Alabama to murder innocent man


George Sibley

A call for activists everywhere to demand the governor stay the scheduled August 4, 2005 execution of George Everette; Sibley

Dear Everyone:

Over the years we at The Idaho Observer have several times experienced the elation that comes when one of "our" prisoners is released. We have also experienced the opposite emotion that comes when we find out one of "our" prisoners is going die-for crimes he did not commit.

First it was Steve Boggs who was sentenced last May to die even though the evidence shows he did not kill three Hispanic Jack In The Box employees in Phoenix on May 19, 2002. After corresponding with Steve for about a year, we found out he received the death penalty at sentencing after a travesty of a trial. Something has to be done for Steve Boggs. He is one of us, a good guy who understands the corrupt and treasonous innerworkings of government and he did not kill anyone.

Then we found out about George Everette; Sibley. We have been corresponding with George for over two years and just found out that he is scheduled to be executed by lethal injection August 4, 2005. George’s letters to us have always been insightful, spiritually-centered and extremely well-written. We didn’t know why he was imprisoned—we generally do not ask because we have learned that it’s best for prisoners to tell us when they feel motivated to so so. George never said too much about what landed him in prison and we did not go out and Google his name to find out. We just looked forward to his intelligent letters and the marvelous insight they provide.

Then we received an email from a woman promoting a petition drive to stay George’s execution which, to our shock, is scheduled for August 4, 2005. That prompted us to investigate George’s case. In doing so we have been able to discern the cause-and-effect of events that resulted in George’s death sentence.

Below is the recounting of events as told by Lynda Lyon—George’s wife who was executed in 2002. I’ll let Lynda’s words speak for themselves with the preface that there is no doubt in my mind that her recollection rings with truth.

Also keep in mind that George and Lynda began exposing the vile nature of government in the early 90s and the incident with officer Motley (described below) occurred in 1993—back in the days when patriots were only just beginning to realize how treasonously our people have been betrayed by generations of corporate fools masquerading as elected public officials.

Before reading the following, I would like to state that we should all be paying more attention to prisoners and what they are telling us about the land of the free’s growing penal colony. I would also be honored if you would take the time to read up on the case of George Sibley, write, call, FAX and/or email those indicated at the bottom of this post with your request that George’s life be spared.

For reasons beyond my comprehension, George has expressed his desire to live. I believe that he would not resist execution if he had nothing left to live for. But he apparently still has work to do and, even if it means spending the rest of his life behind the razorwire, George is willing to continue making the world a better place for those whose lives he can touch.

Also note that then Supreme Court Chief Justice Roy Moore, a hero to many Christian patriots for his much-ballyhooed stand on keeping the Ten Commandments in his courtroom, was in a position to prevent these patriots from being executed or even, possibly, order new trials for both George and Lynda—and did nothing.

Below find an AP story from 2003 (the last time George was scheduled to be executed) followed by a July, 2005 story on the pending execution. Then read the story "From Heaven to Hell" by Lynda which describes the events as they unfolded through to conviction and sentencing. The story is riveting and you can feel the truth pouring out from an eloquent woman condemned to die. Lynda’s story is followed by some letters that were exchanged between the two while in jail, a poem by Lynda and brief bios of George and Lynda. Finally, there is contact information for those who may have influence over a stay being imposed upon George’s execution scheduled for August 4 and a model letter that can be sent to the governor, attorney general and/or parole board for the state of Alabama. The very last comments at the end of this post are regarding The Idaho Observer and its (sadly) thriving prison "ministry."

This is a worthy cause and George is a worthy man. More information can be found on both George and Lynda at http://www.phadp.org

George also wrote a 148-page book on sovereignty issues and the history of the evolution of the federal government and can be downloaded free of charge (donations accepted) at http://prisonsfoundation.org/letters/GeorgeSibleybook1.pdf

There is also an online petition asking Alabama Governor Bob Riley to stay the execution pending the outcome of an appeals process. That petition can be found at http://www.petitiononline.com/051307GS/petition.html

To find a full spectrum of media reports and articles on George and Lynda and comments from supporters from all over the world, simply type "George Sibley" into the Google search engine and follow your instincts.

I can guarantee you will find that, while it is too late to save Lynda, we can and must do what we can to save George.

Bless you all and thank you for caring.

No matter what,

Don Harkins

The Idaho Observer

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George Sibley & Lynda Lyon

CONDEMNED TO DIE

Lynda Lyon Was Executed May 10, 2002

Visit Lynda Lyon's Official Homepage at:

http://www.angelfire.com/al4/alajustice/lynda.html

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Recent AP story on George’s pending execution:

Sibley files appeal seeking to stop execution

The Associated Press

[2003]Condemned murderer George Sibley, who once joined his common-law wife in claiming the courts had no legal jurisdiction in their death penalty case, has filed an appeal to stop his execution scheduled for Thursday.

Sibley, 60, is scheduled to become the 1st person in Alabama executed by lethal injection. His common-law wife, Lynda Lyon Block, 54, was executed on May 10, possibly the last person to die in Alabama's electric chair. Sibley and Block were sentenced to death for the 1993 killing of Opelika

police officer Roger Motley Jr. in a burst of gunfire in a shopping center parking lot. Block and Sibley, who decried government controls over individuals and renounced their U.S. citizenship, were on the run at the time to avoid being sentenced in the stabbing of Block's former husband in Orlando, Fla. Sibley and Block declined for years to file appeals in their case, claiming the courts were corrupt and illegal. But Sibley in recent days filed an appeal in federal court in Montgomery asking for a stay, his attorney said Monday. U.S. District Judge Harold Albritton has scheduled a hearing on the request for 10 a.m. Tuesday.

