Monday, July 30, 2012

KINGPIN ON THE PROWL: CONTEMPT FOR US

The massive Gulf of Mexico discovery contains an estimated one billion barrels of recoverable oil, the company says. The Interior Department, which regulates offshore drilling, says Exxon's leases have expired and the company hasn't met the requirements for an extension. Exxon has sued to retain the leases.
The court battle is playing out at a time in which the Obama administration has made an issue of unused leases, which deprive the Treasury of valuable taxes. It also comes as regulators are being careful not to be seen as lax in their dealings with large energy companies in the wake of last year's BP PLC spill.
The stakes are high: Under federal law, the leases—and all the oil underneath—could revert to the government if Exxon doesn't win in court.

Rex trying a hex, the henchmen in congress lost money on this one, he still got them in his pocket.  The Wichita Falls Klan goes back to the Holt Hotel days when they were the high dollar tricks.  They playing with the world with a trick's mentality while living in billionaires heaven at our, the Americans expense, no taxes, helping the Reds get back on their feet, sending the Russian Mafia's Putin checks on oil/gas produced on our homeland.  




  






EXXONMOBIL: KLU KLUX KLAN CLICK

We think the war is over; the Civil War. It is not. It has taken on a new and vicious form, in my opinion; Exxon-Mobil. It was years after gas and oil was found on Grandma Becky's land in Upshur County, Gladewater, Texas that I realized what is really happening. When the East Texas Oil Field was discovered in 1931, the Klu Klux Klan routed all the blacks from their land by buying their titles or killing them. That's right, the people in Gladewater made all the uniforms for the Confederate Army during the Civil War. They were the straight good ole boys; licking their wounds. The 700 acres Grandma Becky owned title, lock, stock and barrel is in the center of the East Texas Oil Field geographically, the black sharecroppers and her family met the wrath of the crooked lawyers and the Klu Klux Klan. By the time oil and gas was discovered by Exxon-Mobil in 1980 on what is now Gladewater Gas Unit #5, Wells 1 & 2, which has subsequently produced billions of cubic feet of gas and millions of barrels of oil in the last thirty years, the tilde opinion had to be cured. The claimants came out of the wood-works, my grandmother is a true heir to the oil and gas, may she rest in peace. They had warranty deeds, titles, wills, adverse possessions, probated wills, and they didn't get the oil and gas lease. This is how the game works; Ex on-Mobil tells us that the well want pay off for a number of years, it costs millions to create, most wells dry up in five to eight years, this is producing thirty years later, they unitize the whole city of Gladewater, Texas, cut our production, shut-in our wells, and act like they don't know that the high cost gas coming from the wells was not selling for $20.00 a thousand cubic fee in 1981. They tell me it was $2.00 a thousand cubic feet and we will profit after the well is paid off; based on the five to eight year life expectancy scenario, we get nothing. They didn't know this well perforated the mother-lode of oil and gas in the East Texas Oil Field; it want go away. The Haynesville Field structure in the Cotton Valley Lime is causing excitement in the East Texas Oil Field right now as I write. The wells were producing until recently but their is no production data going to the Texas Railroad Commission; why would the wells be shut-in now? The fact is that after gas comes oil, Exxon-Mobil is making us an example; the new Klu Klux Klan in business suits and skyscrapers. They can't threaten us, with the whip and guns; they just breach the contract and dare anyone to protect our rights as royalty owners. There influence goes all the way to Washington, D.C. because my Texas Congressman want address the issue, the Department of Energy want address the issue, the Treasury Department want address the issue, the Department of Interior want address the issue, the IRS want address the issue; it would stir up a massive fraud investigation against the good ole boys in Upshur County, Texas and the East Texas Oil Field.. It is a throw back to the Jim-Crow days when the Klu Klux Klan killed so many of us black people, FREE Americans, but now they are killing my destiny. The City of Gladewater built a lake over much of our land, left my Granny the escrow; there will be no wells on this land; their sick logic. There is a grave in a cemetery in Upshur, County, Gladewater, Texas with a headstone of my Grandma Becky, it has been defaced; ' A WHITE WOMAN WHO LOVED NIGGERS'. If I was of European descent this would not be happening, my family would be wealthy; the Exxon-Mobil aka Klu Klux Klan is STILL IN EFFECT. I bet President Obama will do something; anybody have his cell numb






