RCIC - Sovereign Citizen Movement
RCIC - Sovereign Citizen Movement
RCIC - Sovereign Citizen Movement
By ROCIC Publications
2010 ROCIC DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT
This report is dedicated to the memories of Sergeant Brandon Paudert and Police Officers Bill Evans, David Curtis, Jeffrey Kocab and the 83 other law enforcement officers killed in the line of duty during the first half of 2010. If this terrible trend continues, 2010 could be the deadliest year for U.S. law enforcement in two decades, according to the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial in Washington, D.C. It is not how these officers died that made them heroes, it is how they lived.
n Thursday, May 20, 2010 at 11:36 a.m., a drug interdiction officer from the West Memphis, Ark. Police Department stopped an eastbound Plymouth Voyager minivan with Ohio plates on Interstate 40 for traffic infractions. The white van came to a stop on an off-ramp near College Boulevard in West Memphis. Making the stop was Officer Bill Evans, 38, a nineyear law enforcement veteran and a father of two. He was backed up within minutes by his partner Sergeant Brandon Paudert, 39, a seven-year police veteran and a father of three. The overweight white male driver of the van was asked to get out of the vehicle. At one point, the driver began pointing emphatically at his license plate. A short time later, the driver knocked Officer Evans down into a ditch and the passenger, a skinny teenager in a red shirt, began firing an AK47 rifle at him. The officers shot back with their .40-caliber service pistols but were hit multiple times. Officer Paudert, who took shelter behind
the door of his patrol unit, was hit in the head. The suspects got back into the van, while the younger gunman continued to fire his rifle, and sped off. The alert went out, and an extensive manhunt was launched. Schools were locked down, and roadblocks were set up at interstate ramps and on bridges over the Mississippi River. West Memphis Police Chief Bob Paudert responded to the officer down alert only to discover his own son had been shot and killed at the scene. Officer Evans later succumbed to his wounds at the hospital. Approximately 90 minutes later, the van was sighted in the parking lot of a West Memphis Walmart store by Crittenden County, Ark. Sheriff Dick Busby and his Chief Deputy W.A. Wren. The officers blocked the van from escaping onto Rich Road. Subsequently, the officers and the suspects got out of their vehicles and exchanged gunfire. The officers then got back into their unmarked unit. Sheriff Busby was hit in the left shoulder, and Wren was shot three times in the abdomen.
Left: Jerry R. Kane and son Joseph Kane. Above: Booking photo of Jerry Kane following arrest in New Mexico earlier this year.
Another responding officer, Michael K. Neal, 33, with the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission, rammed his pickup truck into the side of the van, disabling it. A lady at the Walmart store screamed Shoot out! and employees and customers ran to the rear of the store and waited in the stockroom area, where they were guarded by policemen. In the parking lot, approximately 30 law enforcement officers, including the Arkansas State Police, surrounded the van and killed both suspects in the subsequent shootout. A total of 260 rounds were expended. The driver had been shooting with a Taurus 45 revolver. Two dogs had also been in the van; one was killed, and the other escaped after the shooting stopped. The small city of West Memphis, including the police department, was stunned by the violence and the killings. Its just awful for the families, stated Sara Warhurst of the Boys & Girls Clubs of Crittenden County, as she helped collect donations during ball games. It will be a while before anything gets back to normal around here. Sheriff Busby was treated and released at the Memphis Regional Medical Center two days after the shootings. On June 18, after several surgeries, Chief Deputy Wren was released from the Regional Medical Center and began rehabilitation. Four days after the shootings, separate funeral services were held for both slain officers at the
Traffic interdiction is dangerous duty. On June 29, 2010, Tampa, Fla. Police Officers David Curtis and Jeffrey Kocab were shot and killed by a motorist at an early-morning traffic stop. From 1996 to 2005, 106 law enforcement officers were feloniously killed and 61,353 were assaulted while conducting traffic stops and traffic pursuits. From 2001 to 2010, 19 officers were killed by right-wing extremists.
