J. Todd Foster Column: Boucher’s Next Election Might Be Decided By Energy BIll
The most exciting congressional campaign I’ve ever covered was in 1994, when newcomer George Nethercutt defeated House Speaker Tom Foley, R-Wash., by 4,000 votes. It was the second time in history and the first since 1860 that a sitting speaker had lost.
It proved that no incumbent congressman is invulnerable. That includes U.S. Rep. Rick Boucher, D-Va., who represents Southwest Virginia’s 9th District.
The odds against a Republican wresting away Boucher’s seat in Congress are long; the best challenge he has faced in the past 10 years was Kevin Triplett, who now works at Bristol Motor Speedway, and Boucher still won in a 2004 landslide.
With Boucher’s recent support of a cap-and-trade energy bill, the National Republican Congressional Committee has taken aim at the 9th District congressman – an early Barack Obama supporter who could be threatened in 2010 if the GOP runs a big name against him and if Obama has failed to turn around the economy in a meaningful way.
Could Virginia Delegate Terry Kilgore be just the ticket for the Republicans?
“I don’t think so,” Kilgore, R-Scott County, said Friday by telephone. But he added: “Right now.”
The American Clean Energy And Security Act of 2009, which passed the House 219-212 on June 26, pledges “to create clean energy jobs, achieve energy independence, reduce global warming pollution and transition to a clean energy economy.” Opponents say it will decimate the coal industry – a claim Boucher says is “disinformation” because coal usage will actually increase slightly.
“Anything carbon based is going to suffer,” Kilgore says, noting that the bill includes an unemployment provision as if anticipating job losses. “I think the effects are going to be pretty bad on the coal industry as a whole. As time goes on, we’re going to see a lot of coal jobs lost.”
Given the U.S. Supreme Court’s 5-4 decision in 2007 that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases are pollutants that require regulation, Congress had no choice but to act. Whether Congress went too far will be determined with time.
Boucher said in a face-to-face interview on Tuesday that the energy bill is one of two of the most important measures this Congress will face; health care reform is the other.
“This is a bill I had a major role in helping to shape and guide through the House,” said Boucher, 62, who has been elected and re-elected 13 times. “When people say this is a job loser, that’s just wrong. It really is a job creator. It accelerates the movement toward electrification of transportation. All-electric cars and trucks don’t run on imported oil; they run on American electricity, which is coal generated.”
The utility industry has held back capital investment until it could see where Congress was headed with cap-and-trade legislation, Boucher says.
“They have known for years there would be legislation on carbon dioxide emissions,” he said. “That unleashes a tremendous amount of pent-up investment. That creates jobs. That helps with economic stimulation. American industries are going to want to invest in technology. It will be emerging from American labs and exported around the world. This creates the next technology boom.”
The cost to each American family will be $80 to $110 a year, according to Environmental Protection Agency estimates – or less than the cost of a postage stamp per day, per family, Boucher says.
“The other side will try to make an issue of this because they see some potential for doing that,” Boucher says. “They’re not going to be able to do that perpetuating disinformation. There is not any new tax associated with this measure. Not a dollar of new tax. It’s a regulatory bill.”
Meanwhile, Boucher would not discuss the 2010 election and vowed that his only campaigning in 2009 would be to help Democrat Creigh Deeds get elected governor of Virginia.
Of the talk of a Kilgore run against him, Boucher said: “Terry and I are very good friends. We work collaboratively on many projects. … I think Terry is a very capable member of the House of Delegates. He and I are personal friends, partners in a whole range of ventures. What the future holds it holds. I’m not going to comment on the congressional race at this time. I have a job to do.”
Kilgore, meanwhile, has worked his way up in seniority after first being elected to the House of Delegates in 1994. “It would be tough to walk away from that,” he said.
Given Boucher’s dominance of the 9th District since Reagan’s first term, it probably will take a perfect storm to unseat him: a candidate of Kilgore’s caliber and an economy still limping along nearly 18 months from now.
And in Southwest Virginia, the 2010 race could be decided over the loss, if any, of coal jobs.
Mike Quillen, chief executive officer of Abingdon-based Alpha Natural Resources, credits Boucher with moderating the energy bill but says its full effects won’t be known for some time.
