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Deliverance, South Dakotey, South Dakota


Rating: 1 out of 5.

If I could time travel, the first thing I would do is make sure that I never met this bastard.

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Deliverance, South Dakotey, South Dakota


Rating: 1 out of 5.

Deliverance is the most unprofessional, unproductive patent attorney I have met. He frequently comes to work high on Robitussin and passes out or mocks his coworkers.

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Deliverance, South Dakotey, South Dakota


Rating: 1 out of 5.

He will go to hell if his tempermental behavior continues.

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Deliverance, South Dakotey, South Dakota


Rating: 1 out of 5.

This casually misogynistic, abusive man should be in a prison cell—not the workplace. Everyday, Deliverance tells his female coworkers that they should quit their jobs because he believes that “Women ain't smart 'nuff to be lawyers.” He also has told his boss during numerous meetings to “git off the goddamn in’erweb” because it takes up the bandwidth from his redneck car shows. Yes. This actually happens! During meetings!!! Moreover, Deliverance often calls 9-1-1 to avoid meetings and watch redneck car shows, Hawaii Five-O, or Minecraft streams. He also loves to chase his coworkers with a flame striker and scream “AYE!”

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Deliverance, South Dakotey, South Dakota


Rating: 1 out of 5.

This casually misogynistic, abusive man should be in a prison cell—not the workplace. Everyday, Deliverance tells his female coworkers that they should quit their jobs because he believes that “Women are not smart enough to be lawyers.” He also has told his boss during numerous meetings to “git off the goddamn in’erweb” because it takes up the bandwidth from his redneck car shows. Yes. This actually happens! During meetings!!! Moreover, Deliverance often calls 9-1-1 to avoid meetings and watch redneck car shows, Hawaii Five-O, or Minecraft streams. He also loves to chase his coworkers with a flame striker and scream “AYE!”

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Category: Intellectual Property Attorney Who Is Not Much Of An Intellectual

'liverance, South Dakotey, South Dakota


Rating: 1 out of 5.

This man's only hobbies are watching Impractical Jokers and dehumanizing the LGBTQ+ community.

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Category: Doctor

Terry Thompson, FNP-C, East Falls Primary Care, Idaho Falls, ID


Rating: 1 out of 5.

On July 3 2018, I had sinus surgery. This created so much swelling, I was unable to breathe through my nose and was unable to sleep for 7 days afterward. Being bipolar, this lead to a manic state. Mania can be a very dangerous condition that can wreck lives and cause hospitalizations. When I pointed this out in an attempt to obtain a sleeping aid that would work for me, she obviously thought that I was just drug-seeking and threatening and manipulating her. She would not prescribe a med without seeing me, even though I had previously had it filled by a former psychiatric provider, and would not see me FOR ANOTHER 6 DAYS, during which I would continue to have severe insomnia and mania. And even then, there was no guarantee; she seemed very reluctant to listen to me or cooperate. She either didn’t believe me or didn’t care—not sure which is worse. Terry represents the worst kind of medical provider who stigmatizes, doesn’t understand and mistreats patients who unfortunately have mental illness.

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Category: Doctor

Travis Dwywer, various, DE


Rating: 1 out of 5.

Dr Travis Dwyer told me he was experienced with a simple ankle procedure. I had a list of questions my Orthopedic doctor had told me to ask. Dr Dwyer said he was experienced with this simple procedure which he was not, in fact he had never did this surgical procedure and was using me to teach himself. This all became apparent post op when my ankle joint was hanging out the side of my leg, my foot up on the side making it difficult to get around. I continued to request him to do xrays to see what the problem was and he would not do them. He did tell me sine they are a teaching facility he was going to teach this procedure. Now if he already had the experience this would of never came up. He has crippled me, destroyed my life and I still may have to have an amputation. I finally went back to the Orthopedic doctor but the damage was so extensive there was nothing he could do he referred me to an expert to try to reconstruct my leg, ankle and foot with plates, rods, screws and grafts. The Orthopedic doctor said the surgery Dwyer did was not what he did and the expert told me no doctor can ever cut through the bone in which Dr Dwyer did this would happen. The Doctors had never seen any surgeon use that surgical technique. What made it worse is instead of Dr Dwyer sending to someone to fix his errors he continued to have me come in 6 months for post op appointments. He knew there were horrible problem he didn't refer me out asap to someone that may of been able to help so the damage was not so extensive. Not only did the ankle bone die but I had dead bones on the foot and the leg bone all because he remained negligent. He was trying to figure out how to hide this negligent mistake which only made the damage worse. Per the infectious disease doctor I would of became sepsis and probably died. the bottom line is he was negligent pre and post op. The state in which I live (DE) has the medical board and recently arrested a doctor for medicare fraud and identity theft of his minor patients. The consumer advocate group noted DE is not know for disciplining like the other States. Attorneys don't want cases unless there are millions being net into their pocket and my leg hasn't been amputated yet therefore the case wasn't worth as much and my statue expired. I had a good salary until he touched me. While I was trying to obtain an attorney I came across one that had a current case and this man had an amputation. A few months ago a lady sent me a message through FB asking if I was the person who posted a previous review on this Doctor, she to has issues from his surgery and is trying to seek medical attention elsewhere to see if it can be corrected. Do not trust this doctor, Do not let this doctor touch you unless you want to gamble with your ability to walk or live. He should be charged with 1st degree assault but all doctors are above the law. If they are charged it has to go through the corrupt medical board first.