West Memphis High School gymnasium with thousands of officers and mourners attending. Officer Pauderts casket was draped with an American flag.
illed in the Walmart shootout were two antigovernment extremists and members of the loosely organized sovereign citizen movement: Jerry R. Kane Jr., 45, of Chester, Ohio, and his son, Joseph, 16. According to sources, the teenager did most of the shooting. The teenager was so skilled with an AK-47 that he didnt use the weapons foldable stock to improve accuracy. According to a family friend, the son had been raised without any boundaries or limits and was home-schooled by his father. Jerry raised a time bomb, the source said, adding that Jerry Kane, the father, lost control of himself following the death of his first wife several years ago. Jerry Kane held strong anti-government views and toured the country with his son offering seminars on mortgage fraud and debt avoidance. He was an associate of Drew Allen Gillham, a sovereign
Sergeant Brandon Paudert, left, and Officer Bill Evans working Drug Interdiction for the West Memphis (Ark.) Police Department.
citizen advocate incarcerated in a federal prison in Ashland, Ky. Kane resided in Springfield, Ohio, much of the past two decades but traveled extensively. Kane had just given a two-day seminar in Las Vegas, Nev. that ended May 16. Sheriff Gene Kelly of the Clark County, Ohio Sheriffs Office is familiar with Kane. Every elected official here in Clark County has a file on him, he said. Kelly said Kane visited his office in 2004 after officers had ticketed him for driving with an expired license plate and without seat belts. He was very upset with the judge, Kelly said. He advised me that he did not need a license plate and that he is a free man. He said the judge was attempting to enslave him. Videos posted on the Internet by Kane revealed his philosophy was to apply overwhelming violence to conquer foes, a philosophy he credited to the Bible. He also stated, I dont want to kill anybody, but if they keep messing with me, thats what its going to have to come out. Thats whats it going to come down to, is Im going to have to kill. And if I have to kill one, then Im not going to be able to stop, I just know it. Kane was recently arrested near Carrizozo, N.M. after encountering what he called a Nazi checkpoint where they were demanding papers or jail. He spent three days in jail before posting a $1,500 bond.
Crittenden County (Ark.) Sheriff Dick Busby, left, and Deputy Chief W.A. Wren.
Since 1983, Kane was arrested or cited six times in Clark County on charges ranging from passing bad checks to criminal trespass, drunken driving, and driving with expired tags. He was charged with felonious assault in 2004 after allegedly shooting a 13-year-old boy in Springfield, Ohio with a handgun-style BB gun. The van used during the West Memphis shootout was registered to House of Gods Prayer, 143 Main in New Vienna, Ohio. This address was associated in the past with white supremacist Harold R. Redfeairn, head of the local chapter of the Church of Jesus Christ Christian in New Vienna and supposed successor to Aryan Nations leader Richard Butler. In 1979, Redfeairn shot Dayton, Ohio, police officer Dave Koenig three times at a traffic stop after he had held up a car dealership and a motel. The officer survived his wounds; Redfeairn was paroled from prison in 1991 and died in 2003. Compiled from various news accounts
o-called sovereign citizens are anti-government extremists who reject the notion of U.S. citizenship. They claim to follow only Gods laws and the amendments found in the original Bill of Rights. Sovereign citizens believe they are exempt from all other responsibilities associated with being a U.S. citizen, such as paying taxes, possessing a drivers license, registering vehicles, or holding a Social Security card. In addition, they do not generally recognize Federal or State government authority or laws. Sovereign citizen groups are known for presenting fraudulent IDs, license plates, tax-exemption cards, passports, and birth certificates, among others. Other activity includes firearms violations, redemption schemes, and documents that falsely claim diplomatic and law enforcement privileges.
public officials to clog the court systems. Law enforcements ability to identify tactics used by sovereign citizens is essential, as these groups have a history of periodic violence when confronted by law enforcement. In the event that a member of your agency encounters one of these individuals, officers are advised to use extreme caution, and acquire as much information as possible, such as: Full name, address, and dates of birth of all vehicle occupants Any sovereign group or national affiliation, if provided Location of employment Where they are coming from and where they are going Any details regarding the visible contents of their vehicle
The sovereign citizen movement is a loosely organized collection of groups and individuals who have adopted an anarchist ideology originating in the theories of a group called the Posse Comitatus in the 1970s. The ideas of the sovereign citizen movement gained a following among anti-government militia, white supremacists, and other radical groups. In the mid-1990s, a resurgence of the movement also gained a following among AfricanAmerican groups. Adherents believe that virtually all existing government in the United States is illegitimate, and they seek to redeem an idealized, minimalist government that never actually existed. As a result, they believe they dont have to answer to any government authority, including courts, taxing entities, motor vehicle departments, or law enforcement. Sovereign citizen disobedience of laws and regulations often lead to their involvement in criminal activity. Members of sovereign citizen groups use a variety of harassment and intimidation tactics against the government and other forms of authority. The most popular tactic is termed paper terrorism, referring to the filing of false liens against
Each year, more than 50,000 law enforcement officers are assaulted in the United States. Officers have no way of knowing for sure who they are stopping. This anonymity of the vehicles occupants creates the greatest danger for a law enforcement officer as there is no way to positively predict where these individuals have been and what their intentions are. Tactics used by sovereign citizens at traffic stops have been reported throughout the United States, creating a mode of operation. On Aug. 15, 2006, the passenger of a vehicle (involved in a routine traffic stop) was arrested after he claimed he was an officer for the U.S. Constitution Rangers in Yellville, Ark. The U.S. Constitution Rangers is a sovereign citizen group that views itself as the enforcement arm of the common law courts and the protector of their interpretation of the Constitution.
