-----Original Message-----
From: Vermithrax <vermithrax@v-wave.com>
To: <untax@yahoogroups.com>
Date: Monday, April 16, 2001 3:31 PM
Subject: [untax] Attorneys Flee In Canada



Attorneys Flee In Canada


For All of US

I received this Notice today! I am not surprised & hoped I pray the same happens here in the USA.

I am finishing up 3 Declarations! Upon completion I will enter my declaration in the public & wait if someone chooses to refute my declaration.

Read the following & challenge the authority in your area!

Katman


CROWN ATTORNEY DEFECTIONS NEAR CRISIS

[Headline: Calgary Herald, April 14th]

It seems that lawyers employed as Crown Attorneys are acting like rats abandoning a sinking ship. Do you suppose even some lawyers have a conscience? Especially upon discovering the facts of the GRAND HOAX that is Canada?

What are these facts?

1. The British Monarchy as the Crown of Canada has been a hoax and a pretender since the death of Queen Victoria.

2. Canada was never confederated (federated).

3. The Parliament of Canada has absolutely no right to be the Government of Canada; but, in fact, is a usurper "club". All laws and statutes it has enacted by the false Crown are totally ultra vires.

4. Provincial legislatures are ultra vires because they are under a false and a pretender Crown and a hoax and impostor Lt. Governor.

5. All levels of government in Canada have used the term "person" to usurp the Absolute Rights of Canadians. "Person" is a vague term meaning "fictitious character" - the only meaning government has a right to assume for the term.

6. ALL judges in Canada are hoaxes and frauds, and have been committing TREASON against the Canadian People - acts worthy of the death penalty.

7. ALL lawyers who have been participating in this fraud and TREASON against the Canadian People are equally culpable.

8. ALL police who have been enforcing the ultra vires legislation of the hoax and fraudulent government and orders of the treasonous judges are equally culpable.

9. ALL bank managers and employers who have stolen account holders and employees monies for CCRA are thieves worthy of "Mosaic Law" justice; as, no lawful form of a justice system is available to the Canadian people.

10.Crown Attorneys who have participated in the "person" fraud have been committing treason against the Canadian People; and worse, against their own children and grand-children.

Is it any wonder that a few Crown Attorneys, at least, those with a "flicker" of conscience, have bailed out of the "pirate ship"? Is their only problem pay and working conditions? I think not!

In the early 1900's Sir Josiah Stamp, the then President of the Bank of England, said "fractional reserve banking as we know it today, was conceived in iniquity and born in sin".


All Common Law Rights are reserved explicitly without prejudice
UCC 1-103, 1-105, 1-207.

"NOTICE OF DISCLAIMER"

I am not a lawyer and I do not give legal advice! Let me make that perfectly plain, clear and mutually agreed, that, and I repeat, I am not a lawyer and I do not give legal advice! This is my private opinion; I am only sharing information! Notice to agent is notice to principle and notice to principle is notice to agent. For those who would violate my privacy by intercepting this private communication, I fully reserve all of my absolute (sovereign) natural (natural by law) "creator endowed" inherent Rights! I also choose to exercise my Right of remedy In the event that any party attempts to use this writing in any proceeding of any kind! I make no claims as to the accuracy of the information! I could be wrong about all of it! Hereinafter "disclaimer". From now on until further notice the "disclaimer" is presumed in any further private or personal or public or official communication from me to you. "Disclaimer"




This letter open to suggestions, improvements, and comments.
Questions and Comments: Email Katman


-----Original Message-----
From: Leupol Sir Lawrence <sirleupol@yahoo.com>
Date: Thursday, April 19, 2001 12:46 AM
Subject: ACTUAL ARTICLE From CALGARY HERALD "Crown attorney defections near crisis"

Greetings once again from Sir Lawrence Leupol !

This article came to us courtesy of Sam Bournefree, corporation sole who is currently defending himself in Sask. Pay attention to the last paragraph. . .

http://www.calgaryherald.com/news/stories/010414/5009860.html
News    Calgary Herald    Front Page
Saturday 14 April 2001

Crown attorney defections near crisis

Stressed prosecutors quitting because of poor pay, workload

Joe Paraskevas

Ted Jacob, Calgary Herald / Former prosecutors Chris Archer, left, and Allan Fay have returned to private practice.

