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Judicial Oversight Questioned in 2017 Restraining Order Case Involving Oxford’s First Family

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OXFORD, Miss. – A recorded conversation between journalist and self-represented litigant Matthew Reardon and Judge Little’s law clerk, Tara, has reignited concerns over the handling of a 2017 restraining order issued against Reardon. The case, involving Oxford Mayor Robyn Tannehill and her husband, Rhea Tannehill, raises serious questions about judicial discretion, procedural compliance, and potential conflicts of interest within Lafayette County’s legal system.

At the heart of the controversy is the apparent absence of a security deposit or bond, a requirement under Rule 65 of the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure when a restraining order is issued. Reardon, in his call to Judge Little’s office, sought to determine whether any record existed of a bond being posted. Tara, the judge’s law clerk, asserted that the matter was handled by a previous judge and was no longer open to appeal.

The Legal Dispute Over Bond Requirement

Rule 65 states that a security deposit or bond is required to protect the enjoined party if the injunction is later found to be wrongful. However, the court may determine an appropriate sum at its discretion. Reardon contends that while discretion exists, it must be documented in the record. His search of Mississippi Electronic Courts (MEC) revealed no such documentation.

“The rule actually says ‘in such sum as the court deems proper,’ so that means it’s discretionary to the court,” Tara stated.

Reardon, however, rebutted this interpretation:

“The court is allowed discretion to a certain extent, but there must be something in writing to that effect. To just give somebody a free pass and it not be documented or written would be fundamentally unfair.”

The lack of documentation raises further concerns given that the petitioner, Robyn Tannehill, is a prominent public official. Reardon questioned whether political influence played a role in the handling of the case.

Allegations of Fraud and Misrepresentation

Reardon’s skepticism about the restraining order’s legitimacy extends beyond procedural errors. According to him, the allegations contained in the 2017 petition were based on falsehoods, misrepresentations, and constitutionally protected activity.

The restraining order petition, now reviewed as part of this investigation, cites alleged threats and harassment from Reardon. However, Reardon claims that subsequent law enforcement records prove that he was not the aggressor and, in fact, was the one threatened.

“I have obtained law enforcement reports showing that the petitioner (Rhea) actually threatened harm on me,” Reardon stated. “Yet I was the one who was restrained—without a bond, without due process, and based on lies.”

Further, Reardon pointed out that some claims in the restraining order involve speech that should have been protected under the First Amendment. The vague and broad language used in the petition raises concerns about whether the order was improperly granted based on constitutionally protected expression.

Judicial Bias and Lafayette County’s Handling of the Case

Beyond the specifics of the restraining order, Reardon believes his case highlights a broader pattern of judicial bias in Lafayette County, where he alleges officials have repeatedly disregarded due process when he is involved.

“Is this a common practice—that whenever it comes to anything against me, Lafayette County officials immediately get complacent and deflect? … Anything illegal can happen to me, and things are allowed to go by unchecked and unchallenged, no matter how wrong or illegal they are?” Reardon asked during the call.

Tara denied any impropriety and suggested that if Reardon believed he had grounds for relief, he should pursue them through formal legal motions rather than a phone call.

“There is a proper way to present matters to the court, and a telephone call is not that way,” she said.

Reardon, however, argued that previous efforts to seek relief through official channels had been ignored or dismissed without proper review, reinforcing his belief that local officials were more interested in covering up past mistakes than ensuring justice.

A Case That Demands Scrutiny

The 2017 restraining order against Reardon was signed by Judge Alderson, who later retired. The timing of the case, coupled with the absence of a documented bond and the involvement of high-profile local figures, raises significant questions about transparency and fairness in Lafayette County’s judicial process.

While the restraining order remains in place, Reardon’s investigation and continued pursuit of legal accountability suggest that this case is far from over. Whether through legal action or public exposure, he appears determined to bring attention to what he sees as a serious miscarriage of justice.

For now, the question remains:

Was this restraining order a legitimate legal action, or was it a case of judicial favoritism for Oxford’s first family? I believe the facts and evidence now make this an obsolete question

Click on the image to view the petition for the restraining order filed May 22, 2017.

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Medical Dispensary Denies Disabled Marine Corps Veteran During PTSD Crisis

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By Don Matthews | We The People News

On Sunday afternoon, February 8, 2026, a disturbing incident occurred at The Apothecary medical marijuana dispensary in Lafayette, LA involving a disabled United States Marine Corps veteran during an acute medical crisis. The facts are not in dispute. What happened was not loud, not chaotic, and not confrontational. It was quiet, procedural, and revealing.