Montgomery attorney Bryan Stevenson said he filed the appeal at Sibley's request. Stevenson said the appeal "is based on issues relating to the fairness of his conviction and death sentence." Assistant Attorney General Beth Hughes said the state would fight the request for a stay, arguing that Sibley has missed the deadline for filing appeals. A Web site operated by supporters of Sibley and Block said Monday that a letter was being sent to Gov. Don Siegelman on Sibley's behalf asking the governor to stop the execution. The governor's office had not received the request Monday, press secretary Mike Kanarick said.

The Alabama legislature in April voted to change the state's primary means of execution to lethal injection, although death row inmates can still choose to die in the electric chair. Prison officials said Sibley declined to make a choice and therefore is scheduled to die by lethal injection. Prisons spokesman Brian Corbett said Monday that preparations are complete at Holman prison near Atmore to carry out the state's first execution by lethal injection.

"We are ready to go. The chamber has been ready for about a month now," Corbett said. Unless a stay is ordered, Sibley is expected to be moved into a holding cell near the execution chamber Tuesday, Corbett said.

Supreme Court sets execution date for Sibley

The Associated Press

[July, 2005] The Alabama Supreme Court has set an Aug. 4 execution date for George Sibley, a condemned murderer who came within two days of being executed in 2002 and who once joined his common-law wife in claiming the courts had no legal jurisdiction over them.

A court spokesman announced the date Thursday for the execution to be held at Holman Prison near Atmore.

Sibley, 62, was sentenced to death for the 1993 killing of Opelika police officer Roger Motley Jr. in a burst of gunfire in a shopping center parking lot.

His common-law wife, Lynda Lyon Block, was executed in May 2002 after she and Sibley had for years failed to file appeals. Sibley's scheduled execution in November of that year was stopped two days before he was to die of lethal injection, when he filed an appeal.

In that appeal, Sibley claimed that Alabama's death penalty law is unconstitutional because it allows the judge, not the jury, to make the final decision on a death sentence. A federal court dismissed the appeal, saying Sibley missed deadlines for filing such a motion. Sibley had argued that the courts should have considered a letter he wrote then-Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore in 2001 as a notice of appeal.

The head of the capital litigation division at the Alabama Attorney General's office, Clay Crenshaw, said he does not know of any pending appeals that would block Sibley's execution.

"It's our position as of right now he doesn't have any appeals available to him," Crenshaw said.

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BOUND TOGETHER IN LOVE - AND DEATH

This is the incredible story of George Sibley and Lynda Lyon-the only husband and wife in America sentenced to die by electrocution-to be murdered by the State of Alabama for a crime they did not commit. They shot and killed a bad cop - Alabama said it was murder but George and Lynda said it was self-defense. The dead officer was the only other witness as to how and why the shooting began. His personnel file, that showed a long history of abuse to the public, was hidden from the jury. The verdict was predictable-guilty of capital murder. The sentence-death in the electric chair.

Written by Lynda Lyon in her own words, this poignant narrative tells how despite torture, unsanitary conditions, and almost dying for lack of medical treatment - George and Lynda have never lost their love and loyalty to each other, and have vowed they will always be soulmates-even to the day they are strapped into the electric chair to their deaths.

From Heaven to Hell

Written by Lynda Lyon

It was fate - and a libertarian philosophy - that brought George and me together at a libertarian Party meeting in Orlando, Florida, 1991. George had been attending for a year when I entered the meetings for the first time. I was immediately at home with the small but active group of intellectual activists, and George and I were among a smaller group that together attended political rallies.

A year later, my marital problems came to a head and my husband agreed to leave the house to me and our son and to start divorce proceedings. At that time, needing to enlarge my fledgling publishing business, I accepted an investment partnership offer from George, who had seen my potential as a writer and publisher, and who had also seen an entrepreneurship opportunity for himself.

Our partnership, which had began as friendship, soon blossomed into romance - a true libertarian relationship of two highly intellectual, fiercely independent individualists who live passionately. We soon realized that we were soulmates - totally compatible in every way. We married in 1992 and our love and friendship has grown continually.

George helped me launch a new magazine - "Liberatus" -and we published hard-hitting articles about political corruption. We pioneered a revocation process that eliminated driver's licenses, school board surveillance on my home schooled son, IRS demands, and state revenue notices. Every document we filed was challenged by the various agencies, but after we sent them legal proof of our right to revocate, they went away. We taught others this process in papers, video, and seminars. We spoke on local talk radio. The local, state and federal agencies began to notice the influx of revocation documents from Florida.

Our hell began, not with the agencies, but with Karl, my ex-husband, who had decided to sue me for possession of the valuable house. He petitioned the judge to allow him back into my house until the case was settled, a preposterous idea. George urged me not to go to Karl's apartment to try to reason with him, knowing Karl to be a violent-tempered man. But I was desperate to keep my home and was prepared to offer him a deal, so George went with me. Karl let us in to talk, but he became angry at my attempt to bargain. In a rage, he lunged at me. George managed to pull him off, but Karl had sustained a cut from a small knife I had pulled out and held up as a warning just as he had grabbed me. The cut was not large or deep, and when we offered to take him to a medical center, he refused, though he did allow us to bandage the cut.

George and I were arrested in our home at 2:30 am that same night. Karl had called the police and told them we had broken in and attacked him. George and I had never been arrested before, never been in any trouble other than traffic tickets. We were in shock - George's face was pale and grim, and I felt faint when the deputy began to read us our "rights". They put us both, hand cuffed, in the back seat of a patrol car and we tried to console each other. We agreed not to make any statements until we got a lawyer. I told him tearfully how sorry I was that he got pulled into this mess between Karl and me, and he assured me that it was all right, that he didn't blame me. I would have gladly borne the ordeal myself to spare him this. At the jail, as George was taken away, he looked back at me one last time and said "I love you, Lynda". Those words sustained me through the next five days of hell.