EAST TEXAS GIVE AWAY

  • The headlines read, ExxonMobil, Rosneft sign Arctic, Black Sea Deal to make money off hydrocarbons in Russia and the US. What hydrocarbons in the US? ExxonMobil has been denying my opportunity to make money from hydrocarbons on my lease in East Texas but it can deal with the Russians like it ain't nothing. The lease has produced over four billion cubic feet of gas and is with oil but the lease is worthless without the operator developing the production as specified by oil and gas law. I have filed a Notification of Breach of contract to no avail, ExxonMobil just started sending worthless checks and kept in suspence the reclassified gas to oil well even though oil is over eighty dollars a barrel. The Russians have gained their trust and Rex is eating it up. He will do every thing he can to ensure that this deal will uphold their 33.3% stake meanwhile make sure Russsia will gain equity in exploration opportunites in tight oil fileds in Texas. That must be the wells shut-in since 2006 in my case at Gladewater Gas Unit #5, Wells 1 & 2, oil just been sitting there waiting for the Russians to get paid when I can't. Who side is ExxonMobil really on, citizens don't earn a dime off hydrocarbons but Russians do while they ignore my pleads for opportunity on my own land. The Kingpin is in bed with the Reds, it is sending me checks for nickles and dimes, coming with them to America to produce, sell our oil and split the profits with the Russians. New Slave Odyssey in motion is what I say, ExxonMobil sold us out and just keeps on getting richer, the feds don't even blink. 

Sunday, July 29, 2012

ABOVE THE LAW: EXXON-MOBIL KINGPIN


EXXON MOBIL FIGHTS BILLION-DOLLAR VERDICTS, STATES HAVE TO WAIT. 

Exxon Mobil Corp. was ordered by juries twice in the past seven years to pay Alabama almost $3.6 billion in drilling royalties.
The state is still waiting for the money. So are Alaska and Louisiana, which also won verdicts against the world's biggest publicly traded oil company years ago.
Exxon Mobil's appeals have reduced the judgments it faces by billions of dollars and put the Irving, Texas-based company in a position to argue for more favorable legal precedents, said University of Richmond law Professor Carl Tobias. The original $5.29 billion Alaska verdict has been cut twice.
``They got $2 billion shaved from that award,'' Tobias said, referring to litigation over the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill, which dumped 11 million gallons of crude into Alaska's Prince William Sound. ``That speaks volumes on why they may want to keep litigating.''
The appeals are a fight the company can afford, even if it eventually had to pay the Alabama and Alaska verdicts. Exxon Mobil's net income last quarter was $10.3 billion. It earned $39.5 billion in 2006, breaking the U.S. record of $36.1 billion it set a year earlier.
Mark Boudreaux, an Exxon Mobil spokesman, declined to comment on the company's litigation costs.
In 2000 and at a 2003 retrial, jurors found Exxon Mobil fraudulently underpaid Alabama for gas-drilling rights in Mobile Bay. Exxon Mobil asked the Alabama Supreme Court on Feb. 6 to reverse the verdict. The court is likely to decide this year.
$4.5 Billion Bond
To satisfy rules on appealing the Alabama verdict, the company was able to post a $4.5 billion bond. The likelihood of its paying the Alabama judgment is ``remote,'' the company said in a 2005 regulatory filing.
Exxon Mobil set aside $5.4 billion in a letter of credit in case of an eventual payment of the damages awarded by a federal jury in 1994 over the Exxon Valdez oil spill, according to the filing.
``Alabama has a long way to go,'' said Dave Oesting, one of the lead attorneys representing more than 30,000 Alaskans who sued Exxon Mobil.
Appealing a $112 million punitive award imposed six years ago in a Louisiana land-contamination case, put the company in a better position to challenge the entire verdict.
High Court Ruling
The U.S. Supreme Court on Feb. 26 ordered a lower court to reconsider the May 2001 verdict in light of a Feb. 20 high-court ruling that bans punishing companies for injuries suffered by parties who aren't part of the case. Previously, some juries punished companies for the total impact of their bad conduct, nationally or even globally.
In the Alabama case, Exxon Mobil also may be sending a message to other coastal states that might see the state's award and consider filing their own suits, said Jim Vroman, the environmental litigation practice co-chairman for Jenner & Block, a Chicago-based firm.
Exxon raised two challenges to the Alabama award, company lawyer Dave Boyd said.
For one, it argues the state high court should follow the logic it applied in 2004 in a case Alabama brought against Hunt Petroleum Corp., Boyd said. Hunt, based in Dallas, sent Alabama monthly royalty reports stating what it owed. The state didn't rely on those reports to determine what Hunt should pay, so Alabama wasn't misled, the court said.
Exxon Mobil used the same leasing contract with the state as Hunt, and the same facts apply, Boyd said. Exxon Mobil submitted its reports and the state rejected them, using its own calculations, he said.
Exxon also can invoke a 2003 U.S. Supreme Court decision that found that a 145-to-1 ratio of punitive to compensatory damages was unconstitutional because it was excessive.
A Second Jury
The second Alabama jury awarded $63 million in compensatory damages, almost $40 million in interest on the unpaid royalties and $11.8 billion in punitive damages, the third-biggest punitive award ever after two involving the tobacco industry. The trial judge reduced the punitive damages to $3.5 billion five months later.
The jury attributed $23 million of the compensatory award to fraud and the rest to breach of contract. All the punitive damages were levied to punish the fraud, creating a ratio of about 150-to-1.
Constitutionally Excessive
In the Exxon Valdez oil spill case, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco agreed that the jury's punitive damages were constitutionally excessive and ordered the award cut. Exxon appealed again, and in December, the appeals court cut it again, by $2.5 billion. Exxon is asking the court to hear the case yet again for more reductions.
Oesting's clients won $287 million in compensation for damage to their property from the Valdez spill, about one-eighth the current punitive award.
Exxon Mobil's Boudreaux said the company paid almost $300 million to 11,000 residents within a year of the spill, before the 1994 trial. Thus, he said, the company had to pay only a court-ordered $25 million more to satisfy the jury's compensatory award. Punitive damages aren't warranted, he said.
The case is: Exxon Corp. v. Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, No. 1031167, Alabama Supreme Court.
I have no fear, the Kingpin of the Oil/Gas Mafia holds courts, states, and the government in fear.....not me. I want what is mine!




