Lomp-s Court - Case 3 < PROVEN >

Brutal BDSM, heavy whippings, and canings.

Case 3 would not retrace the whole path. Two previous hearings had already established many facts: Elias had assembled structures from scavenged timber and demolition pallets, wired faint electricity to a few lamps, arranged salvaged books, and curated a trove of small artifacts left by park-goers. He had invited neighbors to tea, held music at dusk, and kept a ledger of donations. He had also, the city alleged, falsified maintenance reports to conceal shifts of materials, diverted park labor hours to Lomp-s tasks, and signed a memorandum reducing public signage in the immediate vicinity. The auditors had found payments routed through shell vendors to purchase soil and fencing; some volunteers testified to being misled about the ownership of materials. To the city, those were sins against stewardship — an official turning his office into personal dominion. To others, they were the awkward beginnings of an unexpected public good. Lomp-s Court - Case 3

After careful consideration, Judge Poust delivered a verdict that would send shockwaves through the Lomp-s community: Mr. Gouda was found guilty of the cheese thefts, but not before the judge revealed a surprising twist - Mr. Fager's own son had been an accomplice to the crimes. Brutal BDSM, heavy whippings, and canings

Brutal BDSM, heavy whippings, and canings.

Case 3 would not retrace the whole path. Two previous hearings had already established many facts: Elias had assembled structures from scavenged timber and demolition pallets, wired faint electricity to a few lamps, arranged salvaged books, and curated a trove of small artifacts left by park-goers. He had invited neighbors to tea, held music at dusk, and kept a ledger of donations. He had also, the city alleged, falsified maintenance reports to conceal shifts of materials, diverted park labor hours to Lomp-s tasks, and signed a memorandum reducing public signage in the immediate vicinity. The auditors had found payments routed through shell vendors to purchase soil and fencing; some volunteers testified to being misled about the ownership of materials. To the city, those were sins against stewardship — an official turning his office into personal dominion. To others, they were the awkward beginnings of an unexpected public good.

After careful consideration, Judge Poust delivered a verdict that would send shockwaves through the Lomp-s community: Mr. Gouda was found guilty of the cheese thefts, but not before the judge revealed a surprising twist - Mr. Fager's own son had been an accomplice to the crimes.