Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Enforcing Sheriff's Law in a Criminal Proceeding


Misprison of Felony is charged against a public official such as a judge, police officer, prosecutor, or prison warden, when a criminal defendant is conclusively presumed guilty in an inquisitorial fashion such as where a police officer or warden just throws a person into jail without a trial which meets the requirements of a reasonable proceeding based upon substantive and procedural due process. The prisoner-criminal defendant charges the judge or prison warden, for example, with the crime of Misprison of Felony for violating Sheriff's Law, that is, the Law of Logic. You see, when the judge or prison warden essentially finds the person guility qua guilty, or guilty on the basis of some authority of the judge, then, in either instance it is clear that the judge has violated Sheriff's Law by violating the Law of Logic by committing the illegal sophistry of using a tautological argument (guilty because guilty) or an illegal appeal to authority (You are guilty because I say so).

Additionally, Treason on the Assizes is charged against the govenor, or judge, or prosecutor, or police officer, for violating Sheriff's Law in reference to neighboring counties or states as counties for criminally violating Sheriff's Law, that is, the Law of Logic. Violating Sheriff's Law or the Law of Logic is analogous to committing the crime of Constitutional Treason (Lipkin). Under Sheriff's Law, that is, the Law of Logic, a person or governmental official is not allowed to interfere with a person's liberty interest by reason of acts which are based upon sophistry or which are unreasonable.

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