“We’re studying the heck out of it,” Quillen said Friday of the 1,300-page legislation. “We’re very closely working with Congressman Boucher’s office and do appreciate his efforts, to date, certainly on moving the language that is more comforting to us in terms of where it started.”
Quillen notes, however, that some estimates have utility rates climbing $3,000 a year, per family, and that two-thirds of all coal-mining jobs could go away.
“We’re trying to stay in the middle of the road and be open-minded about this,” he says.
J. TODD FOSTER is managing editor of the Bristol Herald Courier and can be reached at or by phone at (276) 645-2513.
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Reader Reactions
Nice piece J.Todd. Personally I think Mr. Boucher has been in office way too long. He’s definitely lost touch based on the Cap & Trade vote. There needs to be term limits.
Might add, Tom Daschel was defeated in similar circumstances in the 90’s or early 2000’s as well, similar to Foley.
Wgar was the 1st to happen when the Iraq war started ? Prices shot up.
Took a long time for them so get all those leaks fixed didn’t it. Even with Halibourton right there in Iraq 24/7.
When they did get things fixed what happened? Old tankers that had been focked for years were suddenly lining up to get oil. But many of them just filled up and moved off to drop anchor.
Ir rakes time to get old ship ready to sail, hire crews and move it all the way to the middle east.
They even told you on the news that refiners were shuting down for maintance over and over.
Then they told you the refinerys are only working 8 hours a day because they did not want to create an over supply of gas and drive prices down. This was from “GOOD MORNING AMERICA”.
The stock market began to come apart back in August of 2004 when Paulson placed an Auditor at AIG who was allowed to just add money to their books with a stroke of a pen. The insiders knew this and other things were going bad in the economy and they had to stop playing the commodies market.
Tankers were turned away from refinerys constantly and sat there waiting for someone to buy the oil as prices dropped.
The money began to dry up because of all the bad loans out there. The futures traders saw fewer and fewer buyers for oil futures. They needed their money to cover losses in subprimes.
Today the refinerys are not working 24/7. They work 12 hours a day. That is 2 hours on average start up 8 hours production and then 2 hours shut down every day. There are still tankers and barges loaded with oil that banks like Goldman Sak’s leased and filled with oil and holding for the price to go back up.
People cut way back on driving. Use to have cars going by here all night long. Now it is so quite the deer pick grass in the medium.
Dad, if there is price manipulation going on they aren’t very good at it. Last year gasoline prices where in excess of four dollars per gallon now they’re $2.28. What’s your explanation for that?
There is a game going on in the back ground if you have not noticed. Thousands of retirees were just scammed out of the retiement benifits and helthcare benifits along with stock holders.
There will be new businesses comming on line with few employees and many many machines.
An electric car only has 59 parts. HMO employees who POVIDE NO MEDICAL CARE AT ALL have to be slowly moved to out into the working world.
The competition for engery resources is not really there but the people who control it hype the market to inflate the price or they control production to keep the price high.
That is what happening right now controlled production at almost every point.
This comming from an Economic Porce Control book written by an Isreali Economist. Producers control price by NOT COMPETING WITH EACH OTHER !!!!!
Dad, who is lying Obama or Boucher? Obama said, during the campaign, that the cost of energy would skyrocket. Who’s lying? My guess is that it wouldn’t strain either of them to lie.
You are right about one thing, there’s nothing wrong with conserving. Wonder when those in Washington will begin to practice conservation? Every few days Obama jets off to some where or another. Should they not practice what they preach?
By the way, if government will get out of the way we would have all the energy we need for the next 50 to 75 years. In that time the market will provide alternatives not the government. Have you ever heard of the Department of Energy? Created in the seventies to increase domestic oil production and reduce our need for foreign oil. They now have thousands of employees, spend billions of dollars, and they’ve done a wonderful job don’t you think?
JUST WHAT CONGRESS NEEDS…
The Kilgores Share A Last Name But They Trade Favors Like Family
By Daniel Gilbert
Reporter / Bristol Herald Courier
Published: June 15, 2008
The time had expired for filing a lawsuit in a client’s personal injury case, but attorney Frank Kilgore thought he knew a way to rewind the clock.