Tailgate of a pickup truck stopped in Arkansas in May 2010 driven by a self-proclaimed sovereign citizen.
The use of the following tactics during traffic stops may indicate that the individual is affiliated with a sovereign citizen group:
May roll down their window just enough to be heard. May refuse to cooperate with law enforcement and exercise their right to remain silent. May make statements regarding their 13th Amendment rights. When asked to present a DL, individuals may ask if that is a request or a demand. May provide strange responses to law enforcement questions that do not make sense. For example, when asked to present a DL, they may reply, No, not personally. May claim that they do not have a DL, and may present some other form of identification, such as a homemade form of ID. May claim that it is unconstitutional to require individuals to have a DL and obey traffic laws. If an official state DL is presented, they may claim that the person in the picture is not them. They may further claim that the person in the picture is not human, but is a non-breathing extraterrestrial. If asked to provide a Social Security number for their DL, they may claim that the request is an invasion of their privacy and/or a violation of their rights. When signing law enforcement documents, they may write under duress beneath their signature or cite various Uniform Commercial Codes (UCC). Individuals vehicle may bear a fraudulent or homemade license plate. If affiliated with a sovereign citizen group, the individual may state they are licensed within that groups jurisdiction.
RED FLAGS:
Do-It-Yourself ID
One of the first tactics of the sovereign citizen movement was the formation of common law courts. Common law courts are selfelected vigilante organizations that provide an alternative judicial system. In the mid-1990s, the United Sovereigns of America were the leading advocates of common law courts. Members of Washitaw Nation Civil Rights sovereign citizen groups may use Fictitious Law License License Plate Task Force Badge these courts to declare themselves outside the jurisdiction of federal and state laws, issue harassing liens against the transactions. Sovereign citizen organizations such property of political opponents, and proclaim their as The Aware Group, Rightway L.A.W., and the right to arrest, judge, and even kill their enemies. Republic of Texas, among others, regularly hold Although these courts phased out of popularity redemption seminars to teach the tactic to audience (due in large part to the efforts of law enforcemembers. ment), the filing of frivolous lawsuits and liens against public officials has remained a favorite Sovereign citizens widely use fictitious financial sovereign citizen harassment tactic. instruments such as phony money orders, sight drafts, and comptrollers warrants. Believing paper Redemption Scheme money to be invalid, the sovereign citizen moveRedemption, created by anti-government extremist ment justifies the creation of entirely new forms and white supremacist Roger Elvick in the 1990s, of money. Before being shut down, groups such as is a bogus check scheme. Promoters of the scheme the Montana Freemen, Family Farm Preservation, hold seminars at which they claim that the United and the Republic of Texas issued billions of dollars States went bankrupt in 1933 (when it went off the worth of fraudulent money. gold standard) and to pay the countrys debt to inFraud, Impersonating Officers ternational bankers, the United States used AmeriAnother fraudulent activity is affinity fraud (an can citizens as collateral registering their birth investment scam that targets members of identificertificates as securities. Redemptionists argue that able groups or religious denominations), which the people can regain control of these securities (aka Colorado-based We the People and the Floridaregaining ones strawman) to establish Treasury based Greater Ministries International used to gain Direct Accounts and issue bogus, check-like millions of dollars in the 1990s. In addition, other instruments that they call sight drafts to pay off sovereign citizen groups, such as the Embassy of debts or make purchases. Heaven and the Washitaw Nation, have specialized in the creation of fictitious vehicle-related docuShould law enforcement officials interfere with ments ranging from drivers licenses to license this activity, redemptionists are told to file falsiplates. fied IRS Form 8300s against them, alleging that such officials are engaging in suspicious currency
DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT
Prison Influence
Even when jailed, sovereign citizens often continue their activities. They teach other prisoners their tactics; as a result, a number of non-extremist prisoners have engaged in such sovereign-citizen tactics as filing bogus liens. Convicted drug dealer and prisoner Kenneth E. Speight, for instance, filed more than $12 billion in liens against federal judges and prosecutors in Connecticut. He was taught by a member of the Montana Freemen.
