HOA Sued a Wyoming Rancher, Then Its Road Records Turned Against It-Ginny

The ambulance could not move.

Its red and blue lights flashed across the rain-soaked canyon walls while Ridgeview Estates screamed from the mud outside my steel gate.

Twenty homeowners stood there in the storm, soaked through, furious, and suddenly dependent on the man they had spent 6 months calling a squatter.

Image

Inside the subdivision, an elderly man had chest pain.

Outside it, the only road in had a lock on it.

Patricia Thornwell stood at the front in a cream-colored raincoat that probably cost more than my truck.

Rain ran off her blonde hair while she pointed at me like the whole county was supposed to obey her finger.

“You can’t do this,” she shouted. “This is a public access road.”

I stayed quiet.

That made her louder.

I have learned in 46 years that loud people get nervous when quiet people do not react.

Deputy Collins stepped between us, rain dripping off his hat brim.

“Mr. Jennings,” he said, “are you telling me this entire road belongs to you?”

I handed him the folder I had carried through months of threats.

Certified copies.

Easement records.

Survey maps.

Property transfer documents going back to 1958.

He opened the file under the ambulance headlights, and his expression changed one page at a time.

First confusion.

Then concern.

Then the silence that makes everyone else uncomfortable.

Patricia saw it.

“Don’t listen to him,” she snapped. “He’s trying to hold this community hostage because he lost a lawsuit.”

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *