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loveunderlaw
09-27-15, 04:29 PM
NYPD says First Amendment Ends When They Say. Police are still abusing their power regardless of the rhetoric coming from NYPD commissioner Bratton. We the community need to continue to protect and serve each other by filming the police, copwatch, copblock , peaceful streets project and other police accountability initiatives.

This NYPD Officer Butler soothes his ego by writing me 2 summons at Barclay center Atlantic Mall. One for "obscene language" the other for "unreasonable sound."
This power hungry adrenaline junkie couldn't handle that he told me to shut my mouth and I refused to obey and kept filming him while he harassed a citizen who was already being victimized by other power tripping corporate stooges.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1fZiTCwGDNY

allodial
09-27-15, 04:35 PM
It might have something to do with:


§429. Corporate existence presumed unless affidavit of denial filed before trial

On trial of any criminal case it shall not be necessary to prove the incorporation of any corporation mentioned in the indictment, unless the defendant, before entering upon such trial, shall have filed his affidavit specifically denying the existence of such corporation.



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QUYKSWQmkrg

VERY IMPORTANT TO WATCH THE ABOVE SHORT CLIP FROM THE MOVIE SIXTH SENSE.


MALCOM: I See dead people.

MACOLM: In you dreams?

Cole shakes his head in the negative.

MALCOLM: While you're awake?

Cole nods 'yes'.

MALCOLM: Dead people like in graves? In coffins?

COLE: Walking around like regular people. They don't see each other. They only see what they want to see. They don't know their dead.

MALCOLM: When do you see them?

COLE: All the time. ... they're everywhere.


2966

Its important to note that the news and the Amerikan Politburo MSM selects venues to 'stage in'. Typically there is something unique about a given jurisdiction where a given law related or rights related event is staged. In New York City you have what is referred to as the Five Burroughs, that is: the county is deemed to be swallowed up totally by municipal corporations or by other corporations. As in: EVERYONE IS DEAD. Even the cops are 'civilly dead'. That is, the only door to rights is the 14th amendment under the Federal U.S. State of New York.

Furthermore its just like this people YOU MUST PAY ATTENTION. All of Manhattan is on an island--that is where New York City HQ is. You must cross water to get there or back. Thusly admiralty + civil death presumed (corporate status is presumed). Get it? Municipal police = paramilitary --they are all civilly dead under law. Police are technically not law enforcement officers in the organic sense because they are employees of a municipal corporation thusly 'devoled' by status under a corporate venue. The entire electorate of the New York City area is presumed dead (corporate) [GET IT THAT CORPORATE STATUS = DEAD] thusly--of the walking dead of course. Let's look into the New York City situation a bit further.

2967
In the movie I, Robot, Will Smith plays a cop who has a robotic arm (hint: he is part of the corporate "machine world").


The county is the primary administrative division of New York. There are sixty-two counties in the state. Five of the counties are boroughs of the city of New York and do not have functioning county governments.[7] While originally created as subdivisions of the state meant to carry out state functions, counties are now considered municipal corporations with the power and fiscal capacity to provide an array of local government services.[6] Such services generally include law enforcement and public safety, social and health services (such as Medicaid), and education (special needs and community colleges) (Wikpedia)

http://wikitravel.org/upload/shared//thumb/5/5a/New_York_City_District_Map.png/300px-New_York_City_District_Map.png

It is said that almost 50% of residents of the State of New York live in New York City.


The city of New York is a special case. The state legislature reorganized government in the area in the 1890s in an effort to consolidate. Other cities, villages, and towns were annexed[7] to become the "City of Greater New York",[22] (an unofficial term, the new city retained the name of New York), a process basically completed in 1898.[7] At the time of consolidation, Queens County was split. Its western towns joined the city, leaving three towns that were never part of the consolidation plan as part of Queens County but not part of the new Borough of Queens. (A small portion of the Town of Hempstead was itself annexed, also.) The next year (1899), the three eastern towns of Queens County separated to become Nassau County.[22] The city today consists of the entire area of five counties (named New York, Kings, Queens, Bronx, and Richmond).[23] While these counties have no county government, boroughs — with boundaries coterminous with the county boundaries — each have a Borough Board made up of the Borough President, the borough's district council members, and the chairpersons of the borough's community boards. A mayor serves as the city's chief executive officer. (Wikpedia)

In other words, there is nothing "normal" about New York City or City of Greater New York. Due to the corporate extents, it would have become a veritable playground for attorneys because where there be corporations there be attorneys and that kind of priesthood not too far behind. The point isn't to be for or against corporations. It is that it is important to pay attention to the details.

So there you have it New York City DOES NOT HAVE A FUNCTIONING COUNTY GOVERNMENT. It is a municipal/corporate/dead zone under municipal-corporate-administrative law and has probably been that way since JUST AFTER THE CIVIL WAR (WHAT A COINCIDENCE).

