ? Senior Assistant D' istrict Attorney I To paraphrase the w-P. court, petitioner is not oneo comes before us cloaked in the mantel of innocence seeking to who eradicate a blemish on his good name and character." W.P., 417 Pa. Super. at 202, 612 A.2d at 443. See also Petitioner's June 2, 1995 presentence report for his convictions at criminal terms 94-1222 (B), 95-0027 (A), 95-0375 (F) and 95-0376 (A) (Exhibit A attached).. 4 EXHIBIT (9) - -..,,w r. 09WjUSTIC£ MAGISTERAL DISTRICT No '49-2-01 111 E.LODTMR ST. sUM823 f A 01900 CARLISLE,PA. 17013 1, CBFT. T.W.RIIM7 f. auar10-1) of *01M1 ItIDDLMN TOWXS=P POLICE DEPT. COMMONWEALTH of PENNSYLVANIA DEFSKANT, vs. 0 1Mr, if?li 4 do hereby state: (1) Q, 1 accuse the above named defendant, who lives at the address set forth above or, R" I accuse an individual whose name is unknown to me but who is described as F a ? his nickname or popular designation is unknown to me and, therefore, 1 have designated him herein as John Doe: with violating the penal laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania at 19R,VXW1e116yz> CARLISLB,PA. 17013 in NORTH MIDDUTOII ar unty on or about OCT 1, 1989 Participants were !lfthmre PvvcjPanu. ptae rher naves ?rcpraLnB rice name!jubvce defenduni ): (2) The acts committed by the accused were: Q BMLARls Did 1Atent10isally Or ktaouinfly enter uoeor wocc ith tied he iatentAto a building, oeeupied etruetnre or separate 21secured thereof, at 1950$ Fryloop Are, property enter commit the crime of Criminal Miacbief tberein, in that he did forcibly the the apartseS and ddiddint#0t10aa11y,$knOvngly, r"kleeSIp orine8 igantlYtmenti damageAo tompe _ ottnt damage or stapartment andebrokeeorydamagedalurnishings inatheeaetdid enter Tina. Cor Corma lmurv7 less. of $500.00 more CRIMINAL TRESSPASS: Did intentionally or knowingly enter a building or£ paratC ymsecure or occupied XWOMIX portion thereof, at 1950 B. Fryloop Ave. property o or. dignity of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and contrary to the Act of Assseemblyj Ii of which were against the peace and _ and of the Act of 2 in violation of vxgpw? M, nc, •, r MOMMUM-OW Ordinaticc of (Niltrearsvb-dhi,inn) 3) 1 ask that a warrant of arrest of a summons be issued and that the accused be required to answer the cLeraes I have made kuow'z atl err information Code (18 Pa G S. 4) 1 verify that the facts set forth it, this complaint are true and c Section orrect to the 4904 best of o the my and belief. This verification is made sublect to the Pe Y patties of § 4904) relating to unsworn falsification to authorities. ( tuna/C,vnP+atnonJ 19 as ociober comple aeld 19 l certify the complain as been P De : , $ ? tND NOW, on this date ; e a v 2 for issuance o?process ! (SEAT-) cause 'erfied, and that there is pro ' ,?ye?;`;- •:.?: /issuing AUtA /?Y gt:`V m kt i:xr YaM "-"`" TQ-any authorind Person: Pursuant to this warrant. you areb7tvnagded t rrtst defendant, !4 Jt" -L;n unbersigned fat the foregoing Cofnplain? I? ?tG (SEALII n6t;;- -a+1 (DAVIT RIDER CONTAINING PROBABLE CAUSE FOR THE ISSUANCE OF A WARRANT OF ARREST FOR nCWN' C. cnwr.'Ally I b02 W. PE.4NA. AVL, DOWININ'MOW?d. PA. 1,)-2235 1. The affiant is Capt.J.W.Rudolph, North I'liddleton '1'wp Police Den'-t . 2. On t,unday, October 1, 19b3, at 6.36 AM, '.Gina Cormany notifie dorta i1iddleton Town.1thip Police Department that her apartr.ent was forciiy_y entered by her husband, Cory C. Corirany. rs. Cornanr resider at 1950L Fryloop Avenue, Carlisle ja . She hae spent tnt: ni,-,ht at her mothers residence in Carllsle,Pa. Prior to her otifrir,,: police of the above incident, airs. Cormany received e, pi;ore call tro-. Tier ouaoand tnat he ,ras in her apartment, and that he war c-ally:,, zroo :,-r alnartment. ifrs. Cormany stated that the apartment wa:3 < Pry. loaked r.nea thet nhe is living e.t thst vidreys wlti, ?!-r !rp. - crild and that har husband does not reside at 1 < i1 r;, loop Ave, nor does he have a k.ey for the residence. 3. After notifying pollee, Frs. Cormany proceeded to her resi ence by trotor venicle and parked a distance away from her apartment. _;•z observed her husband, Cory C. Corunany, leave the residence. 'W!'en t. police arrived, police and Firs. Cormany entered the apzrtr.,ent an. discovered that forcible entry was made into the apartment b_r a storr• window and screen;, enabling Cory Cormany tc enterethe a;prart::.