The St. Paul, Va., attorney made a phone call to another Kilgore – not a relative, but a fellow attorney who is a state delegate and employed by the fledgling university Frank Kilgore founded and oversees.
In the August 2006 conversation, Frank Kilgore asked Terry Kilgore, a senior Republican lawmaker from Gate City, Va., if he could add his name to the lawsuit to invoke a privilege granted to legislators who are lawyers. That privilege can extend the shelf life of a case – known as its statute of limitations – when a person in active litigation hires a legislator while the General Assembly is in session.
With the consent of Terry Kilgore, who was in special session, Frank Kilgore named him as his client’s attorney in the lawsuit and claimed the legislative privilege.
But the delegate never met with the client, performed any legal work for her, or signed his name to any of the court pleadings. Nor was the client involved in a pending legal action – the trigger language for asserting the legislative privilege – at the time the statute expired.
Both men are the subject of an investigation by the Virginia State Bar for possible ethical misconduct, according to sources with first-hand knowledge of the bar complaint and a document obtained by the Herald Courier. When contacted in early June, Frank Kilgore indirectly acknowledged the complaint, saying he would pursue legal action to force the newspaper to disclose its sources “if that’s in the paper.”
The investigation by the bar of the year-old complaint is a sign investigators are treating the case seriously, but does not amount to evidence that the two attorneys are guilty of any misconduct.
In separate interviews, both men said the lawsuit Frank Kilgore filed and ultimately abandoned was a good-faith misinterpretation of the law, and both maintained they acted ethically.
But the incident opens a window onto the decades-long relationship between one of Southwest Virginia’s preeminent movers and shakers and one of the region’s most powerful elected officials. It offers a revealing glimpse into the dynamic of that relationship, with the delegate willing to lend his name and legislative authority to help out in a $50,000 personal injury suit, relying on the good judgment of his friend and employer.
“Research it,” Terry Kilgore recalls telling Frank Kilgore in the phone conversation about the statute of limitations in his client’s case. “I’ll be more than happy to try to help her do that if you think I can.”
Ties and causes
The history between Frank Kilgore and Terry Kilgore, which stretches back to the early 1980s when one was a young lawyer and the other a law student, does not trace a blood or partisan line, but is a web of political, professional and personal ties.
Frank Kilgore, 55, is the son and grandson of coal miners; a hard-driving attorney who never went to law school but passed the bar on his own. An ex-Democrat and longtime environmental crusader, he has donated prolifically to Republican candidates in recent years.
Terry Kilgore, 46, hails from a family with preternatural political gifts, and serves as chairman of the Commerce and Labor Committee in the House of Delegates. Until recently, he was that body’s third-ranking Republican.
While chairman of the House’s Judicial Selection Subcommittee – a role in which he brokered consensus on judicial candidates with Senate members – Terry Kilgore supported the appointment of Frank’s wife, Teresa M. Chafin, as a juvenile and domestic relations court judge in 2002, and her elevation to circuit court three years later.
Frank gave Terry $11,000 during his 2005 re-election campaign, according to the nonprofit Virginia Public Access Project. Over the last decade, he has given more than $25,000 to Terry and his twin brother Jerry – the former state attorney general and unsuccessful Republican nominee for governor in 2005.
Frank Kilgore and Terry Kilgore describe each other as friends, but not of the sort whose families see each other socially. Still, Frank said he was outraged when Willie Mae Kilgore – the Scott County, Va., registrar and the mother of Terry and Jerry Kilgore – was sued for defamation just before the 2005 election. He viewed the suit as a below-the-belt political tactic.
He signed on as a defense co-counsel, filing sanctions against the plaintiff’s attorney and his former mentor, Gerald Gray, court records show. The case is set for trial in December.
“I had a Mama Kilgore,” he said in a May interview, referring to his deceased mother. “I was furious that anyone would pick on [Terry and Jerry’s] mother.”
Since the 2005 election, the ties between Frank and Terry have thickened.
Notwithstanding some of their political differences, the St. Paul attorney has been successful at enlisting the delegate – and other state lawmakers – in his causes, chiefly relating to the environment.
