fbpx
Wikipedia

Strawman theory

The strawman theory (also called the strawman illusion) is a pseudolegal conspiracy theory originating in the redemption/A4V movement and prevalent in antigovernment and tax protester movements such as sovereign citizens and freemen on the land. The theory holds that an individual has two personas, one of flesh and blood and the other a separate legal personality (i.e., the "strawman") and that one's legal responsibilities belong to the strawman rather than the physical individual.[1]

Irregular, homemade "public notice" presenting the "flesh and blood" persona of a sovereign citizen (whose name is written in lower-case and with punctuation) as the "Authorised Agent and Representative" of his "strawman" (whose name is written in all caps)

Pseudolaw advocates claim that it is possible, through the use of certain "redemption" procedures and documents, to separate oneself from the "strawman", therefore becoming free of the rule of law.[2][3] Hence, the main use of strawman theory is in escaping and denying liabilities and legal responsibility. Tax protesters, "commercial redemption" and "get out of debt free" scams claim that one's debts and taxes are the responsibility of the strawman and not of the real person. They back this claim by misreading the legal definition of person[4] and misunderstanding the distinction between a juridical person[5] and a natural person.[6]

Courts have uniformly rejected arguments relying on the strawman theory,[7][8] which is recognized in law as a scam; the FBI considers anyone promoting it a likely fraudster,[9] and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) considers it a frivolous argument and fines people who claim it on their tax returns.[10][11]

Canadian legal scholar Donald J. Netolitzky has called the strawman theory "the most innovative component of the Pseudolaw Memeplex".[2]

History edit

The theory appeared circa 1999–2000, when it was conceived by North Dakota farmer turned pseudolegal activist Roger Elvick, a sovereign citizen and tax protester who became the primary originator of the redemption movement. It eventually became a core concept of sovereign citizen pseudolegal beliefs.[2] Around the same period, this set of beliefs was introduced into Canada by Eldon Warman, a student of Elvick's theories who adapted them for a Canadian context. It was further reframed in Canada by the freeman on the land movement, which expanded to other Commonwealth countries.[12] The theory that governments, when registering a baby at the registry office, create a straw man or a legal fiction, has since 2014 also spread to Italy, but enriched by the theory that states are supposedly private corporations and do so to secure their debts. Giving credibility to the theory was the actual existence of a financial company called "Republic of Italy," registered with the SEC. Spreading the theory was the self-styled lawyer Heather Ann Tucci-Jarraf, later convicted in 2018 of conspiracy to launder money, who claimed to have rid the world of bogus public debt through the "One People Public's Trust" (O.P.P.T.) with which she allegedly put the states-corporations in default and bankrupt them. Some self-styled self-determinists spread the theory to such an extent that many people procured economic damages, criminal convictions and even forced hospitalizations for mental disorders. These facts were documented by a report on the Italian television program "le Iene."[13]

Assertions edit

The theory holds that an individual has two personas. One of them is a physical, tangible human being, and the other is the legal person, often referred to as a legal fiction. When a baby is born in the U.S., a birth certificate is issued, and the parents apply for a Social Security number. Sovereigns say the government uses that birth certificate to set up a secret Treasury account which it funds with an amount ranging from $600,000 to $20 million, depending on the particular sovereign belief system. Hence, every newborn's rights are split between those held by the flesh-and-blood baby and the corporate shell account.[1] One argument used by proponents of the strawman theory is based on a misinterpretation of the term capitis deminutio, used in ancient Roman law for the extinguishment of a person's former legal capacity. Adherents to the theory spell the term "Capitis Diminutio", and claim that capitis diminutio maxima (meaning, in Roman law, the loss of liberty, citizenship, and family) was represented by an individual's name being written in capital letters, hence the idea of individuals having a separate legal personality.[14]

Proponents of the theory believe the evidence is found on the birth certificate itself. Because many certificates show all capitals to spell out a baby's name, JOHN DOE (under the Strawman theory) is the name of the "straw man", and John Doe is the baby's "real" name. As the child grows, most legal documents will contain capital letters, which means that his state-issued driver's license, his marriage license, his car registration, his criminal court records, his cable TV bill, correspondence from the IRS, etc., pertain to his strawman and not his sovereign identity.[1] In reality, the use of all capital letters is typically done to make certain statements clear and conspicuous, although this is not always the case.[15]

The theory is also based in part on a misinterpretation of the Uniform Commercial Code, which provides an interstate standard for documents such as driver's licenses or for bank accounts: adherents to the theory see this as evidence that these documents, and the associated laws and financial obligations, do not apply to them, but instead to the "straw man".[16]

