Charges against Tramel dropped

Charges against Tramel dropped

Jerry Tramel

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Charges of cheating and making false claims of an academic degree have been dropped against former Sneads City Manager Jerry Tramel.
Hired by the city in November 2005, Tramel was fired in February 2007.
Firing him “without cause” as his employment agreement allowed the city to do, the city council did so amid questions about his Ph.D. from Canterbury University in the town or county of Cheshire in the United Kingdom.
Allegations were made that the institution was essentially a “diploma mill,” in which various degrees are bestowed at varying prices and without class attendance and exams being taken
Tramel was subsequently charged with criminal offenses.
Tramel, in a written statement, said he felt “exonerated in (the) false degree claims case.” But assistant state attorney Greg Wilson said he thinks Tramel’s “claims of being ‘exonerated’ are overblown.”
Tramel called the dismissals a “stunning victory (which) took just 27 minutes during which every facet of the state’s case ... collapsed.” Tramel says the job he lost didn’t even require a degree, although he continues to maintain he does possess the degree he claimed.  He went on to say that he had performed his duties “in an exemplary fashion.”
Assistant State Attorney Greg Wilson, who inherited the case long after it was filed, explained why he believes the charge of cheating was dismissed.
The statutory definition of cheating is a broad one, and requires that the charging attorney specify the particulars that apply.
When the charge against Tramel was first leveled, the full statutory definition of cheating was simply pulled from computer software which stores all Florida statues. The charging attorney is then expected to select the offense variables that apply to the particular case and insert them. This clean-up wasn’t done, Wilson said.
Tramel’s attorney had the option of asking the state to either provide a “statement of particulars,” or file a motion to dismiss the charge for vagueness. Tramel’s lawyer opted to ask for the dismissal, and prevailed.
The court concluded that the state did not properly articulate its justification for the cheating charge.
Wilson said he also felt that he was barred from prosecuting on the cheating charge for another reason. According to him, there was an issue of double jeopardy, because the general statute for cheating essentially mirrors the specific statute cited in the other count.
“When there is a specific statute, it takes precedence and bars prosecution on the general statute for the same criminal action,” Wilson explained, “So, based on that premise, Judge (Bill) Wright concurred and count II (cheating) was dismissed.”
The prosecutor’s office was also facing time constraints.
“Additionally, there would have been an issue with amending the information to cure the grammatical defect (in the cheating charge). due to the time frame in which the defendant was charged and the case actually proceeding to trial,” Wilson said. “At the time of the hearing, it was nearly two years old, mainly because the defendant kept changing attorneys and seeking continuances, as well as the administrative change at the State Attorney’s Office.”
As for the count that accused Tramel of making false claims of an academic degree, the court file provides some clues as to why that charge was dropped.
In the dismissal, the court concluded that none of Tramel’s actions constituted a violation of the law cited in the material presented as the reason for the charge.
In the court file, a letter from Canterbury University states that, while it is not an institution credited by the U.S. Department of Education, it does indeed exist.
Such accreditation is voluntary, the school’s representative pointed out, and is not necessary for the existence of the school.
The institution confirmed that Tramel does possess the degrees he claims to have from the university.
Further, the representative wrote, as a foreign school, it could not obtain U.S. accreditation even if it wished to do so.
Wilson explained why he believes the charge related to Tramel’s claim of an academic degree was dropped.
“If Mr. Tramel had said that he held a Ph.D. or B.Sc. from FSU, and he in fact did not, then he could be charged. But that is not what he did. Mr. Tramel claimed to hold a degree from Canterbury University, which is an online ‘diploma mill,’” Wilson said. “Mr. Tramel does in fact have the paperwork from this ‘diploma mill’ and is allowed to say he has it. .., The fact remains that his claim to have a Ph.D, although technically true, is purposely meant to deceive people into believing that it was a degree earned through a studious education which imparted knowledge on the recipient, in contrast to a title which was actually purchased.”
Tramel defends his degree and its worth.
“Many people do not understand accreditation,” he explained. “They think it is compulsory, when in fact it is voluntary. They think it is a kind of warranty of degree quality when actually it is not. Its function is to allow access to federal tax dollars. Institutions that wish to have Title IV federal funding have their academic freedom restricted to what the federal government dictates,” Tramel wrote. “I believe that access to academic programs that are independent of government finance and interference is an essential factor in a free society.”
He also asserts that the secretary of a state agency has a similar degree, and was promoted by the governor rather than prosecuted by the state.
Tramel wrote at length about various court cases in which the accreditation issue has been tested. He pointed to case law concerning the statute under which he was charged, saying it had been previously struck down as an “unconstitutional violation of First Amendment rights.”
Wilson said the statute itself is not unconstitutional, but acknowledged that the way the state was trying to use it might be considered so.
“Mr. Tramel’s attorney was arguing that the entire statute was unconstitutional because a federal court in south Florida had ruled that way in a civil case ... that case is not binding on the First District Court of Appeals,”  Wilson said.
Tramel had several other things to say in his statement.
“I lost my job over this,” he wrote. “But it is worthy of note that nobody involved in the investigation or prosecution of this case remains in the employ of the State Attorney’s Office. I have been advised I can expect substantial compensation for being put through this terrible ordeal, which my wife and I have endured to clear my own name, and to make a stand for academic freedom for every citizen of this great state and this great country.”

