Embassy of Heaven

John Joe Gray

 

John Joe Gray

The following article by Scott Parks continues the tradition of using words to make one side look good and the other side to look evil. About all we know, after reading this article, is that the John Joe Gray family is still alive at this time.

Please take the opportunity to step out from the secular newspapers agenda and observe the use of words, office titles, and name calling, to influence the reader.

I just love the first paragraph. The bad guy is "an anti-government fugitive" and he "assaulted" the good guy, "a Texas highway patrolman." We also learn that the bad guy is "holed up on his 'Henderson County' farm." From this information we know that "Henderson County" claims ownership to the land. The "Texas highway patrolman" thought he was "assaulted" by the "anti-government fugitive." A possible conclusion is that the "anti-government fugitive" resisted the "Texas highway patrolman" because he did not want to be compelled to perform.

The bottom line is that the secular forces want to rule over others. And they will use any method necessary to make it look like their ideas must be obeyed. At least, in this case, Miers does admit that the "anti-government fugitive" is not a threat to anyone. It is also very interesting that it costs 20 years in prison and $20,000 to be left alone.

A righteous man reguardeth the life of his beast: but the tender mercies of the wicked are cruel."

Proverbs 12:10


Texas farm standoff enters second year

03/23/2001

By Scott Parks / The Dallas Morning News

Map

An anti-government fugitive wanted in the assault of a Texas highway patrolman has rejected a plea bargain and remains holed up with relatives on his Henderson County farm.

The low-intensity standoff between law officers and John Joe Gray has entered its second year with no end in sight, according to those close to the negotiations.

Mr. Gray, 52, his family's patriarch, is wanted on two felony charges in which he is accused of biting a Texas Department of Public Safety trooper and attempting to disarm him during a traffic stop on Dec. 24, 1999. He faces two to 10 years in prison and a maximum $10,000 fine on each charge.

Mr. Gray retreated to his property near Cedar Creek Lake last spring and never showed up for hearings or to stand trial.

Warrants for his arrest were issued last May but were never served.

Eddie Miers, a former police officer and negotiator in the case, said Monday that Mr. Gray has emphatically rejected a plea deal that would require authorities to drop one felony charge and bring him to trial on the other.

"That's the best deal he's gonna get," said Mr. Miers, a Henderson County businessman who has known Mr. Gray for several years. "But he's made it clear that he doesn't intend to turn himself in at all."

In the mid-1990s, Mr. Gray was active in the Texas Militia, a militant anti-government group. Militia units sometimes trained on his property, according to police.

While Gray family members scoff at government authority, they also profess strict Christian beliefs based, they say, on the Bible.

Last October, television actor Chuck Norris heard about the standoff and visited Mr. Gray and his family for two or three hours. Afterward, Mr. Norris said he believed the family needed legal assistance and agreed to provide lawyers for free.

Mr. Norris' attempt to intervene didn't work, Mr. Miers said.

"The lawyers he got for them pretty well backed out when they saw that he didn't intend to go before the judicial system in any event," Mr. Miers said.

Police believe nine relatives are living with Mr. Gray on their 47-acre farm: his wife, two sons, two daughters, a son-in-law and three grandchildren.

Mr. Gray's wife, Alicia, and their sons regularly patrol their property with pistols and rifles. On occasion, police see them visiting with sympathizers across a fence that separates their farm and a county road.

Henderson County Sheriff Ronny Brownlow said the courts, district attorney and the Texas Department of Public Safety have left the case up to him, and that he has no intention of raiding Mr. Gray's property to arrest him.

"He's got no criminal history, no close neighbors in danger and he's hiding behind women and kids," Sheriff Brownlow said. "I think he'll wear out."

Last year, the electric company cut power to the Gray farm for nonpayment of bills. Mr. Miers said the family maintains a small generator to power a pump for their water well. They tend a vegetable garden and chop wood for heat and cooking, he said. They also spend time trying to keep an old Jeep and a tractor running.

"They just basically piddle," Mr. Miers said. "But they seem content with life out there."

At least one Gray family member regularly leaves the farm to get groceries and other supplies. None of the family members holds a job, Mr. Miers said.

"People give them things, but I don't know if they have a source of money for themselves or if people give them that, too," he said.

The Grays also don't believe in seeing doctors or dentists, Mr. Miers said. Already, they have endured an outbreak of the flu, he said.

"Hygiene is certainly an issue," Mr. Miers said.

He concluded, "They are not a threat to society. Eventually, everything will work out."