Time: Tue Nov 12 08:05:05 1996
To: Paul Waldo <pww@ssds.com>
From: Paul Andrew Mitchell [address in tool bar]
Subject: PMRS update
Cc:
Bcc:
>I guess people are reluctant to ask what they can do to help because
>they feel that it won't do any good. Since the government has things so
>rigged, I think that most people believe that even really hard evidence
>of wrongdoing would simply be ignored by anyone who has the power to do
>anything about. BTW, what can I do to help?
Dear Paul Waldo,
Thank you very much for asking
what you can do to help.
Here are some ideas, which have
been evolving and developing
between my ears now for about
7 years:
1. Grand juries are getting very abusive,
and very abused. We need to raise
public awareness about the depth of
the corruption among DOJ employees
who routinely lie to grand juries.
What are your thoughts about doing so?
2. We have developed an excellent legal
challenge to the authority of federal
grand juries, because the Jury Selection
and Service Act (JSSA) is fatally defective
for exhibiting class bias against state
Citizens who are not also federal citizens.
We want to present these findings to as
many Americans as possible, preferably in
weekend seminars. Can you help to assemble
a group of paying attendees, who will get
their money's worth, for sure?
3. The JSSA has another, even larger defect
lurking between the lines: the United States
District Court (USDC) is not even mentioned in the federal
policy for jury selection and service. We have
developed an effective and ground-breaking legal
method of removing cases from the USDC into the
DCUS, on the federal question(s) that arise
from jury selection. This removal even works
when the case is first brought in state court.
We are prepared to help litigants understand
and apply this knowledge. Can you help attract
seminar attendees by disseminating information
about USDC v. DCUS?
4. I could go on and on, but you get my drift, I
think. The PMRS stuff is just the tip of the
iceberg; it's a way to motivate people by
presenting a problem, and then we follow with
the solution. Do you want to involve yourself
in some good-ol' fashioned First Amendment
activities, based on solid research and
scholarship? Our Internet expertise is the
icing on the cake, and I also have 25 years
of experience in advanced computer systems
development; live Internet demonstrations
are a big part of our seminar curriculum.
/s/ Paul Mitchell
[This text is formatted in Courier 11, non-proportional spacing.]
For Immediate Release November 2, 1996
"Karma and the Federal Courts"
by
Paul Andrew Mitchell
All Rights Reserved
(November 1996)
The law of karma is this: what goes around, comes around.
When you begin with freedom, freedom comes back to dwell in your
house.
And so, we have come to this point in decoding Title 28 of
the United States Codes: there are two classes of federal
"District Courts" in the federal court system.
One class is for the federal zone; the other class is for
the state zone.
Using a very powerful rule of statutory construction,
"inclusio unius est exclusio alterius," we show that the phrase
"District Court of the United States" refers to federal courts
for the state zone; and the phrase "United States District
Court" refers to federal courts for the federal zone.
We have this on the authority of the Supreme Court of the
United States, most notably in the cases of American Insurance
Company v. 356 Bales of Cotton, and Balzac v. Porto Rico [sic].
Now, here's the rub: Since federal courts are creatures of
statutes only, they can only cognize subject matters which are
assigned to them expressly by statutes.
When it comes to criminal jurisdiction, the controlling
statute is 18 U.S.C. 3231.
This statute grants original jurisdiction to the District
Courts of the United States (DCUS), but does not mention the
United States District Courts (USDC)!
How about them apples?
Remember this carefully:
Inclusio unius est exclusio alterius (in Latin ).
Inclusion of one is exclusion of others (in English).
Since the USDC is not mentioned, its omission can be
inferred as intentional. (Read that again, then confirm it in
Black's Law Dictionary, any edition).
So, from the historian's point of view, Congress has
permitted the limited territorial and subject matter jurisdiction
of the USDC to be extended, unlawfully, into the state zone, and
Karma and the Federal Courts: Page 1 of 3
into subject matters over which said court has no jurisdiction
whatsoever.