Because we were charged with "domestic violence", George and I could not make bond without a hearing, and we had to wait five days for that. I was placed in a cell with 30 other crying, arguing, loud talking women. I chose a top bunk on the far end, and sat and cried. I was terrified, because I had recently been interviewed on the radio about money being skimmed from the jail accounts, and the sheriff had ordered the radio station padlocked that night.

I could not eat those five days. The meat stank, and the vegetables and whipped potatoes were watery. I lived on whatever cartons of milk I could trade for my trays. I was astounded that the long timers would eagerly bid for my tray, and I managed to get paper and pencil as well. Writing helped me keep sane. I was able to converse with some of the women who recognized me as "fresh meat" and protected me from the lesbians and bullies. I called my mother to see how my son was doing, and she told me that Karl said he would make sure I went to prison and that he didn't want his son. When I began crying, the others stopped talking and looked at me. A large, black woman came over and hugged me to her ample bosom, and I felt a strange kinship to these thrown-away, forgotten wives, daughters, mothers.

The most humiliating experience was the strip search. When ordered to strip for a body search, I froze. I had never undressed for anyone except my husband and doctor. Silent tears ran down my face as I disrobed, then turned to squat so they could see if I had any drugs protruding from my rectum. When I dressed, my face was red with shame. I felt violated, mentally raped. I never did get over that.

George and I did get out on bond the 5th day. We were sure that our ordeal was over and that we would soon prove our innocence at trial. We were so naive.

It soon became evident that politics had entered our case. Too late, we realized that our attorney had sold us out for a job with the county. When our trial date arrived, our attorney had done nothing - the witnesses had not been subpoenaed, nor records we needed. George and I immediately fired him and asked the judge for a continuance to prepare for trial. He said no - we either plead "Nolo contendre" or go to trial that day; and if we were convicted, we would be sent directly to prison for a mandatory 3-year term. Our attorney had an evil, satisfied look on his face and I knew we had been set up. We were forced to sign "No contest."

We were still determined to fight it; we had a month before sentencing. We filed papers exposing the corruption of the judge and the denial of our right to a fair trial, sending copies to the Governor, Lt. Governor, Chief Judge of Florida, Attorney General, and the Sheriff. Friends and supporters flooded these officials with faxes calling for an investigation, throwing their offices in an uproar according to a secretary in the Chief Judge's office.

We didn't show up for sentencing; we'd been tipped off that Judge Hauser was going to send us to prison anyway, under "orders." We had three days to file a temporary restraining order in federal court, but the man who had promised to draft the document never did, and a capias was issued for our arrest.

A friend in the Sheriffs department, and a member of my church, called me the evening of the third day, his voice shaking. "Lynda, the warrants for you and George came up on computer. I just heard there's a plan to raid your house. They know you have guns - they're going to use a SWAT team." I was incredulous. "A SWAT team!" His voice became softer, sadder. "You and George have made a lot of important people angry. They're going to kill you and then say you shot at them first." He paused, to let this sink in, then said, "I've put myself at great risk telling you this. Please, get out of Florida. They mean business."

George had heard this on the speaker phone. His face was as somber as mine. As a last, desperate attempt to stop this insanity, I called to talk to Sheriff Beary. I had interviewed him when he ran for election. But he wouldn't come to the phone.

George and I were not criminals and we did not want to become fugitives. But my friend had made it clear we had no choice. At the invitation of a friend in Georgia to stay with him, we loaded our car and George, my son Gordon, and I left Florida that night.

The Shooting

We stayed in Georgia for three weeks, but we knew we couldn't stay longer and endanger our friends. We decided to go to Mobile, Alabama, a large port where strangers come and go everyday, and figure out how to straighten out the Florida mess. We stayed in a motel in Opelika, Alabama while waiting for our friend to turn our remaining silver coin into cash, then we started out October 4, 1993, for Mobile. On the way I spotted a drugstore with a pay phone in front and suggested to George that we stop there so I could get a vitamin supplement and call a friend in Orlando. After Gordon and I came out of the store, he got back in the car to wait while George and I made the call.

While I was on the phone, George stood by, watching the traffic and people going by. He noticed one particular woman in a red Blazer pull in beside our car. She got out and looked at our car, a Mustang hatchback, with pillows stacked on top of all our belongings. It later came out at trial that she had presumed that we were transients, living out of our car, with a child obviously not in school. Actually, I always carried my own pillows when sleeping in motels. This woman's prejudicial presumption cost a police officer his life, my son his mother, and George and me our freedom.

Because I had run out of change for the phone, my call was cut off, so we left. But as we were leaving the shopping center I remembered my friend had an 800 number and I then spotted a phone in front of Wal-Mart. So George pulled the car into a parking space and he and Gordon stayed in the car while I walked to the store to call. Unknown to us, the woman saw a police officer coming out of a nearby store. She approached him and told him that we were living out of our car and she was concerned about the child. She gave him a description of our car and left.

Roger Motley was the supply officer for the Opelika Police Department and hadn't been on patrol for years. He was irritated that he had to stop and check on this situation. He drove his car up and down the aisles, and when he found our car, he stopped behind it.

I had my back turned while talking on the phone and didn't see the officer pull up. When George saw the officer in the rear view mirror, he got out of the car, closed the door, and waited to see what the officer wanted. The officer approached George with the typical "I'm the guy with the badge and the gun" attitude. In a curt voice he demanded to see George's

driver' s license. George told him he didn't have one, and was prepared to get our legal exemption papers from the car. The officer then decided to arrest George and told him to put his hands on the car. George hesitated, knowing this was arrest, yet he had done nothing illegal. Motley, thoroughly irritated now, reached for his gun. When George saw him go for his gun, he reacted instinctively and drew his own gun. When Motley saw George's gun, he said "Oh shit'." and, with his hand still on his gun, turned and ran for cover behind the police car.

