Establishing the Reign of Natural Liberty: The Common Law and its Courts
Issued by The International Tribunal into Crimes of Church and State (Brussels)
What is assembling is the first court in history to bring judgment against the Vatican and the Crown of England as institutions. But our Court also signals the dawn of a new notion of justice: one defined by the people themselves, and especially by the historic victims of church and state, to bring about not only a judgment on their persecutors, but a new political and spiritual arrangement to undo the systems responsible for inter-generational crimes against humanity
- from the founding Charter of The International Common Law Court of Justice, September 1, 2012
Introduction
History was made on February 11, 2013, when the first Catholic Pope in history resigned from his office during peacetime in order to avoid arrest for protecting and aiding child raping priests.
Barely two weeks later, the same Pope Benedict, Joseph Ratzinger, was
found guilty by the International Common Law Court of Justice for
Crimes against Humanity , including child trafficking. And the Arrest
Warrant that he had anticipated, and which provoked his resignation, was
issued against him on February 25.
Evading justice inside the Vatican, Ratzinger is presently an
international fugitive from the law – and a living example of the power
of Common Law courts to successfully prosecute so-called “heads of
state”.
The lawful verdict of the International Common Law Court of Justice was a
“shot heard around the world”, and has spawned efforts in twenty one
countries to establish similar popular courts of justice to reclaim the
law from the wealthy and their compliant governments. (see www.itccs.org)
~~~
This Manual provides instruction and training to those of you who
have moved from words to actions. We speak to those who not only
recognize the permanent war being waged against humanity by a global
corporate tyranny, but who are actively engaged in dismantling that
murderous system at its source so that justice can be made real in a
reclaimed world.
You are part of a growing movement to create a new, liberated society
within the shell of the old by first allowing the law to act for all
people and not a clique of judicial specialists and their friends. That
new society is emerging through every act of courage and integrity by we
who know what is at stake, and that is, our children and the future of
our species.
Why we are Taking Action: Freeing Ourselves by Remembering the True Law
“Man is born free, yet everywhere he is in chains.”
That fact has altered little over the centuries. But the chains of
oppression over much of our species have been forged through the weapons
of violence and ignorance, and they can be undone.
Long before any rulers held sway over humanity, men and women
established customs and laws among themselves to ensure their peace and
liberties as free, self-governing people. They did so from an inherent
recognition of a Natural Law of Equality or Divine Law whereby no one
has any right to dominate or rule over others, to seize more of creation
than another, or to own any part of a world given equally to all
people.
It is the Divine Principle of Creation that every child born is
endowed with unalienable liberties that no authority, law, government or
religion can diminish or abolish. Any power that attempts to do so is
tyrannical and illegitimate, even if it operates according to its own
laws – for such tyranny is a denial of the natural order and an attack
upon divinity and humanity.
Two great principles summarize this Natural Law:
1. All things exist and are held in common. By the
state of nature, no one has any more of a claim to the earth than
another, as noted by a founder of modern law, Thomas Hobbes:
“I demonstrate in the first place, that in the natural state of men
(which state we may properly call the state of nature) all men have
equal right unto all things” (Leviathan, 1651)
2. The Law does harm to no-one. (Actus Regis Nemini Facit Injuriam)
Arising from the Ten Commandments and God’s law to do no harm to one’s
neighbour, this principle forms the basis of modern law.
John Stuart Mill articulated this principle in On Liberty
where he argued that, “The only purpose for which power can be
rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community, against
his will, is to prevent harm to others.” (1869)
An equivalent idea was earlier stated in France’s Declaration of the
Rights of Man and of the Citizen of 1789 as, “Liberty consists in the
freedom to do everything which injures no one else; hence the exercise
of the natural rights of each man has no limits except those which
assure to the other members of the society the enjoyment of the same
rights. These limits can only be determined by law.”
This Natural Law exists to maintain the natural peace and equity
between people and is their shield and protector against unjust rule,
rather than a force over them. Within the ancient traditions of tribal
communities, especially in the Anglo-Saxon world, this Law evolved into
what became known as the Customary or Common Law, or the Law of the
Land. It has strong echoes in the customs of indigenous nations all over
the world.
Here is a basic summary of the nature of True or Common Law versus arbitrary law.
Natural Liberty and the Basis of Common Law Courts: First Principles
1. Every man, woman and child is born and is by nature free, equal
and sovereign, and possesses an inherent knowledge of what is true and
right. Accordingly, no-one can be subordinated to another or to any
external authority, since every person’s inherent wisdom and liberty
makes them complete and sufficient creations in themselves, within a
wider community of equals.
2. This personal sovereignty is a reflection of the wider Natural Law, whereby all life by nature is indivisible and placed in common for the survival and happiness of all. In any just society, this commonality endows all people with the unalienable right to establish among themselves their own governance, and defend themselves against any tyranny or violence, including that inflicted by external authorities. Any authority that rules unjustly and arbitrarily, without the free and un-coerced consent of the people, has lost its right to rule and can be lawfully overthrown.
“Unjust government is not government but tyranny” – Plato
3. This Natural Law gives rise to customary Common Law whose purpose
is to protect the inherent liberties and sovereignty of men and women in
a community by maintaining equity and peace among them. The Common Law
derives its authority from the people themselves, and from the capacity
of the people to know what is just and to judge right and wrong for
themselves. This capacity is expressed in a jury system of twelve freely
chosen people who are the ultimate judge and authority under Common Law
and its courts.
4. Historically, Common Law arose in England after the 11th century
Norman Conquest as a bulwark in defense of the people against the
arbitrary rule of self-appointed elites, especially monarchs and popes.
The authority of these elites was derived unnaturally, from warfare,
violent conquest and the theft of the earth, rather than from the
consent of the community and its basis, the divine law of peace and
equality. This elite rule arose most strongly in the Roman Empire and
its descendent, the Church of Rome, under whose beliefs “god” is a
dominator and conqueror (“domine“), and all people are “subjects” of the Pope.
5. Such a conquest-based rule of papal and kingly elites gave rise to
a legal system known as Civil or Roman Law, and the belief that men and
women are not endowed with the capacity for self-rule and wisdom. All
law and authority is therefore derived externally, from statutes devised
and imposed by a ruler, whether a pope, a monarch or a government. This
system developed from Aristotelian philosophy and Roman property law in
which creation is divided and human beings are treated as chattels and
the possessions of others, and are thereby devoid of inherent liberties.
The people are thus in every sense enslaved, cut off from the world
given freely and in common to all. This slave system ranks and
categorizes all people, and grants restricted “freedoms” (freithoms, or slave privileges) that are defined and limited through statutes issued by rulers.
6. Common and Civil (Roman) Law are therefore fundamentally opposed
and are at war with each other. They cannot be reconciled, since they
arise from two completely different notions of humanity and justice:
Common Law knows life as a free gift given equally to all, while under
Civil Law, life is a conditional privilege, and humanity is a managed
slave populace. Accordingly, governments operate in practice according
to Civil (statute) law and denigrate or ignore Common Law altogether
through the rule of unaccountable judge-dominated courts.
7. The most extreme form of elite-based Civil/Roman Law is what is
called Papal or Canon Law, which defines the Church of Rome as the only
legitimate authority on earth to which all other laws, people and
governments are subordinate. Canon law is self-governing and completely
unaccountable to anything but itself. Behind its front of Christian
rhetoric, Roman Catholicism is a neo-pagan cult based upon the late 3rd
century Roman Emperor-worship system known as Sol Invictus, in which one
sovereign entitled “God and Master” (Deus et Dominus) rules
heaven and earth: specifically, the Pope. This tyrannical cult has not
surprisingly caused more warfare, genocide, conquest and murder than any
power in human history, and continues to constitute the single greatest
threat to Common Law and human liberty.