This deception was maintained as long as nobody noticed, but
now it is obvious, and quite difficult to change, without
bringing down the whole house of cards (which is happening, by
the way. The Liege firemen are literally hosing their own
corrupt court buildings, so we're not alone in this department of
judicial tyranny.)
By the way, the famous Belgian Firemen from Liege have been
invited, via the Internet, to discharge the Belgian debt to the
United States by moving their talents state-side. They should
return home debt free, in about ten years or so, depending on
available supplies of soap and water.
Imagine a sheet of Saran Wrap, which has been yanked too
far, by pulling it beyond the strict territorial boundaries which
surround the federal zone.
This is the United States District Court (USDC), in all its
limited Honors and tarnished glory.
Further proof of this bad karma can be found by comparing 18
U.S.C. 1964(a) and 1964(c). Both statutes grant authority to
issue remedies to restrain racketeering activities prohibited by
18 U.S.C. 1962. Section 1964(a) grants civil jurisdiction to
issue injunctive relief to the DCUS; Section 1964(c) grants
civil jurisdiction to issue injunctive relief to the USDC. Both
refer to the exact same subject matter, namely, RICO
(Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations) activities.
So, when these two statutes are otherwise identical, why did
Congress need to enact two separate statutes?
The answer is simple: one authority was needed for the
DCUS, and the other was needed for the USDC. Simple, really,
when the sedition by syntax is explained in language which
penetrates the deception.
Now, if this is truly the case, and nobody has been able to
prove us wrong about this matter, the United States (federal
government) is in a heap of trouble here, because it has been
prosecuting people in the wrong courts ever since the Civil War;
furthermore, those courts have no criminal jurisdiction
whatsoever, because such an authority is completely lacking from
Titles 18 and 28, both of which have been enacted into positive
law, unlike Title 26, which has not been enacted into positive
law. See Title 1 for details.
What do we do with this earth-shaking discovery? Well, when
any federal case is filed, the criminal defendant should submit a
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request immediately, for such
things as any regulations which have been published in the
Federal Register, pursuant to the Federal Register Act, for 18
U.S.C. 3231.
Karma and the Federal Courts: Page 2 of 3
It won't hurt to send submit similar FOIA requests for the
credentials of all federal employees who have "touched" the case
in any way.
Since we already know that there are no regulations for 18
U.S.C. 3231, and that federal employees will usually refuse to
produce their credentials, your FOIA requests will be met with
silence, whereupon you will file a FOIA appeal. Once the appeal
deadline has run, you are in court.
But which court? Guess ...
... the answer is the District Court of the United States.
What an amazing discovery, yes? A United States District Judge
in Arizona, in late Spring of 1996, ruled that the United States
District Court (USDC) is not the proper forum to litigate a
request under the FOIA. That can only be because FOIA requests
must be litigated in the District Court of the United States
(DCUS).
Now we have the United States checkmated. The proper forum
for FOIA is now res judicata. If the DCUS is the proper forum
for FOIA, and if the USDC is NOT the proper forum for FOIA, then
the USDC is not the proper forum for prosecuting violations of
Title 18 either, because the USDC does not show up in 5 U.S.C.
552 or in 18 U.S.C. 3231!
Read that last paragraph again, and again, until you get it.
It's okay to admit that you must read it several times; this
writer once read a paragraph from Hooven and Allison v. Evatt
some 20 different times, until the meaning was finally clear.
Inclusio unius est exclusio alterius. The omission by
Congress of the USDC from 18 U.S.C. 3231 must have been
intentional; the maxim certainly allows us to infer that it was
intentional. Use of this maxim allows for us to exploit one of
the most powerful techniques in American jurisprudence. It is
called "collateral attack" -- a broadside, rather than a head-
on, collision.
Knowledge is power, and power is freedom ...
... freedom. Freedom! FREEDOM!!!
Love it.