--, t Once in,ide, ::ory Corr.Itu'Iy -did do damage tc furniturF, anu other hvu.'annca ,ocee i?laide the apartzlent. iatirsata3 value of 3ar:na?;e is 651^.`:F.I mort or less. 4. '.ory C. Lorrany was ricked up by police a short lista.ncc uwa;i fror; the ticer;e of the crime. It was ;kiscovered tY.rit Cory i- ?Cor:nun- m:as on Parole from Cur:berlana County At the time of the acprihen;s .or; and tae it,l.eareL to be under the influanee of alcbi:ol. Cory C. Cortnan:is probation offi:;er was notified and Cormany waa auraee:y,.a:n:tl;r :;1«cc;, 1v the Cur t;erlanti Counts Prison for nabvile violation. on tl-,<; atove infornra.tion. In aduliticn to traces of bLoo foWlu r;n tllt;. 8'vOr['.: Window a n'd 'a. Ci.1t on Cor ani,s .. r6-ji? it h elr.'::il.t, or irrest f.H SuFiit ffir ;-ry +. ?C'r:a:°', r•. Executed this ................ day of ....:.......i.............. 19.....; (?g'nature•o(?i4}tiant) Personally alpffered befor4 me ......... ?• •••• •........., 19..... the Aftlant above named, who, being duly sworn (affirmed according to layk signed this Affidavit Rider In my presence and deposed and said that the facts set forth therein are true and correct-to he. best9f All lants knowledge. Information and belief. i 0 t ISEALI fibv CERTIFICATION OF SERVICE AND NOW, this 9,n(_ day of 2004, I, Cory A. Cormany, foregoing the aforesaid matter knowledgeable a legal pretext and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, hereby certify that I have served a copy of same in person and by the United States Mail at Carlisle Pennsylvania, addressed as follows: Mr. Jeff -rey Rudolf Rt34 Spring Road Carlisle, PA 17013 n?0. Cory A. Cormany 1883 Douglas Dr. Carlisle, PA 17013 CERTIFICATION OF SERVICE AND NOW, this tq.?t,_ day of _ M? tip. 2004, I, Cory A. Cormany, foregoing the aforesaid matter knowledgeable a legal pretext and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, hereby certify that I have served a copy of same in person and by the United States Mail at Carlisle Pennsylvania, addressed as follows: Mr. Lyle Herr 1 South Hanover St. Carlisle, PA 17013 S Cory A. Cormany 1883 Douglas Dr. Carlisle, PA 17013 CERI-Y' TYCATV7OW1 O!7• SERVYCE AWD WOW, this Twelth da of J March, in the year of the Lord" Two Thousand and Four; 7, Cory A. Cormanif foregoing the aforesaid" matter 6nowld ea6l a legal _pretext, and the Commonweal h of Pennsylvania, 6iere6Y certi that 7 have serviced a c Ty of same 6y the united states Mad, and the Cumberland County Sheri 's DTartment at and there to Carlsl Pennsylvania, addressed as the following: Ms. Alexandria C. Corman. y 145 Werrs Road Is?ill, PA 17241 Mr. 9lu6ert Cilrou, y 4 Wo'rtli 9-fanover St. Carlisle, PSI 17o13 Esquire Wotwd'j Cory A. Corman. y 1883 Douglas Dr. Carlisl, Pit 17o13 U ?? _, r? rJ \ ? .? ?? ? J Li ? ? . ?3- L? `rl ? ? k ? ?? ?, _ ', ?.? - :?; ? ? ;? ?? SHERIFF'S RETURN - NOT FOUND CASE NO: 2004-01077 P COMMONTWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA COUNTY OF CUMBERLAND CORMANY CORY A VS CORMANY ALEXANDRIA R. Thomas Kline ,Sheriff or Deputy Sheriff, who being duly sworn according to law, says, that he made a diligent search and inquiry for the within named DEFENDANT CORMANY ALEXANDRIA C but was unable to locate Her in his bailiwick. He therefore returns the COMPLAINT & NOTICE , NOT FOUND , as to the within named DEFENDANT , CORMANY ALEXANDRIA C 145 KERRS ROAD NEWVILLE, PA 17241 CURRENT RESIDENTS SAY THAT THEY NEVER HEARD OF DEFENDANT. PER POST OFFICE, NO ONE BY THAT NAME KNOWN AT GIVEN ADDRESS. Sheriff's Costs: So answers; Docketing 18.00 _ Service 8.28 Not Found 5.00 R. Thomas Kline Surcharge 10.00 Sheriff of Cumberland County .00 41.28 CORY CORMANY 03/22/2004 Sworn and subscribed to before me this .2 y f- day of J_WY A. D. Prot clnotary Curtis R. Long Prothonotary Offire of the Protbonotarp Cutnberlanb Countp Renee K. Simpson Deputy Prothonotary John E. Slike Solicitor nL4 J?'yT CIVIL TERM ORDER OF TERMINATION OF COURT CASES AND NOW THIS 5TH DAY OF NOVEMBER 2007 AFTER MAILING NOTICE OF INTENTION TO PROCEED AND RECEIVING NO RESPONSE - THE ABOVE CASE IS HEREBY TERMINATED WITH PREJUDICE IN ACCORDANCE WITH PA R C P 230.2. BY THE COURT, CURTIS R. LONG PROTHONOTARY One Courthouse Square • Carlisle, Pennsylvania 17013 • (717) 240-6195 • Fax (717) 240-6573