When I heard the popping noises, it took me a couple of seconds to realize it was gunfire. I heard people yelling and running to get out of the way. Quickly I turned and saw Motley crouched beside his car, shooting at George. Fear gripped my stomach. I cried, "Oh God, no!" and dropping the phone, began running, ignoring the people scrambling for cover.

I saw George standing between the rear of our car and the right side of the police car; he was holding his gun in his right hand, but his left arm was hanging strangely. Motley didn't see me approach, and just as I came to a stop I pulled my own gun and shot several times. He turned to me in surprise, and as he did, one of my bullets struck him in the chest and he fell backwards, almost losing his balance in his crouched position. His gun was pointed at me and I prayed he wouldn't shoot. Instead, he crawled into the car, and after grabbing the radio microphone, he drove off.

I immediately ran to our car and got in. The parking lot was quiet - everyone had sought shelter inside the stores. I was shaken, yet incredibly calm. "What happened?" I asked. George's face was extremely pale. "He tried to arrest me for not having a driver's license." He shook his head in disbelief. "I was going to show him our papers, but he didn't give me a chance - and he went for his gun. " He looked at me, his eyes begging me to believe him. "I couldn't just stand there and let him shoot me."

I did believe him. George is the most honest person I know. He would not have placed himself or us in danger. He took the law seriously. He was never the showoff gunslinger-type and would walk away before being drawn into a fight.

I told him that I believed him, but that we had just shot a cop and the whole police force would be gunning for us. We had to get out of there fast. It was then I noticed his arm and he raised it up to show me. With characteristic understatement, he said simply "I've been hit." His arm had been pierced by a bullet. Though blood was dribbling down his arm, it didn't obscure the hole. I examined his arm and could see that the bullet passed through his forearm and miraculously had not broken any bone or cut through a tendon or artery. I had an advanced medical kit in the car and I knew I could treat it later.

George maneuvered our car deftly through the streets, trying to get us out of the area quickly while not attracting attention. I tried to calm Gordon, who was crying and shaking, and I looked at the map for the best route out. But we were unfamiliar with the area and kept running into heavy traffic. Then we picked up an unmarked police car and knew they were closing in on us. We were going over 100 mph when we suddenly came to a crossroad. We could only turn right or left. "Which way?" he asked. I was clueless -

I had lost track of where we were. He took a guess and turned left.

We had gone only 1/4 mile down the country road when we came up on a rise - and then we saw the roadblock, at least 20 cars. George slowed down, then pulled the car over to the side of the road and cut the engine. He sat in calm resignation, then looked over at me.

I said quietly, "I guess this is it, isn't it?" He nodded, then we both looked out at the policemen, detectives, deputies -coming at us from all directions, guns drawn, shouting "Get out of the car and put your hands up!"

It was an incredible, surrealistic scene, as though I was experiencing a virtual reality game where I could feel the action and motion, but then the game would end and I would go back to living my real life again. My son's sobs brought me abruptly back to reality.

I rolled down my window and put out my raised hand. "Stop!" I shouted. "I have a child in the car!" I could plainly see the closest officer's face turn pale, and he quickly spoke into the radio on his shoulder. "There's a child in the car!" he shouted. The Opelika police never told these Auburn police this. The word was quickly passed and then he said "Okay, ma'am, we won't shoot. You can let the child go."

I talked to Gordon, calmed him down, then I opened the door and let him out, told him to be a good boy and that they would take care of him, and pointed him toward a plain-clothes policeman. I gave him a last kiss, holding his handsome nine year-old face in my hand, to get a last picture in my mind of the child I may never see again. I watched him walk quickly away to the beckoning officer and I felt as though my heart would break. I had planned his conception, had nurtured him through sickness, homeschooled him. No one could have possibly loved a child as much as I loved mine, and he was walking out of my life only half-grown, unfinished.

As soon as Gordon was taken away, the police then shouted at us to surrender. I turned to George and asked "What do you want to do?" He had lost a lot of blood and was pale and tired. "I don't know." I made a decision for us. I told the officer, "We are not surrendering. You will have to kill us first."

For four hours George and I sat in the car and talked. I held my gun where the officers could see that we were not going to surrender peacefully. The officer continued to talk to me to get information about us. George and I spent the time talking about the shooting, as he explained to me what happened. We discussed our plans for our future together, all gone. We discussed the probability that if the officer died, we'd be charged with capital murder and executed. If we decided to fight in court, it could take years. We knew we did not want to spend the rest of our lives in prison for an act of self-defense. We knew that it would be our word against a cops' word, and we had already seen how corrupt the justice system is. We then talked about suicide.

My religious belief is that suicide is wrong, but now I was faced with the total hopelessness of our situation. I told George that the only regret I had in all this is that I would not be able to raise my son. We discussed all our options.

As dusk settled in, we saw the SWAT team position themselves around us. The regular police had pulled back an hour earlier. A negotiator got on the police car hailer and tried to talk us into surrendering. We said no, that if they tried to come after us we would shoot ourselves. He then tried to bargain with us. What did we want? I printed my answers on notebook paper with a marker and George held it out his window for them to read - to talk to my son, to talk to the press, and to talk to clergy of my religion. He agreed to all these things (he lied - they did none of them), but we had to surrender first.

Finally, the showdown came. The SWAT teams had us surrounded. We were told that if we did not surrender in 5 minutes, they would lob tear gas through the windows of the car and take us anyway. George and I had been sitting with our guns in hand. We had planned to shoot ourselves in the head at the same time. George looked at me with such sorrow and asked, "Would you mind if I stayed in the car and shot myself while you surrender? At least you could have some decision in Gordon's future."

