Aaron Walker has audio of the Kimberlin v. Norton Peace Order hearing in Montgomery County District Court. He is transcribing it and has part of it up on his blog. Brett Kimberlin (aka, the Speedway Bomber) appears to perjure himself by denying that he went to prison for bombings.
L is Norton’s lawyer; K is Brett Kimberlin:
L: The only questions I have, the only… you are [a] convicted perjurer, correct? Correct?
K: Yes, when—
L: Alright.
K: —I was nineteen years old. Thirty and forty years ago.
L: Alright, and you’ve been in prison for bombings, correct?
K: Sir, we are talking about the last thirty days.
L: Correct?
K: That’s what this issue is about, you know you can try to attack my credibility. Your client took the picture, your client—
L: Sir.
K: —was at my house.
L: Sir, answer the question.
K: I want to be left alone.
L: Correct?
K: I want to be—
L: Correct?
K: —left alone.
L: You’ve been in prison for bombings, correct?
K: No, I haven’t.
L: Where you served prison time, correct?
K: No.
L: [louder, more stern.] Correct?
K: Yes.
L: Okay. And it was related to bombings out of state, correct? Multiple bombings.
K: No. You know, I’m not going to get into that. You know, if you want to talk about—
L: No further, no further questions.
K: Okay, no further questions.
So you see him remarkably deny going to prison for the Speedway Bombings. Yes, he changed his mind a moment later and told the truth, but that is not a defense under the perjury statute.
It’s a long post, but if you’re trying to follow the whole Team Kimberlin story, you should read the whole thing. At the end of the post Mr. Walker provides contact information for the State’s Attorney for Montgomery County. If, after reading the transcript, you believe that a fresh perjury charge is in order, contact the State’s Attorney, especially if you are a resident of Montgomery County.