To distinguish themselves from their "strawman", pseudolaw advocates may refer to their "flesh and blood" identity under by a slightly different name, such as "John of the family Doe" instead of "John Doe".[17] One scheme, notably advocated by sovereign citizen theorist David Wynn Miller, involves adding punctuation—typically hyphens and colons—to one's name: Miller would write his name as :David-Wynn: Miller or David-Wynn: Miller[18] and verbally said it "David hyphen Wynn full colon Miller".[19]

 
A "Legal name fraud" billboard in the United Kingdom

A variation of the strawman theory is found in the "legal name fraud" movement, which believes that birth certificates give the state legal ownership of a personal name and that refusing to use this name removes oneself from the state's authority and a court's jurisdiction.[20][21]

Russell Porisky, a Canadian tax protester who emulated Eldon Warman's ideas,[12] promoted a version of the strawman theory by claiming that people could avoid paying taxes by proclaiming themselves to be "natural persons", in opposition to the government's version of a "person".[22] His concepts relied on a misinterpretation of the definition of a "person" in section 248(1) of the Canadian Income Tax Act, which he combined with the strawman theory.[23] Porisky was convicted in 2012 of tax evasion[24] and was sentenced in 2016 to five and a half years in prison.[25]

Believers of the theory also extend it to law and legal responsibilities, claiming that only their strawman is required to adhere to statutory laws. They also claim that legal proceedings are taken against strawmen rather than persons and when one appears in court they appear as representing their strawman. The justification for this is the false notion that governments cannot force anybody to do anything. A strawman is therefore created which the adherent believes he or she is free to command. Proponents cite a misinterpretation of a passage in chapter 39 of King John's Magna Carta stating in part that, "no freeman will be seized, dispossessed of his property, or harmed except by the law of the land”.[26]

Adherents to the theory believe that separating from their strawman or refusing to be identified as such enables escape from their legal liabilities and responsibilities. This is typically attempted by denying they are a 'person' in the same way as their strawman, or by writing their name in non-standard ways, using red ink, and placing finger prints on court documents. The use of thumbprints and signatures in red ink, in particular, is meant to distinguish "flesh and blood" people from the "strawman", since black and blue inks are believed to indicate corporations.[27] The theory also holds that even after "removing" their strawman, people must remain cautious and take steps to avoid recognizing the validity of government regulations, which would make them succumb to another "invisible contract", experience "joinder" and thus fall back under government authority.[2]

The belief in the strawman articulates with redemption-style schemes, which imply that money from the secret account (known in some variations of the theory as a "Cestui Que Vie Trust"[28]) can be used to pay one's taxes, debts and other liabilities by simply writing phrases like "Accepted for Value" or "Taken for Value" on the bills or collection letters, or that the strawman's funds are accessible through the use of certain forms and securities. Such schemes are commonly known as A4V.[7] By attempting to test this aspect of the theory, one may commit various forms of fraud and face criminal charges.[3][29] One purported "redemption" method for appropriating the money from the alleged secret account is to file a UCC-1 financing statement against one's strawman after having taken the steps to "separate" from it.[3]

One Canadian freeman on the land "guru" known under the pseudonym "John Spirit" developed a more sophisticated version of the strawman theory, based on misinterpretations of various international treaties and of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.[30][31] His arguments were rejected by Canadian provincial and Federal courts.[12]

Legal status of the theory edit

In accepted legal theory there is a difference between what is known as a natural person and that of a corporate person. A corporate personhood applies to business, charities, governments and other recognized organisations. Courts recognize human beings as 'persons', not as a legal fiction joined to a flesh and blood human being but as one and the same.[32] They have never recognized a right to distance oneself from one's person, or the ability to opt out of personhood.[33]

In 2010, Canadian tax protester and vexatious litigant David Kevin Lindsay appealed his 2008 conviction and sentencing on five counts of failing to file income tax returns, on the ground that he was not a "person" as defined by the Income Tax Act. Lindsay's argument was that he had opted out of "personhood" in 1996, which made him "a full liability free will flesh and blood living man". The Supreme Court of British Columbia rejected his claims, commenting that "The ordinary sense of the word 'person' in the (Income Tax Act) is without ambiguity. It is clear that Parliament intended the word in its broadest sense."[34]

In 2012, Associate Justice John D. Rooke of the Court of Queen's Bench of Alberta addressed the strawman theory in detail in his Meads v. Meads decision, concluding:

