Jural Assemblies are the organizational units of the land and soil jurisdiction courts. All land and soil courts operate under the American Common Law. The Land Jurisdiction County Sheriff is the highest-ranking law enforcement officer in each county. Offices of the courts are all elected positions with a six-year term limits.
(or whatever the structure is for that position).
Jural Assembly meetings are Special Meetings organized by the active members of the Jural Assembly, all of whom are qualified Jurors, able to serve on both the Grand Jury and Trial Juries, or officers of the courts.
Reinstating the lawful American Common Law Courts and Grand Juries.
Justice
At the County level, the people are served by “Justices of the Peace”. At the State level, the people are also served by “Justices” as in “Justices of the Supreme Court”. Also at the State level, because not all the State’s international jurisdiction was ever delegated away, we have “Judges”.
Serving the people of Alaska; capable of exercising a jurisdictional knowledge, particularly of the Land & Soil.
Knowledge of the Public Law, 4 Organic Laws, Law of Peace and Peace Proclamation.
Knowledge of the Government history, present and future views of the Three (3) Constitutions and American Government Structure: click for View here.
The 1787 Original Constitutional and the TONA Article/Amendment hold weight in our Jural Assemblies and American Common Law Courts & Offices, so is imperative to that inner standing.
Recorder
The State Recorder function is vital in creating and preserving the Public and Private Records upon which the legitimacy and proof of the proper functioning of the Jural Assembly depends on. Protecting the Person and the Records of the State Jural Assembly Recorder are therefore important considerations and securing the Records in multiple copies and in multiple locations is also necessary.
The Recorders together with Recording Secretaries and Public Notaries elected, trained, and confirmed in Office by the actual State Jural Assembly together make up a team that evidence, secures, and officially affirms our political status, our identity, the capacity in which we are choosing to act, and which ultimately secures the peace and the proper functioning of the State Jural Assemblies and the counties.
Clerk
Clerks set the venue of court cases — that is, they determine where a case belongs, in which court and jurisdiction, and they assign it to a specific Judge, a Justice, or a Justice of the Peace to “shepherd” the proceedings.
So, the first duty of a Court Clerk is to recognize the kind of action being pursued and the nature of the people or the persons pursuing it, and thereby, to correctly direct it to the appropriate jurisdiction and the appropriate court within that jurisdiction.
Court Clerks also maintain meticulous records of all the paperwork involved in a case, assigning numbers to case records, and keeping track as more paperwork and evidence comes in and is added to the court record.
Bondsman
Bondsmen maintain the security of the actual courtroom and direct traffic within it. They may also seat people in the court gallery, help those who are physically injured or disabled, distribute educational information to members of the Jural Assembly, instruct people on how to post bonds — fees guaranteeing future performance of actions — that are retained and accounted for by the Court Clerk’s Office, and act in similar capacities.
A Bondsman may serve as a Witness to official paperwork and confirms the Bond Roster for each day the Court is in Session — he signs the list of Bonds set by the Court and confirms receipt of bonding fees together with the Court Clerk at close of the Court’s business each day. He secures and locks the safe containing the bond fees.
The Bondsmen typically make a public affirmation declaring that he will serve the People of the State in Good Faith and Honor, to protect the Court and the Public, and to assist in providing and securing peace and justice for all.
Public Notary
The actual Office of the Public Notary is very important and very powerful. Our Notaries carry more power and hold a higher office than their corporate State of State Chief Justices. Our Public Notaries are members of our County and State Courts and hold a position of trust similar to that of a State Justice or County Justice of the Peace. Properly overseen Due Process Proceedings subject to Declaratory Judgment by an elected Public Notary have the full force and effect of the Public Law and cannot be reviewed or overturned by any private agency or “State of State” Court.
The often-thankless work of a good, elected Public Notary is an invaluable service to the State, the Counties, and the People. They provide a reliable and official Witness to the business transactions and records upon which we depend to secure our identities and control our assets and invoke the Public and Organic Law owed to our country.
Coroner/ Medical Examiner
The Office of County Medical Examiner, like the Office of County Sheriff, must be filled and is in fact one of the Primary Offices of the American Government. Why? The County Medical Examiner is the only Public Official who can remove a sitting Governor from office. Strange, but true.
The County Medical Examiner is the office of the greatest trust. As well as recording deaths, the County Medical Examiner has an even more important function from the standpoint of the Jural Assembly: recording births. As new babies are born into the families of State Jural Assembly members and into the families of State Nationals, the event and the details need to be recorded on the land and soil jurisdiction of the actual States.
The actual County Medical Examiner’s Office certifies both births and deaths and has them recorded by the State Jural Assembly Recorder’s Office prior to serving Notice to the Territorial Government by providing a copy of the public record.
Marshal-at-Arms
In most State Jural Assemblies, the security for Assembly functions, meetings, and meeting spaces, is provided by an elected Marshal-at-Arms. They are responsible for the security of the State Jural Assembly, its records, its Officers, and its Membership during meetings, for securing the Meeting Place prior to and immediately after meetings, to be prepared to remove disruptive participants, to be aware of any “suspicious” activities (such as bringing in contraband). Marshal-at-Arms help organize the State Militia and Coordination of the County Militias with the State Militia. This is a very busy and important job. The Marshals-at-Arms for each State, like the leaders of the actual County and State Militias, are responsible for outreach and education of their counterparts in the U.S. Military, U.S. Marshals Service and LEO/law enforcement communities.
Court Office Elections
Nominations are scheduled to be held March 23, 2024 to April 23, 2024 (All nominees must be qualified Americans, vetted, background checked and no conflict of interest)
Elections are scheduled to be held April 23, 2024
Click here for Election Ballot
Must be a qualified elector: U.S. Citizens and citizens of the United States are not eligible electors.
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