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THE CODE PROJECT: A New School of Law

Introduction

A group of individuals have joined together to create a common law jurisdiction as defined in this information and reference material. The purpose is to create a self governing body of individuals which would be a true republic as described by Plato, modified by our Anglo-Saxon ancestors and mandated by the Constitution. The rules of this society are that the laws are made by litigation. The preexisting laws and principles can be found in the reference material. Other editions of the same works will not be useful as specific reference is made to page numbers, chapters, etc. The information enclosed is the beginning laws in this reformed republic. This information is provided so that students may start learning these laws to decide if they want to participate in this type of society.

The rules will limit the ability to join or ask questions until a student has the knowledge existing in these book.

1. Ongoing litigation is creating new summaries.

2. Litigation, contributions and questions on these principles are causing ongoing

modifications.

You may choose to learn common law by these methods:

1. Start learning the reference material and the enclosed summaries on your own and file a domicile proceeding. (This usually requires book purchases.)

2. Use the study course. (No books needed to start this.)

3. This system replaces all others existing effective January 15, 1998.

It is recommended that you obtain a 3 ring binder to keep these summaries in. New

address:

The Code Project

Non Domestic Mail

Suite 32

3527 Ambassador Caffery

Lafayette, La. USA 70503

Remember the information is a rough draft and subject to modification based on the results of ongoing litigation. Updates, new summaries and other material will only be sent if a self-addressed stamped envelope is furnished. Responses to questions and generally not intelligible and will probably seem confusing unless a study of this material is made and specific questions are directed to these references. The presumption is that a student is wasting time by not studying first.


Foreword

The goal of these summaries and this study material is to restart a common law society such as ones existing in this country in the last century. The method used is this:

1. A jurisdiction was formed in 1993.

2. The laws of the courts on common pleas existing before the civil war were adopted.

3. The members who submit to this system of justice are learning how to enforce these laws in government courts.

4. The old laws are now being modified by litigation and summaries to fit the needs of our present society.

The recreated jurisdiction will be a society of self-governing people. The base law will be the old common law rather than government law. 100 years of public law making has created a society that is contrary to our basic nature as a Christian nation. This process will allow this group of people to reject that which is unsatisfactory and retain laws favorable to our inherent nature.

This study should take about a year depending on the individual effort and ability. It works like this:

1. An individual who is working with this information will file a proceeding in Federal Court.

2. The response or results of the government court action is reviewed by the writers.

3. The summaries are then adjusted to prevent others from making the same mistakes.

4. The new information is then made available to those who desire to participate in the ongoing process.

The material is generally adjusted to prevent others from making the same mistakes in this manner:

1. Individuals are required to leam the common law from the books in the study guide before proceeding.

2. Common law judgments issue in accordance to these summaries, prior litigations and the books.

3. Successful litigation becomes part of the code.

The ability of new students to follow and understand this process is determined by requiring them to engage in litigation to become common law citizens. Litigators who can read, understand and use code are allowed to proceed. Individuals who can't are prevented and engaging in litigation or becoming citizens without the help of someone who is a citizen. The principal being adopted is that the members will not teach law to those who won't use these reference sources and/or these books.

The summaries are principles of common law, which control the subsequent actions of the justices who issue common law orders to enforce. The summaries represent very little new law but are simply a restatement (or gathering) of existing common law and principles as found in the study materials.

The summaries are simply an update of Blackstone's and Bouvier's to the law to this country and this particular jurisdiction. This is the primary information:

1. They are in order of the study courses and may be rough drafts.

2. Each is written and modified freely as required.

3. A written question may result in a summary.

4. Members (citizens) or law students are authorized to submit summaries without restrictions.

5. As common law rights and court cases are discovered the summaries are amended to conform with the best information available to the writers.

6. An ongoing court case, review by others, newly discovered books and joining with other jurisdictions may cause modification.

7. A summary may result from common rights established by individuals attempting to live by common law.

8. The wording may be updated from prior common law but the law or circumstances force change out of necessity.

9. The civil code (read government law) is construed to be in conformance to common law and the summaries are modified as civil code rights are found and litigated.

10. Modem technology causes minor changes.

Do not perceive that you will learn common law from this source. You will only be shown where the common law can be found. When you understand the process of how to change or modify these summaries you may start a citizenship action. The primary principles of English common law are found in Blackstone's Commentaries. Some of the laws of the United States of America and word definitions are found in Bouvier's.


Changing United States Citizenship

Corporations legally avoid United States income tax laws each and every day by changing domicile. This is done by lawyers creating a "paper corporation" in a place like the Cayman Islands. The paper corporation is then registered with that jurisdiction and the assets of the United States corporations "legally move" to the Cayman Islands while the plants and headquarters (the physical presence) remain in this country.