Matthew Reardon, a Marine Corps veteran with service-connected PTSD, entered The Apothecary with a valid medical marijuana license that he has held since September 2025. This was his first time visiting this dispensary. He was not seeking recreational use. He was seeking prescribed medication during an active PTSD episode triggered by recent events connected to years of documented government misconduct, false charges, incarceration, and systemic retaliation.

Reardon calmly explained to the staff that he was experiencing severe PTSD symptoms and needed fast-acting relief. He asked for guidance on the most effective and cost-efficient option available because he had exactly $15 accessible on his Cash App account. He was transparent about his situation. He did not ask for free medication. He asked for help navigating a system that brands itself as medical.

The lowest-priced product available was a single pre-rolled joint priced at $12.50. At checkout, Reardon was informed that the dispensary does not accept tap-to-pay. He then attempted to pay using his Cash App card. At that point, staff advised him that their payment system only processes transactions in $5 increments, meaning the $12.50 purchase would be automatically rounded up to $15. He was then told that an additional $3.50 card-processing fee would be added on top of that amount.

Reardon explained—again—that he had access to exactly $15 and no more. He explained that this medication was necessary to manage his PTSD symptoms in that moment. He asked for a supervisor.

When the manager arrived, Reardon reiterated the situation clearly and respectfully. He requested a reasonable accommodation: any adjustment that would allow him to obtain the prescribed medication without being priced out by arbitrary rounding and discretionary fees. Options existed. The price could have been adjusted. The fee could have been offset. A managerial override could have been used.

Instead, the manager stated that nothing could be changed in the system. Staff suggested Reardon leave the dispensary, go across the street, purchase another item he did not need, and attempt to obtain cash back—an impractical and dismissive suggestion given his disclosed financial and medical condition.

At no point did Reardon raise his voice, threaten staff, or disrupt business. He did not record inside the store out of respect. He was there for medicine, not confrontation. Yet despite clear knowledge of his disability, his medical crisis, and his inability to absorb additional fees, the dispensary refused all flexibility.

This is not merely a customer service issue. PTSD is a recognized disability under federal and state law. Medical marijuana dispensaries that hold themselves out as medical providers are expected to make reasonable modifications to policies when rigid enforcement denies disabled patients equal access to prescribed treatment.

Reardon was not asking for charity. He was asking for accommodation.

What makes this incident particularly troubling is the context. Reardon has lost nearly everything due to years of government abuse, including false charges dating back to 2017, prolonged incarceration, and the seizure and sale of his personal property while he was jailed. Those same false records continue to disqualify him from employment through background checks, trapping him in financial precarity.

Against that backdrop, a medical dispensary chose strict adherence to payment mechanics over human judgment during a medical emergency.

After leaving the dispensary without medication, Reardon exercised his First Amendment rights by preparing to stand on a public sidewalk outside the business.

This article exists so that members of the public who encounter that sign understand exactly what it refers to.

We The People News encourages The Apothecary to preserve all surveillance footage and transaction records from the time of this incident. Transparency serves everyone.

Medical care is not defined solely by licensure or product type. It is defined by whether institutions recognize the humanity and legal rights of the patients they serve—especially when those patients are disabled veterans seeking relief during a crisis.

This report is factual, contemporaneous, and accurate to the best of our knowledge. Any party wishing to dispute the facts is encouraged to do so with evidence.

— Don Matthews Reporting on the experience of Matthew Reardon


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No Box for Justice: Inside Mississippi’s Broken Prison Grievance System

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The Call That Said Everything

When I dialed the Mississippi Department of Corrections commissioner’s office, I expected professionalism, maybe even urgency. What I got instead was a bureaucratic echo chamber.

Silenced Behind Bars: Call to MDOC – “Who’s in the Commissioner’s Office?”- 1st Call 10-22-25 @ 3:38
Inside the Call: MDOC Commissioner’s Office Promises “We’ll Look Into It”-2nd call 10-22-25 @ 3:41pm

“This is the commissioner’s office,” the woman said.
I explained the problem — a constitutional one — about inmates at Delta Correctional Facility being denied access to grievance forms and ILAP requests. When I finished, she cut me off:
“I need to send you to the commissioner’s office.”

That’s when it hit me: in Mississippi’s corrections system, even accountability has to be forwarded.