I looked up at him with surprise, my eyes filling with tears at the thought that this honest, loving, gentle man who had waited over 40 years to find the right woman and found me, spending all those years in patient waiting, should now die alone with a bullet to his head.

'No," I said firmly, "I'm not going anywhere without you. Either we surrender together or we die together. I'll follow you, George - Whatever you want, I'm leaving it up to you."

A totally surprised expression came to his direct, penetrating gaze. Until that very moment, he had not realized the depth of my love for him, that I would rather stay with him, even in death, and that I would trustingly place my life in his hands.

"If we surrender, it will be years before this is resolved."

"I know," I said, "but at least we'd be fighting this together."

He then took my left hand in his right, stained with blood where he had tried to staunch the wound, and raised my hand to his lips.

"No," he said with renewed determination. "We will surrender so we can fight this. We have to do whatever we can to see that Gordon is taken care of, and to prove our innocence - if only for his sake." For the first time in months, hope was in his voice "We will fight this to the end, and it they still execute us, we'll die knowing we fought for what was right." He then gave a tired smile.

"Yes," I said with respect and admiration for my husband.

With a look of tenderness I'll always remember, he leaned forward and kissed me, a gentle, parting kiss, perhaps the last we would ever share. Then, at a nod from him, we laid down our guns and exited the car with our hands up.

The Trials

George and I were placed in solitary confinement in the Lee County jail in Opelika. The jail is small - the men's section holds 100 men, the women's section - 25. I was taken to a 4-cell unit in which I was the sole occupant. I was exhausted and numb - I had been fingerprinted, photographed, strip-searched and questioned. I had not eaten since breakfast and it was after 9:00 pm.

The cell block I was in was at the far end of the jail and hadn't been used for almost a year. After the last occupants had left, it had not been cleaned. One of the female officers pointed out a cell and told me to put my things there, then they left. But five minutes later they came back and took everything except the mattress, soap, toothpaste, and toilet paper. I stood there, dumbfounded. "Why are you doing this?" I asked. "Orders," was the curt reply and they locked me in the tiny cell.

George was treated similarly, locked in a cell by himself, but under the watchful eye of a surveillance camera. The bright fluorescent lights in our cells were not turned off for 10 days, and it was almost impossible to sleep. The constant temperature in the jail was 68 -degrees, and without, any covering, not even a sheet, I developed hypothermia, at times awakened by uncontrollable shivering. I would pace the cell to keep warm but I was too exhausted to pace for long. George had no shoes or socks - they had taken those from him- and he too, was suffering from the cold. By the 6th day of constant cold I awoke to intense shivering, I was cold - inside as well as out; I was numb and could hardly move. With great difficulty I crawled to the bars of the cell and tried to raise myself, but couldn't. About 30 minutes later they found me on the cold cement floor, one hand grasping the bars, and they decided to give me a blanket. I wrapped myself in it and slept for 18 hours before my body temperature became normal.

I had to use my only pair of panties to wash myself and hung them to dry overnight to wear each day. They wouldn't let us shower, nor would they give us clean clothes. We asked repeatedly to use the phone to call our families so they could get lawyers for us, but they denied us that, too. The constant cold and bright light, the isolation, the starchy food - they all began to take its toll - as planned. We were both taken before Judge Harper for the initial appearance in handcuffs attached to belly-chains, and shackles on our bare ankles.

One cannot imagine the pain of trying to walk with shackles on your ankles, on bare skin. The proper procedure is to place them on the pants legs, but the jailers deliberately put them on our skin to inflict pain. George and I bore the pain without comment - we were not going to let them gain satisfaction from their torture. I still have scars on my ankles where the shackles dug deep into my skin.

At both court appearances the media was there in swarms. At the first appearance, Judge Harper - the star - imperiously went through the routine of asking if we understood the charge - capital murder - and that the penalty was death or life without parole. Did we have lawyers or

did we want the state to provide them? We both looked at him in disbelief. They all knew we had been denied even one phone call - how could we have retained lawyers? If George and I were not so exhausted and disheartened, we would have insisted on handling our own case. But they would not let us talk and discuss this. The prosecutor had quickly figured out from looking through my files and our legal papers that were in the car that we were well-educated, and politically and legally astute. He did not want us to handle our own case, thus the psychological torture to force us to take their lawyers.

After we were appointed lawyers, suddenly everything changed. They let us shower and use the phone. We received all our bedding and basic toiletries. We began to receive mail. Because George and I were so well known, the news of the shooting went all around the country, and calls and faxes to the Sheriff had come in asking about us. My mother had called and begged the Sheriff to let her talk to me but he curtly told her I was going to die for killing a cop and hung up on her. A friend had traveled all the way from Orlando to see what he could do for us and they refused him. Letters began pouring in, but we didn't get them. The prosecutor, judge and the Sheriff conspired to cut us off from all contact with support.

Despite the cruelties I suffered, none was worse than what they did to George. After they let us receive mail, a friend sent us stationary, pens and stamps. It was a long shot but l asked if George and I could exchange letters. Surprisingly, they said yes. (We found out later that the prosecutor had the jailers copy our letters for information.) When George wrote, he told me that the wound in his arm had been treated only once - at the hospital right after we surrendered. Over a week had gone by and they had not given him any antibiotics. Once, just before he was to appear in court, an officer put peroxide in his wound and changed his bandage. George wrote me that he could feel itching and could smell infection setting in.

