“We hold these truths
to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are
endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among
these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to
secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving
their just powers from the consent of the governed, —“
When you read the preamble to the
Declaration of Independence remember what the world looked like to
the men who wrote it. Then look at our world through their eyes;
understanding their world and the institutions they used routinely
brings understanding of what has gone so wrong with our world today.
Their world was the same and
different. The agreement to go to war came after a long process of
discourse over the issues, not by leaders, but by ordinary people. The
Committees of Correspondence drove a dialogue on why the people
should govern themselves, enacting formally what they had been doing
for two centuries. They were a people who expected to cooperate,
looking across into each other's eyes, never up to anyone in
government.
Over that time they had built a
vibrant and robust society that was stretching out in all directions.
The people governed themselves, using of a system of organizing
tools, proven over time. Those tools were town government operating
with transparency, ensuring that real control remained directly in
the hands of the people. For justice, they used the Common Law,
brought with them from England.
Control of the functions of government
through the town ensured that government would never eat up the seed
corn. Direct scrutiny by the people on what was spent, the authority
always with them to approve or deny, kept government small and
honest. Delving back in time you see these people assumed that no one
went into government to make money or secure their retirement because
the pay was terrible and there were no benefits. Those serving in
government were assumed to have enough money to be able to donate
their time. That model still persists in some parts of New England. The
same principles were in use for the justice system through the
Common Law Courts. Judges performed a service to the community,
drawing from their own time to do so.
In use by the people for centuries, the
common law was not something apart from the people but like the
air they breathed. School children saw it operating and were
prepared to use it themselves when they became adults. Going to
court was serious, a process treated with respect, but instead of
dividing them they entered into that process knowing that,
ultimately, there would be justice. Contrast that to how the system
of courts looks to us today.
The Common Law is a system for justice
that is handled directly by the people. That is the system our
Founders assumed would continue; it was one of those tools, used
sparingly, that allowed a free people to govern themselves directly.
Town government, with its absolute transparency and resulting low
costs, along with the Common Law, were the foundation for freedom
that the Founders assumed would continue.
Elections handled directly by the
people; the votes totaled openly and transparently.
Spending by government overseen
directly by the people.
Common law courts that possessed the
right to judge both the facts and the law.
The system worked. It remains the
system intended by our Founders. It can still work today.
How do we become, again, a people who
govern themselves? That we can do so is inherent in our mission
statement. The Declaration of Independence says,
“That whenever any
Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right
of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new
Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing
its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect
their Safety and Happiness.
Prudence, indeed,
will
dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for
light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn
that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable
than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are
accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing
invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under
absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off
such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future
security.”
The
first Amendment of the Bill of Rights owes its existence to a common
law case heard in New York in 1735. In 1735 the Royal Governor of New
York attempted to suborn the right of jury to decide fact and law. It
had begun with the publication of the New-York Weekly Journal in
1633 with Zenger as the editor. The paper began because Crosby, the
Royal Governor, was corrupt and the people needed the truth. Zenger
was arrested and incarcerated for telling the truth on November
17, 1734. The bail set made his release impossible.
The
Zenger Case was heard on August 4th
of that year saw a jury of twelve men render the verdict of not
guilty, thus overthrowing the law and setting a course that lead to
the principle that the truth is its own defense. It was this case
that remained in the minds of our Founders when they wrote the Bill
of Rights, addendum to the Constitution, which was intended to limit
government, never us.
The
verdict of Not Guilty affirmed the right of anyone to break a law
that violated the conscience of the community and the right of an
individual to speak the truth.
The
Zenger Case is with you any time you serve on a jury.
The Common Law is
the muscle behind our rights.
Many
today think of the Common Law as antiquated and impractical; nothing
could be further from the truth. The disused understanding of
these tools are waiting for us to pick up. They are easy to use and
bring with them amazing benefits, also forgotten, that created the
American people as different from any nation on the face of the
Earth.
When
you are empaneled as a juror on a Common Law Court you already
understand that this is a grave responsibility. You take up the
charge to become, with those others serving, the conscience of your
community. You leave behind you any prejudices. Those who serve
understand they must see the matter at hand dispassionately, demand
the facts, scrutinize the evidence, see beyond evasion to the root of
the issues. Then, the juror must reflect on each other point,
listening as if the life of their community depended on it.
America
itself owes its existence, in part, to another case where the jury
refused to violate the conscience of the community and the right of
the individual. That jury heard its case in England in 1670. King Charles II demanded the prosecution of William
Penn for the
crime of preaching his Quaker faith. The jury foreman, Edward
Bushel, along with the rest of the jury, found the law unjust, in
violation of the people's right to worship. The case was heard at
the Old-Bailey from the 1st to the and 5th
of Sept.
Afterwards, the jury was incarcerated
for returning a verdict that outraged the judge. He directed that
the jury reconsider their verdict. They retired and returned with
the same verdict, Not Guilty. The judge then confined the jury in
Newgate Prison to remain without food or water until the desired
verdict was rendered. They continued to hold that William Penn was
not guilty. Eventually they were fined and released.
William Penn, then 26 immigrated to
Pennsylvania. The lesson of the right of the jury to decide is the
birth right of all Americans and the midwife of our freedom.
The Common Law and its principles
remain in use, though those now in power try to disguise their
existence. A pivotal example of the same kind of courage shown in the
Zenger and Penn cases took place in the
township of Credit River, Minnesota on 12th
December 1968. The issue was the fraud being perpetrated by banks
across the world. It is known as the Credit
River Case.
Jerome
Daly faced eviction from his home. Daly had sued the bank, his house
in foreclosure; while reviewing the papers and practices he had
noticed that the mortgage was issued with no legal consideration. The
verdict rendered hinged on the admission by the president of the
First National Bank of Montgomary that there was no legal
consideration with the loan written for Jerome Daly's mortgage. The
bank president testified, ‘this
was standard banking practice exercised by their bank in combination
with the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, another private bank,
further that he knew of no United States Statute or law that gave the
plaintiff the authority to do this.”
Daly
kept his home. Two weeks later the judge in the case, Mahoney, was
murdered. No one ever said that freedom and justice would come
without costs.
Courts
that follow the common law accept the tenet that the jury decides on
all issues, both fact and law; they can demand more information.
Nothing is hidden from them. The judge is only there to be called on
by the jury. They must understand that the rights of individuals
trump statute, and, most importantly, they are acting as the
incarnation of the conscience of the community.
Arguably,
the most important check and balance to power in government is the
power of the informed jury to decide on the issues of both of law and
fact. Today, we as Americans face the need to restore to use the
tools that connect us to our own power, granted not by government,
but by God.
Start
with your local county, establish your own Heritage
Association on the common law and the Constitution.
Let
your local
law enforcement know what their obligations are under the
Constitution.
Celebrate
Jury Rights Day, September 5th
. Get to know the Fully Informed Jury Association.
A
free people will govern themselves; a people who will be free do it
themselves.
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