'Double/split person' schemes have no legal effect. These schemes have no basis in law. There is only one legal identity that attaches to a person. If a person wishes to add a legal 'layer' to themselves, then a corporation is the proper approach.[8]

Judge Norman K. Moon found such tactics an unconvincing argument in 2013 when an individual named Brandon Gravatt tried to overturn a drug conviction and get out of prison. The case was summarily dismissed by the court.[35]

In 2016, a billboard campaign promoted the "legal name fraud" theory in the United Kingdom. Lawyer David Allen Green commented that the theory was "complete tosh" and potentially harmful to litigants who would use it in court: "If people try to use such things to avoid their legal obligations they can end up with county court judgments or even criminal convictions. You may as well walk into court with a t-shirt saying 'I am an idiot'."[36]

In 2021, the District Court of Queensland dismissed an application that relied on the strawman theory, commenting that this argument "may properly be described as nonsense or gobbledygook".[37] The court also pointed out that the strawman scheme, if it had any legal validity, would have adverse consequences for those affected:

An adult human being with full capacity can sue and be sued. They are subject to the criminal laws of this state. These fundamental propositions cannot be doubted. It is true that a natural person can create a legal entity that has a distinct legal personality – such entities are commonly called companies – but this is an adjunct to, rather than a replacement for, the legal personality of the human being. One way of illustrating why this must be so is to consider the consequences of the ability to 'renounce' legal personhood. The law has at times recognised categories of person who did not possess a legal personality. These categories included, before 1833, slaves, who were regarded as chattel property, could be bought and sold, and who had no rights under the law. At times women and children were thought not to possess a legal personality. (...) The fates of people who were in these categories were rarely pleasant. If the applicant were somehow able to renounce his legal personality, he would become a human being without rights. He would be mere property. Such an outcome would be antithetical to our society and system of laws.[38]

Likewise, Donald J. Netolitzky has stressed that :

In modern law, any human being is also innately a legal person, so the historical duality that might serve as a theoretical foundation for "Strawman" Theory is now irrevocably and innately melded together into a single unit. Any human being is a legal person.[30]

It is impossible to dodge the law by insisting that an individual is different from his or her person. If a court can establish a person's identity, regardless of consent or cooperation, the court will engage in proceedings and sanctions against the individual. This is due to the legal principle known as Idem sonans (Latin for "sounding the same") which states that similar sounding names are just as valid in referring to a person.[39] The earliest legal precedent is R v Davis in the United Kingdom in 1851.[40]