“He’s probably a little more to the left on a lot of those issues than I am,” Terry Kilgore said in a recent sit-down interview.
In the 2007 legislative session, Frank helped craft three successful bills that Terry sponsored – stiffening the penalties for polluting bodies of water and allowing probationers to perform recycling work at landfills and other waste disposal facilities.
Frank was also the driving force behind a budgetary amendment sponsored by Terry Kilgore and Sen. William Wampler, a Bristol Republican, for the state purchase of Brumley Mountain in Washington County, Va. That purchase added nearly 5,000 acres of protected state land to Virginia’s inventory and is the region’s first state forest, according to the Virginia Department of Forestry.
“One thing about Frank,” Terry Kilgore said, “he’s just a go-getter. That’s why I like Frank. He puts his heart and soul into everything.”
One of those things is the University of Appalachia College of Pharmacy in Grundy, Va., which Frank Kilgore founded in 2003. The school bills itself as a “model for progressive pharmacy practice and education in context with rural health care,” according to its Web site, and as a way to stimulate economic development through higher education.
In April 2006, Frank Kilgore, who chairs the university’s board, recruited an initially uninterested Terry Kilgore to be the school’s fundraiser-in-chief.
“I didn’t think I wanted to do that,” Terry Kilgore said of the pharmacy school offer. Asked what changed his mind, the delegate said: “Once I got over there and visited and talked to folks over in Buchanan County – they’re committed to this. I mean committed.”
As a popular state delegate, Terry has a broad network of deep-pocketed donors from Richmond to Washington, D.C., and can rely on them for contributions to the private pharmacy school.
The school will announce a $500,000 donation next week, largely thanks to a donor Terry cultivated, Frank Kilgore said on Friday.
Shortly after Terry accepted his new role as “dean of institutional advancement,” Frank asked a favor of his friend and new hire.
Frank Kilgore and Teresa Chafin, who sits as a judge in the 29th Judicial Circuit, wanted to build a house on property they owned a short distance away but which crossed into the next judicial circuit. He asked the delegate to introduce a bill to amend the residency requirements of a judge.
In January 2007, Terry Kilgore introduced a bill tailored to his friend’s situation, tacking on language that exempted from the residency requirement a sitting judge “who resides ... upon property that is located contiguous to his respective circuit.”
“I’d do that for anybody that asks me to put a bill in that’s not out of bounds,” he told the Herald Courier in a recent interview. “I didn’t think it was that big a deal.”
But Terry Kilgore withdrew the bill after a Richmond Times-Dispatch reporter inquired about it, and Frank Kilgore asked him to.
“I told him, ‘I don’t ever want to be the source of someone being able to embarrass or hurt you politically,’ ” Frank Kilgore recalled in an interview.
This was early in February 2007. Just days earlier, Frank had begun to extricate himself and Terry from a second ill-fated collaboration: an unraveling lawsuit with both of their names on it.
Salvaging the statute
When Sherri Boardwine made an appointment with Frank Kilgore in August 2006, she had been a victim twice over – of a car accident on July 1, 2004, and of a law firm that mishandled her case by missing the deadline to file a lawsuit.
The statute of limitations in Virginia personal injury cases is two years. Boardwine had retained the Abingdon, Va., attorney David Scyphers in April 2006, according to an active lawsuit she has filed against him. Shortly after July 1, 2006, Boardwine learned that the statute had expired, and Scyphers told her to find another attorney to file a claim against his professional liability insurance.
She made an appointment with another Abingdon attorney on Aug. 16, but the attorney did not want to sue another local lawyer and referred Boardwine to Frank Kilgore, according to interviews and documents obtained by the Herald Courier.
Kilgore also declined to sue Scyphers but offered a novel alternative. Terry Kilgore was in special session, which began in April – before Boardwine’s statute of limitations expired. By claiming the delegate as her attorney, Frank Kilgore thought, he could resurrect the statute. He filed a lawsuit on Aug. 22 seeking $50,000 in damages.