Sovereign citizens are often confused with extremists in the militia movement. But while sovereign citizens sometimes use or buy illegal weapons, guns are secondary to their anti-government, antitax beliefs. On the other hand, guns and paramilitary training are paramount to militia groups.
Originally taught during seminars at remote extremist compounds, sovereign citizen tactics and redemptionist doctrine and tactics are now spread through online forums such as suijuris.net or via DVD courses available through organizations such as Paper Advantage or Citizens of the American Constitution, two sovereign-citizen groups that instruct clients in the wording of the movements nonsensical legal pleadings. In addition, sovereign citizen newsletters such as The Americans Bulletin are popular within prisons. College radicals also post sovereign videos on YouTube and MySpace.
Housing Scams
A recent twist in sovereign citizen tactics has been seizing foreclosed homes through the use of phony documents.
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n March 2010, APOST-certified Reserve Deputy Michael Lovelace stopped a vehicle with an improper tag in Jefferson County, Ala. The tag said Republic of Jefferson and had private citizen at the bottom where the year and month stickers would be displayed. The tag was reflective and would not have been noticed if the numerals had resembled the numerals of real tags. The white male suspect, Donald Barber, displayed a six-point star badge with Jefferson Ranger on it, and he was adamant that the tag was proper. Deputy Lovelace contacted his supervisor, and erring on the side of caution, issued a warning, wrote an I/O report, and seized the tag and badge. Soon after, Barber and his father entered the Jefferson County Sheriffs Office, demanding that the tag and badge be returned. Barbers father stated that his son had duly earned the Jefferson Ranger badge, having been appointed by the district of tens assembly. Jefferson County S.O. Lieutenant David McAnally, who taught gang-related courses at the academy, was contacted. Lt. McAnally spoke with the suspect and his father, who threatened the officer with lawsuits and referenced land patents as their reason for immunity from the traffic citations. I told him I would walk his son across the street to the jail, and we would let the judge sort it out, and he calmed down, Lt. McAnally stated. Bottom line, he did not have a valid DL with him, just the paper copy with a passed expiration date. After preliminary research, Lt. McAnally contacted the State Revenue Department and verified that the tag was bogus. He then contacted the Jefferson County DAs Office and was told that they would prosecute if needed. After briefing their captain, Lt. McAnally and Deputy Lovelace went to Barbers residence and issued a ticket for the tag. The officers told the suspects that they were following up on the investigation. The father then acted susThese TRESPASSES and ACTS OF TREASON have created a CONSTITUTIONAL CRISIS in that the Sovereign is guaranteed a Republican form of government and is being threatened, coerced and manipulated into becoming a U.S. citizen against his will with no easement into our venue. -Criminal complaint filed by Donald Barber (See page 18)
picious and stated that he had a meeting that night at a local church. Barber signed the ticket and the officers left. Two days later, the Barbers emailed a criminal complaint to the sheriff, alleging that Lt. McAnally and Deputy Lovelace committed acts of treason, kidnapping, and theft. When the complaint came in, Lt. McAnally filed an I/O report and reopened the investigation. He ran the suspects through every available database and started to track down the origin of the tag and badge. He discovered that Barbers father was known for preaching sovereign citizen tactics in a local church. In the past, the suspect had filed similar grievances to other citations, including an eviction notice. The responses were full of terms such as land patents and district of tens. The badge was one of 25 made by Smith and Warren and shipped to a uniform company in Texas, which could not (or would not) provide the buyers name. Lt. McAnally stated that once he found out the suspects were affiliated with a sovereign citizen group, his office became concerned about the number of falsified liens that Barber threatened to file against them. The Jefferson County DAs Office was contacted, but advised that nothing could be done unless the suspects actually followed through with the threats. Currently, the FBI and State Attorneys Office are involved.