Friday, July 27, 2012

New Slave Odyssey


The Massa's didn't make it back from the Civil War, either killed or broke was their plight. Their property in slaves once worth millions dropped to zero, the land could be purchased by anyone with money. I still wonder how she knew that the parcel of land she bought was in the middle of the East Texas Oil Field, never the less her legacy should have provided all her descendants a rich and full life. That's the American dream, hit it rich, life having the best of everything, black gold under her land. The field was used up in many parts before a well was drilled, it was deep but prolific, a major strike. The crooks put their papers in order to claim the Allen Estate, reap the hoped for bonanza in gas and oil. They couldn't do it! The company that went and drilled the well wanted it all for itself, that was 1980. Here it is 2011 and the company, Exxon-Mobil, has produced billions of cubic feet of gas from that land and has an oil well sitting idle just because it can in Texas. The slavers had my great-great -grandmother bare their children, we are mulatto, it was easy to buy that land back in the 1870s, land was going by the acre for change, fifty cents to a dollar per acre. Grandma Becky was free and land owning way back then, she helped her relatives and prospered. When the oil was discovered her land was off limits to the drillers, twenty years after the boom most of it was sunken under a lake but enough remained to pass on royalties to the survivor's. The power's that be had written us from the book of life, had no idea that we even existed until ExxonMobil cleared the title and destroyed the swindlers dreams to get rich.


The new slave odyssey began when the well came in producing gas and condensates at an extraordinary rate and we signed an oil/gas lease with ExxonMobil. They inferred from the beginning that, the @!$%#'s, us, would never be paid for the oil or gas from this lease. The Gladewater field was developed around our lease to drain it with slant drilling and choked production at its well head. The sand dome hasn't gone dry yet and the gas is turning into oil at my lease, this is where the slavery aspect unfolds. This land was slaver's paradise, black people would be worked from the cradle to the grave and broken every step of the way. At the end of their lives they would have nothing while the slavers would be rich. ExxonMobil never intended on ex slaves profiting from the discovery of oil and gas in the East Texas Oil field, the rulers of this company represent those slavers but they are wearing suits and living large now. How else would it be possible for thirty years not to pay or share equally the money made from those wells with us being royalty owners? I guess their way of breaking us is deny us our fair share of the money from the land, oil and gas. Back in the days the uppity slaves were butchered savagely to keep fear in the remaining slaves, the Bible was used to justify their dehumanizing treatment, this is 2011. Its a new day. ExxonMobil needs to take these chains off me and sit down to discuss facts of oil, facts of gas and paying for what is coming out of the ground. I resent being treated like a slave by a company that has made so much money from the land of America, it is still time left for it to change its evil ways. I want whats mine, bottom line, they have stolen so much over the pass thirty years which can never be settled but the oil and gas are still pumping, do the right thing; now.