8. The Church of Rome was the first and is the oldest corporation on
our planet: a legal entity designed for the protection of tyrants, which
nullifies the individual liability and responsibility of the elites for
any crime or conquest they perpetrate. From Rome and the Vatican
Incorporated has spread the contagion that now threatens to destroy our
planet and our lives, as unaccountable corporate oligarchy everywhere
subverts liberty and the health of our planet by subordinating all of
life to profit and power.
9. At this very moment of corporate conquest and its subjugation of
humanity, a counter-movement is arising to reassert the divine purpose
and its operation through the Common Law, and to restore the earth and
humanity to their natural being as a common body. This movement is
foretold Biblically and in prophecy as the time when all people are
returned to their natural equality, devoid of all divisions, privileges
and oppression, in order live in harmony with creation and one another.
10. This restoration of humanity is a divine purpose, and begins by
actively dis-establishing all existing authority and institutions
derived from Roman civil law, and replacing them with a new governance
under Common Law jurisdiction. The creation of that new Natural Law
authority among a liberated humanity is the fundamental purpose of the
Common Law Courts.
How Do We Use the Common Law?
The truth is that throughout everyday life, people everywhere use and
rely on Common Law to live and work together. It is simply the inherent
way that people conduct their affairs together. Liken it to the roots
that bind together human communities by unconditionally upholding the
life, dignity and well-being of every man, woman and child. These roots
are especially necessary and foundational in the face of tyrannical
powers that seek to subvert such natural freedom.
The Common Law’s firm horizontal guarantees of mutual respect and
protection are a permanent threat to the efforts by arbitrary rulers to
harness men and women into the unnatural and vertical arrangement known
as the State. That is why every government and religion seeks to annul
the Common Law with their own authority and statutes, in order to reduce
free peoples everywhere to the status of regimented, obedient tax
paying wage slaves who serve a ruling clique.
To extend our everyday reign of Common Law into all areas of life
means to challenge the arbitrary rule of those cliques, and of all State
level regimes. But the very fact that it is the Law of we, the vast
majority of humanity, means that it only needs to be consistently
practiced by enough of us for arbitrary authority and dangers to
crumble.
We use the Common Law by simply employing and relying on it, in all
spheres of life. And that means, first, by establishing functioning
Common Law Courts with absolute and ultimate jurisdiction over every
aspect of our lives and communities.
Matters before a Common Law Court
Traditionally, law in the European tradition falls into two general
categories: civil and criminal law. The former deals with disputes
between individuals – often called “Tort” offenses – or issues of
negligence which cause harm. Criminal law deals with acts of intentional
harm to individuals but which, in a larger sense, are offences against
all people because they somehow threaten the community.
Arising as a defense against absolutism and state or church tyranny,
the Common Law traditionally has dealt with Criminal Law matters that
“crown” or “canon law” courts refuse either to address, or do so in a
restricted manner, including murder, rape, warfare and other crimes
against the community. But civil matters of personal disputes may also
be brought into a Common Law Court, which after all claims universal
jurisdiction over all legal matters within a community.
Indeed, because Common Law is rooted in the jury system, what better
forum can there be for the settling of civil matters between individuals
than a trial before one’s own neighbors?
For our purposes, however, the major focus of litigation before our
Common Law Courts will be on Criminal Law and matters involving serious
threats or crimes made against people, animals, communities, and the
environment.
As in any lawful system, the burden of proof in any such litigation
brought before the Common Law Court will be on the plaintiffs – those
bringing the lawsuit – and normal Rules of Evidence will apply. For
example, allegations against a party cannot be made in court without
there being a basis in provable facts, such as primary documentation
that is certified by an independent party, or by producing eyewitnesses
to the alleged crime.
Another crucial Rule of Evidence is the inadmissibility of hearsay evidence, as in “No, I wasn’t there, but I heard
about what happened”. This is an especially relevant rule when it comes
to the commission of serious crimes, such as murder, genocide or rape.
In short, any allegation must be backed up with provable facts, and
must be made by one who was a direct participant in or an eyewitness to
the event.
For our purposes, it must be noted that in the case of especially
monstrous, corporate crimes committed by governments or other powers,
such as wars of aggression, genocide or human trafficking, normal rules
of evidence are less stringently applied. This is because of a realistic
understanding that crimes committed by entire societies or regimes are
of a different nature than crimes by isolated individuals. A different
set of norms regarding intent and provable evidence applies.
In the words of the chief American prosecutor at the Nuremberg Trials in 1946, Robert Jackson,
“No regime that seeks the extermination of entire groups of people generally retains written proof of their intent to commit this crime. Considering the murderous nature of their regime, there is no need, since such extermination is not considered a crime.
“No regime that seeks the extermination of entire groups of people generally retains written proof of their intent to commit this crime. Considering the murderous nature of their regime, there is no need, since such extermination is not considered a crime.
Nevertheless, even
such a system seeks to fog and dissimulate the evidence, especially
during wartime … The proof of crimes against humanity generally lies not
in documents but in the witness of survivors, in mass graves, and in
the implied proof of the intent to commit these crimes contained in the
everyday and institutionalized laws, attitudes and norms of the
murderous regime.” (our emphasis)
Implied intent is a legal concept especially relevant and specific to
litigation involving genocidal regimes, including governments and
churches whose world view and laws consider other groups to be unworthy
of life or equal rights, such as the groups that were tried and
sentenced in the first case of the International Common Law Court of
Justice concerning the genocide of indigenous peoples in Canada by
church and state. (www.itccs.org)
Laws such as the Indian Act of Canada, which impose a different set
of laws on a racially targeted group, or the Roman Catholic “canon law”
called Crimen Sollicitationas, which condones and facilitates
the concealment of child rape within the church, indicate a clear
implied intent to commit and abet criminal acts.
That is, it is unnecessary to prove the individual intent to harm
children by Catholic priests, since under their own self-governing rules
called “canon law”, every priest is systematically required to harm
children by aiding those who do so if he is to retain his job and
ordination. The collective guilt of these clergy as a whole is implied and clear, just as it was concerning all of the servants of the Nazi regime.
Thus, while normal due process requires that the prosecution prove
that the accused committed an act and did so with deliberate intent,
such an intent may also be assumed to exist by the larger context of a
crime, especially when that crime is perpetrated by entire organizations
or regimes.
Ascertaining the truth is always laborious, but ultimately the
process is best guaranteed by a body of jurors than single adjudicators.
Common law juries, and not individual judges, are invariably a better
guarantee against the abuse of Rules of Evidence and just procedure in a
courtroom.
Self-governing judges are notoriously prone to corruption and
political manipulation, and when appointed by the very governments under
criminal investigation, are obviously unsuited to the task of rendering
a fair judgment. In fact, under legal procedure, such state-appointed
judges have no jurisdictional competence to rule on the criminality and
guilt of their employers.
Judges routinely waive just procedure and rules of evidence, and are
authorized to do so by statute law. In Canada, “crown” appointed judges
even have the power to alter or destroy court records, silence one party
in a dispute, and ignore due process altogether!
The whole point of establishing a jury-run Common Law Court is to
prevent such a manipulation of the law and justice by unaccountable
parties or vested interests. It is not accidental that a Founding Father
of the American Republic, John Hancock, declared in 1777,
“If we have not Courts that are established and maintained by the
People, rather than by bribable Judges, then we will have no Republic …
Our Constitution and our Nation will rise or fall according to the
independence of our Courts.”