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Common crimes committed by sovereign citizens, such as fraud, can be investigated through the usual methods employed by a law enforcement agency. However, it is more difficult to protect individual officers from false liens and documents filed by these sovereign citizens. According to the Anti-Defamation League, only effective state and federal legislation can be successful against these tactics employed by sovereign citizens. Sovereign citizen litigation often begins when the individual feels he or she has been victimized in some way, whether through foreclosure, issuance of a traffic citation, or demand for payment of income taxes. Members of the Posse Comitatus used methods of paper terrorism, but not to the extent that there was a nationwide awareness of the tactics. As a result, law enforcement agencies and other levels of government employed a variety of uncoordinated strategies to deal with the problem of false liens, such as court orders, civil suits, and criminal prosecution. Only criminal prosecution had an effective impact (although not always successful, as most states did not have laws against bogus liens). Court orders and civil suits rarely deterred lien filers, as many had no money to pay the damages anyway.
The resurgence of bogus liens occurred with the revival of the sovereign citizen movement in the mid-1990s and caused a more widespread problem. More than half of U.S. states have now passed some laws to deal with bogus liens. In addition, some states provide some sort of expedited process for victims of bogus liens to get the liens removed. One of the first comprehensive laws was passed by the Texas legislature in 1997, which included a variety of measures designed to protect officials against many of the tactics of sovereign citizen groups, including provisions against impersonating public servants, exercising the functions of a public office, creating a fictitious court, filing bogus financial statements, and using fake summonses, judgments, complaints, or other bogus court documents. The law also required court clerks, county clerks, and city clerks to notify persons whom they believe may have had a fraudulent lien filed against them.
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nquiries regarding the Sovereign Citizen Movement can be made to the ROCIC Criminal Intelligence Unit. Individuals claiming to be a sovereign citizen can be queried through the RISSIntel and RISSGang databases. Generally, the names they give law enforcement are not their actual names or they have many aliases. An Intelligence Specialist can query a number of subscription and public-records databases to determine their actual identity and provide any available information on all of their identities to the requesting officer. If the person is identifiable, the usual CIU services can be provided to the officer, including a comprehensive report on the person, DL photos, employment, and online profiles, among others. The type of information depends on the officers request. Generally, a sovereign citizen will provide law enforcement with documents and credentials stating their right to immunity from our laws. If an officer has confiscated these documents (or made copies of the originals), the documents can
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Officers should always use an anonymizer when visiting a sovereign citizen Web site.
Slidell, Louisiana
Mobile, Alabama
On May 29, 2008, dentist Louis Genard was sentenced to 30 years in prison for tax evasion. During the previous ten years, Genard replied to IRS delinquency notices with letters using spurious legal theories pulled from sovereign-citizen anti-tax groups such as We The People Foundation and the Guiding Light of God Ministries, a group forced to disband by a Florida court. At a pre-trial hearing in July 2007, Genard filed a motion claiming he was an ambassador and citizen of the Kingdom of Heaven under its King Jesus the Christ. The Embassy of Heaven is a sovereign citizen group and church in Oregon that sells fake passports and drivers licenses to members.
Jacksonville, Texas
On May 15, 2008, police raided the House of Israel after a member of the anti-government group violated his parole. Inside the so-called church, officers found prescription drugs, caches of pornography, liquor, anti-Semitic and neo-Confederate literature, along with evidence suggesting that House of Israel leaders were involved in promoting sovereign citizen legal sabotage. The leader of the House of Israel practiced unlicensed law and dentistry in Jacksonville, Texas since at least 2005. He is notorious for his prison ministry, which circulates books that instruct prisoners in how to combat the legal system using sovereign citizen techniques. The House of Israel leader gained a high profile in the Western states after conducting numerous seminars where, for $175, participants could supposedly learn how to outwit the legal system. The House of Israel was also allegedly used as a sanctuary for fugitives from justice. The leader was charged with improperly trying to solicit business for his legal practice, a felony under Texas law.
On Oct. 16, 2008, an accused cocaine dealer submitted a guilty plea after tying up his hearing for months by claiming that the federal government has no jurisdiction over his flesh-and-blood person. In September, a federal judge in Alabama refused to accept the defendants first guilty plea because he employed the flesh-and-blood technique of pleading guilty only on behalf of the debtor, an entity, in sovereign citizen theory, that is entirely separate from the real-life defendant.