If two names spelt differently necessarily sound alike, the court may, as matter of law, pronounce them to be idem sonantia; but if they do not necessarily sound alike, the question whether they are idem sonantia is a question of fact for the jury.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Sovereign Citizens Movement". Southern Poverty Law Center. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d Netolitzky, Donald (2018). "A Rebellion of Furious Paper: Pseudolaw As a Revolutionary Legal System". SSRN Electronic Journal. doi:10.2139/ssrn.3177484. ISSN 1556-5068. SSRN 3177484.
  3. ^ a b c The Sovereigns: A Dictionary of the Peculiar, Southern Poverty Law Center, August 1, 2010, retrieved 2022-01-20
  4. ^ "What is Person?". thelawdictionary.org. 4 November 2011. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  5. ^ "What is Juridical Person?". thelawdictionary.org. 19 October 2012. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  6. ^ "What is Natural Person?". thelawdictionary.org. 19 October 2012. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  7. ^ a b Netolitzky, Donald J. (2018). "Organized Pseudolegal Commercial Arguments as Magic and Ceremony". Alberta Law Review: 1045. doi:10.29173/alr2485. ISSN 1925-8356. S2CID 158051933. Retrieved November 18, 2022.
  8. ^ a b John D. Rooke (2012-09-18). "Reasons for Decision of the Associate Chief Justice J. D. Rooke". canlii.org. Retrieved January 20, 2022.
  9. ^ "Redemption / Strawman / Bond Fraud". fbi.gov. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  10. ^ "Internal Revenue Bulletin: 2005-14". irs.gov. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  11. ^ "26 U.S. Code § 6702 – Frivolous tax submissions". law.cornell.edu. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  12. ^ a b c Netolitzky, Donald J. (24 May 2018). A Pathogen Astride the Minds of Men: The Epidemiological History of Pseudolaw. Sovereign Citizens in Canada symposium. CEFIR. doi:10.2139/ssrn.3177472. SSRN 3177472. from the original on 23 December 2020. Retrieved 23 December 2020.
  13. ^ https://www.iene.mediaset.it/video/vivere-non-riconoscendo-lo-stato%201257866.shtml
  14. ^ Weill, Kelly (4 January 2018). "Republican Lawmaker: Recognize Sovereign Citizens or Pay $10,000 Fine". The Daily Beast. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  15. ^ "Sovereign Citizens Movement". Southern Poverty Law Center. Retrieved 2018-09-12.
  16. ^ Berger, JM (June 2016), (PDF), George Washington University, archived from the original (PDF) on 2022-02-04, retrieved 2022-02-07
  17. ^ , Benchmark, Issue 57, February 2012, pp 18–19
  18. ^ "Screw the Taxman: The Weird Ideas of Tax Cheaters". DigitalJournal.com. April 24, 2006. Retrieved December 27, 2021.
  19. ^ "The Sovereigns: Leaders of the Movement", Intelligence Report, Southern Poverty Law Center, August 1, 2010, retrieved 2020-06-21
  20. ^ Dalgleish, Katherine (14 March 2014). "Guns, border guards, and the Magna Carta: the Freemen-on-the-Land are back in Alberta courts". lexology.com. Lexology. Retrieved January 4, 2018.
  21. ^ Kelly, John (June 11, 2016). "The mystery of the 'legal name fraud' billboards". BBC News. Retrieved January 4, 2018.
  22. ^ "B.C. anti-tax crusader sentenced to 5½ years". CBC. August 5, 2016. Retrieved July 16, 2022.
  23. ^ Netolitzky, Donald J. (2016). "The History of the Organized Pseudolegal Commercial Argument Phenomenon in Canada". Alberta Law Review. Alberta Law Review Society. 53 (3). from the original on 23 December 2020. Retrieved 23 December 2020.
  24. ^ Lindsay, Bethany (January 19, 2012). "Tax-dodging guru convicted on evasion charges". CTV News. Retrieved July 16, 2022.
  25. ^ Lindsay, Bethany (March 11, 2021). "As anti-tax guru's fines go unpaid, his bogus ideas are revived in COVID-19 conspiracy circles". CBC. Retrieved July 16, 2022.
  26. ^ "Magna Carta: Muse and Mentor". loc.gov. 6 November 2014. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  27. ^ Williams, Jennifer (9 February 2016). "Why some far-right extremists think red ink can force the government to give them millions". vox.com. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  28. ^ Sarteschi, Christine M. (May 21, 2023), "Sovereign Citizens and QAnon: The Increasing Overlaps with a Focus on Child Protective Service (CPS) Cases", International Journal of Coercion, Abuse, and Manipulation (IJCAM), retrieved 2023-05-24
  29. ^ The Sovereign Citizen Movement. Common Documentary Identifiers & Examples (PDF), Anti-Defamation League, 2016, retrieved February 7, 2022
  30. ^ a b Netolitzky, Donald J.; Warman, Richard (2020). "Enjoy the Silence: Pseudolaw at the Supreme Court of Canada". Alberta Law Review. Retrieved November 25, 2022.
  31. ^ Ha-Redeye, Omar (May 12, 2019), Freemen Arrive at the Ontario Court of Appeal, Slaw.ca, retrieved November 27, 2022
  32. ^ Meads v. Meads (ABQB 571 (CanLII) 18 September 2012) ("A strange but common OPCA concept is that an individual can somehow exist in two separate but related states. This confusing concept is expressed in many different ways. The ‘physical person’ is one aspect of the duality, the other is a non-corporeal aspect that has many names, such as a “strawman”..."), Text.
  33. ^ Lovejoy, Hans (7 July 2015). "Taking on the law as a 'strawman'". echo.net. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  34. ^ "A person is a 'person', B.C. judge rules". CTV news. June 18, 2010. Retrieved January 25, 2022.
  35. ^ United States v. Brandon Gravatt (Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit 26 June 2013) ("Brandon Shane Gravatt appeals the district court's order denying his 18 U.S.C.§3582(c)(2)(2006) motion for sentence reduction. We have reviewed the record and find no reversible error. Accordingly, we affirm the district court's order. United States v. Gravatt, No. 5:01-cr-00736-CMC-1 (D.S.C. March 27, 2013). We dispense with oral argument because the facts and legal contentions are adequately presented in the materials before this court and argument would not aid in the decisional process."), Text.
  36. ^ Kelly, Jon (11 June 2016). "The mystery of the 'legal name fraud' billboards". BBC News. Retrieved 2 September 2019.
  37. ^ 'Nonsense, gobbledygook': Judge criticises man's bizarre argument to throw out drug charges, news.com.au, September 16, 2021, retrieved November 9, 2022
  38. ^ "R v Sweet[2021] QDC 216", queenslandjudgments.com.au, September 6, 2021, retrieved 2021-12-27
  39. ^ "What is IDEM SONANS?". thelawdictionary.org. 9 November 2011. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  40. ^ John Frederick Archbold; W. N. Welsby (1867). Archbold's Pleading and Evidence in Criminal Cases ... The twelfth edition, including the practice in criminal proceedings generally. Henry Sweet. p. 190.

