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We’re never without an abundance of information to present to you about the job Hardin County’s new prosecutor is doing…mainly because she’s not really doing her job.
We’ve been chronicling Tara Wallace’s use of her office for systematic targeting of people she perceives have offended or insulted her in some way, ever since about a month after she took that office just a short year ago. At first it appeared that she was going to get away with over-charging or mis-charging people with impunity.
However, recent developments in some of the cases we’ve followed, one of them featured here yesterday, show that the judges who are having to deal with Wallace are for all intents and purposes calling her on her missteps. One case that is explored in great detail is the following, “Prosecutor torments 12-year-old boy as personal vendetta continues“:
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HARDIN CO.— Hardin County State’s Attorney Tara Wallace has lost yet another bid to convict a woman she has targeted since being elected to office, simply because the woman wrote something on her personal Facebook page that insulted Wallace.
This time in her relentless pursuit of Julie Hobbs and despite a judge’s ruling concerning a 12-yer-old boy being in emotional distress, Wallace has pushed her agenda anyway.
Wallace had told several individuals that she was going to “get her” (meaning Hobbs) for the Facebook comment.
Hobbs worked for the late attorney Jack Quarant, who died in July 2012.
Shortly after being sworn into office later that same year, Wallace presented an application for a search warrant to judge Paul Lamar.
Wallace told Judge Lamar that her personal investigator (and suspected romantic fling) Tom Maynor had written the application.
Disclosure sources indicate that Wallace was the one who wrote the application and had Maynor sign it, which would make her guilty of perjury, official misconduct, and malicious prosecution just to name a few, if anyone would decide to push it.
The case was ultimately thrown out by Lamar, who said there was no evidence for the charge ever being filed.
In a phone conversation with Disclosure publisher Jack Howser (who didn’t know about the falsifying of the application at the time) earlier this year, Wallace expressed that she was outraged over Lamar’s decision.
Hobbs’ 12-year-old son was having a very difficult time over visitation with his biological father.
In January 2013 the boy, very upset after years of reportedly being stood up by his father for court-ordered visitation, didn’t want to go, and so Hobbs didn’t force the emotionally distraught boy.
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