[Texas] Attorney general sues to stop business's land protection claim
 
 
 
 
(Note: Welcome to "property rights, Texas style." The rub regarding land taking for roads is the huge "buffer zone" -- or "corridor" -- upon which no roads will be built. This is where the legal use of eminent domain stops. Until the public stops paying others to "protect" and "represent" it -- and learns how to protect its own property rights using education and empowerment -- property rights still lie directly in harm's way.)
 
 
 
 
September 14, 2006
 
 
 
By Gordon Dickson [email protected] or 817-685-3816
 
Fort Worth Star-Telegram
 
400 West 7th
 
Fort Worth, Texas 76102-4793
 
817-390-7400
 
Fax: 817-390-7789
 
 
To submit a Letter to the Editor: [email protected] 
 
 
 

A lawsuit has been filed to stop three Central Texas residents from claiming that they can protect property owners from losing land to the Trans-Texas Corridor, Attorney General Greg Abbott announced Wednesday.

The business, You Can't Take It, offered to protect landowners from eminent domain proceedings for a $600 fee, which would increase to $1,000 by November, and a $100 annual maintenance fee, Abbott said in a news release.

Transportation officials say they still don't know the precise path of the toll road and rail lines that would connect the San Antonio area to North Texas, including an outer loop around Dallas-Fort Worth. But once a route is chosen, the state can legally take land for a public road and pay the owner an agreed-upon price or a sum set in eminent domain proceedings.

You Can't Take It says land can be protected by filing commercial lease agreements, when that could actually cause owners to lose their land, Abbott said in a statement.

Named in the lawsuit are Douglas Lee Thayer (aka Morgan) and Lou Ann Reed (aka Fuller) of Killeen, and Nykee Jolene Murray (aka Keen) of Austin.

The attorney general's office is seeking temporary and permanent injunctions halting deceptive claims or advertising, along with penalties of $20,000 per violation and $250,000 for consumers ages 65 or older.

 

 

Copyright 2006, Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

 

http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/news/15516434.htm

 
 
State sues Killeen firm offering protection from eminent domain
News 8 Austin, TX - September 14, 2006
The Texas Attorney General's Office is suing to stop a Killeen-based firm that claims to protect property owners from land seizures for the Trans-Texas Corridor ...
Texas AG lawsuit accuses firm of condemnation scam
Austin American-Statesman (subscription), TX - September 14, 2006
Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott has filed a lawsuit to stop three individuals and their organization from falsely claiming they can protect property owners ...
Attorney general sues to stop business's land protection claim
Fort Worth Star Telegram, TX - September 14, 2006
By Gordon Dickson. A lawsuit has been filed to stop three Central Texas residents from claiming that they can protect property owners ...
State sues Killeen firm offering protection from eminent domain
Fort Worth Star Telegram, TX - September 14, 2006
Austin, Texas - The Texas Attorney General's Office has filed a lawsuit seeking to stop a Killeen-based firm from claiming it can protect property owners from having ...
State sues firm touting eminent domain protection
Austin American-Statesman (subscription), TX - September 13, 2006
A Killeen business that advertised that for $600 it could save property owners from having their land seized for a highway project is being sued by the Texas ...
State Sues Over Web Site’s Promise To Protect Property From ...
KWTX, TX - September 13, 2006
(September 13, 2006)—Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott has filed a lawsuit aimed at stopping a Central Texas-based organization that claims it can protect ...