strawman, theory, this, article, about, discredited, pseudolegal, concept, legitimate, legal, practice, straw, other, uses, straw, disambiguation, strawman, theory, also, called, strawman, illusion, pseudolegal, conspiracy, theory, originating, redemption, mov. This article is about the discredited pseudolegal concept For the legitimate legal practice see Straw man law For other uses see Straw man disambiguation The strawman theory also called the strawman illusion is a pseudolegal conspiracy theory originating in the redemption A4V movement and prevalent in antigovernment and tax protester movements such as sovereign citizens and freemen on the land The theory holds that an individual has two personas one of flesh and blood and the other a separate legal personality i e the strawman and that one s legal responsibilities belong to the strawman rather than the physical individual 1 Irregular homemade public notice presenting the flesh and blood persona of a sovereign citizen whose name is written in lower case and with punctuation as the Authorised Agent and Representative of his strawman whose name is written in all caps Pseudolaw advocates claim that it is possible through the use of certain redemption procedures and documents to separate oneself from the strawman therefore becoming free of the rule of law 2 3 Hence the main use of strawman theory is in escaping and denying liabilities and legal responsibility Tax protesters commercial redemption and get out of debt free scams claim that one s debts and taxes are the responsibility of the strawman and not of the real person They back this claim by misreading the legal definition of person 4 and misunderstanding the distinction between a juridical person 5 and a natural person 6 Courts have uniformly rejected arguments relying on the strawman theory 7 8 which is recognized in law as a scam the FBI considers anyone promoting it a likely fraudster 9 and the Internal Revenue Service IRS considers it a frivolous argument and fines people who claim it on their tax returns 10 11 Canadian legal scholar Donald J Netolitzky has called the strawman theory the most innovative component of the Pseudolaw Memeplex 2 Contents 1 History 2 Assertions 3 Legal status of the theory 4 ReferencesHistory editSee also Redemption movement Sovereign citizen movement and Freeman on the land movement The theory appeared circa 1999 2000 when it was conceived by North Dakota farmer turned pseudolegal activist Roger Elvick a sovereign citizen and tax protester who became the primary originator of the redemption movement It eventually became a core concept of sovereign citizen pseudolegal beliefs 2 Around the same period this set of beliefs was introduced into Canada by Eldon Warman a student of Elvick s theories who adapted them for a Canadian context It was further reframed in Canada by the freeman on the land movement which expanded to other Commonwealth countries 12 The theory that governments when registering a baby at the registry office create a straw man or a legal fiction has since 2014 also spread to Italy but enriched by the theory that states are supposedly private corporations and do so to secure their debts Giving credibility to the theory was the actual existence of a financial company called Republic of Italy registered with the SEC Spreading the theory was the self styled lawyer Heather Ann Tucci Jarraf later convicted in 2018 of conspiracy to launder money who claimed to have rid the world of bogus public debt through the One People Public s Trust O P P T with which she allegedly put the states corporations in default and bankrupt them Some self styled self determinists spread the theory to such an extent that many people procured economic damages criminal convictions and even forced hospitalizations for mental disorders These facts were documented by a report on the Italian television program le Iene 13 Assertions editSee also Pseudolaw and Tax protester conspiracy arguments The theory holds that an individual has two personas One of them is a physical tangible human being and the other is the legal person often referred to as a legal fiction When a baby is born in the U S a birth certificate is issued and the parents apply for a Social Security number Sovereigns say the government uses that birth certificate to set up a secret Treasury account which it funds with an amount ranging from 600 000 to 20 million depending on the particular sovereign belief system Hence every newborn s rights are split between those held by the flesh and blood baby and the corporate shell account 1 One argument used by proponents of the strawman theory is based on a misinterpretation of the term capitis deminutio used in ancient Roman law for the extinguishment of a person s former legal capacity Adherents to the theory spell the term Capitis Diminutio and claim that capitis diminutio maxima meaning in Roman law the loss of liberty citizenship and family was represented by an individual s name being written in capital letters hence the idea of individuals having a separate legal personality 14 Proponents of the theory believe the evidence is