The opposing attorney, representing the defendant’s insurance company, challenged the statute of limitations. Stephanie Cook, a Roanoke-based attorney, argued that “Terry and/or Frank Kilgore were not retained in a timely fashion and within the limits prescribed” under the relevant code section, according to a motion filed in the Circuit Court of Washington County, Va.
When contacted, Cook said she could not talk about the case.
But Boardwine, after her case collapsed, wrote that her attorneys had improperly claimed the legislative privilege, according to an affidavit attached to a bar complaint obtained by the Herald Courier.
Of the lawsuit’s claim that Terry Kilgore represented her, Boardwine wrote: “This allegation is untrue. I have yet to meet Delegate Kilgore.”
She “overheard” the phone conversation between the two attorneys, she wrote, but did not understand its meaning. “I did not understand that it was being asserted that Delegate Kilgore and Attorney Kilgore were my attorneys when the statute of limitations expired,” she wrote.
The affidavit bears Boardwine’s signature and is notarized, though the precise day on which it was signed in April 2007 is not discernible on the Herald Courier’s copy.
Reached by phone, the notary – a retired former co-worker of Boardwine’s – insisted she would not have notarized anything without a date, but she confirmed that she had seen and signed the document.
“I feel sure of that,” Velma Ezell, the notary, said of signing the affidavit. “There’s no problem there.”
Two sources with first-hand knowledge of the complaint also independently confirmed that a bar investigation into Frank Kilgore and Terry Kilgore is ongoing. The sources were contacted separately and agreed to speak on condition of anonymity because bar complaints are confidential, pending the bar’s determination of whether to file charges of misconduct.
Sherri Boardwine declined to speak in depth when contacted about her case. “The lawyers are handling it,” she said.
Anthony Collins, Boardwine’s current attorney who is suing Scyphers and who filed the bar complaint, spoke briefly with a reporter in March about the case but has not returned follow-up phone calls since.
“She came in to retain us when she discovered that the statute had run and her attorneys, Terry Kilgore and Frank Kilgore, that they were going to have to withdraw,” Collins said in a telephone interview. The statute expired in Scyphers’ hands, Collins said. He did not mention the bar complaint.
On Jan. 29, 2007, Frank Kilgore wrote to Boardwine that she would need to find someone else to sue Scyphers, and enclosed an order allowing he and Terry Kilgore to withdraw from the case, according to a letter obtained by the Herald Courier.
On March 27, 2007, Washington County Circuit Court Judge C. Randall Lowe signed the order of dismissal and Collins withdrew the suit.
Questions of interpretation
When asked about the case in early June, Terry Kilgore dismissed it as something he was peripherally involved in and that didn’t pan out.
“We knew the statute had run,” he said.
As a delegate, he uses the legislative privilege on a monthly basis to have his cases continued while in session and said that an extension to the statute of limitations was a “gray area” but “consistent” with the language of Code Section 30-5.
“I still think you could probably do it,” he said. “But we got out of the case. I mean, we were just trying to do the lady a favor.”
Terry Kilgore serves on a 10-member committee of the Virginia State Bar that adjudicates complaints that come from the 28th, 29th and 30th judicial circuits. A committee member who is the subject of a complaint must recuse himself from the proceeding, according to the bar’s guidelines.
He would not comment on the bar investigation.
But when Frank Kilgore was asked about the Boardwine case, he anticipated a reporter’s questions with some of his own.
“Who mentioned that case to you? Who mentioned the subsequent problems with the case to you?” he asked, initially refusing to discuss the case.
“There’s a pending action, and you know what it is. If that’s in the paper, I have to sue the Bristol paper to get your source, and then I’m going to sue and report [to the Virginia State Bar] whoever told you that if they’re a licensed attorney,” he said.
He added, “You cannot find anywhere in the public record any complaint against any lawyer unless it’s founded.”
But in the course of a half-hour telephone interview, he agreed to explain his interpretation of the code section on legislative privilege. He admitted that he misinterpreted the law but maintains that he acted ethically.
According to his reading of 30-5, a statute of limitations that expires while the General Assembly is in session would be extended for a client who hired a lawyer-legislator.
“You can’t hire the guys if they’re in Richmond during the session,” he pointed out.
Asked why he didn’t just sue Scyphers, Kilgore said, “There’s a lot of people I won’t sue.”