As angry as I was of their treatment of me, I was more angry at their deliberate indifference to his obvious medical condition. We had just been given permission to use the phone and I called a friend and told him what they were doing to George. He immediately put out an urgent fax message to our supporters nationwide and we were told that the next day the Sheriff's office was swamped with faxes and phone calls demanding that George be properly treated immediately. Pat Sutton, a retired deputy, quoted law and Supreme Court decisions to the Sheriff about the proper treatment of prisoners. Early the next morning George was taken to a doctor who treated his wound and prescribed antibiotics. An officer later told George they had been given a prescription for antibiotics at the hospital, but the Sheriff would not authorize it to be filled.

From the moment we were introduced to our court-appointed lawyers, George and I fought to have them recognize that we were as knowledgeable of the Constitution and the law as they. We soon realized that we were more knowledgeable then they; all they knew was what they were spoon-fed at law school. They knew nothing about the common-law rights of self-defense, of the significance of the 14th Amendment citizenship, of the right to resist unlawful arrest. They refused to combine our cases, kept trying to put me against George so I would get a lighter sentence, kept repeating the phrase "We're doing this for appeal." We soon realized that they were not considering our innocence, but only the degree of our "guilt." They didn't expect acquittal, weren't working for it at all, and only wanted to work toward saving us from the electric chair.

George and I refused to submit to their plans - George' s lead attorney tried to quit; mine left town and was replaced. George' s attorneys did not prepare for trial. They had not sent the witness subpoenas out in time, so few came. They had not examined the forensic reports or questioned potential witnesses about the officer's violent nature. At trial, the prosecutor purposely twisted the facts in his closing statement to make it appear that it was George's bullet - not mine - that killed the officer. When George and I insisted that I testify to show that it wasn't George's bullet, George's attorney made the loudest protest. My attorney begged me not to testify. "George is already lost. Don't throw away your chance for life. Don't be a hero." I looked him straight in the eye. "I'm not doing this to be a hero. I'm doing it because it's the right thing to do."

I had prayed that I would be calm while I was on the stand, and I was. This, however, was interpreted by the media and the jury as "cold-blooded lack of remorse." During his trial, George was pale and tired, and extremely thin. And he knew he was lost. It was inevitable that he would be convicted and sentenced to death.

When the jury recommended death for George, the jailers expected me to cry and wail. Because I showed no reaction and went about my normal routine, keeping my grief to myself, some of the jailers turned against me, convinced I was cold and heartless about George's plight. It was only after George had been taken away to prison three weeks later that I broke down. Clutching his last letter, written hurriedly just before they took him away, I cried quietly for hours. Half of me had been torn away and now I couldn't even hope for a glimpse of him in court, and receive his daily letters of love and encouragement. The reality of our situation only hit me then, when they took George away to Death Row.

I now had to concentrate on my own trial, which was getting nowhere. My lawyers and I argued at every meeting because they refused to even consider the Constitutional issues I knew were crucial to my case. One night I perpended the realization that unless these issues were raised at trial, I could not raise them in appeal - according to the ABA Rules of Court - and I would have no basis for a demand of my release. I had no choice but to fire these useless attorneys and conduct my own trial.

The next morning, at a closed-chamber session between the judge, my lawyers and me, I presented the lawyers their dismissals, and copies to the judge. Judge Harper only raised his eyebrows in surprise and ordered that the lawyers and I discuss this privately. When we were alone, the lead attorney exploded in anger. "You arrogant fool. Why do you insist on throwing your life away! Do you have a death wish?" I was calm and even smiled a little. "You are not interested in proving me innocent - only of getting me a lighter sentence. I want acquittal or nothing. I may lose anyway, but at least it will be done my way." He stormed out angrily, and the other attorney shook his head in sympathy. "I know why you're doing this, but you're making a big mistake. You're risking your life." I nodded. "I know, but it is my life, isn't it?"

To prepare for trial in the 3 months I had, I read the Rules of Procedure and Rules of Evidence. I filed several pre-trial documents, unusual documents that I convinced the judge were to be introduced as evidence at trial. Fortunately, the judge was too ignorant of the documents and of Constitutional law to realize what I filed. Though he and the prosecutors scoffed at my pretrial documents challenging his jurisdiction, the Constitutionality of the statute I was charged under, and the validity of the indictment based on the original 13th Amendment; I knew that if I did lose, I still could raise this issue on appeal because it had been raised at trial.

The trial was a play, scripted by the judge, the prosecutor, and the restrictive ABA Rules of Procedure. In both our cases, Judge Harper refused to release the officer' s personnel record, which showed a long pattern of abuse to the public, and I was working against a one-sided portrayal of the officer as a "good cop gunned down in cold blood." I was able to perform all the functions of trial in a calm, business-like manner, and even the judge grudgingly admitted how well I was conducting my defense. But under the restrictive rules of procedure in today's courts I had little chance, and I knew it. All I could hope to do was maneuver the trial to get as much information in my favor on record - for appeal.

When the jury came back with the guilty verdict I was not surprised, but it hit me hard. No one can possibly imagine being alone in a courtroom, feeling the eyes of everyone else upon you waiting for your reaction to the news that they were going to put you to death in a most horrible manner. I forced myself to sit perfectly still, emotionless, while realizing that the people of Alabama wanted to kill me for choosing to defend my husband's life.

When it came time for the sentencing portion of the trial, when I was supposed to convince the jury they should give me life without parole instead of the death penalty, I waived my time, telling everyone in that courtroom that I had presented everything I had at trial. I was not going to beg for my life. When I was awaiting their decision, I prayed that they would give me death. If George and I were both on Death Row, we could join our appeal and fight together. When the jury recommended death, I rose from the defense table with as much dignity as I could evoke and walked through the silent courtroom and hallways back to my cell. Some of the jailers were upset. One of the women in my cell broke down and cried.