I made it clear who I was — Don Matthews with We the People News — and that the story would run by five o’clock if Commissioner Burl Cain didn’t call me back. Only then did her tone shift. The room on the other end of the line seemed to wake up.

“I’ll have someone look into it,” she finally said.
“That’s what the people need to hear,” I told her.

And that’s where this story begins.


The Reports from Inside

Multiple sources from Delta Correctional have told me the same thing: there’s no grievance box. No ILAP box. No confidential way for an inmate to file a request or complaint.

Instead, if an inmate wants to report abuse or mistreatment, they to hand the form to a guard — possibly the very guard they are reporting. That isn’t procedure; that’s intimidation by design.

Mail? Same story. No mailbox. No locked drop point. The only “system” is giving it directly to a corrections officer on night shift.

One inmate put it simply:

“They say we can grieve, but we can’t even drop the paper.”


What the Law Says

The law isn’t vague on this. In Bounds v. Smith (1977), the U.S. Supreme Court held that prisons must provide inmates with “meaningful access to the courts.” That includes the right to file grievances and legal assistance requests.

Two decades later, in Lewis v. Casey (1996), the Court reaffirmed that right — and made clear that when prison officials obstruct it, they violate the First Amendment.

Then there’s Farmer v. Brennan (1994), which established that officials who show “deliberate indifference” to known risks or constitutional violations can be held liable under the Eighth Amendment.

So when MDOC ignores reports that inmates have no safe way to file grievances, that’s not a paperwork problem. That’s a constitutional one.

Even MDOC’s own internal policy — Administrative Remedy Program (ARP), Policy 20-08 — mandates accessible, confidential grievance procedures. “Confidential” doesn’t mean slipping a form to a guard who controls your daily life.


The Bureaucratic Deflection

When I raised these issues, the response from the commissioner’s office was not outrage, not even concern — just redirection.

“I can’t comment on that… I’ll have someone look into it.”
“He’s not in the office right now.”

The tone was polite, careful, professional — the kind of tone that gets people through their workday but never fixes anything.

If you listen closely to the call, you can hear something more subtle: a system that’s learned to protect itself. Every question gets rerouted. Every responsibility diluted. By the time it’s “looked into,” the problem has already gone quiet again.


The Cost of Silence

What’s happening at Delta Correctional isn’t unique — it’s just quieter there. At Parchman, the neglect made headlines. At Delta, it hides behind procedure.

A grievance system that doesn’t function is more than a missing box; it’s a message. It tells the men inside that their voices don’t count. It tells the guards they can act without oversight. And it tells the public that “corrections” in Mississippi still means control, not rehabilitation.

One source told me she’d never had a problem at Delta but didn’t want to be retaliated against for speaking up. That line alone says it all: when the fear of retaliation outweighs the faith in justice, the Constitution becomes a ghost in its own house.


What Comes Next

As of publication, Commissioner Burl Cain has not returned my call. His office did say they would “look into the ILA procedure” at Delta Correctional Facility.

Looking is one thing. Fixing is another.

The Constitution doesn’t take weekends off, and it doesn’t stop at the prison gate. If the State of Mississippi is serious about justice, it can start by giving its inmates something simple — a locked box, a piece of paper, and the right to be heard without fear.


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Judge Whitehurst Grants Ex Parte Protective Order Without Defense Hearing

Magistrate Judge Carol Whitehurst issues an ex parte protective order without hearing the defense, gagging journalist Matthew Reardon. Is this judicial bias?

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Federal judge issues ex parte protective order without hearing defense

In a stunning development that raises serious questions about judicial bias, Magistrate Judge Carol B. Whitehurst has issued an ex parte interim protective order the same day the government filed their motion – without waiting for the defense response – effectively gagging journalist Matthew Reardon from exposing evidence of ex parte communications between U.S. Marshals and federal judges.

THE ORDER: Granted Ex Parte Without Hearing Defense

On October 15, 2025, Judge Whitehurst issued what she calls an “Interim Order” that:

  1. Restricts access to discovery materials containing “courthouse security information”
  2. Defines “security information” to include EMAILS – the very ex parte communications to judges
  3. Requires all materials be kept in a “secure place”with restricted viewing
  4. Acts immediately – before defense can file opposition (due October 22)

WHAT “EX PARTE ORDER” MEANS

An “ex parte order” means the judge granted relief to one party (the government) without hearing from the other party (the defense) first.