The Common Law’s First Principles establish its general legitimacy
and lawfulness. This valid system gives rise to Courts with the power to
protect the people as a whole by prosecuting and indicting any persons
and institutions that threaten the community.
The mandate to establish such Courts is derived from the sovereignty
of the people as a whole, and not from any particular political system
or government. Common Law Courts are therefore universal, not
constricted by customary borders or laws, and are jurisdictionally
competent to adjudicate any issue or grievance. Common Law Courts are
not subject to and do not recognize any other legal or moral authority,
immunity or privilege, like those routinely claimed by heads of churches
and states.
Enjoying universal jurisdiction because of its rootedness in the
Natural Law, Common Law Courts can be established in any country or
community, and not only within nations with a specifically common law
legal tradition, such as England, Canada and America.
Common Law Courts are established when any number of men and women
come together to judge a matter of concern to them and to their
community. Thus, such Courts are invariably and naturally linked to
political movements, “town hall gatherings” and Tribunals of Conscience
that unite citizens and give direct voice to their concerns and demands.
The Court is thereby the expression of that voice.
The Court itself is established by the direct will and vote of the
people as a whole, who elect Citizen Jury of at least twelve people, a
Citizen Prosecutor to conduct the case on behalf of the people, a
presiding Adjudicator whose job is strictly advisory, and a Sheriff and
group of Peace Officers to enforce the summonses, warrants and verdicts
of the Court.
Additionally, the community may appoint local magistrates versed in
the law known as Justices of the Peace (JP’s), who traditionally have
the power to summon juries and issue warrants. The JP may also initiate
the formation of a Common Law court.
All of the participants in a Common Law Court must present their own
case in all of the Court proceedings, since to allow another to
“re-present” them would constitute a surrender of their natural rights
and sovereignty. This applies both to the plaintiffs and the defendants
involved in any matter before the Court.
There are, accordingly, no professional lawyers or permanent presiding judges in a Common Law Court system.
There is no restriction on the power of a Common Law Court to access
any person, place or thing, nor any limitation on the duration or rights
of the Court. The Court and its Magistrate can issue Public Summonses
that are binding on any person or institution, and enforceable by the
Court Sheriff, who has an unrestricted right to detain any person named
in the Summons and bring them into Court.
The final verdict of the Common Law Court Jury is final and not
subject to appeal, simply because a reasonable and non-coerced group of
citizens can come to the truth of any matter on the basis of the
evidence alone, possessed as they are of an inherent knowledge of right
and wrong. The truth is not mutable. A defendant is either innocent or
guilty; the truth is not subject to revision or reconsideration, since
then it is not true.
However, if it can be proven beyond any doubt that the Court’s
verdict was made unlawfully, was unduly influenced, or occurred on the
basis of incomplete or faulty evidence, a Common Law Magistrate can
re-open and re-try the case with the normal Jury and Court officers.
In the same way, the sentence of the Court is also final, and is
enforced not only by the Court Sheriff but by all citizens. For the
Common Law arises from and is the direct responsibility of all people,
as are all of its procedures. The verdict really is a declaration of the
people that they will govern themselves according to their own
democratic law and decisions.
There is no restriction on the power of a Citizen Jury to impose a
sentence on any person, group or institution. The Court Adjudicator or
Magistrate has no power to alter, influence or direct the original
verdict or sentence of the Jury – simply to advise the Jury on legal
procedure and points of law.
Finally, upon issuing its final verdict and sentence, the Common Law
Court jury is automatically concluded and its members are released from
their duty. No Court is maintained without the conscious consent and
participation of the people themselves.
Again, there is no professional, permanent caste of either lawyers or
judges in a Common Law Court system, but rather elected and temporary
Court officers.
Legal Procedure and Court Protocol
Common Law, being derived from Natural Justice, bases its legal procedures on the centrality of Due Process:
the three-fold right of anyone to be notified of the charges being
brought against him, to see the evidence in such a suit, and to be tried
and judged before his own peers.
No legitimate trial can proceed nor can a conviction be rendered if
the accused has not been given these rights, and afforded the chance to
freely defend himself in a court of law.
Such rights are based on these fundamental doctrines of the Common Law:
1. It is presumed that the accused is innocent, not guilty;
2. The burden of proof of the accused’s guilt rests not upon the
defendant but the plaintiff, who must convince a jury of the guilt of
the accused beyond any reasonable doubt, and
3. The accused cannot be detained without due process but must appear promptly before a Court, according to the principle of Habeas Corpus (Latin for “produce the body”).
Both sides in a dispute are given equal time to file their statements
and evidence, make motions to the Court, and respond to arguments. But
to avoid “vexatious litigation” designed to simply harass or disrupt an
adversary – which can drag out and impede justice and due process itself
– the Court normally sets a strict time limit on pre-trial proceedings,
after which the trial must commence.
The pre-trial period is designed to allow both sides the opportunity
to present their evidence and arguments to one another in order to seek a
settlement prior to a Court appearance. This presentation is usually
referred to as “Examination for Discovery” or Voir Dire (“to see and to say”), where either party can demand any relevant evidence or document from the other.
If Examination does not produce a settlement of differences, then the Court is convened and a trial begins.
The general procedures and protocols of a Common Law Court are
summarized in the following outline, which must be followed by anyone
seeking to accuse and try other parties.
A Statement of Claim must be produced by those bringing a case, known
as the Plaintiffs. Their Statement sets out in point form the basic
facts of the dispute, the wrong being alleged, and the relief or remedy
being sought.
Next, the Plaintiff’s Statement of Claim must be accompanied by
supporting evidence: documents and testimonies proving their case beyond
any reasonable doubt. This evidence must be duly sworn by those not
party to the dispute in the form of witnessed statements; and it must
consist of the original documents themselves, and not copies.
As well, anyone whose testimony is used in this body of evidence must
be willing to come into Court to testify and affirm their own
statement.
Step Two – Seeking the Remedy of a Common Law Court: Filing a Notice of Claim of Right
After gathering his case, a Plaintiff must then seek the aid of a
Common Law Court and its officers. Such a Court can be brought into
being by publishing a Notice of Claim of Right (see Appendix B, “Court Documents”),
which is a public declaration calling for the assistance of the
community in the asserting of the Plaintiff’s right under Natural
Justice to have his case heard through the Common Law, by way of a jury
of his neighbors and peers.
Such a Notice can be published in local newspapers or simply
notarized and posted in a prominent public location, like a town hall or
library.
Step Three – Forming a Common Law Court
Within 24 hours of the issuing of such a Notice of Claim of Right,
any twelve citizens of a community can constitute themselves as a Common
Law Court and its jury, and must then appoint the following Court
Officers from their ranks:
- a Court Adjudicator, to advise and oversee the Court
- a Public or Citizen Prosecutor to conduct the case; this person is normally the
Plaintiff himself or someone he authorizes to advise but not represent him
- a Defense Counsel to advise but not represent the accused
- a Court Sheriff, either elected from the community or delegated from among existing peace officers
- Bailiffs, a Court Registrar and a Court Reporter
It is assumed that people with knowledge of the Common Law and legal
procedure will act in these capacities. And, as mentioned, a Common Law
Magistrate or Justice of the Peace may also initiate this formation of a
Common Law Court.
