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Tag: U.S. Constitution

The Bias of an Impartial Jury

The Sixth Amendment guarantees the rights of criminal defendants, including the right to a public trial without unnecessary delay, the right to a lawyer, the right...

Congress v Trump – Have They Destroyed the Constitution?

Originally, the Founding Fathers envisioned a government that was “We The People.” The structural design was based largely on the writings of Montesque...

Why a Judge Ruled the Police Have NO DUTY to Protect Citizens

I have received a number of questions asking how the judge in the school shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, ruled that the...

SEC Administrative Law Courts are Unconstitutional

The U.S. federal courts do whatever they possibly can to avoid real issues to maintain powers that are clearly unconstitutional. I reported last year when Judge...

Can the USA Break Apart Legally?

Within the US Federal Constitution, there is what many refer to as the Republican Guarantee Clause of Article Four; Section 4; Clause 1: Obligations of the United...

Why Jury Decisions Reflect the View of Government

The most famous trial where a jury stood up refusing to find the defendant guilty in the face of a corrupt government, was that of William Penn, the founder of...

Defense Department Exempt From Providing Any Accounting

Part of the 9/11 conspiracy, exposed on September 10, 2001, is an unexplained $2.3 trillion missing from the Defense Budget. The plane that struck the Pentagon (if...

The Constitution – A Lawyer’s Perspective

COMMENT: Martin, Excellent, refreshing review of the enactment and enforcement of legislation under the Constitution; your blog entry should be taught in grammar...

The Right to Notice, Ignored by Government

You cannot be found guilty unless you KNOWINGLY violated the law. The way they get around this is they PRESUME you KNOW the law. The millions of laws they...

Judge Rules Administrative Court System Illegal After 81 Years

Well it has been a long time coming, but all along there have been discussions behind closed doors (never in public) that the Administrative Law Courts established...