found on the birth certificate itself Because many certificates show all capitals to spell out a baby s name JOHN DOE under the Strawman theory is the name of the straw man and John Doe is the baby s real name As the child grows most legal documents will contain capital letters which means that his state issued driver s license his marriage license his car registration his criminal court records his cable TV bill correspondence from the IRS etc pertain to his strawman and not his sovereign identity 1 In reality the use of all capital letters is typically done to make certain statements clear and conspicuous although this is not always the case 15 The theory is also based in part on a misinterpretation of the Uniform Commercial Code which provides an interstate standard for documents such as driver s licenses or for bank accounts adherents to the theory see this as evidence that these documents and the associated laws and financial obligations do not apply to them but instead to the straw man 16 To distinguish themselves from their strawman pseudolaw advocates may refer to their flesh and blood identity under by a slightly different name such as John of the family Doe instead of John Doe 17 One scheme notably advocated by sovereign citizen theorist David Wynn Miller involves adding punctuation typically hyphens and colons to one s name Miller would write his name as David Wynn Miller or David Wynn Miller 18 and verbally said it David hyphen Wynn full colon Miller 19 nbsp A Legal name fraud billboard in the United KingdomA variation of the strawman theory is found in the legal name fraud movement which believes that birth certificates give the state legal ownership of a personal name and that refusing to use this name removes oneself from the state s authority and a court s jurisdiction 20 21 Russell Porisky a Canadian tax protester who emulated Eldon Warman s ideas 12 promoted a version of the strawman theory by claiming that people could avoid paying taxes by proclaiming themselves to be natural persons in opposition to the government s version of a person 22 His concepts relied on a misinterpretation of the definition of a person in section 248 1 of the Canadian Income Tax Act which he combined with the strawman theory 23 Porisky was convicted in 2012 of tax evasion 24 and was sentenced in 2016 to five and a half years in prison 25 Believers of the theory also extend it to law and legal responsibilities claiming that only their strawman is required to adhere to statutory laws They also claim that legal proceedings are taken against strawmen rather than persons and when one appears in court they appear as representing their strawman The justification for this is the false notion that governments cannot force anybody to do anything A strawman is therefore created which the adherent believes he or she is free to command Proponents cite a misinterpretation of a passage in chapter 39 of King John s Magna Carta stating in part that no freeman will be seized dispossessed of his property or harmed except by the law of the land 26 Adherents to the theory believe that separating from their strawman or refusing to be identified as such enables escape from their legal liabilities and responsibilities This is typically attempted by denying they are a person in the same way as their strawman or by writing their name in non standard ways using red ink and placing finger prints on court documents The use of thumbprints and signatures in red ink in particular is meant to distinguish flesh and blood people from the strawman since black and blue inks are believed to indicate corporations 27 The theory also holds that even after removing their strawman people must remain cautious and take steps to avoid recognizing the validity of government regulations which would make them succumb to another invisible contract experience joinder and thus fall back under government authority 2 The belief in the strawman articulates with redemption style schemes which imply that money from the secret account known in some variations of the theory as a Cestui Que Vie Trust 28 can be used to pay one s taxes debts and other liabilities by simply writing phrases like Accepted for Value or Taken for Value on the bills or collection letters or that the strawman s funds are accessible through the use of certain forms and securities Such schemes are commonly known as A4V 7 By attempting to test this aspect of the theory one may commit various forms of fraud and face criminal charges 3 29 One purported redemption method for appropriating the money from the alleged secret account is to file a UCC 1 financing statement against one s strawman after having taken the steps to separate from it 3 One Canadian freeman on the land guru known under the pseudonym John Spirit developed a more sophisticated version of the strawman theory based on misinterpretations of various international treaties and of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms 30 31 His arguments were rejected by Canadian provincial and Federal courts 12 Legal status of the theory editIn accepted legal theory there is a difference