Search This Blog

Selective Prosecution

 

In West Virginia, selective prosecution is a constitutional defense based on the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and the state’s own constitutional guarantees. It asserts that while the defendant may have technically violated the law, the decision to prosecute was made on an unconstitutional, discriminatory basis.

The West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals follows a rigorous standard—primarily the two-pronged test established in federal law (e.g., Wayte v. United States and United States v. Armstrong) and applied within state precedents.

1. The Two-Pronged Legal Test

To succeed on a claim of selective prosecution in West Virginia, a defendant must prove both of the following elements:

  • Discriminatory Effect: The defendant must show that other individuals who were "similarly situated" (committed the same acts) were not prosecuted.

  • Discriminatory Purpose/Intent: The defendant must prove that the decision to prosecute was motivated by an "impermissible standard," such as:

    • Race, religion, or gender.

    • Exercise of a protected constitutional right (e.g., freedom of speech or political affiliation).

    • Arbitrary or malicious classifications.

2. The "Presumption of Regularity"

West Virginia law grants prosecutors a presumption of regularity. Courts assume that prosecutors have properly discharged their official duties unless "clear evidence to the contrary" is presented.

  • Prosecutorial Discretion: Prosecutors have broad latitude to decide whom to charge and what charges to bring.

  • Mere Selectivity is Not Enough: Simply showing that others were not prosecuted for the same crime is insufficient. You must prove the reason for the selection was intentionally discriminatory.

3. Key Procedural Hurdles

The biggest challenge in these cases is the "Catch-22" regarding discovery:

  • High Threshold for Discovery: To get access to the prosecutor’s files or internal emails to prove intent, a defendant must first provide some evidence of both discriminatory effect and intent.

  • Pre-Trial Motion: Selective prosecution is considered a "defect in the institution of the prosecution" rather than a defense to the crime itself. It must typically be raised in a pre-trial motion to dismiss.

4. Relevant West Virginia Authority

While specific case names vary, the state’s framework relies heavily on:

  • West Virginia Code § 7-4-1: Outlines the general duties and broad discretionary powers of the Prosecuting Attorney.

  • State v. Barker (and similar cases): West Virginia courts often cite that a "conscious exercise of some selectivity in enforcement is not in itself a federal or state constitutional violation" unless it is based on an unjustifiable standard.

Summary Table for Claims

ElementWhat You Must Show
ComparatorSpecific examples of people who did the same thing but weren't charged.
MotiveDirect or circumstantial evidence of bias (e.g., political retaliation or racial profiling).
Burden of ProofThe burden is on the defendant to overcome the presumption of prosecutorial honesty.

Disclaimer: I am an AI, not an attorney. This information is for research purposes and does not constitute legal advice. For specific legal challenges in Pocahontas County or elsewhere, you should consult with a licensed West Virginia attorney.

What if Snowshoe Decides to Incorporate?

 


In West Virginia, the minimum number of residents required to incorporate depends on the physical size of the territory you are looking to incorporate. According to West Virginia Code §8-2-1, the requirements are as follows:

Population Requirements

  • Areas less than one square mile: Must have at least 100 inhabitants or freeholders.

  • Areas more than one square mile: Must have an average of at least 500 inhabitants or freeholders per square mile.

Classification of New Municipalities

Once incorporated, the "class" of the municipality is determined by the total population:

  • Class I City: More than 50,000 residents.

  • Class II City: More than 10,000 but not more than 50,000 residents.

  • Class III City: More than 2,000 but not more than 10,000 residents.

  • Class IV Town or Village: 2,000 residents or fewer.

Additional Legal Hurdles

Simply meeting the population minimum is only the first step. To successfully incorporate, proponents must also satisfy several other conditions:

  • The Petition: Must be signed by at least 30% of the freeholders (property owners) in the territory.

  • The "Urban" Rule: The area cannot already be within an existing municipality that is "urban in character."

  • Service Delivery: The proponents must prove to the county commission that the new municipality can provide essential services, such as police and fire protection, solid waste collection, and water/sewer services, starting on the date of incorporation.

  • The "Best Interest" Clause: A county commission can deny the incorporation if they determine it is not in the best interest of the county as a whole or if a nearby existing municipality could provide services more efficiently.

If the county commission finds the requirements are met, they will order a census and eventually a special election where the qualified voters in that territory must approve the incorporation.

