Capitalize all proper nouns that are names of individuals.

D. Capitalization
(1) Proper Nouns
Capitalize proper nouns (e.g., “General Assembly” but not “the legislature” or “the government”), imaginative names of particular persons, places or things (e.g., “the Land
of Lincoln”), and short-form nouns that are intended to replace and carry the full significance of a previously set forth proper noun (e.g., “the State” or “the People” when used in lieu of “Illinois”). Common nouns are not capitalized, e.g., “the plaintiff,” “the complaint,” “a state highway”).

(2) Governmental Units and Officials
Only the titles of state- and federal-level bodies and officials are capitalized. The names of local bodies and officials, such as county and municipal governmental agencies and officials, are set in lower case.

(3) Common Noun Used as Title
Capitalize the titles of local public offices (county, municipal, etc.) when used in the adjective form and immediately preceding an officer’s name, but not when standing alone:

(4) Official Capacity
Regardless of the terminology used in the complaint or notice of appeal, where an individual was made a party to the action in his or her official, and not personal, capacity, that information should be added after the party’s name by a term appropriate to the position, such as Governor, Secretary of State, Attorney General, Judge, Director of Revenue, Trustee, Administrator (Adm’r), Executor or Executrix (Ex’r), Individually and as Administrator (Indiv. and as Adm’r), etc. Even though the party’s name may be placed in all-capital letters for style purposes, his or her capacity is not.

(5) Italicized Words
Words and phrases in a foreign language which have not been well accepted into the English vocabulary and are likely to be unfamiliar to readers should be italicized. The following words and abbreviations should always be italicized.
in personam
in rem
in toto

(4) Documents
Do not capitalize the descriptive name of a legal document or subparts thereof:

The Editorial Staff of the University of Chicago answered:

"Writing names in all caps is not conventional; it is not Chicago style to put anything in all caps. For instance, even if 'GONE WITH THE WIND' appears on the title page all in caps, we would properly render it 'Gone with the Wind' in a bibliography. The only reason we can think of to do so is if you are quoting some material where it is important to the narrative to preserve the casing of the letters.

Law is extremely precise. Every letter, capitalization, punctuation mark, etc., in a legal document is utilized for a specific reason and has legal (i.e. deadly force) consequences.

State created, ALL-CAPITAL-LETTERS-NAME

(That must be what the state calls “top secrets” because I have not found the evidence , law, term, written anywhere.)

Very few people normally sign their name in ALL CAPS. Your JOHN H. DOE is really a corporation. Print your name in ALL CAPS if you intend to express the name/ title of Your corporation.

You'll find it on "your" driver's license, "your" social security card, "your" bank statement, "your" check blanks, "your" tax statements, etc.
The Social Security number is evidence that there is an insurance policy. The benefit you are receiving is the privilege of an army, navy, police, fire protection, Medicaid, Medicare, SSI, pension etc.

ceteris paribus