Miami, Florida
On Aug. 29, 2008, the U.S. Department of Justice charged three members of the Little Shell Pembina Band of North America (a non-existent American Indian tribe) with selling fake citizenship papers to undocumented immigrants. The documents were sold through a Florida religious group called Universal Service Dedicated to God. The Pembina Band is a front for an anti-government sovereign citizens group that has been involved in dozens of cases of identity fraud.
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Vehicle Title (top left), License Plate (bottom left), Drivers License (top right), Vehicle Registration (bottom right)
Vehicle Registration (left), License Plate (top right), Drivers License Front and Back (bottom right) DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT
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Alabama Republic
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Without the occupants permission to enter this building YOU MUST STAY OUT. Though we value your friendship and your service to our community, you are a member of a high-risk group. Current law mandates that we separate ourselves from any individuals likely to have been in contact with illegal drugs. We hate such substances here and have nothing to do with them. The law demands that we take every possible measure to assure absolutely no illegal drug ever be found on this property. In an effort to keep our property free from forfeiture under drug laws, we must demand that before you enter this building, you: 1. Empty your pockets and submit to a complete body search; 2. Assure us you have no drugs; 3. Produce proper ID and be fingerprinted and photographed; 4. Sign our guest register and complete our public servants questionnaire listing at least your: full name, social security number, drivers license number, work address & phone number, home address & phone number, the purpose for your visit, and any other of your intentions. We must ask this, in addition to the above, you assure us that you hold us as harmless and forfeit any substance from you or your company while you are on our property. You must give us your personal word that you will not hold us as personally responsible if any illegal drugs are found on the property after your visit. You must be unarmed and anything you say or do will be used as evidence by audio and video recordings. In any case the occupants reserve all rights, and so demand a neutral non-interested accounting firm physically account for everything being brought into or out of this property in the case of any entry, search or seizure. If youre unable, or unwilling, to meet these requirements, you must stay out of, and off from, our property and arrange LEGAL NOTICE any meetings with us outside of these premises. TO FEDERAL OFFICERS OF THE IRS, BATF, FEMA, ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY AND OTHER UNCONSTITUTIONAL AGENCIES; AND TO ALL LOCAL MEMBERS OF PLANNING & ZONING BOARDS:
NOTICE!
TRESPASSING
CRIMINAL LAW
DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT
NO
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DECLARATION OF LIEN NOTICE OF DEFAULT This declaration of lien is filed by WILBURN ERNEST LUDLUM AND BARBARA J. LUDLUM, Lien Claimant, against the below-listed Lien Debtor(s) on the basis of default and breach of contract under Commercial Law, and pursuant to California Civil Code Sections 2872, 2874, 2881, 2883, 2884, 2889, 3281 and CORRESPONDING COLORADO state civil codes. Lien Debtor(s): SEE ATTACHED EXHIBIT A This Declaration of Lien (Affidavit of Obligation) is a Consensual Lien/Obligation on the part of Lien Debtors, arising out of a private contract formed between Lien Claimant and Lien Debtors. Said contract was initiated by Lien Debtors by claims asserted against Lien Claimant. Lien Claimant responded to claims of Lien Debtors by Commercial Affidavit, proclaiming the claims of Lien Claimant within thirty (30) days or abate all action against Lien Claimant, in the absence of which Lien Debtors were put on notice that they would be in default. Subject Commercial Affidavits, sworn true, correct, and complete; were sent by Lien Claimant, WILBURN ERNEST LUDLUM AND BARBARA J. LUDLUM, to above-cited Lien Debtors by United States Postal Service, Certified Mail Return Receipt Requested. Lien Debtors failed to respond to said Affidavits/Notices, thereby admitting and acquiescing to declarations by Lien Claimant that Lien Debtors claims were false and fraudulent and that said Lien Debtors were guilty of the criminal violations involved in their actions as set forth in Lien Claimants Commercial Affidavits, Notices, and subsequent Criminal Complaints. In the absence of response, Lien Claimant, WILBURN ERNEST LUDLUM AND BARBARA J. LUDLUM, hereby inserts and records a Notice of Default, and