A lien is a possession taken in security in respect of the completion of a contractual obligation, generally financial (such as securing your mortgage on your house) but it can also apply to the provision of a service.
Commercial Lien Strategy (CLS) is a method through which common citizens, without the aid of lawyers or the courts, can induce government officials to actually obey the laws they have sworn to uphold.
When government officials take an Oath of Office, they enter into a specific performance contract. By virtue of their Oath of Office, government officials assume a contractual duty or obligation to obey the law.
If a government official who has sworn (i.e. contracted) to obey the law, breaks or ignores any law he's sworn to "uphold", common citizens can file a Commercial Lien on his property that will paralyze his ability to buy, sell, or lease any property and ruin his credit rating until he corrects his breach of contract and once again obeys the law.
For example, suppose a judge arbitrarily denies you some Right he's sworn to uphold -- if he does, you can file a Commercial Lien on his property to compel his compliance with his contractual oath.
Because the Commercial Lien is a non-judicial instrument, i.e. there is no judge or court involved in the filing procedure, there is no one who can dismiss the lien and thereby protect government officials who have broken the law.
As soon as an employee breaches his employer's trust (in this case breaks statute) then the liability of the employer for the actions of the employee is removed, exposing the employee to face the full force of the law unaided (in this case by the limitless resources of the State).
The CLS appears to be simple, inexpensive and nearly perfect for common people. All they have to do is properly prepare a Commercial Lien against the offending government official, have it notarized, pay a modest filing fee and file it.
With just a little time, a little research, and a little money, the average person is capable of compelling government officials to actually obey the law! It's almost unheard of.
THE MILLION DOLLAR QUESTION
If the Commercial Lien Strategy is lawful, its ability to drive corruption and lawlessness from our government may be limitless. But that's the critical question: Is the Commercial Lien strategy truly lawful?
The question is important because if the CLS is unlawful, any man who tries this strategy could wind up being sanctioned, fined, or even jailed.
Commercial Lien Strategy (CLS) is a method through which common citizens, without the aid of lawyers or the courts, can induce government officials to actually obey the laws they have sworn to uphold.
When government officials take an Oath of Office, they enter into a specific performance contract. By virtue of their Oath of Office, government officials assume a contractual duty or obligation to obey the law.
If a government official who has sworn (i.e. contracted) to obey the law, breaks or ignores any law he's sworn to "uphold", common citizens can file a Commercial Lien on his property that will paralyze his ability to buy, sell, or lease any property and ruin his credit rating until he corrects his breach of contract and once again obeys the law.
For example, suppose a judge arbitrarily denies you some Right he's sworn to uphold -- if he does, you can file a Commercial Lien on his property to compel his compliance with his contractual oath.
Because the Commercial Lien is a non-judicial instrument, i.e. there is no judge or court involved in the filing procedure, there is no one who can dismiss the lien and thereby protect government officials who have broken the law.
As soon as an employee breaches his employer's trust (in this case breaks statute) then the liability of the employer for the actions of the employee is removed, exposing the employee to face the full force of the law unaided (in this case by the limitless resources of the State).
The CLS appears to be simple, inexpensive and nearly perfect for common people. All they have to do is properly prepare a Commercial Lien against the offending government official, have it notarized, pay a modest filing fee and file it.
With just a little time, a little research, and a little money, the average person is capable of compelling government officials to actually obey the law! It's almost unheard of.
THE MILLION DOLLAR QUESTION
If the Commercial Lien Strategy is lawful, its ability to drive corruption and lawlessness from our government may be limitless. But that's the critical question: Is the Commercial Lien strategy truly lawful?
The question is important because if the CLS is unlawful, any man who tries this strategy could wind up being sanctioned, fined, or even jailed.
How'd you like to see a sworn opinion on the CLS from the president of the Florida bar? Sound unlikely? Sound impossible? Well, Case No. 92-8051-CIV- RYSKAMP, US Dist. Ct. of the South. Dist. Florida. The defendants asked Mr. Alan T. Dimond, president of the Florida Bar, to examine Commercial Lien and express his opinion of the lien's legality in a sworn affidavit.
In the first five paragraphs of his affidavit, Mr. Dimond outlines his considerable background as a lawyer. Then, in the last two paragraphs, he swears under oath that:
(signed) Alan T. Dimond;
Sworn to and subscribed before me
this 7th day of October, 1992. He is
personally known to me and did take
an oath. Notary: H. Valdes
LINE BY LINE
Damn.
Dimond's affidavit was apparently intended to help defend the government officials, but if you stop to reread it, line by line, you'll see that one of the nation's premier lawyers (president of the Florida bar) pretty much says the Commercial Lien's got the defendants by the short and curlies.
But before you re-read Dimond's sworn statement, consider some of the background information. First, Mr. Dimond is a lawyer. His stock in trade are words. Linguistic precision is everything in law. Second, he was asked to provide an opinion in defense of several very powerful government officials and federal judges. Third, he was asked to present his opinion under oath.