If a territory in West Virginia successfully incorporates, the authority to collect the hotel/motel (occupancy) tax shifts from the county to the new municipality for all establishments within the new corporate limits.

Under West Virginia Code §7-18-1, the tax is a "privilege tax" that can be imposed by either a county or a municipality, but they cannot both tax the same room. Here is how incorporation specifically changes the landscape:

1. Jurisdiction Shift

  • Pre-incorporation: The county commission collects the tax from all hotels, motels, and short-term rentals (like Airbnbs) in the area.

  • Post-incorporation: Once the municipality is formed and passes its own hotel tax ordinance, the county loses its authority to collect the tax within those new city limits. The revenue now flows directly to the municipal treasury.

2. Tax Rates

  • Current Standards: Both counties and municipalities are generally authorized to charge up to 6%.

  • Recent Legislation: As of early 2026 (HB 4776), there have been legislative moves to increase this maximum to 8%.

  • The Benefit of Incorporation: A new municipality could theoretically set a different rate than the surrounding county (within the legal limit). If the county was only charging 3% and the new town needs revenue, the town council could vote to increase it to 6% or 8% to fund local services.

3. Allocation of Funds (The 50/50 Rule)

West Virginia law is very strict about how this money is spent (WV Code §7-18-14). Whether collected by a county or a municipality, the revenue must be split:

  • At least 50% must go to a Convention and Visitors Bureau (CVB) to promote tourism.

  • The remaining 50% can be used by the municipality for:

    • Public recreation projects (parks, trails).

    • Historic preservation.

    • Promoting the arts.

    • Operating a museum or cultural center.

    • General expenditures (only if certain tourism requirements are already met).

4. Administrative Impact

For hotel and short-term rental operators, the primary change is remittance.

  • Instead of sending tax payments to the County Sheriff or Treasurer, they would remit them to the Municipal Finance Officer or Recorder.

  • Under current 2026 regulations, "marketplace facilitators" (like Airbnb or Vrbo) are required to use geofencing to ensure the tax is automatically routed to the correct taxing authority (the new town vs. the county).

Summary Table

FeatureCounty JurisdictionMunicipal Jurisdiction
Collection AuthorityUnincorporated areas onlyInside corporate limits only
Max Rate6% (or 8% per 2026 updates)6% (or 8% per 2026 updates)
Primary BeneficiaryCounty-wide CVBMunicipal or Regional CVB
RemittanceCounty Sheriff/TreasurerMunicipal Finance Office

In short, incorporation creates a "revenue carve-out" where the money generated by local tourism stays directly under the control of the new town's government rather than being managed at the county level.

 

 

Green Bank Deed

 

In West Virginia, property deeds serve as the foundational legal instruments for tracking land ownership, encumbrances, and the specific nature of real estate transactions. In Pocahontas County, these records are maintained by the County Clerk in Marlinton through Deed Books and Grantor/Grantee Indices.

Based on the region's historical and contemporary land transactions—including the transitions of the JacMal Properties estate and the public land maneuvers of the Solid Waste Authority (SWA)—property deed information can be understood through the following key legal and structural components:

Types of Deeds and Their Functions The type of deed used in a transaction reveals the level of protection afforded to the buyer and the intent of the transfer:

  • General Warranty Deed: This is the standard instrument for "arms-length" market sales. It guarantees that the seller holds a clear title to the property and promises to defend the buyer against any future third-party claims.
  • Quitclaim Deed: Under W. Va. Code § 36-3-7, a quitclaim deed simply transfers whatever interest the grantor has in the land without any warranties or guarantees that the title is actually clear. These are frequently used to clear historical "clouds" on titles, settle estates, or move personal family land into a corporate holding company (like an LLC) for liability protection. In West Virginia, a quitclaim deed made for $100 or less requires the signature of both the grantor and the grantee to be recorded.

Financial Fingerprints: Consideration and Excise Taxes Deeds provide explicit clues about the financial nature of a transaction through their consideration clauses and tax stamps:

  • Market Sales: When property is sold at fair market value, the deed will display a substantial state and county Excise Tax stamp, calculated at $1.10 for every $500 of value (or $4.40 per $1,000).
  • Nominal Transfers: If a deed states the property was transferred for "$1.00 and other valuable consideration," it indicates an organizational or family maneuver rather than a market sale. These nominal transfers avoid setting a new, higher market price that the County Assessor could use to spike property taxes. In these cases, the recorded excise tax will typically be $0.00 or a minimum fee like $2.20, and a "Declaration of Consideration or Value" must be filed explaining the exemption.

