Ron Durbin of Guerrilla Publishing released an update live stream on Thursday detailing his health and legal challenges following both his arrest and his heart incident earlier this month.
Durbin was taking part in the “Lexington Takeover” in Lexington, Mississippi, earlier in the month when he was arrested in Pearl, Mississippi, for trespassing in the mayor’s office. During the arrest, Durbin had chest pains and ended up being hospitalized overnight for heart issues.
He voluntarily accompanied a Pearl police officer back to Pearl from the hospital the next afternoon and was arraigned for the trespassing charge and released after posting $1,600.00 out of his $20,000.00 bond.
Starting with his health, Durbin assured his fans that he was doing better and had a cardiac catheterization with his regular doctor as soon as he got home. He was doing better now and that he didn’t want anyone to feel sorry for him as his health issues will be on-going and he’s dealing with them the best he can.
Addressing the chief of police from Pearl, Mississippi, who arrested him, Durbin promised an up-coming exposé on the man. Durbin promised that he had pages and pages of the chief’s history as an officer before he was police chief and would be exposing an extensive history of corruption.
The corruption supposedly dated back to when the chief was a member of the “goon squad” in Richards, Mississippi, which Durbin described as a corrupt faction of police officers.
The YouTuber said he had directly contacted the United States Department of Justice about his arrest in Pearl but offered no information or updates to the status of that complaint.
Durbin also did not address his on-going issues with James Freeman and Shawn Buckner, who deserted his “Lexington Takeover” when Durbin experienced his health issues.
The YouTuber updated the status of his suspended law license in Oklahoma.
Durbin said that he had spent 30 hours drafting a lawsuit in order to have his law license restored in Oklahoma and had another 45-page brief that he was filing in the Western District of Oklahoma for a motion of injunctive relief against the Oklahoma Bar Association.
He stated that his intention was to have his license restored so he could resign from the Oklahoma Bar Association as his pending legal actions were designed to destroy the organization.