In 1994 I sent a certified letter to Mr. Mike Androvett of WISH, the Indianapolis CBS affiliate. Here are some excerpts:
    
I seem to remember a crime committed at an Indianapolis Lindner store a number of years ago…. If I … remember correctly, you were called on to give evidence in the case and did not want to do so ….
     What I remember is that a white girl, a sales clerk at a Lindner store was murdered by a black youth. The youth stated that the VOICE of God had instructed him to kill her. This is of interest to me because I’ve had annoying experiences … in which voices have been produced within my living quarters ….
     
I’d appreciate it if you could help us by pointing our any inadvertent inaccuracies which may appear in this letter.
     
There was no direct reply; but, not long after receiving the letter, Androvett quit his job at WISH and moved to Texas. He’s a lawyer, so, by moving to another state, he disrupted his legal as well as his TV career.

The Role of TV Stations
The “stalking” case of Michael McCormick didn’t involve homicide, but it did have some similar features to the above. In his “stalking” case, it seems a complicated con was involved, which, had it been successful, would not have been likely to have been of benefit to Lynn St. James. But both cases did seem to include fraud, and attempted psychological manipulation of other people.
       The same elements are present also in my situation. That situation currently seems to mostly involve
Channel 13 in Indianapolis (NBC). With me there’s also an added element of intimidation. That’s because I’ve been made abundantly aware that, like it or not, I’m under continuous audio and visual surveillance. There has been at least one threat spoken against a member of my family.
        I have “handlers” who talk to me at night while I’m sleeping. Sometimes because I’ve “misbehaved” in some way, it seems, they need to tell me how to act. On one occasion, for example, someone wanted me to know that I’d gone out in public without doing an adequate job of clipping my nasal hairs. Perhaps a cashier in a local supermarket had been traumatized by that hairy apparition. Naturally, I needed to be informed, so as to modify my grooming practices accordingly.
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Nast created the modern American "Santa Claus" icon. Above is his first published version of that icon.