Boardwine, he said, “didn’t suffer one setback except for a small delay for me to see if I could salvage the statute of limitations. Except for people misusing someone’s lack of understanding of the legal system, I don’t think she would’ve been upset.”
Terry Kilgore, he added, “had very little information and depended on me to interpret the law properly, and I was wrong.”
There is a dearth of higher court opinions on how 30-5 applies to a statute of limitations, and several legal scholars who study civil procedure in Virginia said they were not familiar with the code section. But in 1992, the Virginia Supreme Court ruled that a defendant in a personal injury case had a “vested right to a defense of the statute of limitations” once it expired, meaning that retroactively extending the statute would violate the defendant’s constitutional property rights.
One expert who specializes in Virginia civil procedure was incredulous that an attorney would claim the legislative privilege to extend an expired statute of limitations.
“I think most people haven’t thought there is any possible argument that this could apply,” said Kent Sinclair, a professor at the University of Virginia Law School.
Reviewing the code section, he said, “The obvious intention is to deal with pending cases and not letting the episodic nature of General Assembly obligations disadvantage someone who is litigating while legislators are in session.”
The code section applies to “any party to an action or proceeding in any court,” and would not apply to a plaintiff – like Boardwine – who had not filed a lawsuit before the statute expired, Sinclair said. “There is no proceeding pending when you are injured, only after you file the lawsuit.”
If the opposite were true, the scholar said, it “would invite tremendous abuse by inviting people to retain legislators when their statutes had run.”
Even so, such an interpretation by a lawyer-legislator did not strike Sinclair as unethical in itself. He pointed to two circuit court cases in Norfolk, Va., in which judges ruled in favor of a Hampton Roads delegate seeking to extend a statute of limitations – though the cases did not deal with a statute that expired before a would-be plaintiff filed a lawsuit.
Though trial court decisions in general do not create a legal precedent, “there is nothing unethical about making that claim if two sitting circuit court judges thought that it had merit,” he said.
For his part, Frank Kilgore questioned why a reporter would probe into his ties with Terry Kilgore.
“I am at a loss as to how my relationship with Terry is very newsworthy,” he wrote in an e-mail.
He raised a similar point when asked about the Boardwine case.
Why, he wanted to know, was a reporter asking these questions. “Am I a public official? Is somebody under indictment?”
dgilbert@bristolnews.com | (276) 645-2558
YOU SHOULD KNOW
§ 30-5. Continuance or time for filing pleading, etc., where party or attorney is connected with General Assembly or Division of Legislative Services.
Any party to an action or proceeding in any court, including the Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court of Virginia, commission or other tribunal having judicial or quasi-judicial powers or jurisdiction, who is an officer, employee or member of the General Assembly, employee of the Division of Legislative Services, or who has, prior to or during the session of the General Assembly, employed or retained to represent him in such action or proceeding an attorney who is an officer, employee or member of the General Assembly, or employee of the Division of Legislative Services, shall be entitled to a continuance as a matter of right (i) during the period beginning thirty days prior to the commencement of the session and ending thirty days after the adjournment thereof, and (ii) during a period beginning one day prior to the meeting date of any reconvened or veto session or of any commission, council, committee or subcommittee created by the General Assembly at which such officer, employee or member is scheduled to attend and ending one day after the adjournment of such meeting; however, no continuance need be granted under clause (ii) unless it shall have been requested in writing at least three days prior to the first day for which the continuance is sought and filed with the court. The requesting party, when practicable, shall strive to notify all other parties to the proceeding of such request.
Any pleading or the performance of any act relating thereto required to be filed or performed by any statute or rule during the period beginning thirty days prior to the commencement of the session and ending thirty days after the adjournment of the session shall be extended until not less than thirty days after any such session. The failure of any court, commission or other tribunal to allow such continuance when requested so to do or the returning of such filing or act during the period hereinabove specified shall constitute reversible error; provided that this section shall not prevent the granting of temporary injunctive relief, or the dissolution or extension of a temporary injunction, but the right to such relief shall remain in the sound discretion of the court or other such tribunal.