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Category: Veterans ***

John Windom, 64, a retired Navy officer, Washington


Rating: 1 out of 5.

Another Lenka Stankova hurting the war fighters. John Windom, 64, a retired Navy officer, was charged with making false statements, concealment of material facts and falsification of a record or document tied to a failure to report more than $15,000 in cash, casino chips and other gifts from contractors. The Justice Department announced the charges on Wednesday, accusing him of “accepting, and sometimes demanding, extravagant gifts from a group of contractors and subcontractors who worked on the project he was overseeing.” As the indictment notes, Windom was aware of the rules regarding reporting gifts and receipts, per training for officials. “An indictment is merely an allegation. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law,” the Justice Department said in its release. Top Stories This Week News Army raises enlistment age to 42, eases marijuana restrictions Patty Nieberg News Pentagon wants to increase naval, special operations capabilities on Greenland Nicholas Slayton Tech & Tactics French sailor goes running, reveals flagship’s location via fitness app Nicholas Slayton The VA began a project to modernize its health records in 2017, aiming to digitize information, an initiative estimated to cost $16 billion, but has since exceeded that and is expected to cost as much as $37 billion. In 2018, the 10-year contract was awarded to Cerner (now known as Oracle Health after Oracle acquired it). Windom was appointed as Executive Director of the Office of Electronic Record Modernization in 2017 and helped supervise the VA’s choice of Cerner for the contract. According to the grand jury indictment against him, Windom used his position to take money and gifts from a group of business executives from information technology and consulting companies who were contractors on the project. According to the indictment, Windom allegedly called them “the Power Group.” Windom used his role to “encourage, monitor, and facilitate contract and subcontracting opportunities for members of the Power Group, related and unrelated to the EHRM project.” Windom was allegedly given payment in everything from cash, to $8,200 in Louis Vuitton gift cards and $1,800 in casino chips. He was also given a High Efficiency Particulate Air, or HEPA, filter worth $631. The indictment also accuses Windom of using his position to “coerce” payments and gifts from others. Per the indictment, Windom “repeatedly reminded Power Group members to remain loyal and directed them to maintain confidentiality and their relationship with him.” In one message at the start of 2020, Windom messaged Power Group members, telling them that “loose lips sink ships.” Windom’s initial contract was extended, and in 2022 he was reassigned to serve as deputy director of the Federal electronic Health Modernization Office, a joint VA and Department of Defense project. Nine years after the modernization effort started, the Electronic Health Record program is used by only a handful of VA sites, with the program hit by glitches and usability issues. The VA paused the program in 2023, but is expected to roll out at several sites this year. Windom faces a maximum sentence of over 20 years in prison if convicted on all counts. Task & Purpose Video Each week on Tuesdays and Fridays our team will bring you analysis of military tech, tactics, and doctrine. Watch Here Nicholas Slayton Avatar Nicholas Slayton Contributing Editor Nicholas Slayton is a Contributing Editor for Task & Purpose. In addition to covering breaking news, he writes about history, shipwrecks, and the military’s hunt for unidentified anomalous phenomenon (formerly known as UFOs). 5 Viewing We want Task & Purpose to be a nice place to chat and and swap stories, but please read and follow our guidelines here. Sort by 1 day ago I can only assume what kind of officer he was in the military. Pretty sure this was not his first “rodeo.” Gets 0 sympathy from me. 1 day ago When Trump fired 90% of the Inspector Generals day one of this administration, he signaled it was business as usual for the only stable genius who can not fail to bankrupt countless businesses througjout his life. Greed and corruption exist in this administration like none other. It's impact has ... See more 1 day ago "Hey boss......you buy that new HEPA machine for the house?" Others had to know something. 