This process is called acquiring a foreign domicile. Foreign domicile simply means "legal home" that is not the United States. This legal right also exist for individuals who are now considered United States citizens. The following problems exist when the average individual attempts this:

1. It takes a trained lawyer who charges a very large fee to accomplish abrogation of US citizenship.

2. It requires a person trained in this type of litigation to resolve the resulting problems in the event of legal disputes.

3. Individuals may lose certain advantages that exist in an organized society (such as availability to public schooling, welfare, etc.).

To overcome these problems a group of people have joined together to recreate a "foreign jurisdiction" that existed before the United States was formed. This nation was called the United States of America. This foreign jurisdiction overcomes the problems of changing domicile in this manner:

1. It trains individuals in the manner of legally changing domicile under United States law.

2. It provides a legal system that creates documents to support this move or change of domicile.

3. It trains the individuals how to litigate these issues in United States courts.

4. It creates an organized society with laws to retain the advantages lost by abrogation of US citizenship.

The move to a common law domicile requires the individual to make the following decisions:

1. You must agree to abide by the laws of an organized society already existing that has different laws.

2. You must either become trained in law or join under the protection of someone who is trained since this society does not have enough lawyers at this time.

3. This implies you must be willing to spend a certain amount of time and money acquiring a legal knowledge of to help someone with your litigation.

The money amount is small compared to what you are required to pay under income tax laws. The time element is considerable but worth it when you consider that under United States tax laws you are probably paying over 35% of everything you make to support the society to which you are now a member.

The problem with starting a jurisdiction is that it requires a very large set of laws to litigate virtually anything. This was overcome by adopting the laws of the old jurisdiction. These old laws were called the "common law".

Article 4 of the Constitution mandates the government to give full faith and credit to every jurisdiction that exists. The founding members of the jurisdiction simply recreated the old common law state that was brought over from England to this country. This is the nation that formed our present government. This is the jurisdiction that is referred to in Amendment VII. to the Constitution of the United States. The legal right to perform the act of recreating (or creating) a common law state is written in Amendment IX.:

"The enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people."

The legal reasoning is based on these points of law:

1. The common law jurisdiction was the method used by the settlers of this country to resolve disputes prior to the formation of the governments.

2. The people always retained the right to go to common law and resolve disputes (this is Article 1, Section 9, Clause 2 and Amendment VII.) even after governments and civil courts were formed.

3. The government was never given the specific right to form or organize common law jurisdictions. (Governments were only authorized to enforce common law judgments.)

The effect of these laws is that the people of this country have a right to be self governing if they simply learn how to live under these preexisting laws. This allows various societies to coexist (such as Indians and US citizens) provided that a "jurisdiction" (or state) exists in which differences may be litigated. This means if you want to live in a "foreign state" under "foreign laws" you must first learn the laws and then join the jurisdiction under which this can be done.

The laws of this recreated jurisdiction are based on these concepts of self government:

1. The primary laws are the Ten Commandments.

2. The judicial actions of the people living under and interpreting the Ten Commandments were called jury trials. (This is the jury trial protected in Amendment VII. - not a government jury trial.)

3. The body of law (the accumulated jury decisions) are the rules of laws of the state and is called "common law".

4. The government entity created by this common law society was called the United States.

5. The document controlling and limiting the power of this government body is called the Constitution.

Recreating a "common law" jural society that preexisted the government makes the people of that nation self governing.

The beginning laws of this recreated jurisdiction are currently evolving based on the fact that litigation is ongoing to re-establish this society. Individuals who have changed domicile under United States law are doing this litigation.

The college courses derived from this litigation will give you an explanation of how this type of law system works in conjunction with government court actions based on the litigation that is now ongoing. The books are being used to teach enforcement of common law judgments to those individuals who have the desire to be a member of a self governing society.

You may order the courses which will provide you with more information. This information is available based on the following principles:

1. The writers have undertaken this project for the purpose of teaching common law litigation.

2. You only need to read the enclosed materials before determining if you want more information.

3. They are copied originals in an 8 1/2 x 11 format.

4. Some of the material is under litigation and is modified as a result of ongoing court actions.

5. A list of study materials will be in the first mailing which will provide you with all of the information you will need to do your own research.

6. The first packet will give you enough information to determine if you wish to participate in this type of society and start learning its laws.

Think about this pledge and the fact that the government has banned it from the "public school" system:

"I pledge allegiance the flag of the United States of America and the Republic for which it stands. One nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all."

That is the republic which has been reformed. See Bouvier's law dictionary for the legal description and court cases about this nation.

You may request the first lesson from:

The College of Common Law

Non Domestic Mail

3527 Ambassador Caffery Box 32

Lafayette, La. USA 70503

Send a 9 x 12 self addressed stamped envelope. The postage cost is $1.20. A copy of the

first lesson shall be sent in the envelope you furnish if it is not with this packet.

The internet address for more information is:

www.mindspring.com/~bjrepro

Background - Effective January 22, 1999