Execution by electric chair is gruesome. They shave your head so they can attach the electrodes to bare skin. They shove cotton up your rectum and put an adult diaper on you because the charge of electricity through your body causes your bladder and intestines to evacuate. They put a hood over your face because the jolt of 20,000 volts causes your face to contort and your eyeballs to explode.

George and had agreed at the roadblock that we would fight to the end, and if we still lose and are executed, we will go back to our Creator knowing that we fought to the end, and fought for the principle that it is better to have fought and lost than to submit to those who would rob us of our unalienable right to liberty.

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Heart to Heart

Below are portions of the daily letters George and Lynda wrote while in the Lee County Jail, Alabama

"When you wrote that you did not blame me for the plight we're in, it did make me feel much better too. I had been put in such a difficult spot, and when he reached for his gun, my reaction was an instinctive one. At that point was one choice: life or death, to protect myself and my family, or fail miserably. You came to my defense, as I would yours, without question. I don't know of any woman I've ever met who would do as you did for me, and I do so thank God that we met. " - George

"I'm going through a terrible time dealing with my captivity here. Yet, there is that hope, that chance for freedom, and I am clinging to that with the fierceness of a person who is clinging to the last standing tree in a raging storm." - Lynda

"I have been penalized all my life, as you have, for adhering to principle, and being honest. I defended my principles to my own detriment. Everywhere I went, someone wanted me to yield to a situation, an ideal, or purpose that was wrong - or at least, wrong for me - and I rebelled. This has cost me dearly throughout my life. Realizing this, I still am unwilling to forfeit that what I hold dearest -my integrity." - George

"Though in a moment of total despair I may have been tempted to entertain thoughts of ending it all here, I've since come to terms with the fact. that, just as our lives are playing possibly to the end, so are the lives of those who lied to us and about us, who prosecuted us, who cheated us and stole from us, who have unjustly punished us. Even in this place, captive as I am, I will not yield my principles. No matter how much I am mocked or tormented, I will not forfeit my dignity. I will leave this world as Lynda Lyon Sibley, and with all the pride that entails. I am content to play this to the end, whatever it might be" - Lynda

II agree with you completely on the result we want here. Patrick Henry's 'Give me liberty or give me death!' sums up the way I feel, and all who share the same spirit as you and I, that mere existence is not life. " - George

'I told her (attorney) I was tired of living my life to suit others, including an enslaving government, and that yes, I could have taken the (Florida) sentence and tried to live under community control, but why? Why should I submit to yet another injustice? When does a person stand up for the principle of defending oneself against injustice, rather than submit for the sake of expediency? Always, I said. I'd rather die than live as a slave to government control or public opinion. " - Lynda

"I will never give up the fight for freedom, never! No matter what, I will endure, and I know that you have the will, determination, and faith to do it too. As you have said before, they cannot chain our spirits!" - George

"Life in prison is not "life." It is living hell for someone like you or me. Living in a caged existence where you are told what to eat, what to wear, where to sleep, when to sit or stand; where your meager belongings are regularly searched, where even your body is inspected, where the only intellectual stimulation you receive is what they allow - what kind of life is that? If the jury has to choose between death or life in prison, they would be far more charitable to give us death." - Lynda

"This is one man who won't make a "deal" and sell his soul for limited freedom." - George

"You carried yourself proudly in the courtroom, and this is what the jury hated. They wanted submissive, emotional groveling. They wanted pained expressions of remorse. You are truly a brave man, Sweetheart, and I am honored to be your wife. " - Lynda

"You have changed me forever, Lynda, and for the better. I am a whole and complete man with you, and I know that even if we can't communicate for a while, that you will never forsake me and will always love me. I know you won't want anyone else, and I want only you. I will always be faithful to you, my soulmate, and I will not lose faith in our freedom coming Soon, or in Heavenly Father's plan for us. " - George

"I tried to picture you in my mind, and the picture of you I love best is how you look in jeans, your snug-fitting shirt, and your leather jacket. With your tall, slim stature and your wavy hair, you looked so incredibly elegant and handsome. I love your boyish smile and your direct, intense gaze. Such honesty in that gaze. I love and adore you. " - Lynda

"After all this time apart, sweet Lynda, I will cherish every moment we have together, every tender caress, every kiss, every chance I have to see you. My favorite memories are those of holding you in my arms, sharing a tender kiss or with your head on my chest. I await the soft warmth of your embrace as I bring you to the exquisite heights of our lovemaking. I pledge my eternal love, and a promise of total and complete loyalty to you. You are one of Heavenly Father's special daughters, and He has given me the Sacred duty and honor to love, protect, and guide you, and I will. " - George

"These months ahead are going to be lonely for us, George. Please don't let my resignation of our present situation make you think I will ever let my love grow dim. I think about you constantly. Memories make me cry with longing for days gone by. I want to lay with you once again, caress your body; to snuggle up to you and your masculine scent, and then feel the warmth of you inside me as we share love. I am not complete without you. I never will be. I am yours for eternity. " - Lynda

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IN THE WARMTH OF MY HEART

by Lynda Lyon to George Sibley(written in Lee County Jail - 1994)

In the warmth of my heart I saw you;

Lonely, hopeful, and open to love.

I saw your giving soul,

your honest gaze and tender heart;

I saw a man yearning for love's fulfillment.

And I came.

In the warmth of my heart I see you

emerging, from hope-to a man in love.

I see you complete and content and

confident of life's promises fulfilled.

I see a man who's warrior blood renewed

Because I came.

In the warmth of my heart I see you

In full stature as a celestial Prince.

I see you wise and patient and content

With assurance of the fruit of our love.

I see a Prince who reaches out to his eternal bride -

And I will come.