Step Four – Swearing in and Convening the Jury and Court Officers: Oaths of Office
Upon the appointment of these Court Officers, the Adjudicator (a
Justice of the Peace or a comparable Magistrate) will formally convene
the Court by taking and administering the following Oath of Common Law
Court Office to all of the Court officers:
I (name) will faithfully perform my duties as an officer of this
Common Law Court according to the principles of Natural Justice and Due
Process, acting at all times with integrity, honesty and lawfulness. I
recognize that if I fail to consistently abide by this Oath I can and
will be removed from my Office. I make this public Oath freely, without
coercion or ulterior motive, and without any mental reservation.
After taking this oath, the Jury members, Court Counselors, Sheriffs,
Bailiffs and Reporter will then convene and receive instructions from
the Adjudicator concerning the case. The Adjudicator is not a presiding
Judge or Magistrate but an advisor to the Court, and has no power to
influence, direct or halt the actions or the decisions of the Jury or
other Court officers, except in the case of a gross miscarriage of
justice or negligence on the part of other Court officers. Thus, the
Court is self-regulating and dependent on the mutual respect and
governance of all the Court officers and the Jury.
Step Five – Pre-Trial Conference
The Adjudicator brings together both parties in a pre-trial
conference in an attempt to settle the case prior to a trial. If a
settlement is not achieved, both parties must then engage in a mandatory
Examination of Discovery, in which the evidence and counter-evidence
and statements of both sides will be presented. After a period of not
more than one week, this pre-trial conference will conclude and the
trial will commence.
Step Six – Issuing of Public Summonses
No person or agency may be lawfully summoned into Common Law Court
without first receiving a complete set of charges being brought against
them and a formal Notice to Appear, or Writ of Public Summons. Such a Summons outlines the exact time, date and address when and where the trial will commence.
The Public Summons is applied for by the Plaintiff through the Court
Registrar. The Summons will be issued under the signature of the Court
Adjudicator and delivered to the Defendant by the Court Sheriff within
24 hours of its filing in the Court Registry by the Plaintiff. The
Sheriff must personally serve the Defendant, or post the Summons in a
public place and record the posting if the Defendant avoids service.
The Defendant has seven days to appear in Court from the date of service.
Step Seven – The Trial Commences: Opening Arguments
After an introduction by the Adjudicator, the trial commences with
opening arguments by first the Plaintiff or Prosecutor, and then the
Defendant. The Adjudicator and both Counselors will then have the chance
to question either parties for clarification, and to make motions to
the Court if it is apparent that the proceedings can be expedited.
Note: Step Seven can still occur even if one side,
usually the Defendant, is not present in Court and refuses to
participate. Such a trial, being conducted “in absentia”, remains a
legitimate legal procedure once the Defendant is given every opportunity
to appear and respond to the charges and evidence against him. An In absentia
trial will commence with the Plaintiff presenting his opening argument
followed by his central case. The Court-appointed Defense Counsel will
then be given the chance to argue on behalf of the absent Defendant, if
that is the wish of the latter.
It is often the case that a non-response or non-appearance by the
Defendant can result in the Adjudicator advising the Jury to declare a
verdict in favor of the Plaintiff, on the grounds that the Defendant has
tacitly agreed with the case against himself by not disputing the
evidence or charges, and by making no attempt to appear and defend his
own good name in public.
Step Eight – The Main Proceedings
Assuming the proceedings are not being conducted in absentia and the
Defendant is present, the main proceedings of the trial then commence
with the Plaintiff’s presentation of the details of his evidence and
argument against the Defendant, who can then respond. The Plaintiff may
be assisted by the Citizen Prosecutor.
After his presentation, the Plaintiff is then cross-examined by the Defendant or his advising Counsel.
Following cross-examination, the Defendant presents his case, with or
without his advising Counselor, and in turn is cross-examined by the
Plaintiff or the Citizen Prosecutor.
Step Nine – Closing Summaries and Arguments to the Jury and final advice by the Adjudicator
Step Nine – Closing Summaries and Arguments to the Jury and final advice by the Adjudicator
After the main proceedings, the Adjudicator has the chance to further
question both parties in order to give final advice to the Jury. The
Plaintiff and then the Defendant then have the right to give their
closing summary and argument to the Court. The Adjudicator closes with
any final comments to the Jury.
Step Ten – The Jury retires to deliberate
The Court is held in recess while the twelve citizen jury members
retire to come to a unanimous verdict and a sentence, based on their
appraisal of all the evidence. There is no time restriction on their
deliberations, and during that time, they are not allowed contact with
anyone save the Court Bailiff, who is their guard and escort. The Jury’s
verdict and sentence must be consensual, non-coerced, and unanimous.
Step Eleven – The Jury issues its unanimous verdict and sentence
The Court is reconvened after the Jury has come to a verdict. If the
jurors are not in complete unanimity concerning the verdict, the
defendant is automatically declared to be innocent. The Jury spokesman,
chosen from among them by a vote, announces the verdict to the Court,
and based on that verdict, the final sentence is also declared by the
Jury.
Step Twelve – The Court adjourns and the Sentence is enforced
Following the announcement of the Verdict and Sentence, the
Adjudicator either frees the Defendant or affirms and authorizes the
decision of the Jury in the name of the community and its Court, and
instructs the Sheriff to enforce that sentence. The Adjudicator then
dismisses the Jury and formally concludes the trial proceedings, and the
Court is concluded. The entire record of the Court proceedings is a
public document, accessible to anyone, and can in no way be withheld,
altered or compromised by the Adjudicator or any other party.
A Note on Common Law Enforcement: It is understood
that every able bodied citizen is obligated and empowered by Natural Law
to assist the Court Sheriff and his Deputies in enforcing the sentence
of the Court, including by ensuring the imprisonment of the guilty, the
monitoring of his associates and the public seizure of the assets and
property of the guilty and his agents, if such is the sentence of the
Court. This collective law enforcement is required in the interest of
public safety, especially when the guilty party is an entire institution
or head officers of that body.
A Note on Appealing Common Law Court Decisions:
Under the doctrine of Natural Law, in which every man and woman is born with an inherent grasp of right and wrong and of justice, it is understood that a jury of twelve citizens, when given the complete evidence and facts of a case, will arrive at a just and proper verdict. The truth of that verdict must stand and is not subject to re-evaluation or dispute, except in the case of a gross dereliction of duty or non-consideration of evidence. Therefore, the verdicts of Common Law Court juries are not subject to appeal or revision, since the truth is not mutable or reformable.
This solidity of a verdict is also required by the Common Law
doctrine and custom of Stare Decisis, meaning “the decision stands”,
whereby the precedent decisions of previous Court verdicts have binding
authority. Without Stare Decisis, the law is subject to the whims and
political interference of rulers and despots.
In the words of Black’s Law Dictionary,
The doctrine of stare decisis states that legal decisions are binding
and shall not be reversed. “The decision stands.” That is, once a court
has entered its judgment upon an issue, it shall not reverse itself. This
is in fact the foundation of legality in the common law system – and is
one of the principal differences between common and civil law. (our emphasis)
Verdicts, Enforcement, and Convicting Rulers and Institutions
Every legal system operates according to its own worldview and
essential purpose. In the case of Civil or statute law, the contending
interests of individuals waging war with one another in a courtroom
define the process and aims of the Court. This system serves whoever has
the money or influence to present the most convincing case, usually
before a single magistrate who is part of a self-governing and
unaccountable judicial clique.
The law, under this elite-derived system, is a private weapon to
wield against another person or group over commercial interests, not an
avenue of justice for all or of the common good.