The Anatomy of a Legal Description To locate and define the boundaries of a parcel, deeds rely on historical surveying language, which is carried forward generation after generation:

  • Metes and Bounds: Older deeds describe the perimeter using a "Point of Beginning" (like a stone or tree), compass bearings, distances, and references to neighboring properties (adjoiners).
  • Source of Title: Modern deeds link back to historical ones using a clause that states, "Being the same property conveyed to..." This allows title examiners to trace the chain of ownership backward.
  • Inherited Encumbrances: A deed's "anchor" document will list permanent restrictions that bind all future owners. This includes utility easements, rights-of-way for neighbors to access landlocked parcels, or the reservation of subsurface mineral rights (coal, oil, and gas).

Tracing the JacMal Properties Chain of Title The property records for JacMal Properties, LLC in Green Bank (Map 67, Parcel 3.8) offer a perfect case study of how these deed mechanics work in practice.

  • The Anchor Deed: In 1978, C.P. and Evelyn Arbogast sold the land to John M. and Mary Alice Burns, recorded in Deed Book 162, Page 44. This specific document contains the original "master DNA" of the property's metes and bounds, as well as any historical mineral reservations.
  • The Corporate Vesting: Following John's death, Mary Alice Burns executed a nominal quitclaim transfer of the property to JacMal Properties LLC around 2012 (Deed Book 330, Page 125). The attorney drafting the LLC's current holding deed (Deed Book 350, Page 500) simply copied the legal description from the 1978 Arbogast deed to establish a continuous "root of title".

Public Land Deeds and Statutory Constraints While private individuals can use $1.00 quitclaim deeds freely, government entities like the SWA cannot easily "gift" public land.

  • Under W. Va. Code § 7-3-3, public property generally must be sold at a public auction, or directly to a private party for no less than 75% of its appraised fair market value.
  • To bypass these strict auction requirements for the new solid waste transfer station, the SWA is executing a multi-step deed maneuver. They are deeding two acres of the public landfill to the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) via an inter-governmental transfer.
  • Because the GVEDC operates under different statutes, it can then legally allow Jacob Meck's company to build on the site. Consequently, the public deed records will show the GVEDC holding the "Fee Simple" title, while JacMal will record a "Memorandum of Lease" or "Notice of Option" to secure its 15-year interest in the property without ever actually holding the deed.

A satirical and facetious sales pitch for the Meck Proposal

 


Step right up, citizens of Pocahontas County, and feast your eyes on "Option 4"—the undisputed masterpiece of modern municipal maneuvering, brought to you by Jacob Meck and JacMal Properties, LLC. Are you tired of tedious transparency? Exhausted by the grueling process of saving taxpayer money? Then you are going to love our revolutionary new transfer station proposal!

Why compete when you can collude? Forget the outdated concept of finding the "lowest responsible bidder" on the open market. With Option 4, we pioneered the "Developer-Led Criteria" method, meaning we kindly wrote the technical specifications ourselves, perfectly tailoring the project to our own crane maintenance capabilities. It’s a massive conflict of interest, sure, but it guarantees we win the contract without breaking a sweat!

The Magic Disappearing Public Land Trick! Normally, West Virginia Code § 7-3-3 requires public land to be sold at a public auction so the taxpayers get fair market value. How boring! Instead, we use the fabulous "GVEDC Bypass." The Solid Waste Authority (SWA) simply slips two acres of public landfill property to the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation, who then leases it to us. This brilliant "Title Shield" not only sidesteps public bidding laws, but it also magically erases our property tax liability.

A Financial Commitment Your Grandchildren Will Feel! Why use a non-binding, annually renewable lease when you can be legally suffocated by an inescapable 15-year unconstitutional debt?. For the low, low price of just $16,759 every single month for 180 months, the county gets the privilege of renting a facility we own. And the grand finale? A mandatory terminal buyout of $1,103,495.24 at the end of the lease. That’s over $4.1 million locked in, with absolutely no way for future SWA boards to opt out! Plus, the Public Service Commission will likely force the county into a $4,500-a-month "forced savings" escrow account just to make sure we get our million-dollar payday.