Common Law Copyright
Paul Andrew Mitchell
Counselor at Law, federal witness
and Citizen of Arizona state
All Rights Reserved Without Prejudice
November 2, 1996
# # #
Karma and the Federal Courts: Page 3 of 3
[This text is formatted in Courier 11, non-proportional spacing.]
For Immediate Release July 27, 1996
Juries in Check Around the Nation
Payson, Arizona
The founders of a new legal cooperative -- the Supreme Law
Firm -- have just issued a ground-breaking formal challenge to
the process of selecting grand and trial juries everywhere in
America.
Paul Mitchell, one of the co-founders, has recently
documented a serious flaw in the laws enacted by Congress to
select jurors for grand and trial jury service. These laws are
found in Title 28, United States Code, Sections 1861 and 1865,
the federal Jury Selection and Service Act.
On the one hand, Congress has said that all citizens should
have the opportunity to serve on both kinds of juries (section
1861). On the other hand, Congress has also said that jury
candidates must be federal citizens (section 1865). Citizens of
the several Union states are not mentioned in these Acts of
Congress, and the omission was intentional.
Grand juries are convened to consider probable cause for
issuing indictments, or formal charges, against people suspected
of criminal behavior. Trial juries are convened to try those
people and to determine their guilt or innocence. Both kinds of
juries are now assembled entirely from voter registration lists,
which consist of federal citizens only. In many states, it is a
felony to falsify information on a voter registration affidavit.
Ever since the Civil War, Congress has been pushing hard,
through force and fraud, to get all Americans into a second,
inferior class of citizenship known as federal citizenship. This
class did not exist in the law before the Civil War.
Prior to that war, there was only one class of citizenship,
a class which today is called state Citizenship. This is the
class that is mentioned in the qualifications for serving in the
Congress and the White House. The term "United States" in those
provisions means "states United", and the "C" in Citizen is a
capital "C", not a lower-case "c" as in the case of federal
citizens.
Unfortunately for Congress, the U.S. Supreme Court has
ruled, several times, that class discrimination in the selection
of grand or trial jurors is a ground for proving that a jury is
not a legal body. This means that any jury which exhibits class
discrimination cannot issue lawful indictments, nor can it issue
lawful verdicts. There are two "classes" of citizens in America.
In fact, several courts have already ruled that one can be a
state Citizen without also being a federal citizen, regardless of
the Civil War and its ugly aftermath.
"We are prepared to stipulate that federal citizens have no
standing to challenge the obvious conflict between these two
statutes," says Paul Mitchell, the author of several court briefs
which are racing through the Internet at present. "But, when it
comes to Sovereign state Citizens, the class discrimination is
unmistakable, and unconstitutional."
At an introductory lecture last week in Mesa, Arizona,
members of the audience were enthralled by the prospect that
government indictments against state Citizens will soon be thrown
out. "The correct procedural move is to petition the court for a
dismissal, or a stay of proceedings, pending final resolution of
the challenge," explained Mitchell. A stay is a procedural
"freeze" on any further hearings, until the controversy is
settled.
Final resolution means that the matter will be finally
decided by the United States Supreme Court, probably after two or
more federal appeals courts decide the matter with opposite
results. This will almost guarantee a hearing before the Supreme
Court.
Sample briefs can be obtained from the Supreme Law Firm by
contacting co-founder Paul Mitchell at email pmitch@primenet.com.
With minor changes, the two briefs can be adapted to any state or
federal prosecution, no matter at what step in the proceedings.
Mitchell is even prepared to utilize their logic in habeas corpus
petitions, in order to release state Citizens from federal
prisons. Their indictments and convictions were decided by
juries that were not legal bodies.
# # #
Contact: Paul Mitchell, Mail: 2509 N. Campbell, #1776
Counselor at Law Tucson [zip code exempt]
Supreme Law Firm ARIZONA REPUBLIC
(520) 320-1514 Email: pmitch@primenet.com
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