Connecticut & Newtown Also Special Case
Similarly, Connecticut where the alleged Newtown Massacre was staged DOES NOT HAVE CORONERS. THERE ARE NO SHERIFFS IN CONNECTICUT. That could be taken as a hint of Connecticut being a 'juristic dead zone'. Connecticut has very anti-gun laws. Newtown was hand picked due to its lack of government structure or laws.

When you watch the news it is worthwhile to avoid presuming that what applies in one area, state, region or whatever would apply everywhere else.

When an area becomes 'dead' it becomes TERRA NULLIS (NO MAN'S LAND) and likely rolls into some kind of special trusteeship (District Attorneys?).

Relevant Roman law maxims:

Paria copulantur paribus. Things unite with similar things.
Par in parem imperium non habet. An equal has no power over an equal.
In praesentia majoris potestatis, minor potestas cessat. In the presence of the superior power, the minor power ceases.
Disparata non debent jungi. Unequal things ought not to be joined.




Paria copulantur paribus. Things unite with similar things.

If you join a corporation then you must be a CORPORATION (i.e. non-corporations cannot join corporations).

St. Louis City and St. Louis County Split
St. Louis City split from St. Louis County. The Protestants are said to have stayed on the County side with the Roman Catholics on the City side. Why? Romans AFAIK lauded cities as superior, that those outside of cities to be 'inferior'. Ever notice how movies/Hollywood most always makes non-city-dwellers out to be stupid, low, base, idiots or backwards? It might be that the villain comes from a reference to those who live outside of cities.

Related:

Egregores (local link) (http://savingtosuitorsclub.net/showthread.php?1201-Egregores)
There Are No Sheriffs In Connecticut (http://savingtosuitorsclub.net/showthread.php?1526-There-Are-No-Sheriffs-In-Connecticut) (local link)
Are Boroughs Their Own Cities? Municipal Structure. (New York, Hempstead: Neighborhood, School District) (http://www.city-data.com/forum/new-york-city/1066553-boroughs-their-own-cities-municipal-structure.html)

loveunderlaw
09-27-15, 06:12 PM
It might have something to do with: Its important to note that the news and the Amerikan Politburo MSM selects venues to 'stage in'. Typically there is something unique about a given jurisdiction where a given law related or rights related event is staged. In New York City you have what is referred to as the Five Burroughs, that is: the county is deemed to be swallowed up totally by municipal corporations or by other corporations. As in: EVERYONE IS DEAD. Even the cops are 'civilly dead'. That is, the only door to rights is the 14th amendment under the Federal U.S. State of New York.

Furthermore its just like this people YOU MUST PAY ATTENTION. All of Manhattan is on an island--that is where New York City HQ is. You must cross water to get there or back. Thusly admiralty + civil death presumed (corporate status is presumed). Get it? Municipal police = paramilitary --they are all civilly dead under law. Police are technically not law enforcement officers in the organic sense because they are employees of a municipal corporation thusly 'devoled' by status under a corporate venue. The entire electorate of the New York City area is presumed dead (corporate) [GET IT THAT CORPORATE STATUS = DEAD] thusly--of the walking dead of course. Let's look into the New York City situation a bit further.


A LEO friend of mine also told me before that "New York City does NOT have an elected Sheriff like all of the other counties in New York", Some of it can be verified by going to Wikipedia:
The New York City Sheriff's Office, officially the Office of the Sheriff of the City of New York, is the primary civil law enforcement agency of New York City and the enforcement division of the New York City Department of Finance.[1] The Sheriff's Office is headed by a sheriff, who is appointed to the position by the mayor, unlike most sheriffs in the U.S. state of New York who are elected officials.[2] The New York City Sheriff holds jurisdiction over all five counties within the city, with a subordinate undersheriff in charge of each county-borough. Deputy sheriffs of various ranks carry out the primary day-to-day duties of the sheriff's office.


The New York City Sheriff's Office originated in 1626. Originally, each of the city's five county-boroughs had their own sheriff, each which held the widest law enforcement jurisdiction in their respective county-borough. Once the city was consolidated in 1898, the New York City Police Department took over responsibility for criminal investigations throughout the entire city.

On January 1, 1942, each of the city's five county sheriff's offices were merged to become the Office of the Sheriff of the City of New York. The city's five county sheriffs were abolished and replaced with borough "chief deputies" (later undersheriffs) reporting to the now mayorally-appointed city-wide sheriff. A contemporary report of the changes emphasized professionalization of the office, which had become notorious for employing political patronage beneficiaries. The new top five commanders were "all college graduates" and "lawyers like their chief, who promises to keep out politics".[3] At the same time, the sheriff's former responsibility for running prisons was transferred to the newly established New York City Department of Correction.[4]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_City_Sheriff%27s_Office


And also it's important to note that the New York City Department Of Finance is who controls the Sheriff's office:

http://www1.nyc.gov/site/finance/sheriff-courts/sheriff.page


The Sheriff is an officer of the court whose main job is to serve and execute legal processes/mandates issued by the State courts, legal community and the general public.