Slavery is illegal in America. Fraud is illegal in America. What can ExxonMobil do except the right thing? Its a heartless predator that has no regard for nation or law, it will not relent its position because I have to be the example. They working this new slave game while filling their vaults with out giving me my fair share, why should they? The big courts kiss its ass, the lawyers kiss its ass, and a exslave doesn't have a chance in America to fight the Kingpin of the Oil/Gas Mafia!







Thursday, July 26, 2012

CIVIL ACTION: US ATTORNEY JIM MIDDLETON

7/26/2012
Charles L. Evans
716 Azalea
DeSoto, Texas 75115
Attention:
Tyler Office
110 North College, Suite 700
Tyler, Texas 75702
 U.S. Attorney:  Jim Middleton
I want to explore my legal rights for my oil and gas lease with Exxon-Mobil.  The following brief is reflective of what I have endured the last thirty years of Exxon-Mobil producing for my lease.
I'll never forget what the Sheriff of Gilmer, in Upshur County, Texas, said to me, “I ain't never seen no dead folks before." I was at the Upshur County court house looking through the deed and title library; copying everything I could about Grandma Becky's land. The land men were Lee Raymond and Matthew Clark from Exxon-Mobil, the well was Gladewater Gas Unit #5, Well 1; the well was producing millions of cubic feet of high-cost natural gas per day along with condensates. The remark from the sheriff, there is still a Sherriff’s deed in effect in Upshur County on my land now, was in reference to who owned the land the well was on. The hundred or more claimants all had deeds and titles; by law Exxon-Mobil had to cure the title opinion. I realize today, thirty years later, that it wasn't going to make any difference for our family. My great-great grandmother bought five hundred acres or more in Upshur County in the 1870's, lock, stock and barrel. Grandma Becky had brought land, in 1870, that is geographically in the center of what was five hundred billion barrel's or more of oil and quadrillions of cubic feet of high cost natural gas in 1930, the East Texas Oil Field.  This land was a dangerous place for many reasons to her and her family; we are black. She provided work and refuge for her family, the ex-slaves wanting work and freedom to begin a new life. The wrath of the Klu Klux Klan came down on her and the people living on her land; men, women and children were tortured, and killed. The torrent of oppression and hate for her is still evident today at the cemetery she rests in; her tomb stone bears this epitaph, “The white woman who loved niggers!”, the hate is still there in Upshur County.
I want to file civil charges against Exon-Mobil with your office on the Breach of Contract and defrauding of the oil and gas at the lease, with the gas production being in the billions of cubic feet since 1980. Well #2 was reclassified as an oil well in 2005 but has been shut-in since 2006; the parity is not there in the field as interest on the opposite side of Lake Gladewater show optimal gas and oil production. My family has gone through a disenrichment since this lease was completed in a systematic way to defeat our share of the oil and gas in this shale field.  This is not Russia, Saudi Arabia, or Nigeria where the government owns all the oil and gas, Exxon-Mobil is not the government although it has paid my family nothing of the fair market value of the oil and gas produced from this lease since 1981.  I received a royalty check for ten cents from the company the other day and realized that the long term aspects of this fraud must be evaluated on a criminal level at your office.    