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Flag Comment Posted by Amadeous on October 15, 2009 at 5:17 pm

Mr Trammell did nothing for the town of Sneads except rip them off. He ran around town calling all the employees to him and threatened to fire them all if they oppsed him. He was a cheating liar and a scammer.

Flag Comment Posted by democrat4ever on October 14, 2009 at 7:20 am

zebra gravy i thout i ran you off frum here alredy u mus not learnd yo lessin.
blackbart- i luv dat name it jus so happen dat i hav mos resentlee obtained a phd in ackountin frum canterberry miself. ma-be i culd be of servis in dis bran surjery biness endever. pleze concider me for any posishun u may hav.

Flag Comment Posted by BlackBart on October 14, 2009 at 12:33 am

From seeker’s comment:
“...a real Asst. State Attorney Wilson stepped up to bat and spoke the truth. Look for this man to be State Attorney at some point in his career. He is strong and to the point and straight down the line!“

HUH???  Quoting Wilson directly from the article:
1.  ‘...assistant state attorney Greg Wilson said he thinks Tramel’s “claims of being ‘exonerated’ are overblown.”‘
2.  “Mr. Tramel does in fact have the paperwork from this ‘diploma mill’ and is allowed to say he has it. .., The fact remains that his claim to have a Ph.D, although technically true, is purposely meant to deceive people into believing that it was a degree earned through a studious education which imparted knowledge on the recipient, in contrast to a title which was actually purchased.”

Seeker, you either need to become more intimately acquainted with some reading comprehension skills or you’re nuttier than squirrel crap.  (Perhaps both…)

Tramel got lucky because the case got thrown out on a technicality.  Besides that, he played ‘musical attorneys’ long enough that the case was no longer considered relevant/cost effective for the State Attorney’s office to deal with.  I guess if you consider being so irrelevant that your court case basically gets dismissed as being equal to “winning” a case, then buy yourself a cookie.  If Tramel wants to waste more of his and his wife’s money trying to get blood out of a turnip by suing the town of Sneads, et al, he can knock himself out and get in line (there is one person I know of right now who has a LEGIT beef with a certain Sneads town council member and the current town manager and that person is totally justified in getting “lawyered up”—HINT: it ain’t Jerry Tramel).  Anyway, if TramellLOLll was the hot-shot city manager you/he purport himself to be, I’m fairly sure that the beleaguered town of Sneads would have turned a more forgiving eye to his/your so-called “educational credentials” (because, remember kids, the position didn’t require a degree!).  There was more to the dismissal of Tramel than his simply fudging on a job application.  The old adage “quit while you’re ahead” comes to mind.

Now Jerry can devote his undivided attention to who/what unsuspecting person/municipality he’s going to try to defraud next.  As for me, I think I’ll go buy an MD degree from SCAMterbury University and start my own brain surgery practice.  I’m gonna be rich!$!!$$!!

Flag Comment Posted by zerogravity on October 13, 2009 at 3:59 pm

EJCP, Yeah, it is good to be back.  I just had to post about what Jerry said there in the article.  My comment was on what the paper reported Jerry as saying and Seeker Tramel had to post as If I was talking to him directly.  You are correct in your comprehension of my post in that I was saying Jerry Seeker Tramel had the habit of blowing things out of proportion. 

No Jerry you are wrong a dismissal does not imply or prove innocence.  Why don’t you hire just one more attorney and get him to explain that to you…..or just look it up on Wikipedia.  By the way I am prepared to reveal my true identity if you are…..in fact I really am ready to do it regardless because you cant reveal that you truly are Jerry.  I challenge you to reveal yourself to me privately.  Many people know who I am and that I post using the screen name zerogravity.  By the way I use that name because there are some people that I hope their gravity lets go of them and they fly up into the atmosphere sometimes.  Not always, lately I have been less frustrated with people (idiots).  Whoa?! did yall feel the wind just change?

