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Outline for the proper procedure(s) to use to confirm if one is a "Judge" or an Imposter.
http://www.supremelaw.org/rsrc/commissions/index.htm
The DOJ is the legal custodian of the Presidential Commissions
for all federal judges subject to the Appointments Clause.
The Clerk of Court is the legal custodian of the Appointment Affidavits
for all judges, magistrates, clerks and deputy clerks employed by that court.
We have not succeeded in locating any federal statutes which define
the legal custodians of the Senate Confirmation or Oath of Office.
FOIA does not apply to courts, so you should submit a prompt FOIA
request to the DOJ in D.C. for any Presidential Commissions that you want.
They have 20 working days to answer your initial FOIA Request, and
then another 20 working days to answer your FOIA Appeal.
Remember that federal magistrates do NOT have Presidential Commissions,
because they are not commissioned by the President; they are appointed
by U.S. District Judges.
Quite often, DOJ also happens to have copies of other credentials,
so your FOIA request for the Presidential Commission should also
request the other 3 credentials too: Appointment Affidavit, Oath of Office
and Senate Confirmation, for each judge you are investigating.
If and when DOJ fails to produce any of the latter 3, then you should
submit an administrative NOTICE AND DEMAND to the Clerk of Court for the
Appointment Affidavit, and attach a copy of any letter(s) you received
from DOJ in re: your FOIA request.
Send along a copy of this overdue SUBPOENA, because the federal
Clerks are fond of referring queries to the Administrative Office in D.C.:
http://www.supremelaw.org/cc/aouscourts/
That A.O. has refused to produce ANY credentials, so they are
now in contempt of court, and they are NOT the legal custodians
of any credentials.
Also, send along copies of 5 U.S.C. 3331 and 2906, which make it
quite clear that the Clerk is the legal custodian of the Appointment
Affidavits required by section 3331:
http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/5/3331.html
http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/5/2906.html
As for State judges, the legal custodians of their credentials are
governed by State laws. In California, for example, the Oaths of Office
required of Superior Court judges are in the legal custody of the
California Secretary of State in Sacramento.
A good place to start, if you seek to discover Oaths for State court judges,
is the applicable State law(s) for same, plus the Clerk of Court: don't
go to the Clerk until and unless you have confirmed the applicable
law -- so that you'll be able to correct the Clerk of that Court in the
event that the Clerk does not know and tries to do a snow job on you.
Sincerely yours,
/s/ Paul Andrew Mitchell, B.A., M.S.
Private Attorney General, Criminal Investigator and
Federal Witness: 18 U.S.C. 1510, 1512-13, 1964(a)
http://www.supremelaw.org/decs/agenc...ey.general.htm
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