between what is known as a natural person and that of a corporate person A corporate personhood applies to business charities governments and other recognized organisations Courts recognize human beings as persons not as a legal fiction joined to a flesh and blood human being but as one and the same 32 They have never recognized a right to distance oneself from one s person or the ability to opt out of personhood 33 In 2010 Canadian tax protester and vexatious litigant David Kevin Lindsay appealed his 2008 conviction and sentencing on five counts of failing to file income tax returns on the ground that he was not a person as defined by the Income Tax Act Lindsay s argument was that he had opted out of personhood in 1996 which made him a full liability free will flesh and blood living man The Supreme Court of British Columbia rejected his claims commenting that The ordinary sense of the word person in the Income Tax Act is without ambiguity It is clear that Parliament intended the word in its broadest sense 34 In 2012 Associate Justice John D Rooke of the Court of Queen s Bench of Alberta addressed the strawman theory in detail in his Meads v Meads decision concluding Double split person schemes have no legal effect These schemes have no basis in law There is only one legal identity that attaches to a person If a person wishes to add a legal layer to themselves then a corporation is the proper approach 8 Judge Norman K Moon found such tactics an unconvincing argument in 2013 when an individual named Brandon Gravatt tried to overturn a drug conviction and get out of prison The case was summarily dismissed by the court 35 In 2016 a billboard campaign promoted the legal name fraud theory in the United Kingdom Lawyer David Allen Green commented that the theory was complete tosh and potentially harmful to litigants who would use it in court If people try to use such things to avoid their legal obligations they can end up with county court judgments or even criminal convictions You may as well walk into court with a t shirt saying I am an idiot 36 In 2021 the District Court of Queensland dismissed an application that relied on the strawman theory commenting that this argument may properly be described as nonsense or gobbledygook 37 The court also pointed out that the strawman scheme if it had any legal validity would have adverse consequences for those affected An adult human being with full capacity can sue and be sued They are subject to the criminal laws of this state These fundamental propositions cannot be doubted It is true that a natural person can create a legal entity that has a distinct legal personality such entities are commonly called companies but this is an adjunct to rather than a replacement for the legal personality of the human being One way of illustrating why this must be so is to consider the consequences of the ability to renounce legal personhood The law has at times recognised categories of person who did not possess a legal personality These categories included before 1833 slaves who were regarded as chattel property could be bought and sold and who had no rights under the law At times women and children were thought not to possess a legal personality The fates of people who were in these categories were rarely pleasant If the applicant were somehow able to renounce his legal personality he would become a human being without rights He would be mere property Such an outcome would be antithetical to our society and system of laws 38 Likewise Donald J Netolitzky has stressed that In modern law any human being is also innately a legal person so the historical duality that might serve as a theoretical foundation for Strawman Theory is now irrevocably and innately melded together into a single unit Any human being is a legal person 30 It is impossible to dodge the law by insisting that an individual is different from his or her person If a court can establish a person s identity regardless of consent or cooperation the court will engage in proceedings and sanctions against the individual This is due to the legal principle known as Idem sonans Latin for sounding the same which states that similar sounding names are just as valid in referring to a person 39 The earliest legal precedent is R v Davis in the United Kingdom in 1851 40 If two names spelt differently necessarily sound alike the court may as matter of law pronounce them to be idem sonantia but if they do not necessarily sound alike the question whether they are idem sonantia is a question of fact for the jury References edit a b c Sovereign Citizens Movement Southern Poverty Law Center Retrieved 14 June 2018 a b c d Netolitzky Donald 2018 A Rebellion of Furious Paper Pseudolaw As a Revolutionary Legal System SSRN Electronic Journal doi 10 2139 ssrn 3177484 ISSN 1556 5068 SSRN 3177484 a b c The Sovereigns A Dictionary of the Peculiar Southern Poverty Law Center August 1 2010 retrieved 2022 01 20 What is Person thelawdictionary org 4 November 2011 Retrieved 14 June 2018 What is Juridical Person thelawdictionary org 19 October 2012 Retrieved 14 June 2018 What is Natural Person thelawdictionary