I
n the Common Law, contrarily, the Court is defined not by contending
individual interests, but by the needs of the community as a whole, and
by justice as defined by those who have suffered from the lack of it. A
bedrock of collective morality shapes how the Common Law operates,
according to a simple issue: Will this legal decision and precedent
best serve the community as a whole, and those within it who are the
most vulnerable or who have suffered or been victimized, or who may be?
Men and women have a natural tendency to resolve their differences
and mediate disputes among themselves, when non-coerced and left to
themselves to apply their own natural sense of right and wrong. Despite
this, the State has under threat of force violently conditioned people
to automatically deny their own judgment and defer to external
authorities whenever they are in dispute or they seek justice. And so a
long “relearning of freedom” is needed for Common Law to become a
functional part of human life once again.
Fortunately, we have found that the very act of publicly declaring
and establishing the supremacy of the People and their Common Law has
sparked that process of relearning freedom in the hearts and minds of
growing numbers of people. Sparked, but not secured. For the greatest
impediment to the efficacy of Common Law courts lies in the fears and
doubts that seize citizens when they are presented with the power to be
the law, and not have the law be done to them.
“Taking the law into your own hands”, we have been taught wrongfully
is a violation of civil order and tantamount to “anarchy”. In reality,
for citizens to judge legal matters for themselves is the highest civic
virtue and the cornerstone of true democracy, according to the Athenian
law maker Solon. The latter even believed that citizens should be fined
or reprimanded for shrinking from a public controversy or from their
inborn capacity to be lawgivers.
At the heart of that personal responsibility for the law is the
capacity of citizens to judge a lawsuit for themselves as sworn jurors,
and impose a verdict and sentence in such a suit. The jury system has
always been the purest expression of the Common Law and its capacity to
empower the people themselves to defend traditional liberties and
ascertain the truth of a matter.
To render a fair and reasonable verdict, anyone simply needs to know
all the facts and the evidence, and consider it all soberly, without
threats, influence or coercion. The more people who gather to determine
the truth of a matter, the more likely they will come to a just and
truthful verdict. It tends to be the case that individual bias or
prejudice, which is always present and undeniable within a jury, becomes
through the jury process counterbalanced and absorbed into a broader
collective truth imposed by the natural reason and fairness among jury
members.
Enforcement
The big and thorny issue, of course, is not whether men and women can come to a Court verdict, but rather, how their decision can be enforced, and effective in their community. This is especially an issue when the verdict is imposed against heads of church or state, or even entire institutions, as in the February 25, 2013 verdict of the International Common Law Court of Justice (ICLCJ) concerning Genocide in Canada. (www.itccs.org)
To use that case as an example, the moral weight of the verdict was
clearly the strongest weapon in the arsenal of the Court, and created
the conditions for the enforcement of the verdict against the thirty
officials of church and state named in the indictment.
For one thing, the February 25 verdict – which sentenced all the
defendants to public banishment, twenty five years in prison and the
loss of all property and assets – directly helped depose not only Pope
Benedict, Joseph Ratzinger, but the most powerful Catholic Cardinal in
Rome: the Vatican Secretary of State Tarcisio Bertone, who also resigned
while in office after the ICLCJ verdict was pronounced.
Ratzinger and Bertone know about international law, even if others
don’t. They understand that the verdict of the ICLCJ carries a
recognized legitimacy under the Law of Nations and the public right to
form Tribunals of Conscience when governments and courts refuse to
address a matter. And the Vatican also knows that the ICLCJ verdict can
be entered into other nation’s courts and used for the issuing of arrest
warrants against proven war criminals like church officers. And so the
resignation of these ostensibly “untouchable” church leaders in the
spring of 2013 is simple proof of the power of independent, common law
court verdicts.
A court verdict, after all, is a binding order carrying with it the
full force of the law, and whoever ignores or subverts such a verdict,
and the Court’s orders arising from it, is guilty of an indictable
crime.
In the Appendix to this Manual, we have reprinted all of the Court
documents related to that first ICLCJ case of Genocide in Canada. The
Court Order and Arrest Warrant dated March 5, 2013, can be acted on by
any sworn agent of the ICLCJ or whoever such an Agent appoints. Any
citizen, in short, can assist in the arrest of Joseph Ratzinger,
Tarcisio Bertone and the twenty eight other officials of church and
state found guilty of Crimes against Humanity by the ICLCJ.
Such enforcement of the law by citizens themselves is generally
recognized in most countries, under the precedent known generically as
“the Right of Citizens’ Arrest”. In Canada, for example, under a law
known as the Citizens Arrest and Self-defence Act (2012),
citizens can detain anyone who either commits a crime or is even
suspected of having done so, or who poses a threat to their own or
others’ safety: like, for our purposes, a child raping priest. This
power of Citizens Arrest has in fact been broadened under this new
Canadian law, from what it was previously. (see :
In theory, then, the enforcement of Common Law Court verdicts by any
citizen is not only perfectly legitimate and lawful, but is guaranteed
even under the laws of countries dominated by Civil, statute law. But
power, as we know, is not only about laws and theory, but ultimately
involves naked force: the capacity of one group to impose its will upon
another.
Hugh Grotius, a sixteenth century pioneer of international law, said
that legal principles acquired power only when backed by cannon fire. So
besides its legal and moral weight, what “cannons” will back up and
enforce the verdicts of our Common Law courts? Especially when the fire
power of those we are sentencing and arresting is apparently so much
greater than ours?
Another great pioneer, the Chinese general Sun Tzu, wrote millennia
ago that in any conflict, power is not ultimately what you have
materially but rather psychologically; and the superior firepower of a
much bigger enemy can always be negated with the right, unforeseen
maneuvers. (We’ve reprinted forty of Sun Tzu’s most relevant teachings in Appendix C).
Those rulers indicted by the ICLCJ are men and women garbed by the
illusory robes of their offices, and they are guarded by other men and
women who, like the rulers themselves, are motivated primarily by fear.
That fear is their greatest weakness, and can be easily exploited by
even a small group of people, as anyone who has occupied a Roman
Catholic church learns very quickly.
The fact that laws guard the rich and the powerful is not as
important as the reality that any functional law rests upon its moral
and political legitimacy. Once such legitimacy is weakened or gone, the
laws and hard physical power of a state or church begin to crumble. Once
public confidence in a ruler wanes, internal divisions appear in the
ruling hierarchy, and usually a “palace coup” occurs and the regime
falls. We are witnessing precisely such developments and such a collapse
of legitimacy within the Roman Catholic church today, in the manner of
events prior to the deposing of any dictatorship.
And so the short answer to the question, how do we enforce our
verdicts in the face of the power of the enemy, is simply, we do as Sun
Tzu teaches, and strike at the weakest, not the strongest, part of that
enemy.
The weak point of any institution, especially a church, is its public
image and its source of money. Threaten either, and the entire
institution must respond to the smallest of enemies. We have proven that
in practice. And the very fact of our smallness gives us a freedom and
flexibility to strike at such big targets when and how we like: a power
that is denied to big institutions.
A Common Law Court verdict like the one of February 25 is a wedge
between the credibility of an institution like the Vatican and the rest
of the world. Clearly, by striking at that credibility – a weak link in
the church’s chain – we are maneuvering around the obvious strong points
of that opponent and hitting them where they have no defense: the fact
that as an organization, they officially protect and aid child rapists
and human trafficking. And it was precisely by doing such a strategic
maneuver that on August 4, 2013, the Vatican was declared a
Transnational Criminal Organization under international law. (www.itccs.org, August 3)
As such a criminal body, the Vatican can now be legally
disestablished, its officers arrested, and its property and wealth
seized, not simply under Common Law but according to the Law of Nations.