What happened:

  • Morning: Government files motion for protective order
  • Afternoon: Judge grants it as “interim order”
  • Problem: Defense response not due until October 22 (7 days away)

Judge Whitehurst acted on the government’s motion without waiting for the defense to respond. This denied Reardon:

  • The opportunity to be heard
  • Due process
  • The ability to argue against the restrictions

This is highly unusual and suggests urgency to hide something.

THE SMOKING GUN: What She’s Trying to Hide

The order specifically defines “courthouse security information” as:

“information including emails, camera footage, or other law enforcement sensitive materials that may tend to reveal the methods or operational behavior of the US Marshal”

Translation: The emails between U.S. Marshals and federal judges – the ex parte communications that violate judicial ethics rules – are now classified as “security information.”

WHY THIS IS OUTRAGEOUS

1. The Emails Are NOT Security Information

The ex parte communications revealed by FOIA records:

  • Were sent to judges and chambers staff (@lawd.uscourts.gov addresses)
  • Characterized Reardon’s journalism as “suspicious behavior”
  • Created prejudice against Reardon before charges were filed
  • Violated the Code of Conduct for United States Judges

These are evidence of judicial ethics violations, not security protocols.

2. She Granted Government’s Motion Without Hearing Defense

The order acknowledges that “defense objects to the Motion” and sets the response deadline as October 22, 2025.

But she granted the government’s motion on October 15, 2025 – the same day they filed it – a full week before the defense response is due.

No emergency justified this. Courts can issue ex parte orders only when:

  • There’s a genuine emergency
  • Delay would cause irreparable harm
  • Notice would defeat the purpose

None of these factors exist here:

  • Reardon has had discovery for weeks without incident
  • No security breach has occurred
  • Government identified no specific threat
  • Waiting 7 days would cause no harm

This denies Reardon:

  • The opportunity to be heard
  • Due process
  • The ability to argue against the restrictions

3. She May Have Received the Ex Parte Communications Herself

Here’s the critical question: Did Magistrate Judge Whitehurst receive any of the ex parte communications about Reardon?

FOIA records prove U.S. Marshals sent emails to multiple @lawd.uscourts.gov addresses on June 24 and 26, 2025.

Judge Whitehurst uses an @lawd.uscourts.gov email address.

If she received those communications, she is biased and must recuse.

Her immediate action to grant the government’s protective order—without hearing from the defense—suggests she may have something to hide. Why the rush to protect these communications from disclosure?

THE CATCH-22: Protecting Judicial Bias

The Interim Order creates an impossible situation:

  1. Reardon suspects judges received ex parte communications (confirmed by FOIA)
  2. Discovery materials would reveal which judges received them
  3. But the order prevents Reardon from viewing those materials
  4. Without viewing them, he cannot seek recusal of biased judges
  5. Without recusal, he faces trial before potentially biased judges

This is a textbook due process violation.

WHAT THE ORDER ACTUALLY DOES

Despite claiming to be about “security,” the order:

  1. Prevents exposure of judicial ethics violations
  2. Protects biased judges from being identified
  3. Denies Reardon the right to challenge bias
  4. Allows the government to hide its misconduct
  5. Ensures the cover-up continues
THE GOVERNMENT’S PRETEXTUAL “FINDINGS”

Judge Whitehurst found:

  • Government demonstrated “good cause”
  • “Serious potential of harm to individuals” if materials are disseminated
  • “Serious potential” that dissemination would reveal “methods or operational behavior”

But these findings are based solely on the government’s one-sided motion – without hearing from the defense.

WHY “SECURITY” IS A LIE

The government’s security concerns are contradicted by their own conduct:

  1. They disclosed the information through FOIA – if truly sensitive, they wouldn’t have released it
  2. They filmed the same events Reardon filmed – no security issue with recording
  3. They waited 20+ minutes before arresting Reardon – no urgent security threat
  4. The emails went to judges, not just security personnel – not about security operations

The real concern is accountability, not security.