org 19 October 2012 Retrieved 14 June 2018 a b Netolitzky Donald J 2018 Organized Pseudolegal Commercial Arguments as Magic and Ceremony Alberta Law Review 1045 doi 10 29173 alr2485 ISSN 1925 8356 S2CID 158051933 Retrieved November 18 2022 a b John D Rooke 2012 09 18 Reasons for Decision of the Associate Chief Justice J D Rooke canlii org Retrieved January 20 2022 Redemption Strawman Bond Fraud fbi gov Retrieved 14 June 2018 Internal Revenue Bulletin 2005 14 irs gov Retrieved 14 June 2018 26 U S Code 6702 Frivolous tax submissions law cornell edu Retrieved 14 June 2018 a b c Netolitzky Donald J 24 May 2018 A Pathogen Astride the Minds of Men The Epidemiological History of Pseudolaw Sovereign Citizens in Canada symposium CEFIR doi 10 2139 ssrn 3177472 SSRN 3177472 Archived from the original on 23 December 2020 Retrieved 23 December 2020 https www iene mediaset it video vivere non riconoscendo lo stato 201257866 shtml Weill Kelly 4 January 2018 Republican Lawmaker Recognize Sovereign Citizens or Pay 10 000 Fine The Daily Beast Retrieved 14 June 2018 Sovereign Citizens Movement Southern Poverty Law Center Retrieved 2018 09 12 Berger JM June 2016 Without Prejudice What Sovereign Citizens Believe PDF George Washington University archived from the original PDF on 2022 02 04 retrieved 2022 02 07 Nonsense or loophole Benchmark Issue 57 February 2012 pp 18 19 Screw the Taxman The Weird Ideas of Tax Cheaters DigitalJournal com April 24 2006 Retrieved December 27 2021 The Sovereigns Leaders of the Movement Intelligence Report Southern Poverty Law Center August 1 2010 retrieved 2020 06 21 Dalgleish Katherine 14 March 2014 Guns border guards and the Magna Carta the Freemen on the Land are back in Alberta courts lexology com Lexology Retrieved January 4 2018 Kelly John June 11 2016 The mystery of the legal name fraud billboards BBC News Retrieved January 4 2018 B C anti tax crusader sentenced to 5 years CBC August 5 2016 Retrieved July 16 2022 Netolitzky Donald J 2016 The History of the Organized Pseudolegal Commercial Argument Phenomenon in Canada Alberta Law Review Alberta Law Review Society 53 3 Archived from the original on 23 December 2020 Retrieved 23 December 2020 Lindsay Bethany January 19 2012 Tax dodging guru convicted on evasion charges CTV News Retrieved July 16 2022 Lindsay Bethany March 11 2021 As anti tax guru s fines go unpaid his bogus ideas are revived in COVID 19 conspiracy circles CBC Retrieved July 16 2022 Magna Carta Muse and Mentor loc gov 6 November 2014 Retrieved 15 June 2018 Williams Jennifer 9 February 2016 Why some far right extremists think red ink can force the government to give them millions vox com Retrieved 15 June 2018 Sarteschi Christine M May 21 2023 Sovereign Citizens and QAnon The Increasing Overlaps with a Focus on Child Protective Service CPS Cases International Journal of Coercion Abuse and Manipulation IJCAM retrieved 2023 05 24 The Sovereign Citizen Movement Common Documentary Identifiers amp Examples PDF Anti Defamation League 2016 retrieved February 7 2022 a b Netolitzky Donald J Warman Richard 2020 Enjoy the Silence Pseudolaw at the Supreme Court of Canada Alberta Law Review Retrieved November 25 2022 Ha Redeye Omar May 12 2019 Freemen Arrive at the Ontario Court of Appeal Slaw ca retrieved November 27 2022 Meads v Meads ABQB 571 CanLII 18 September 2012 A strange but common OPCA concept is that an individual can somehow exist in two separate but related states This confusing concept is expressed in many different ways The physical person is one aspect of the duality the other is a non corporeal aspect that has many names such as a strawman Text Lovejoy Hans 7 July 2015 Taking on the law as a strawman echo net Retrieved 15 June 2018 A person is a person B C judge rules CTV news June 18 2010 Retrieved January 25 2022 United States v Brandon Gravatt Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit 26 June 2013 Brandon Shane Gravatt appeals the district court s order denying his 18 U S C 3582 c 2 2006 motion for sentence reduction We have reviewed the record and find no reversible error Accordingly we affirm the district court s order United States v Gravatt No 5 01 cr 00736 CMC 1 D S C March 27 2013 We dispense with oral argument because the facts and legal contentions are adequately presented in the materials before this court and argument would not aid in the decisional process Text Kelly Jon 11 June 2016 The mystery of the legal name fraud billboards BBC News Retrieved 2 September 2019 Nonsense gobbledygook Judge criticises man s bizarre argument to throw out drug charges news com au September 16 2021 retrieved November 9 2022 R v Sweet 2021 QDC 216 queenslandjudgments com au September 6 2021 retrieved 2021 12 27 What is IDEM SONANS thelawdictionary org 9 November 2011 Retrieved 15 June 2018 John Frederick Archbold W N Welsby 1867 Archbold s Pleading and Evidence in Criminal Cases The twelfth edition including the practice in criminal proceedings generally Henry Sweet p 190 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Strawman theory amp oldid 1203526059, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.