Monopoly Money: Funded by YOU! You might be wondering, "How will the broke Solid Waste Authority afford my $16,759 monthly invoice?" Easy! We are establishing an ironclad "Flow Control" monopoly. We will legally mandate that every single ounce of garbage in the county must pass through our doors, explicitly forbidding towns like Durbin from hauling their waste to cheaper landfills in neighboring counties. To make sure the SWA’s checks don't bounce, they will just hike your residential Green Box fee from $120 to a staggering $310 a year. We even tried to charge people who own empty dirt lots, though the farmers complained a bit too loudly about that one!

We Haven't Checked the Soil Yet, But Who Cares? Now, you might be asking: "Is the ground next to the landfill actually stable enough to hold a massive concrete tipping floor without cracking and leaking garbage juice into the groundwater?" We don't know! It might be a karst sinkhole, or it might just be 30-year-old uncompacted trash fill. But don't worry about us; if our core drilling proves the site is an unbuildable disaster and the deal collapses, the SWA is still legally on the hook to reimburse us up to $200,000 for our "pre-construction" troubles. We literally cannot lose!

So sign on the dotted line, Pocahontas County! Embrace a project boasting a spectacular 0% compliance rate with statutory procurement thresholds. The Meck Proposal: because the most "economic" deal is the one you make behind closed doors!

It Was a Sham!

 


The "straw man" principles you’ve researched can be directly applied to the recent and controversial developments in the Pocahontas County Solid Waste project of 2026. While the project is currently in flux after the April 29th "start over" announcement, the original deal with JacMal Properties/Allegheny Disposal provides a textbook case for comparing these concepts.

1. The "Hidden Principal" vs. Transparency

  • Straw Man Theory: A hidden party uses a "clean" name to bypass scrutiny or legal barriers.

  • Pocahontas 2026 Reality: Critics (including yourself at the April 29th meeting) have questioned the transparency of the relationship between the Solid Waste Authority (SWA) and Jacob Meck (JacMal/Allegheny Disposal). The "straw man" concern here isn't necessarily a hidden person, but a procedural "sham." By signing a Letter of Intent (LOI) without a public bidding process, the SWA essentially selected a private "principal" to control a public necessity, leading to accusations that the deal was a "sham to hide a private sale" of public land access.

2. The Transfer of Liability and Assets

  • Straw Man Theory: A straw man holds the title or debt to protect the real buyer, often leaving the straw man (or the public) at risk if the deal collapses.

  • Pocahontas 2026 Reality: * Asset Transfer: The original proposal involved deeding or leasing public landfill acreage to a private company (JacMal) to build the station.

    • The "Sham" Risk: SWA Attorney David Sims argued that taxpayers wouldn't be liable if the deal collapsed because they aren't "parties to the contract." However, from a straw man perspective, the SWA acts as the "front" for the public. If the private operator (the principal) fails, the SWA—and by extension, the county’s waste infrastructure—is the one left "holding the bag" with a half-built facility or a 15-year debt obligation.

3. Avoiding Regulatory Constraints (Flow Control)

  • Straw Man Theory: Used to bypass residency or licensing rules.

  • Pocahontas 2026 Reality: The SWA attempted to implement "Flow Control"—a regulation requiring all trash to pass through this specific private facility. In legal terms, if the SWA (a government body) uses its regulatory power solely to guarantee the profits of a specific private partner (Jacob Meck) without a competitive bid, it mirrors the straw man principle of using a "legitimate" shell (the SWA's regulatory power) to achieve a "private" financial end.


Comparison Summary: Is it a "Straw Man" Deal?

PrincipleStraw Man DefinitionPocahontas 2026 Context
The "Front"A person with a clean record or legal standing.The SWA board, acting as the legal entity to sign a lease that benefits a private developer.
The BenefitPrincipal gets the asset without the baggage.JacMal/Allegheny Disposal gets a 15-year guaranteed revenue stream and control over county waste.
The "Sham" IndicatorLack of disclosure or competitive process.The lack of bidding for the transfer station or hauling contract before the LOI was signed.
The Fallacy"I'm the one buying it" (when they aren't)."This is for the public's benefit" (when critics argue it's a private land/revenue grab).

Current Status: The "Clean Slate"

The SWA's decision on April 29, 2026, to "go back to the drawing board" is a direct response to these specific concerns. By tabling the JacMal project and welcoming public suggestions, the board is effectively trying to dismantle the "straw man" optics of the original deal and move toward a more transparent, legally defensible process.


Selective Prosecution

  In West Virginia, selective prosecution is a constitutional defense based on the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and ...

Shaker Posts