Flag Comment Posted by eastJCpatriot on October 13, 2009 at 2:55 pm

cameralady- It’s great to see you back. I can assure you that seeker (aka sucker) (or Jerry) knows how to spell his own name. He either misspelled it on purpose to throw us off HA, HA, HA, HA, not working.  Or it was a type-o. Hope to see you soon cameralady.

Zerogravity- It’s really great to see you back in the mix.  You are absolutely correct by saying that innocence cannot be established.  And your handsome, you have a great personality, a great sense of humor, and are just a wonderful person in general.  Tell the family I said hi.

Jerry/seeker- There is a world of difference between Guilty, Not Guilty, and Dismissal.  The case was too costly for the SAO to prosecute not being a violent crime. Basically you got lucky. Stop misleading people. Your NOT smarter than everyone here Jerry. YOU WERE NOT PROVEN INNOCENT. If you say otherwise then you are a liar. And you smell funny. wink

Love Yall.
eastJcpatriot SBDLLC

Flag Comment Posted by cameralady on October 13, 2009 at 1:14 pm

Seeker, if you know Jerry so well, I would expect you to spell his name correctly. It’s TRAMEL. One “L”, not two.
Maybe we’re talking about two different people???

Flag Comment Posted by seeker on October 13, 2009 at 12:29 pm

My Dear Zerogravity,
Come down from where you are.What is your real name? AKA What?
How wrong can you be? There was a verdict. Go to the Jackson County Court house and read the file. The charges were dismissed. That means,“no crimes committed.“ It is so easy to get caught up in things you have no truth about. But, rumors make life interesting, when you don’t have a real life. Some people strive on rumors. Speaking for Mr.Tramell I can understand. You are brainwashed in “the good ole boy” syndrome. It is o’kay. As you can see that syndrome is passing!
For the “Without Cause” claim. Again, so untrue! In the 02/28/2007 Minutes of Sneads read the reason.Also,statements were given to State authorities that Mr.Tramell was terminated for other reasons. He has copies if you would like them. But, that would is irrelevant. Mr.Tramell was on medical leave and was not notified of the “Special Meeting” nor that he was terminated. The Town Attorney forgot to notify him. Read the 02/28/2007 Town minutes. It states he was terminated, because of the ridiculous claim made against his credentials from someone named “Pug.“ The Town did not wait and see the charges were wrong.
As you can see, Mr.Tramell is the victim and Sneads will not go without a lawsuit against,“Pug” and all Town Council -Maybe Town Clerk and Chief of Police(if he is still employed.)Both Town Attorneys. Mr.Tramell has statements made to one of his Attorneys from the Town Attorney. Believe, this is all put together with perfection and honesty! Sneads should be making Mr.Tramell an offer to settle, because ALL the Town Councilmen can be sued for any amount!
Now get the real facts before you make comments. By the way, his article is in USA Today - Naple News - Business News - AR News, and so many others. Read them. This is a big story!
Thank You for remembering Mr.Tramell.

Flag Comment Posted by zerogravity on October 13, 2009 at 9:54 am

WOW, Jerry never changes.  There was not a verdict so therefore innocence can not be established.  Legally or not there is the moral issue of honesty and integrity in the claims made by one Jerry Tramel or is that an AKA?  Either way the city of Sneads is safe because they had the unmitigated right to let him go, WITHOUT CAUSE.  I am tired of posting for now…..more to come

Flag Comment Posted by seeker on October 12, 2009 at 10:25 pm

My dear drmcarthur.

Patience. It is very simple to change anything on Wikipedia. Just register-Log In-Edit and Save.
Simple Right?
Mr.Tramell would not let me do this. He states Wikipedia is under so many lawsuits they are obtaining the IP Address’s for all entries in a recent time.People may have posted very false information and some Could have been used in Courts!
Why should we get involved when a situation takes care of itself?
Bless the poor ones that put the info., on Wikipedia. They will need it.
Bottom Line,“Again.“ Tramell, was exonerated and his school was proved to exist.“He Won!“ His credentials are real. Find another person to challenge. You are way out of your league.
Notice the “good ole boys"backed off!
By the way, “who could be named Pug?“

Flag Comment Posted by drmcarthur on October 12, 2009 at 3:02 pm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canterbury_University_(Seychelles)

Still there—not removed from the web just yet

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