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Mel Stamper     55

                                Bill of Rights of the federal constitution. Such is exemplified in the following
                                legal definitions found in Black’s Law, Sixth Edition.
                                   Constitutional Liberty or Freedom: Such freedom as is enjoyed by the
                                citizens of a country or state under the protection of its constitution, the
                                aggregate of those personal, civil, and political rights of the individual, which
                                are guaranteed by the Constitution and secured against invasion by the
                                government or any of its agencies.
                                   Constitutional Right: A right guaranteed to the citizens by the United
                                States Constitution and state constitutions and so guaranteed as to prevent
                                legislative interference therewith.
                                   Once one corrects his status, he is no longer under the jurisdiction of
                                the police power of the federal or state governments. One is then an alien
                                as to the de facto political system, i.e. nation/body politic; moreover, one
                                is also an alien in every state wherein he is not a national. This plays an
                                important part in reference to the U.S. code in reference to protections and
                                remedies. Accordingly, as one is no longer in breach of allegiance to his state
                                government when his status is corrected, he is protected from its unlawful
                                actions. Such unlawful actions are called actions done under color of law.  The
                                term “color of law” is another way of saying private law, or the law created
                                under the police power of the state legislature (as it is not of the common
                                law, i.e. custom and usage). Under the Fourteenth Amendment system, de
                                jure nationals (a ward, in sense) are protected from such state actions by the
                                federal government.




                                                                           Title 18 USCA § 242.
                                    Deprivation of rights under color of law. (Criminal) [In part]


                                   “Who ever, under color of any law, statute, ordinance, regulation, or
                                custom, willfully subjects any person in any State, Territory, or District to the
                                deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured or protected by
                                the Constitution or laws of the United States, or to different punishments,
                                pains, or penalties, on account of such person being an alien, ... shall be fined
                                under this title or imprisoned not more than one year, or both.”
                                   Note that a person has to be an alien to be protected from actions done
                                under the color of law. This means that if a state employee or officer violates
                                your natural rights that are secured by the federal and/or state constitutions,
                                he can be put in jail; moreover, the state itself is not immune from such
                                actions.  They can be sued for their employees’, officers’, and their own
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