(Code 1919, § 298; 1926, p. 18; 1934, p. 370; 1940, p. 363; 1952, c. 234; 1960, c. 147; 1973, cc. 242, 322; 1984, c. 703; 1987, c. 192; 2002, cc. 584, 617.)
TIMELINE
July 1, 2004
Sherri Boardwine is injured in a four-vehicle wreck in Washington County, Va.
April 2006
Boardwine retains attorney David Scyphers to file a personal injury lawsuit against a driver who crashed into her vehicle.
July 1, 2006
The statute of limitations expires for filing a lawsuit. Scyphers tells Boardwine to find another attorney to file a claim against his insurance because he missed the filing deadline.
Aug. 16, 2006
Boardwine meets with an Abingdon attorney who declines to sue Scyphers, but refers her to Frank Kilgore.
August 2006
Frank Kilgore asks Delegate Terry Kilgore to be his co-counsel on the case in an effort to resurrect the expired statute of limitations through a legislative privilege.
Aug. 22, 2006
Boardwine’s lawsuit is filed in the Circuit Court of Washington County, Va., and lists Terry Kilgore as her attorney and asserts the legislative privilege.
December 2006
Stephanie Cook, the defendant’s attorney, files a motion inquiring about when Boardwine retained Frank Kilgore and Terry Kilgore.
Jan. 29, 2007
Frank Kilgore informs Boardwine that she will need to find another attorney to sue Scyphers and asks her to release he and Terry Kilgore as her attorneys.
March 13, 2007
Cook files a motion challenging the statute of limitations in the case, and moves for lawsuit to be dismissed.
March 27, 2007
Frank and Terry withdraw from the case and the lawsuit is dismissed.
April 2007
Boardwine’s new attorney, Anthony Collins, files a bar complaint against Frank Kilgore and Terry Kilgore.
Feb. 15, 2008
Collins files a lawsuit against Scyphers. The action remains pending.
Shell had been furling Hydrogen Vechile for 10 years now in Iceland.
GM has a tank You can shoot with a 50 cal. machine gun for Hydrogen. GYDROGEN CAN BE USED TO PRODUCE ELECTRIC POWER FOR CARS.—- LIKE A TRAIN USES DESIEL TO PRODUCE ELECTRIC
The future is comming fast better hold on. Becauseful about buying old technology and getting stuck with long term payment of expensive techonology.
There was one other small matter I left out of the last post regarding hydrogen fuel usage….did you ever hear of the Hindenburg?
dadw5
That’s an interesting car. I hope they can improve enough on the technology in the next 26 years as they have to date. Wouldn’t it be great if they could make a version that would actually get to production in the next decade or maybe two?
Just to make sure we get all the “facts” in accurately… which isn’t always a priority for some, but they tend to actually matter.
During the competition the car got about 353 miles per liter of hydrogen, or about 1336 mpg. Nothing short of amazing…. The problem with new technologies as always are the following; Is it safe, reliable, practical, scalable, affordable and with cars, a little matter of… can you sell it to the public.
The price tag for the 2008 model one seat, 242 pound carbon fiber vehicle was a mere $170,000.
What you run into with creating a new transportation vehicle though is the infrastructure to support public use. Where are we getting hydrogen filling stations for the cars? The build out of infrastructure will take $billions, years to put in place and cooperation of the very energy companies that you detest now.
How are they going to afford this additional cost if Obama puts them out of business with Cap & Trade? I have a suggestion…forget C&T and establish tax credits and incentives for private entities to get this done…it will happen faster and more economically without the Gov’t involved.
There’s one more item that needs to be covered while you’re waiting for the new technologies to be placed into service. Keep in mind that every time you flip on the TV to watch Obama or login to your computer to drag the Coal Industry through the mud, the only reason you have electricity to do so is because of the very people you are saying should be put out to pasture.
On second thought, why don’t you go ahead and convert to the new Obama green technology. During your 30 minute window of daily energy use…let us know how it’s working for you.
Hydrogen quickly becoming the power source of choice around the world.
How long before it will be cheaper to run Power Turbines from Hydrogen Power.
Incase you missed it Turkish Students built a car goes over 1000 miles on 1 LITER of Hydrogen.
Lol COAL lol


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