(see The United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime, November 2000, articles 5, 6 and 12:
So while it isn’t normally possible to immediately detain heads of
states or corporations after a sentence is passed against them, such an
arrest does follow naturally as their credibility and protection
diminishes. Their overt power tends to crumble as the law and public
condemnation works around their strong defenses and undermines them,
like water flowing around a wall or a rock.
The point of any Common Law Court verdict, after all, is not to
target or imprison mere individuals, but to stop any threat to the
helpless and to the community: to arrest such threats so they do not
reoccur, primarily by ending the institutional source of those threats.
And our chief means to do so is the moral weight of our evidence and
verdicts combined with the capacity of many people to enforce those
verdicts.
Common Law Sheriffs and Peace Officers
That brings us to a key aspect of the Court: its police arm, without which it cannot function.
The tradition of Common Law sheriffs is an old one in the English
speaking world: men or women appointed from the local community to
detain those harming others, bring them into town or “shire” courts for
judgement, and enforce that court’s sentence. In the United States, that
tradition is still alive and embodied in locally elected sheriffs who
are granted considerable power within their communities.
The role of the Common Law Court Sheriff is fourfold: to provide
security for the Court, to deliver Court Summonses and Orders to Appear,
to detain and physically deliver to Court those summoned who evade a
Court Order, and finally, to enforce the final sentence of the Court,
including by jailing and monitoring the guilty.
The Sheriff does not perform these duties alone, but with deputies
and other agents he appoints to assist him. Such a “posse” is another
pejorative term that actually refers to an important traditional custom
of mobilizing all the able bodied men in a community to stop anyone who
has committed a crime. The word “posse” comes from a Latin term “pro
toto posse suo” meaning “to do the utmost in one’s power”.
According to one writer,
All persons who were the victims of a crime in Anglo-Saxon England were expected to raise their “hue and cry” and apprehend the criminal; and upon hearing their cry, every able-bodied man in the community was expected to do the “utmost in his power” (pro toto posse suo) to chase and apprehend the accused as a “posse”.
- 1215: The Year of Magna Carta by J. Danziger et al (2003)
The custom of electing community peace officers like sheriffs, in
other words, arose from the belief that everyone in a community had the
obligation to police and protect themselves and their children. The
Court Sheriff is thereby the servant of the people, taken from among
them, answerable to and recallable by them, and not an external force
over them.
Part of the power of such a Sheriff is that he can deputize anyone to assist him, including other police officers and agents of the very institutions being named and tried in Common Law courts. This
is an especially important action and tactic during this, the early
stages of the development of our local Common Law courts, since it uses
the very strength of the system we are opposing against itself.
To give an example, if a Common Law Court Summons or Arrest Warrant
is to be delivered against a church or government official, the Court
Sheriff will first deliver a copy of it to the local, existing police
agency along with a Deputizing Notice placing those police under the
jurisdiction of the Common Law. (See Court Documents, Appendix B). As such, the police are then obligated to assist the Sheriff and must take the same Oath of Common Law Office as the Sheriff.
If those issued such a Notice deny or dispute it or refuse to take
the Oath, they are then ordered to stand down from their position and to
not interfere with the Sheriff in his duties. If they agree with the
Notice, either directly or through their silence or non-interference,
such police agencies are tacitly abiding by the Common Law action, and
the normal protection around criminals in high office is suddenly
nullified.
Such a remarkable encounter is in effect an enormous tug of war
between two contending legal systems: a battle of wills, played out in
full public view as an enormous “teaching moment”. Our aim is to create and encourage such a creative confrontation and moral conflict at every level of official society.
This is the bigger and crucial point of that particular confrontation
between Court Sheriffs and Civil law policemen, which must always be
visible and televised to the world as it occurs: that it is a chance for
the people to learn directly that those policemen and soldiers who
provide the muscle for the system are not exempt from the authority of
Common Law, and must ultimately make a choice concerning who and what they serve. The moral and propaganda value of publicly posing such a question is inestimable.
On those occasions when this tactic has been tested in Canada and
elsewhere, the results have always been the same: the police back off
and do not interfere. Time and again, neither the RCMP nor the Vancouver
police have interfered with protestors who peacefully occupied Catholic
or Protestant churches responsible for the death of Indian children. On
one occasion, a senior police sergeant even stated that if the church
had committed such crimes and were served with a Court Order, he’d be
duty bound to enforce such an Order and help arrest those responsible!
Again, quoting Sun Tzu, to defeat an enemy one must know them; and such knowledge can only be gained through constant contact. “Provoke them to learn their responses. Prick them to test their strength and weakness. Do not outfight them but outthink them.”
Common Law peace officers return power to the people by making them
their own police authorities. In so doing, they challenge the very basis
of the status quo and its elite-based rule, by undermining those
unaccountable “armed bodies of men” who constitute the final and
ultimate power of the State.
The Common Law, in short, is a seed of fundamental social and political
transformation, not simply a weapon of self-defence for the oppressed.
On Citizens’ Arrests
The right and necessity of citizens to detain suspected or actual criminals has long been recognized under both civil and common law.
For example, as mentioned, under a recent law in Canada, The
Citizens’ Arrest and Self Defense Act (2012), the right of citizens to
perform arrests and detain suspects on their own has been broadened to
include not only people caught endangering the community or harming
others, but anyone suspected of crimes, including known offenders.
Under the same common law custom of pro toto posse suo (see above)
that empowers any group of adults to unite and stop those causing harm,
the right of Citizens’ Arrest is not restricted or negated by a higher
authority because of the recognition that any man or woman has the
competence and obligation to see and directly halt wrongdoing in their
community.
The procedure for performing a Citizens’ Arrest is as follows:
1. One must first either witness a crime, or recognize a suspected
criminal or known offender, or even have a reasonable suspicion that
such persons pose a danger to others. Such a suspicion must be based on
probable cause and not simply a “feeling” or prejudice about someone.
2. One must then inform the suspect or offender that he or she is
being placed under Citizens’ Arrest under the right of Necessity to
Defend, which obligates the arrester to detain the suspect or offender.
The arrester must state who they are and why they are exercising the
power of arrest by stating the cause of action.
3. The offender or suspect must then be detained and held for trial
in a common law court, if they turn out to have committed a crime or
pose a danger to others. The amount of force used in the arrest must be a
reasonable response to the suspect’s behavior.
Citizens can normally hand over those they have detained to an
authorized Common Law peace officer or a Sheriff of the court. The
arresters must be willing to appear in court and give sworn testimony
concerning their actions.
The crucial importance of the power of Citizens’ Arrest is that it
trains and empowers citizens to take responsibility for policing their
communities and for the law itself. It moves democracy from theory to
action.
Broader Consequences of the Common Law Court: A World made New
Our first real step towards independence from England was the
establishment of our own Republican courts, right under the nose of the
Brits. We set up a different legal system of our traditional Brehon
laws, even while under military occupation. And we had to defend that
system in arms. So you can say that once we started living under our own
laws, everything else had to follow, right up to becoming a new nation.
- Joe MacInnes, Republican veteran of the Irish Civil War (1974 interview)
For what you call the Law is but a club of the rich over the lowest
of men, sanctifying the conquest of the earth by a few and making their
theft the way of things. But over and above these pitiful statutes of
yours that enclose the common land and reduce us to poverty to make you
fat stands the Law of Creation, which renders judgement on rich and poor
alike, making them one. For freedom is the man who will thus turn the
world upside down, therefore no wonder he has enemies
- Gerrard Winstanley, The True Levellers’ Standard, Surrey, England, 1649
For the people themselves to sit in judgment of historically
“untouchable” rulers like popes and heads of state, and to render an
enforceable verdict on their crimes, is a revolutionary act. And such a
revolution has begun, with the February 25, 2013 verdict of the
International Common Law Court of Justice.