A burgeoning workload, poor pay and a justice system that demands more while providing less are driving many of Alberta's Crown prosecutors out of their jobs, legal community insiders say.

The problems here reflect growing discontent among Crown attorneys across Canada, those same insiders add, and the situation in Calgary is building towards a crisis.

"Potentially, it's a disaster," says Chris Levy, a University of Calgary law professor specializing in criminal law.

Levy and others have seen seven of 51 Crown attorneys -- also called prosecutors -- leave the provincial office in Calgary since February.

The same number have departed in Edmonton -- where there are 54 Crown attorneys -- during the past six months.

In Alberta, Crown prosecutors earn $49,000 to $95,000 a year, compared with $68,113 to $162,863 earned by their coun terparts in Ontario.

"I think the stress is significant," said defence lawyer Alain Hepner, who has practised in Calgary for 24 years.

"(Crown attorneys) don't have enough preparation time, (work) volume is increasing and they're not often in the loop for more funding. And there are greener pastures out there."

The result of the recent exodus from Crown offices has left senior lawyers sharing an increasing amount of work and responsibility with relatively inexperienced lawyers, many of whom see the Crown simply as a step to the more lucrative practice of being a defence lawyer.

"Sooner or later, those very senior lawyers are going to retire," Levy said.

"If you haven't got someone to replace them, you've got a real, real problem."

Chris Archer has watched that problem develop at close range. As a Crown prosecutor turned defence lawyer, he saw the dream he had as a student graduating from law school vanish in under a decade.

"It did," Archer said this we ek. "Oh yeah, it did. The most significant thing to me was the perception the government wanted just warm bodies in the courtroom. The (government's) attitude was: If you don't like it here, leave."

When Archer graduated from Cambridge University in England 14 years ago, a Crown attorney was the only thing he wanted to be.

"That was the best way to learn," Archer said. "It focuses on lots of court work, high-volume court work."

But the hardscrabble yet idealistic life in the office of the Crown was more than just a place for Archer to build his career. He believed it would serve his entire professional life.

"It just seemed like the most interesting way to practise criminal law," he said. "You get your satisfaction out of basically helping victims and playing your part in the justice system: win, lose or draw doing your best. I went in thinking I was going to be a career Crown."

Three and a half years ago, after almost a decade as a prosecutor in Calgary, Archer had re ached a critical point.

Increasingly overcrowded courts were leaving him and his colleagues little time to prepare for cases. Sometimes a prosecutor would pick up work shifted from another's courtroom with minutes to learn a file.

According to Statistics Canada, Alberta prosecutors were handling an average of 500 cases a year in 1998-99, well above the national average of 379.

On the day Archer left the Crown in 1997, the government lifted a five-year wage freeze on all provincial employees and offered him a raise. It wasn't enough. Archer joined his friend Allan Fay -- himself a former Crown attorney who had left in 1994 dissatisfied with worsening conditions.

"I decided it was no longer feasible to remain in the Crown prosecutor's office," Fay said. "Very early in my career as a defence lawyer, I was making more money -- significantly more -- than as a Crown prosecutor."

Archer and Fay represent the previous two waves of departures from the Crown in Calgary -- each s paced a couple of years apart. The problems here have now given way to an even more profound exodus.

"I'm not sure we know why it happens," Levy said of the pattern of resignations.

"It's really a workload issue. The workloads themselves have peaks and valleys. When you hit one of the peaks, frankly it's overwhelming. It gets people thinking about where they're going to spend the next years of their lives."

When they reflect on why Crown attorneys are leaving their office in mid-career, Archer, Fay, and others maintain poor compensation is only half of the problem. The other half is a result of changes in the way the justice system works.

"The police are very cautious about simply saying, 'We're not proceeding with a case,' " Levy said. "They'll send it on to the Crown's office and let them make decisions the front-line police officers would make 10 years ago."

In addition, most provincial and federal jurisdictions have legislated greater input for victims into the cou rt process.

While experts welcome the changes, people such as Wendy Stephen, the Vancouver-based president of the Canadian Association of Crown Counsel, acknowledge the Crown has had to bear the weight of both increased work and public expectation.

"There's a huge social pressure on us," Stephen said. "As we become a more open society and a more knowledgeable society, there are so many more people who insist on input and information. There's also much more scrutiny by police, by members of the public, by various interest groups."

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