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George Everette Sibley, Jr.

was born and raised in South Bend, Indiana, and moved to Orlando Florida in 1976. He spent most of his life designing and converting cars and engines into drag racers, and also worked on street racers and circle track cars. He owned his own car repair shop in Orlando, but closed it when he couldn't find proficient mechanics to repair cars to his standards. He enjoys reading, sport shooting, auto cross competing, and political activism on libertarian issues. In recent years he became a well-respected legal researcher and drafter of constitutionally correct revocation and sovereignty-status documents.

Lynda Cheryle Lyon

was born and raised in Orlando, Florida, but has traveled throughout America. She is a professional writer of columns, op-ed pieces and short stories for several publications. She is a sailor, scuba diver, cross-country motorcyclist, sport shooter, fisherman and billiards champion. She has been active in community affairs as President of Friends of the Library, as investigator for the Humane Society, President of the Young Womens organization in her church, and State Vice-Chair of the Libertarian Party of Florida, where she and George met. George became Lynda's partner in her publishing business and wrote a column about gun ownership rights in her magazine "Liberatus." They married in 1992 and are raising Lynda's 11 year-old son, Gordon.

Visit Lynda Lyon's Official Homepage at:

http://www.angelfire.com/al4/alajustice/lynda.html

*************************************************************

July 18th, 2005

Project Hope to Abolish the Death Penalty

Friends,

As you know the State of Alabama has set August 4th as the execution date for George Sibley.

George Sibley has chosen to represent himself and identified the following issues as his talking points when requesting a stay from Governor Bob Riley so he can pursue his legal options. George Sibley is not requesting clemency.

1. The State set the execution date a day before the last date for his appeal and is thus denying him access to legal remedies.

2. He did not kill Officer Motley.

3. He was not legally complicit in killing Officer Motley.

We urge you to let your voices be heard each and every time the State of Alabama prepares to take another life. When we do not act we condone the killing, so please tell the State of Alabama that it does not kill in your name and request a stay for George Sibley.

The Governor of Alabama

THE HONORABLE GOVERNOR BOB RILEY

STATE CAPITOL N 104

11 S. UNION ST. # 600

MONTGOMERY, AL 36130 2751

FURTHER DETAILS ON HOW TO REACH THE GOVERNOR:

PHONE 334 242 7100

FAX: 334 242 0937

Website: www.governor.state.al.us

Email: http://www.governor.state.al.us/contact.htm

Attorney General Troy King

Address, phone and email are on his website. You are thereby invited to use them freely!

http://www.ago.state.al.us/

Office of the Attorney General

Alabama State House

11 South Union Street, Third Floor

Montgomery, AL 36130

Alabama Parole Board

P.O. Box 302405

Montgomery Al 36130

Phone 334 242 8730

Fax 334 242 8700

email: wsegrest@paroles.state.al.us

Write Op-Ed:

The Birmingham News

PO Box 2553

Birmingham, AL 35202

Phone: 205-325-2444

Fax: 205-325-3345

Email: elard@bhamnews.com

Web: http://www.bhamnews.com

Montgomery Adviser

200 Washington Ave.

Montgomery, AL 36104

Phone: 334-261-1524

Email: khare@montgomeryadvertiser.com

Web: http://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com

Thank you for your support

*****************************************

Model letter to send governor, attorney general and parole board

The Governor of Alabama

THE HONORABLE GOVERNOR BOB RILEY

STATE CAPITOL N 104

11 S. UNION ST. # 600

MONTGOMERY, AL 36130 2751

RE: Pending execution of George Everette Sibley

Dear Governor Riley:

As you are well aware, August 4, 2005, is the date the state of Alabama has set for the execution of George Everette Sibley. A review of what has transpired in this matter indicates that numerous due process errors were committed by both the prosecution and the defense at the time of trial and since George was sentenced to die for the 1993 death of Officer Motley in Opelika.

For justice to prevail in this sad case, we urge you to stay this execution pending the outcome of an appeals process.

Respectfully,

End note:

The Idaho Observer has a thriving prison "ministry." We send copies of the newspaper to prisoners for barely above the cost of postage and we dedicate a page each month to letters generated from "behind the razorwire." The mostly men prisoners inspired to write commonly display excellent communications skills coupled with expertise in certain areas and remarkable insight. It is an honor to publish the thoughts and observations from these reflective free men whose fates landed them in government cages.

There are many good people prison right now who understand information contained in The IO and appreciate hope its editors hold for the day when honorable men and women assume control of public policy. So many, in fact, our correspondence-intensive ministry is expanding to proportions that are difficult to keep up with. But as long as we are being written to we will write back—for two main reasons: We love these guys and their letters tell a story of America that remains hidden behind guard towers and razorwire. Prison is the government's grand disappearing act: It can take a man and his life from headlines and popular public opinion to total obscurity in the amount of time it takes to close the prison gates behind him.

By all reports, half the guys in prison are innocent of their convictions or heavily sentenced for non-violent offenses. In either event, they do not belong in cages. (If) released, they bear the scars and social stigma of being convicts, cannot vote, hold public office, possess weapons or do anything to make government angry in violation of parole, probation or three-strikes rules because such actions will result in their immediate return to prison.

Somebody has to be there for these guys. There are a million of them who did nothing to harm another person or his property. That means there are a million stories each day that could prove in a real court the following claim: Our government is run by men and women who, in their public capacity lie, falsify evidence, pejure themselves, allow the perjured testimony of witnesses and fix due process in order to incarcerate and execute innocent men and women.

If you feel motivated toward investigating the growth of America’s penal colony and want to be part of prisoner advocacy groups or wish to correspond with good men and women being held captive by the government—men and women who need contact with good people on the outside, contact The IO.

No matter what,

Don Harkins

The Idaho Observer

http://www.idaho-observer.com

vaclib@startmail.com

(208) 255-2307