1 day ago What would anybody expect from a bureaucracy that goes out of its way to find every reason to deny claims of service members? There is more corruption in the VA than just that guy. 1 day ago If convicted, he should lose his Navy retirement. Powered by TermsPrivacy Trending U.S. Air Force Airmen assigned to the 379th Air Expeditionary Wing take cover in a bunker during exercise Grand Shield 22-2 at Al Udeid Air Base, Qatar, Dec. 15, 2021. Grand Shield tested Al Udeid’s readiness to respond to regional threats. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Noah D. Coger) Pentagon looks for vendors to supply pre-made bunkers within 30 days Patty Nieberg U.S. Marines with Lima Company, Battalion Landing Team 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit, conduct a live fire deck shoot aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Tripoli (LHA 7), Philippine Sea, March 16, 2026. The 31st MEU is a persistent, combat credible force operating aboard the ships of the Tripoli Amphibious Ready Group in the U.S. 7th Fleet area of operations, routinely interacting and operating with our allies and partners to contribute to deterrence, security, crisis response, and combat operations in the Indo-Pacific region. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Gerardo Mendez) USS Tripoli, 2,200 Marines arrive in the Middle East Nicholas Slayton More in News HINES, IL - MAY 30: A sign marks the entrance to the Edward Hines Jr. VA Hospital on May 30, 2014 in Hines, Illinois. Hines, which is located in suburban Chicago, has been linked to allegations that administrators kept secret waiting lists at Veterans Administration hospitals so hospital executives could collect bonuses linked to meeting standards for rapid treatment. Today, as the scandal continued to grow, Veterans *** Secretary Eric Shinseki apologized in public and then resigned from his post. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images) Veteran entrepreneurs say VA cuts have gutted their businesses Patty Nieberg Disabled Army veteran fired from the VA will attend Trump speech to Congress Disabled Army veteran fired from the VA will attend Trump speech to Congress Patty Nieberg As the VA celebrates 100 years of medical research, the very people doing that job are being fired As the VA celebrates 100 years of medical research, the very people doing that job are being fired Patty Nieberg PACT Act Healthcare, the economy, reproductive rights: what matters most to veterans in the midterm elections Jeff Schogol Sarah Cavanaugh Woman accused of stolen valor charged with defrauding $250,000 from veteran charities Jeff Schogol air force wounded warrior program Inside the Air Force Wounded Warrior Program’s toxic workplace David Roza 230,000 veterans’ disability ratings are stuck in limbo due to COVID-19 230,000 veterans’ disability ratings are stuck in limbo due to COVID-19 David Roza With the ‘Tally Bill’, vets could hold the VA accountable when medical malpractice occurs at the hands of a contractor With the ‘Tally Bill’, vets could hold the VA accountable when medical malpractice occurs at the hands of a contractor

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Category: Worst Bankruptcy Attorney

Joyce Lindauer, 1412 Main St Suite 500, Dallas, TX 75202


Rating: 1 out of 5.

I retained Joyce in 2019. First retainer was $2,500. Joyce gave me a rough estimate of $4-$5,000 and 6 months to resolve my legal matter. 3 years and $12,000 later, this idiot lawyer is still working on my case. I don't hear from her for months at a time. When I call, it takes 30 minutes to get her to remember who I am. Its like deja vu. I agree with the other reviewers. Joyce is not aging well and her mind is slipping. She is very good at remembering when you owe her money. That's about it. My friends have told me that she is ripping me off and probably charging me for the 30 minutes everything I have to re-explain who I am. Its 2023 and I will be looking for a new attorney. I recommend you take your business elsewhere. There are plenty of real lawyers in Dallas that work at big law firms. Joyce works with a part-time assistant and some young lawyer in training. Not much of a law office or firm, which is why I thought I was getting a cheap deal. Boy was I wrong.

Like 18