We cannot shrink from or deny the profound consequences of taking such a
necessary historic step. Rather, we must recognize that the new
judicial system in our hands is in fact a doorway to a transformed
world, in which the land and its wealth and society as a whole is
reclaimed by all people, and brought into harmony with Natural Justice
through a great social levelling.
Many traditions and prophecies foresee such a time as now as a
judgment upon the corruption and injustice of the human world.
Biblically, such a moment was known as the Jubilee, when all human laws
and divisions are abolished, and society, like nature during a fallow
year, is allowed to rest from warfare, corruption and injustice.
In truth, we recognize this historic moment not only as a
condemnation of what has been, but primarily as a transformation into
what is coming to be: a reinventing of humanity according to the simple
principle that no law or authority shall ever again cause anyone to
rule, harm or dominate others.
The aim of Common Law is to re-establish direct relations of mutual
aid among people by placing justice and the law within their reach
again. And that devolution of power will simultaneously disestablish all
hierarchical institutions of state, business and church which control
and mediate human life as a power over people.
A process so profound and revolutionary can only be enacted from the
grassroots, by many people who have relearned freedom and use it to take
action in their own communities to govern themselves as their own
judge, jury and police. On the basis of this good renewed soil, a great
harvest will one day arise in the form of new and local Republics of
Equals, in harmony with itself and all Creation. The Common Law is a
catalyst and a means towards achieving this political and spiritual end.
For now, as we struggle to give birth to the Courts that are like a
great plow breaking open the dead soil of the status quo, we must never
forget that much of what we have been taught will betray us, for we have
been raised as slaves to think and operate under laws that serve the
few. Everything must be rethought and retried according to the two great
Principles of Natural Law: All things are placed in common for the good of all; and therefore, the law shall cause harm to no-one.
Our principles are firm, but our methods and tactics are supple. We
must audaciously try ever new ways to expose, indict and stop the
criminal institutions and corporations that are killing our planet, our
children and our sacred liberties. And together, we must learn from
every mistake and defeat, and generalize the victories and wisdom we
gain into clear precedent, throughout this long redemptive struggle that
will span many lifetimes.
The conscience born into us is our lamp during this journey and our
best instructor, as is our great heritage of Natural Law and Reason,
passed down to us so that a free and independent humanity may never
perish from the earth.
Armed with this truth, this knowledge and this sacred purpose, go forth and take action! You have a world to win back.
……………………
Armed with this truth, this knowledge and this sacred purpose, go forth and take action! You have a world to win back.
……………………
The Law is the public conscience. And the Common Law is but common reason.
- Sir Edward Coke, 1622
- Sir Edward Coke, 1622
Appendix
A. Sources and Resources
Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, by John Bouvier, (1856)
Legal Maxims, by Broom and Bouvier, (1856)
A Dictionary of Law, by William C. Anderson, (1893)
Black’s Law Dictionary, by Henry Campell Black, (3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th Editions, 1933-1990)
Maxims of Law, by Charles A. Weisman, (1990)
Legal Maxims, by Broom and Bouvier, (1856)
A Dictionary of Law, by William C. Anderson, (1893)
Black’s Law Dictionary, by Henry Campell Black, (3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th Editions, 1933-1990)
Maxims of Law, by Charles A. Weisman, (1990)
See also
O. W. Holmes, The Common Law (1881; new ed., ed. by M. DeWolfe Howe, 1963, repr. 1968);
T. F. Plucknett, Concise History of the Common Law (5th ed. 1956);
H. Potter, Historical Introduction to English Law and Its Institutions (4th ed. 1958);
A. R. Hogue, Origins of the Common Law (1966);
R. C. van Caenegem, The Birth of the English Common Law (1973);
J. H. Baker, The Legal Profession and the Common Law (1986);
R. L. Abel and P. S. C. Lewis, ed.,
The Common Law World (1988).
O. W. Holmes, The Common Law (1881; new ed., ed. by M. DeWolfe Howe, 1963, repr. 1968);
T. F. Plucknett, Concise History of the Common Law (5th ed. 1956);
H. Potter, Historical Introduction to English Law and Its Institutions (4th ed. 1958);
A. R. Hogue, Origins of the Common Law (1966);
R. C. van Caenegem, The Birth of the English Common Law (1973);
J. H. Baker, The Legal Profession and the Common Law (1986);
R. L. Abel and P. S. C. Lewis, ed.,
The Common Law World (1988).
Further publications of aspects of the International Common Law
Court of Justice and its procedures and principles will be forthcoming,
issued by the ICLCJ Legal Advisory Board.
B. Examples of Common Law Court Documents
1. Notice of Claim of Right – To be publicly issued in order to convene a local Common Law Court
PUBLIC NOTICE OF CLAIM OF RIGHT
Issued by _____________________________________ on _______________________
in the community of ____________________________.
I, ____________________________________, give public notice of my
personal claim of right and of lawful excuse to convene and establish a
common law court under my liberty as a flesh and blood man or woman; and
I do hereby call upon the support of all competent men and women to
assist me in this lawful right.
I further give public notice of my personal claim of right and of
lawful excuse to convene and establish as part of such a court a jury of
my peers, consisting of twelve men or women, to judge a matter
affecting the wellbeing, rights and safety of myself and my community,
that matter being the following:
(Description of issue, statement of claim and parties named)
I further give public notice that the said jury of my peers claims
the jurisdictional competence to judge this matter and issue a sentence
and verdict within the said common law court established to render such a
judgement, based upon proven and irrefutable evidence presented within
its court.
I hereby publicly call upon and request the support of my community
to establish this common law court and its jury of twelve men or women,
to be sworn to act in such a capacity for the duration of the court
proceedings, according to Natural Law and the rules of evidence and due
process.
I make this public claim of right freely, without coercion or
ulterior motive, in the interest of justice and the public welfare.
_________________________
Claimant
Claimant
_________________________
(witness)
(witness)
___________________________
Date
Date
2. Deputizing Notice issued by Court Sheriffs to other peace officers
NOTICE AND WARRANT TO DEPUTIZE
ISSUED UNDER THE AUTHORITY OF THE SHERIFF’S OFFICE OF THE COMMON LAW COURT OF JUSTICE
AND THE JURISDICTION OF NATURAL LAW AND THE LAW OF NATIONS
To all Peace Officers and Law or Statute Enforcement Officials:
This Public Notice is issued to you as a lawful warrant by the Common
Law Court of Justice, placing you under the jurisdiction of the Court
and Natural Justice, and deputizing you as its officers.
Upon your taking the appended Oath of Common Law Court Office
(below), you are empowered to act as the lawful agents and protectors of
the Court and its proceedings, and to serve and enforce its writs,
warrants, summonses and court orders on any and all persons and
corporations named by the Court.
If you choose not to take this Oath of Office, you are compelled and
ordered by the Court and by Natural Law to refrain from interfering with
the actions of other Officers so deputized and empowered to act for the
Court.
If you resist, disrupt or impede the actions of the Court or its
Officers you can and will be charged with criminal assault and
obstruction of justice.
