
11-14-2004, 04:32 PM
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Suits in Admiralty
There is discussion going around that we need to bring our processes into the united states district court ,(not UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT), to get remedy, as a "suit in admiralty." this supposedly is a article 3 common law court, in which the judge and attorney or not allowed to testify, not allowed immunity, no defense, and the judge is a referee. anyone know how to access such a venture in federal court?
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11-14-2004, 05:20 PM
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Come and Get Some!
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Illinois(chi-town)
Posts: 5,076
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I concur. i need ammo for this issue.
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11-15-2004, 01:42 AM
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 1,685
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Kgod,
This one of the things I am researching with others. We are gathering information on how to enter the court under Admiralty. This looks to be the best way, IMHO, to file a suit or counterclaim. AS soon as I have more info I will share.
iamfreeru2
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11-16-2004, 01:50 PM
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United States District Court
Hey folks :-)
This thread is short, but I noticed some misinformation that should be cleared up. First, there are only UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURTs per Art IV of the Constitution ... there are no lower case usdc's! If you seek a genuinely Constitutional court, where the Constitution is observed, then it must be an Art. III DCUS (District Court of the Unite States). The problem with DCUS is that there have not been any open seats filled since 1948, when Congress slipped the USDC's in. Remember, a USDC is a legislative tribunal ... no Constitutional rights available. Congress "broadcast" the USDC's over top of the same geographic structure of the DCUS, so that all who entered a USDC were treated as 14th Amendment citizens (slaves) and not Art.III Sovereigns. Admiralty is a special subset of Rules used for in rem actions.
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11-16-2004, 04:54 PM
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Come and Get Some!
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Join Date: Oct 2004
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ecosoft welcome to the forum.
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11-17-2004, 05:50 AM
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admiralty
ok ecosoft, good post, now, how do we access that court? im being lazy, i admit. now, ive heard that filing your case into the miscellaneous files in the district court accesses a constitutional court and that a court clerk admitted that. any input on that? maybe i need to go down their and ask them how to access a constitutional court vs a legislative court. and what are in rem actions? again, im being lazy.
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12-21-2004, 04:59 AM
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admiralty
ok, i found the remedy, now i need a procedure to invoke this. admiralty can be brought under the savings to suitors at usc title 28 section 1333. ive heard of savings to suitors before and forgot all about that. now, for a state action or wrong that has been done to you, i wonder if you have to go to district court under savings to suitors or can you invoke it into state court? i believe you can. comments?
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12-21-2004, 05:12 AM
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admiralty
ok, i found some of my answers. its tricky, especially if you are going after a state for wronging you, but it can be filed in federal or state court. here is a veeery interesting link i found written by a attorney on this matter
http://www.irmi.com/Expert/Articles/2002/Orlando02.aspx
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