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Grandma Becky


I'll never forget what the Sheriff of Gilmer, in Upshur County, Texas, said to me, " I ain't never seen no dead folks before." I was at the Upshur County court house looking through the deed and title library; copying everything I could about Grandma Becky's land. The land men were Lee Raymod and Matthew Clark from Exxon-Mobil, the well was Gladewater Gas Unit #5, Well 1; the well was producing millions of cubic feet of high-cost natural gas per day along with condensates. The remark from the sheriff, there is still a sherriff's deed in effect in Upshur County on my land now, was in reference to who owned the land the well was on. The hundred or more claimants all had deeds and titles; by law Exxon-Mobil had to cure the title opinion. I realize today, thirty years later, that it wasn't going to make any difference for our family. My great-great grandmother bought five hundred acres or more in Upshur County in the 1870's, lock, stock and barrel. The fact that millions of years ago this land was called Pine Island is reflective to the pine trees all throughout East Texas. The heat ,pressure and lime stone over time created one of the juggernauts in oil; the East Texas Oil Field. 
Grandma Becky had brought land, in 1870, that is geographically in the center of what was five hundred billion barrel's or more of oil and quadrillions of cubic feet of high cost natural gas in 1930.. This land had been a dangerous place for many reasons to her and her family; we are black. She provided work and refuge for her family, the ex-slaves wanting work and freedom to begin a new life. The wrath of the Klu Klux Klan came down on her and the people living on her land; men,women and children were tortured, and killed. The torrent of oppression and hate for her is still evident today at the cemetery she rests in, her tomb stone bears this epitaph, “The white woman who loved niggers!." I wouldn't be surprised, after all, the city of Gladewater made the uniforms for the Confederate Army during the Civil War, the Klu Klux Klan was supreme fear for the black people living in Upshur County. They could do whatever they wanted no matter who, when,what or where. The East Texas Oil Field was discovered in 1930. The price for a barrel of oil was fifty cents and the gas was burned off by the trillions of cubic feet every moment; terrible waste.. There was so much oil that a man could still get rich back in those days. It was a terrible thing to be black in Texas during those times; the farmers were forced off the land, the titled land owners had to sale or die. There were blacks who outright owned land in East Texas, the laws were different so it made it possible for a black man or woman to own land. 
When the word got out that oil was on their land it was the Klu klux Klan,crooked laws and lawyers who forced them out with their main weapon; fear. All my relatives that were still alive in Upshur County got drove out by the Klan, the land men, and crooked lawyers. The oil rigs were everywhere, side to side, pumping oil all over east Texas, but it was odd that Gladewater had land that was never drilled on by any producers. So when Exxon-Mobil bought a well in the fireworks went off and the black gold rush came there again. Lee and Matthew went on to be big executives with the Company, we signed an Oil and gas lease contract with Exxon-Mobil. they said; " It will be years before you see any profit from the well; it has to pay off first." I knew they were putting the fraud in place from the get go; the well were pumping high cost gas from 12,500 feet in the Cotton Valley Lime, Bossier/Haynesville Shale, by the millions of cubic feet per daily, which is at this moment the center of a black oil rush in the East Texas Oil Field. but we had to wait for the well to pay off.  How long does it take a well to pay off?
 It is thirty years later and the well still hasn't paid off; we been robbed! This is where the story turns because it is two wells on Gladewater Gas Unit #5 now and we never did realize its full potential from the fair market value of the commodities; oil and gas. I have been offering lawyers this case since 1982, none will take on Exxon-Mobil, although I can prove the Breach of Contract. This predator, Exxon-Mobil, is the new Klu Klux Klan in Upshur County, waits and watches as my family dies while steadily stealing our money for the oil and gas from Gladewater Gas Unit #5, Wells 1&2. The legal system has only one recourse but to front Exxon-Mobil in Texas but they are not going to do it. The pay offs are so big as not to stir up anything that might bring a light on Gladewater Gas Unit #5, my Angel, Grandma Becky will get redemption. I will take this to the Supreme Court if necessary, the destiny killers will not prevail. I know about the hate being sustained by Exxon-Mobil and their boy from Wichita Falls; Texas, he want respond to my communications. They making all those billions, beating us at the pump, and they don't know; I am not going away

The notorious aka.$.$......FAT BASTARD,
LEE RAYMOND, the architect of the Gladewater Gas Unit #5, Wells 1 & 2 new slavery swindle.



Oil/Gas Slaves

Is Exxon-Mobil guilty of new slavery at Gladewater Gas Unit #5, Wells 1 & 2, in Upshur County, Texas?



The lease is paying, but we are getting dimes for royalty!

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

THIRTY YEAR BREACH OF CONTRACT: 1981-2012

Date: 6/26/2011 

To: 
Exxon-Mobil
5959 Las Colinas Bld.
Irving, Texas 75039-2298






RE: Breach of Contract

Dear Sir:

This notice is in reference to the following described contract: 

Oil and Gas Lease
Gladewater Gas Unit #5, Wells 1 & 2
Upshur County, Texas

Well #1 Texas ID: 091522
Well #2 Texas ID: 144364


Please be advised that as of June 27, 2011, we are holding you in BREACH OF CONTRACT for the following reasons:

The failure to pay fair market value of the commodities; oil, condensates, and gas since from 1980 to 2011. The failure to pay; delay rental. The failure to develop the oil on the lease, well #2 has been reclassified to oil. The failure to follow rules and regulations pertinent to oil and gas laws in these here United States of America, your total disregard for the leasee. 




If this breach of contract is not corrected within 30 days of this notice, we will take further action to protect our rights, which may include the right to obtain a substitute service and charge you for any additional costs. This notice is made under the Uniform Commercial Code and any other applicable laws. All of our rights are reserved under this notice.



Charles L. Evans