This Office enforces court mandates and processes including:

Civil Practice Law and Rules;
Judiciary Law;
Real Property Actions; and
Family Court Act

The majority of our duties include:

Discovery and seizure of property;
Cigarette Tax and License Enforcement;
Arrests; and
Serving a variety of mandates, orders and decrees issued by various courts


2968

Yes you read that right, "NO ELECTED SHERIFF" !

allodial
09-27-15, 07:09 PM
The sheriff is historically the principal conservator of the peace of a county or shire. The sheriffs were agents of the king. Sheriffs were also required to defend a county. If all of the people of the electorate are DEAD who is there to defend? If there is no sheriff it maybe means they are all DEAD and there is no one to elect one?

Consider that a lender, banker or surety can take over as an administrator (i.e. administrative law) in certain cases to enforce obligations (debts).

That is why some PTB hate sheriffs. They are chief organic law enforcement officer (not police) outside of corporate control. The blood threatens the green death vs red living blood. That is also why they hate the Bible and Jesus Christ (i.e. the Power of the Blood).


And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb, and by the word of their testimony; and they loved not their lives unto the death. Revelations 12:11 (KJV)

In some states, even where sheriffs are lacking, the Attorney General should be the principal conservator of the peace (not talking "police" here). Where judges or sheriffs are lacking then: judges, the Governor or judges/justices in their peace officer capacity. The sheriff would be who the living go to. The police is who the corporate members go to or the might living engage them as peace officers rather than as municipal policy enforcement agents.

In some states, such as the State of Illinois, each county has a state's attorney who is said to be the chief law enforcement officer of the county. Counties can be organic or they can be corporate. They can have an organic side or a corporate side.

Consider what has been done recently in St. Charles County, Missouri (http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/govt-and-politics/mark-schlinkmann/st-charles-county-sheriff-won-t-seek-re-election-or/article_3d2167c3-5c42-5c99-8711-f64a493b514f.html).

It is general rule that when a government 'folds' the power reverts to the People.

2969
Lindsay Eason, appointed sheriff of New York City by Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Note the colors on the car (see quote below). Red/gold/brown denote life/sovereignty. Black/blue/green connote 'civil death'.


STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- The city Sheriff's Office has quietly changed the look of its vehicles and uniforms over the past several months, making it the latest city law enforcement agency to bring its look closer to the style of the NYPD.

Officials with the city's Finance Department said the changes went into effect last summer.

"We had red and white. We changed it to blue and yellow, because it's more in line with other law enforcement," said Finance Department spokesman Owen Stone.

The previous color scheme looked more like fire or emergency medical vehicles, Stone said, and "not many people could recognize they were a law enforcement vehicle."

Some sources within the Sheriff's Office said the uniform changes -- new patches on sheriffs' shoulders, and new badges -- went into full effect about a month ago.

The Sheriff's Office is the law enforcement arm of the Finance Department, and the chief civil enforcement agency of the state court system. Sheriffs oversee evictions, tow and affix boots to vehicles with unpaid tickets in judgment, seize property and conduct auctions, and conduct tax fraud investigations, with a focus on cigarette tax enforcement. Sheriffs also enforce traffic regulations.

Other agencies, such as the all-civilian NYPD Auxiliary Police, also wear uniforms that closely resemble police uniforms, and drive vehicles similar to NYPD squad cars. NYPD School Safety vehicles have also recently been changed to look almost identical to standard NYPD patrol cars.

The city often refers to the roughly 4,500 Auxiliary Police officers as the "eyes and ears" of the police force -- they're not armed, but they're trained to observe and report, and assist in non-enforcement duties like traffic control and patrolling community events and parades.

For Joseph Fugel, who owns A & J Police Equipment in Great Kills, the look of a uniform often dictates the level of respect officers and sheriffs get from the public.

"Sheriffs, I guess they want to look just like the cops," he said, noting that a sheriff in plainclothes might not command the attention necessary to handle an eviction, a property seizure or any other official interaction. {AT A TIME WHERE PSYOPS IS TURNING FOLKS AGAINST COPS THEY DO SOMETHING TO REMOVE THE DISTINCTIONS BETWEEN SHERIFFS AND MUNICIPAL POLICE.}

"They have that law enforcement look. When they get out of the car and their presence is known, they want to make sure they don't have problems."

Fugel said he wouldn't be surprised to see School Safety and Traffic Safety officers -- who wear light-blue uniforms -- make the shift in the next few years.

In a major municipality, typically the major becomes the internal "conservator of the peace". The sheriff tends to remain outside. In the case of New York City etc. the sheriff might be sheriff only in title.