by Vin Suprynowicz
The Libertarian
03/21/97
"But what can I do?" folks keep asking.
OK: try this.
Get on a jury. Once you're safely ensconced in the jury room, perform this simple test: Do you believe the defendant deserves to go to prison, because he harmed someone?
Who?
If you're satisfied the defendant willfully harmed someone without justification, and you can name who that person was, convict the SOB.
If, however, you can't figure out who was
harmed, but instead hear your fellow jurors talking about how they "have
to convict" because the "judge's instructions are clear"
about "what the law says," you now have a chance .. perhaps the
greatest chance of your life ... to strike a blow for
freedom.
Have the bailiff ask the judge to send into the jury room an actual statute book that contains the law in question, so you can read it.
If the judge refuses, state without equivocation that you cannot vote to convict a fellow citizen of violating a law, if you're not allowed to read the law yourself. Your precedent? The acquittal of William Penn, for the "crime" of preaching a Quaker sermon in London. It was in all the papers.
Either the jury will be hung, or there will be an outright acquittal.
If you do get a look at the statute, try to determine when it was enacted. If the law was enacted after 1912, ask your fellow jurors why.
Would a state (or territory) have allowed murder to remain legal for years, not getting around to outlawing it until after 1912? How about rape? Kidnapping? Armed robbery? Of course not.
Everything that should be against the law, was against the law by 1912. Virtually every enactment since then has been part of the scaffolding of the welfare-police state.
Refuse to convict any fellow citizen under any law enacted since 1912. If the judge told you you have to convict, remember: This is the government that stole half your family's lifetime income before you even got to see it, forcing both spouses to work their entire lives so you never got to see your kids (if you could even afford kids) -- and then used the proceeds to murder women and children at Waco and Ruby Ridge, and to put up Red Chinese spies in the Lincoln Bedroom.
You're only likely to get the one chance. They can't take away your home, bank account or family for voting your conscience in the jury room ... yet.
Go for it.
In fact, if you can easily get your fellow jurors to vote unanimously for acquittal on some bogus drug or gun or tax charge, don't stop there. (This may well be the last jury on which you'll ever be allowed to serve.)
Ask your fellow jurors if they'd REALLY
like to send the government a message. Propose a verdict in four parts:
"The verdict and finding of this jury is in four parts. Should any
part or parts be overruled or held invalid -- though we protest no one
has that power -- the remaining part or parts shall remain true and binding.
"1) On all charges, we the jury find
the defendant 'not guilty.'
"2) On all charges, and for all his actions to date, we the jury find
this defendant 'innocent.' Our purpose in this finding is to prevent any
government functionary from ever stating 'The jury only found him "not
guilty;" that's not the same as "innocent." That's why we're
still free to
proceed with our "administrative or regulatory sanctions".' We
the jury hereby order -- and respectfully request and instruct this court
to order, on penalty of summary imprisonment for contempt of court -- that
the government's agents not attempt to take away any of the defendant's
assets, or professional licenses or privileges, or to seek to punish or
discipline him in any other way, for his actions to date, or for any repetition
of those actions in future.
"3) We the jury hereby award the defendant all his court costs and
attorney fees, which shall be judged reasonable by this court, to be paid
by the government, with half those costs being assessed against the budget
of the prosecutor's office and/or those prosecutors who have appeared in
this court personally; and half to be assessed against the budget of the
arresting police agency and/or those police officers who have appeared
in this court on this case personally.
"We also award the defendant compensation of $200 per day for each
and any day he has been incarcerated, to be paid in greenback dollars or
goldcoin, whichever he shall prefer, within 24 hours, and to be assessed
against the same government sources just detailed. We also order that any
assets seized from the defendant or destroyed or damaged be returned, or
-- if they cannot be returned in their original condition -- that he be
compensated for them at their replacement value. This specifically includes
(but is not limited to) any contraband, or material or items which the
police or prosecutors have held to be 'illegal' or 'controlled.'
"And, if the defendant can demonstrate that he has suffered any interruption
of his business, whether that business is legally licensed and sanctioned
or not, these same aforementioned government agencies are hereby ordered,
instructed, and found liable to recompense this defendant at the rate which
would be standard for any major insurance company providing
business-interruption coverage in this jurisdiction.
"4) This court is respectfully requested and instructed by this petit
jury to place the circumstances of this prosecution before an appropriate
grand jury now empaneled in this jurisdiction, or the next such grand jury
which shall be empaneled, with a respectful request and instruction that
said grand jury consider whether the prosecutors and police agents who
have appeared in this courtroom, and other government agents unnamed and
presently unknown to this petit jury, should and shall be indicted and
charged with the felony crimes of conspiracy to obstruct justice, and of
violating this defendant's civil rights under color of law, with particular
attention to his rights under the First, Second, and Ninth Articles of
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, based on the circumstances and actions
reported in the official transcript of the court case which, with these
words, is now concluded.
"Have a nice day."
Vin Suprynowicz is the assistant editorial page editor of the Las Vegas Review-Journal. Readers may contact him via e-mail at vin@lvrj.com. The web site for the Suprynowicz column is at http://www.nguworld.com/vindex/.
![]()
Browse more of the JRP site
You Can Help!
Contact Us:
Jury Rights Project