What is Martial Law?
Also
know as National Emergency or Police State, Martial
Law is where the government has declared a military control of
the population. Under martial law, you are presumed guilty
until proven innocent.
Admiralty
Law is armed enforcement of shipping laws regulating commercial
contracts with severe penalties.
The
Admiralty power originates in article III: sec. 1 of
the Constitution for the united States of America.
The
gold-fringed flag only stands inside military courts that sit
in summary court martial proceedings against civilians and
such courts are governed in part by local rules, but more especially
by "The Manual of Courts Martial", U.S., 1994 Ed., at
Art. 99, (c)(1)(b), pg. IV-34, PIN 030567-0000, U.S. Government
Printing Office, Wash. D.C. The details of the crimes that
civilians can commit, that are classed as 'Acts of War,' cover 125
pages in the Manual of Courts Martial.
HOW
IS MILITARY LAW ENFORCED ON AMERICANS?
By
offering, “UNITED STATES” corporation citizenship, out
into the American population and enslaving the unsuspecting
recipients with excessive licensing and taxation.
This
is exactly why so many judges are appointed, and not elected by the
people. The President, the national military commander in chief,
appoints the Federal judges. The Governors, military commanders for
the States appoint the State judges,. The judges are appointed
because civilians do not "elect" military officers.
Lincoln
Executive Proclamation 1, April 15, 1861,
President
Lincoln – General Orders # 100 (April 24,1963): the Lieber
Instructions or Lieber Code
Trading
with the Enemy Act of 1861 - revised 1918.
Under
International Law, all parties to a cause must appear by nom de
guerre(war name), because an "alien enemy cannot maintain an
action during the war in his own name". See Alien, Wharton's,
Pennsylvania Digest, § 20.94 and the Oxford English Dictionary,
2nd. ed., Clarendon Press (1989).
18
USC Sec. 9
TITLE
18 - CRIMES AND CRIMINAL PROCEDURE
PART
I - CRIMES
CHAPTER
1 - GENERAL PROVISIONS
Sec.
9. Vessel of the United States defined
The
term ''vessel of the United States'', as used in this title,
means a vessel belonging in whole or in part to the
United States, or any citizen thereof, or any
corporation created by or under the laws of the United States,
or of any State,
Territory, District, or possession thereof.
If
you claim that you are a citizen of the United States you are
considered to be a corporate slave.
Title
28, 3002(15)(3): States that all departments of the UNITED STATES
CORPORATION are part of the corporation.
An
exhaustive description of the "economic war" against the
Private Citizens of the United States of America can be found in the
Digest of International Law, Volume 10, and pages 95-127. It is here
that we will find that the Departments of State, Justice, Commerce,
and the Treasury, in disregard to the administrative orders of the
President, conduct an "Alien Enemy Program" whose sole
purpose is to unconstitutionally seize the properties of all Private
Citizens, militarily, with the aid of such maritime hypothecations as
"bottomry bonds", etc.
Quoted
directly from the U.S. Marshal's web site:
Admiralty
law or maritime law is the distinct body of law (both
substantive and procedural) governing navigation and shipping. Topics
associated with this field in legal reference works may include:
shipping; navigation; waters; commerce; seamen; towage;
wharves, piers, and docks; insurance; maritime liens; canals;
and recreation. Piracy (ship hijacking) is also an aspect of
admiralty. The courts and Congress seek to create a uniform body
of admiralty law both nationally and internationally in order to
facilitate commerce. [-Note: vessel of the United States]
The
federal courts derive their exclusive jurisdiction over this field
from the Judiciary Act of 1789 and from Article III, § 2 of the
U.S. Constitution. Congress regulates admiralty partially through the
Commerce Clause. American admiralty law formerly applied only
to American tidal waters. It now extends to any waters navigable
within the United States for interstate or foreign
commerce. In such waters admiralty jurisdiction includes
maritime matters not involving interstate commerce, including
recreational boating. [-note: vessel of the United States]
JURISDICTION:
Admiralty and maritime jurisdiction is part of the judicial power
conferred upon the courts of the United States by the
Constitution which provides "[t]he judicial power shall extend .
. . to all cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction"
(Article III, Section 2). Subject to specific statutes, the authority
of a district court is generally limited to the geographical limits
of the district, including the territorial waters bordering the
district (a distance of approximately 3 miles offshore Band
approximately 9 miles on the Gulf coast of Florida and Texas).
However, bodies of water that are wholly located within a
single state and are not navigable nor used in interstate or foreign
commerce would not be included in the admiralty jurisdiction.
In short, admiralty in rem jurisdiction of the federal court and the
USMS authority to arrest vessels is limited to vessels
and/or cargo physically within the territorial jurisdictional
authority of the district. [-note: vessel of the United
States]
GENERAL
PROCEDURES: Upon authorization of the court or the clerk, the
clerk will issue a warrant for the arrest of the vessel or
other property that is the subject of the action or will issue a Writ
of Maritime Attachment or Garnishment and deliver it to the U.S.
Marshal for service. There are basic procedures that should be
reviewed and followed in order to achieve the arrest, attachment, or
garnishment. [-note: vessel of the United States]
Although
the Supplemental Rules for Certain Admiralty and Maritime Claims
authorize persons or organizations other than the U.S. marshal
to be named by the court to execute the warrant of arrest, or
writ of attachment or garnishment, seizure of a vessel and
tangible property on a vessel remain exclusively the task of
the U.S. Marshals Service. [-note: vessel of the United States]
Seizure
of other tangible or intangible property can now properly be
undertaken by other persons or organizations if named by the
court in the warrant of arrest, writ of attachment, or garnishment.
In addition, many districts have local rules pertaining to
admiralty procedures and these must be followed where applicable.
[-note: vessel of the United States]
Includes 3 new chapters:
- Right of Travel vs. Privelege to Drive
- Law of the Land vs. Law of the Sea
- A real life case of Kidnapping
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