Issued on _________________________ in the Community of
________________________ by the following Legal Agent or Sworn Peace
Officer or Sheriff of the Common Law Court of Justice:
___________________________
(signed)
(signed)
(stamp of the Court)
Oath of Common Law Court Office
To be issued to any sworn agent of the Court or to all persons or law
enforcement officers deputized by the Court or its Sheriffs
I, ________________________, being of sound mind and clear
conscience, do hereby swear that I will faithfully and justly execute
the office of an agent of the Common Law Court of Justice according to
the best of my abilities.
I understand that if I fail in my duties or betray the trust and
responsibilities of my office I will forfeit my right to this position
and can be dismissed.
I take this solemn oath freely, without coercion, reservation or
ulterior motive, according to my conscience as a free man or woman, and
as a citizen under the authority and jurisdiction of the Common Law.
______________________________
signed
signed
______________________________
date
date
court stamp
3. Documents in the first case of The International Common Law Court
of Justice, Docket No. 022513-001, In the matter of The People v. Joseph
Ratzinger, Elizabeth Windsor et al. (Genocide in Canada)
(See attached hard copy documents and at www.itccs.org)
C. Strategy and Tactics: Forty Key Lessons from Sun Tzu
1. One skilled in battle summons others and is not summoned by them.
2. One skilled at moving an enemy Forms and the enemy must follow; Offers and the enemy must take.
3. Form the ground of battle before engaging an enemy, on terms
favourable to you. Then shape the ground to deceive the enemy, with
actions that fit the enemy’s own mind and action. Thus you form victory
before battle by standing on the ground of no defeat.
4. Victory is not achieved by the physical destruction of an enemy
but by their demoralization, which is accomplished by maneuver. Do not
repeat successful maneuvers with the same enemy or they will recover and
adapt to your tactics.
5. War is only a means to a political end, not an end in itself.
6. Knowing the enemy and knowing yourself: in every battle, no
danger. Not knowing the enemy and knowing yourself: one defeat for every
victory. Not knowing the enemy and not knowing yourself: In every
battle, certain defeat.
7. Defend and one is insufficient. Attack and one has a surplus.
8. The victorious army is first victorious and then does battle. The
defeated army first does battle and after that seeks victory.
9. It is the nature of warfare that swiftness rules. Everything will
be won with swift action at the right moment, or lost without it.
10. Only fight an enemy if a position is critical; only move if there is something to gain.
11. Do not respond to the ground your enemy has prepared for you, but
instead, shape their ground. Then they have no alternative but to be
led by you, as if it was their own idea. This is skill.
12. Hide the time of battle from an enemy, and make what he loves and
defends your first objective. When near, manifest far; when able,
manifest inability, so as to confuse him.
13. Let your plans be as dark as night, then strike like a
thunderbolt with utter surprise. Prior to such a surprise attack, feign
weakness and offer the enemy a truce, to lull his defenses. The
unexpected attack always negates the superior strength of an enemy.
14. If I do not wish to do battle, I mark a line on the earth to
defend it, and the enemy cannot do battle with me. I misdirect him.
15. Respond to aggression by creating space, so as to control the
actions of the aggressor. Resist and you swell the attacker. Create room
for the aggressor and he will dissipate.
16. When I am few and the enemy is many, I can use the few to strike the many because those whom I battle are restricted.
17. Use order to await chaos. Use stillness to await clamor. At the
right moment, not acting is the most skillful action. This is ordering
the heart-mind.
18. It is not necessary to exercise your strength. Instead, rest in your sufficiency.
19. Every sage commander acts from his own ground of strength, which
is formed solely by the completeness of his being. He accepts his nature
and remains himself, which brings the power to discern clearly. The
clarity and the will of the commander forms the ground of his entire
army; and clarity comes from an honest and a humble heart.
20. The commander must never issue ambiguous orders.
21. The victorious commander does not win victory by conquering an
opponent but by creating the larger view that includes both sides.
Outthink, do not outfight, your enemy.
22. Always carefully discern the enemy’s purpose. True knowledge of
the enemy comes from active contact. Provoke them to reveal themselves,
assessing their nature and responses. Prick them and know their
movements. Probe them and know their strength and deficiencies.
23. An enemy can be subdued without battle once you understand the
relationships and combination of things that constitutes its power. This
skill of understanding exceeds one hundred victories in battle.
24. Power is found not in solid things but in the constant flow of
relationships, which are never still. The power of a squirrel to cross a
river on a log lies neither in the squirrel nor the log, but in their
momentary combination. That combination is its power.
25. To employ the skill of understanding an enemy’s power, one must
be formless, like water. The water moves from high to low; your army’s
movements are determined fluidly, according to the state of your enemy.
Thus is your power not fixed, and it is without permanent form, to
reflect and capture the power of your enemy.
26. Never reinforce error or a defeat, but let your understanding
move fluidly with each new experience. There is never a final or
definitive outcome to the army that moves like water.
27. Being without permanent form and fluid in your movements and
tactics, you compel your enemy to defend against you at every point. He
is thereby dissipated and weakened, and kept ignorant of your purpose
while forced to reveal his condition to you.
28. By this means of formlessness, you can form the strongest enemy
to the ground you have chosen for it, on the terms of your victory. But
without foreknowledge of the ground itself, none of this is possible.
29. Hostile ground heightens your focus. Cut off from home support,
you take nourishment from the enemy. Such supply lines cannot be
severed. Use the threat surrounding you to stay united and sustain your
army.
30. Place your soldiers where they cannot leave. Facing death, they
find their true strength and cannot be routed. When they cannot leave,
they stand firm and fight.
31. Extreme situations cause your troops to respond from profound
sources of inner power. Training and commands cannot accomplish this.
Dire circumstances automatically evoke it, unsought yet attained. The
right relationships unleash enormous power greater than the individual
parts.
32. If an enemy occupies high ground, do not engage him; if he attacks from high ground, do not oppose him.
33. If a mightier enemy pauses though enjoying an advantage, they are
tired. If divisions appear in their ranks, they are frightened. If
their commander repeatedly speaks soothing reassurances to his army, he
has lost his power. Many punishments indicate panic. Many bribes and
rewards means the enemy is seeking retreat.
34. Bind your own army to you with deeds. Do not command them with words.
35. Engage an enemy with what they expect, so that what you allow
them to see confirms their own projections. This settles them into
predictable patterns of response, distracting them from your actions
while you wait calmly for the extraordinary moment: that which they
cannot anticipate or prepare for. Use the extraordinary to win victory.
36. Be in this manner invisible and unfathomable to your enemy. To be
thus without form, first be so orthodox that nothing remains to give
you away. Then be so extraordinary that no-one can predict your action
or purpose.
37. Thus, in battle, use a direct attack to engage, and an indirect attack to win.
38. Ride the inadequacies of your enemy. Go by unpredicted ways. Attack
where your enemy has not taken precautions and avoid where they have.
39. Do not confront the enemy in their strength, but at the points of
their weakness. Seize something the enemy holds dear. Their strength is
then rendered useless; they must stop to listen and respond. Likewise,
whatever you love makes you vulnerable. Prepare yourself to relinquish
it.
40. Being thus prepared and awaiting the unprepared is victory. Thus it is said,
“Victory can be known. It cannot be made”.
In summary:
– Know your enemy and know yourself
– Subdue the enemy without fighting
– Avoid what is strong. Attack what is weak.
– Know your enemy and know yourself
– Subdue the enemy without fighting
– Avoid what is strong. Attack what is weak.
These three great Principles are tied together like braided strands of hair.
…………………
…………………
There is but one law for all, namely that law which governs all law,
the Law of our Creator, the law of humanity, justice and equity. That is
the law of Nature and of Nations. – Edmund Burke, 1780
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