claims a Lien against the Lien Debtors jointly and severally, in the total amount TWENTY FIVE MILLION AND 00/100 ($25,000,000.00). Said money to be paid in lawful money of the United States of America, i.e. gold or silver coin minted by the U.S. Mint, 31 USC 5112 Dollars, as adjusted or negotiated. Said Declaration of Lien is in the amount of criminal fines, penalties, and damages enumerated in Criminal Complaint received by U.S. Attorney, which total ledger amount is to be secured by the real and personal property of lien Debtor, to be subsequently itemized and set forth. Said itemization includes the following real property of Lien Debtors indicated: ALL PROPERTY TANGIBLE AND INTANGIBLE, REAL AND PERSONAL OWNED IN PART OR IN WHOLE BY EACH LIEN DEBTOR AND LOCATED ANYWHERE IN THE STATE OF COLORADO, THEIR RESPECTIVE COUNTY AND/OR THE UNITED STATES OR ANYWHERE ELSE AND TO THE FULLEST EXTENT ALLOWABLE BY COMMERCIAL LAW This Declaration of Lien is filed to command specific performance of Lien Debtors in order to prevent THEIR evasion(s) of financial liability through efforts to shield property and assets by placing said property and assets in other names to prevent attachment for the satisfaction of suits and liens. WILBURN ERNEST LUDLUM BARBARA J. LUDLUM
c/o United States Post Office 11708 W. MARLOWE AVE. MORRISON, COLORADO 80465
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Sources of Information
Anti-Defamation League. Multiple articles. www.adl.org. CovertAction Quarterly. Vigilante Justice: common law courts. www.mediafilter.org. Family Guardian Fellowship. The usurping octopus of jurisdictional authority: the legal theories of the sovereign citizen movement. 26 March 2009. www.famguardian.org. FBI.gov. Domestic Terrorism: The Sovereign Citizen Movement. 13 April 2010. www.fbi.gov. FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin. Traffic Stops: surviving interactions with the motoring public. May 2008. Vol. 77. No. 5. FBI Situational Information Report. Tactics employed by sovereign citizens during traffic stops. Birmingham, Ala. 28 April 2010. Indiana News. Police seize sovereign citizen license plate: movements members claim diplomatic immunity. 11 May 2010. www.theindychannel.com. Intelligence Report SPLC. Multiple articles. Spring 2009-Summer 2010. Issue No. 132138. Lieutenant David McAnally. Jefferson County, Ala. Sheriffs Office. Personal interviews. Memphis Commercial Appeal. Multiple articles. Officer Down Memorial Page. www.odmp.org. Sanchez, Ray.; Portnoy, Steven. Hundreds attend Arkansas funeral for cops slain by man and teen son. ABC News. 24 May 2010. Southern Poverty Law Center. Multiple articles. www.splcenter.org.
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Gang Prevention Programs: Law Enforcement and Active Shooter: Protecting the Lives of Innocents Community Working Together in Shooting Situations U.S.-Mexican Border Violence Terrorism Threat Assessment for Large Facilities Get Smart! with Intelligence-Led Policing Cargo Theft Contraband Cigarettes School Administrators Guide to Gang Prevention and Intervention Check 21: New Banking Technology Challenges Law Enforcement ICE: Crystal Methamphetamine: Imported HighPurity Meth Replacing Domestic Lab Output Meth Lab Safety Issues: How to Protect Law Enforcement, First Responders, and the
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ROCIC has been serving its criminal justice members since 1973, and served as the prototype for the modern RISS (Regional Information Sharing Systems) Centers. ROCIC serves more than 180,000 sworn personnel in over 2,000 criminal justice agencies located in 14 southeastern and southwestern states, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
equipment and vehicles Publications, including criminal intelligence bulletin Specialized training and membership & information exchange Use of investigative funds On-site personal assistance enforcement coordinators by law
2010 ROCIC This publication was supported by Grant No. 2008-RS-CX-K005, awarded by the Bureau of Justice Assistance, Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice. The Office of Justice Programs also coordinates the activities of the Bureau of Justice Statistics, the National Institute of Justice, the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency, and the Office for Victims of Crime. This document was prepared under the leadership, guidance and funding of the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice in collaboration with the Regional Organized Crime Information Center (ROCIC). The opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this document are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position or policies of the U.S. Department of Justice. Regional Organized Crime Information Center and ROCIC are protected by copyright laws.