REARDON’S RESPONSE: Emergency Motion to Vacate

Reardon is filing an emergency motion demanding:

  1. Immediate vacation of the Ex Parte Interim Order
  2. Disclosure of whether Judge Whitehurst received ex parte communications
  3. Recusal of Judge Whitehurst if she received them
  4. Full disclosure of all judges who received communications
  5. Denial of the protective order motion
  6. Full access to all discovery materials
  7. Full briefing before any protective order issues – including defense response and hearing

THE BROADER IMPLICATIONS

This case now involves:

Layer 1: The Original Charges
  • Arrest for peaceful protest on courthouse steps
  • First Amendment violations
Layer 2: The Ex Parte Communications
  • U.S. Marshals emailed judges before filing charges
  • Judicial ethics violations
  • Due process violations
Layer 3: The Cover-Up
  • Government seeks protective order to hide communications
  • Prior restraint on publication
Layer 4: The Ex Parte Order
  • Judge grants government’s motion same day without hearing defense
  • Premature restriction of access
  • No emergency justification
  • Possible judicial bias

Each layer makes the scandal worse.

QUESTIONS THAT MUST BE ANSWERED
  1. Did Magistrate Judge Whitehurst receive any ex parte communications about Reardon?
  2. If so, why didn’t she disclose this and recuse?
  3. Why did she grant the government’s motion the same day without waiting for the defense response?
  4. What emergency justified issuing an ex parte order without hearing from the defense?
  5. Why is she classifying emails to judges as “security information”?
  6. Is she protecting her own bias or the bias of other judges

THE STAKES

If this interim order stands:

  • Judges can be secretly prejudiced against defendants
  • Defendants can never learn about the bias
  • Evidence of judicial ethics violations can be hidden
  • The government can coordinate with judges behind closed doors
  • No one gets a fair trial

This is not about one journalist. This is about whether our justice system works.

TIMELINE OF ESCALATING COVER-UP

June 24, 2025: U.S. Marshals email judges about Reardon

June 26, 2025: Follow-up email encouraging distribution

August 25, 2025: Reardon arrested

October 15, 2025 (morning): Government files motion for protective order

October 15, 2025 (afternoon): Judge Whitehurst grants government’s motion as ex parte interim order (same day, without waiting for defense response)

October 22, 2025: Defense response due (but order already in effect)

The pattern: Act fast, hide evidence, prevent exposure.

REARDON’S STATEMENT

“This ex parte order proves exactly what I’ve been saying: they’re desperate to hide evidence of judicial bias. Judge Whitehurst granted the government’s motion the same day they filed it—without waiting for my opposition, without any emergency justification. That’s not how justice works.

There was no emergency. I’ve had these materials for weeks without incident. The only urgency here is their desire to hide evidence of judicial bias before I can expose it.

If she received those ex parte communications herself, she’s protecting her own bias. If she didn’t, she’s protecting other judges’ bias. Either way, this is a cover-up—and the court is helping them do it.

I will not be silenced. I will not accept a system where judges can be secretly prejudiced against defendants, and courts help the government hide it. And I will not stop fighting for transparency.

The government created this scandal by violating judicial ethics rules. They cannot now hide behind ‘security’ to conceal their misconduct.

Sunlight is a disinfectant. They’re trying to turn off the lights.”

HOW YOU CAN HELP

  1. Share this story – The mainstream media won’t cover judicial corruption
  2. Contact the Fifth Circuit Judicial Council – File complaints about judicial ethics violations
  3. Demand transparency – Call your representatives and demand accountability
  4. Support independent journalism – We the People News needs your help to continue investigating
  5. Stay informed – This case is developing rapidly
  6. GoFundMe: https://gofund.me/d7e84db6

WHAT TO WATCH FOR

  • Emergency motion to vacate (filing this week)
  • Judge Whitehurst’s response to recusal demand
  • Disclosure of which judges received communications
  • District Judge’s review of interim order
  • Possible appeal to Fifth Circuit

THE BOTTOM LINE

A federal magistrate judge has issued a gag order before the defense could respond, classifying evidence of judicial ethics violations as “security information,” and potentially protecting her own bias.

This is not justice. This is a cover-up.

And it’s happening in broad daylight.


BREAKING UPDATES:

We will update this story as developments occur. Follow We the People News for real-time coverage.

DOCUMENTS:

  • [Interim Protective Order – October 15, 2025]
  • [Government’s Motion for Protective Order]
  • [FOIA Records Showing Ex Parte Communications]
  • [Emergency Motion to Vacate (forthcoming)]

CONTACT:


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🚨 BREAKING: Federal judge grants government’s protective order motion SAME DAY without hearing defense – hiding evidence of ex parte communications to judges. No emergency justified this. Cover-up in real time. #JudicialCorruption #ExParteScanal

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© 2025 We the People News. All rights reserved.

This is investigative journalism documenting judicial proceedings. All facts are sourced from court documents and FOIA records.


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