Source: http://lawlessamerica.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=452:national-grand-jury-filing-month-september-2011-file-criminal-charges-for-corruption&catid=130:grand-juries&Itemid=105
Timestamp: 2017-03-27 12:41:24
Document Index: 323197946

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 1341', '§ 371', '§ 1622', '§ 201', '§ 666', '§1956', 'Art. 438']

National Grand Jury Filing Month - September 2011 - File Criminal Charges for Corruption	Wednesday, 24 August 2011 23:00	William M. Windsor	Our best hope, perhaps our only hope, to get judicial corruption and government corruption addressed is with our local grand juries.
1. Research your state's statutes on grand juries. Determine what types of grand juries exist in your state, and determine what the laws are relative to grand juries. A Yahoo search for (your state) criminal statutes will probably return what you need. The searches to do are: (your state name) grand jury -- (your state name) grand jury presentment -- (your state name) grand jury procedures. (This is the Georgia statute on grand juries.) Check your state's laws on Special Grand Juries. Size of Grand Juries by State -- Grand Jury Term by State -- Other Helpful Grand Jury Information
2. Your effort is on county or state grand juries -- not the federal grand jury. So, find out where the grand jury meets. Call or visit the county district attorney's office for where the crimes took place. (This isn't your home...but where the judges or government officials committed the crimes.) Call the general information number for the county, and they will give you the district attorney's number. Don't identify yourself or provide any information if you don't have to. Simply ask: When and where does the grand jury meet? Is there a grand jury inn session now? What days do they meet, and what time do they start each day? Visit the grand jury area before you do anything else just so you will have the lay of the land for when you or an agent delivers your sealed envelopes. Be able to tell an agent where the grand jury room is, where there is someone posted who may deny access, etc. Casually ask the name of any receptionists or security people. Take notes of everything.
Tampering with Evidence â€“ Your State statute, for example, Georgia: O.C.G.A. 16-10-94 18 U.S.C. Â§ 1341 -- Mail Fraud and 18 U.S.C. 1346 (honest services)
Perjury -- Your State statute, for examole, Georgia: O.C.G.A. 16-10-70 Conspiracy to Defraud United States -- 18 U.S.C. Â§ 371 Subornation of Perjury â€“ 18 USC Â§ 1622 Subornation of Perjury -- Your State statute, for example, Georgia: O.C.G.A. 16-10-72
Bribery -- 18 U.S.C. 201-227 Conspiracy Against Rights -- 18 U.S. C. 241
Tampering with a Witness, Victim, or an Informant -- 18 U.S.C. 1512 Gratuity, 18 U.S.C. Â§ 201(c)
Bribery or Theft in Programs receiving Federal Funds, 18 U.S.C. Â§ 666 Money Laundering, 18 U.S.C. Â§1956
If your state has a RICO Act, study carefully the predicate acts. These are crimes that must have been committed for RICO to be applicable. Those state and federal statutes will be the key ones for you. Now, make sure the statute of limitations has not expired on your claims. In Georgia, RICO is five years from when you discovered the criminal racketeering enterprise, so that was the critical date for me.)
5. Take notes of everything that you do, hear, etc. Always write confirmation letters to memorialize any discussions with government officials. Date and note the time of everything that you and others do. Lay the Groundwork
If you do not receive confirmation that your envelopes have been delivered to each Grand Juror, mail certified letters return receipt to each of the Grand Jurors. That way, if someone interferes with the personal and confidential mail, I would ask the U.S. Postal Service to become involved. 5. Go to the Grand Jury area each day they meet. Take a large envelope addressed to the Grand Jury and have EVIDENCE written on it in giant letters with a dark felt tip marker. Evidence is the key word, because if government employees block you from delivering evidence to the Grand Jury, it is absolutely a crime, in my opinion from reading the statutes. If you have a lot of evidence, take a box similarly marked. Position yourself in a place where everyone entering and leaving will see you and your EVIDENCE. Get a photo taken of you holding your evidence at the Grand Jury area. Ask at least one person who sees you to give you their name, address, and phone as a witness that you were there. If possible, have a witness accompany you. Take a recorder -- a cell phone with a recording feature is ideal.
Document everything. Get the names and titles of anyone who speaks with you; ask for their business cards. If you are threatened with a crime, document. Get witnesses.
Present each Grand Juror with a binder containing your information. Provide an overview. Then concisely present each charge, explain the elements, and show the evidence that the elements for the charge have been met. Make good eye contact. You must establish confidence with the audience; they have to believe you are a sincere, honest person.
What If... If your effiorts fail, stay at it. I went to the Grand Jury area every Friday for almost two months before I got in.
As regular readers know, those who have met through LawlessAmerica.com have formed an effort called GRIP -- Government Reform & Integrity Platform. So, let's refer to this plan as the GRIP Grand Jury Plan.
Statutes Grand
Statutes Criminal
Statutes RICO
Statute Alabama
Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â State RICO Statutes:
Florida Fabulous statute: "Charges of crime may be brought to your attention in several ways: by the court; by the state attorney (or the statewide prosecutor); from personal knowledge brought to your body by any member of the grand jury; and, lastly, by private citizens who have a right to be heard by a grand jury in formal session and with the grand jury's consent." Idaho
Louisiana Will permit a citizen to inform the grand jury about crimes: "Art. 438. Duty of grand juror having knowledge of offense; investigation: If a grand juror knows or has reason to believe that an offense triable by the district court of the parish has been committed, he shall declare such fact to his fellow jurors, who may investigate it."
- Alabama Code- Alaska Statutes- Arizona Revised Statutes- Arkansas Code- California Law- Colorado Code- Connecticut Statutes- Delaware Code- District of Columbia Code
- Florida Statutes- Georgia Code- Hawaii Code- Idaho Statutes- Illinois Statutes- Indiana Statutes- Iowa Statutes
- Kansas Statutes- Kentucky Revised Statutes- Louisiana Laws- Maine Revised Statutes- Maryland Code- General Laws of Massachusetts - Michigan Compiled Laws- Minnesota Statutes- Mississippi Code- Missouri Statutes- Montana Statutes
- Nebraska Statutes- Nevada Revised Statutes- New Hampshire Statutes- New Jersey Statutes- New Mexico Code- New York Code- North Carolina General Statutes- North Dakota Code- Ohio Code- Oklahoma Statutes- Oregon Code P through T
- Pennsylvania Statutes- Rhode Island Code- South Carolina Code of Laws- South Dakota Statutes- Tennessee Code- Texas Statutes
- Utah Code- Vermont Statutes- Virginia Code- Washington Code- West Virginia Code- Wisconsin Statutes- Wyoming Statutes
Â Last Updated on Saturday, 07 January 2012 01:05	Add comment
You are here: Battling Corruption Grand Juries National Grand Jury Filing Month - September 2011 - File Criminal Charges for Corruption