Conclusions: 1) Mr. Dimond's purpose was to prove the CLS was unlawful; 2) he should have done some considerable research into the CLS to prove it's unlawful; and 3) he must have chosen the words used in his affidavit very carefully.
Point: If Mr. Dimond writes very carefully, we must read very carefully.
For example, Dimond opens paragraph 7 with, "I have been told by counsel for the United States that the Security Claim of Commercial Lien and Affidavit has no basis in fact or law..."
ANALYSIS: Very strange. The defendant judges and government officials presumably sought attorney Dimond's personal affidavit because either 1) he's recognized as a legal genius whose opinions carry great technical weight, or 2) he's recognized as a legal whore who'll say anything for anyone (if the price is right) but whose opinion still carries great political weight by virtue of his status as Florida bar president.
Curiously, lawyer Dimond does not say the Commercial Lien is unlawful -- he merely says he's "been told it has no basis in fact or law" by someone else. Hell, any first year law student can tell you his second hand opinion is essentially hearsay and, as such, almost meaningless in court.
Dimond continues, saying "Assuming the truth of this representation [that the lien "has no basis in fact or law"]..." Assuming? Are we to "assume" lawyer Dimond didn't bother to research the issue himself and prefers to base his sworn testimony, on behalf of some of the most powerful government officials in the country, on nothing but hearsay?
By attributing the opinion of the Commercial Lien's lawfulness to an unnamed "counsel of the United States" and "assuming" that opinion is valid, attorney Dimond is ducking personal responsibility for a statement that implies (but never declares) that the CLS is unlawful. Under oath, Dimond sounds strangely unconvinced that the CLS is truly "without basis in fact or law".
Dimond's evasiveness is telling. The powerful defendants must have sought Dimond's opinion because they expected him to rescue them with a brilliant denial of the lien's lawfulness. If Dimond didn't take time to analyze the lien's lawfulness and merely dashed out an affidavit on a moment's notice as a sort of "political favor" to the powerful defendants, why didn't he "go the distance" and swear that, based on all his years of experience, he knew the CLS was absolutely worthless? The only reason I can imagine is that something in the CLS scares him more than the government officials who sought his help. (Could it be that he was scared that if he lied under oath, that someone would file a Commercial Lien on him?)
On the other hand, if Dimond thoroughly analyzed the lien (as we can expect from a bar president handling a very hot issue for several very powerful government officials), why didn't he "go the distance" and swear under oath that he knew the lien was worthless? I can imagine only one explanation -- Dimond suspects the Commercial Lien strategy is lawful.
Why else would Dimond base his affidavit on inadmissible hearsay and unprofessional "personal experience", rather than hard, professional research in a law library? Are we to believe that the president of the Florida bar, a member of a substantial law firm, a recognized professional in his field, didn't bother to crack open a single law book to find evidence that the CLS is unlawful? Six important federal officials (people who can play a serious role in Dimond's financial and political future) asked for his help, and the best he can do is vaguely recollect that "I ain't nevah seen nuthin' lahk it, nevah befo'"?
Pretty hard to believe.
A more plausible scenario would be that Dimond did his level best to please the powerful defendants by digging through the law library for statutes and case law that proved the CLS invalid, but failed to find anything. If Dimond researched the CLS, but couldn't prove it unlawful, he'd have to concede it was lawful. Perhaps, he couldn't reference his own opinion under oath since, based on his legal research, he knew the CLS was valid. Therefore, Dimond could only support the defendants by skating around the issue with an affidavit based on hearsay and "assumptions" rather than facts and law.
Next, Dimond notes that the CLS "is a creation of one of the litigants herein. In my 24 years of experience, I have never seen or heard of any [such] 'lien'..."
ANALYSIS: Roughly correct, but irrelevant. The CLS is a recent innovation previously unknown to the lawyers and legal system. But labelling the CLS as a "creation" hints that it's been spawned out of some twisted pro se litigant's delusions rather than the law, that the CLS is without legal and lawful foundation, and is therefore unlawful.
But that's just Dimond's words. If I were spinning those words, I wouldn't say the lien's a new "creation". I'd say it's a new "application" and thereby imply the Commercial Lien has a lawful foundation, and as such, is probably lawful itself.
Further, just because Mr. Dimond has never seen such a lien in his "24 years of experience" doesn't prove a thing. How many lawyers had seen a law that blacks could ride in the front of an Alabama bus prior to the 1964 Civil Rights Act? How many lawyers had seen a Constitutional "right to privacy" before the U.S. Supreme Court found it in Roe v. Wade? The law, as lawyers like to remind us, is constantly changing, growing, evolving. Well, on behalf of "We, the Mammals", I'd like to welcome "You, the Dinosaur Lawyers" to a brand new wrinkle in the "theory of evolution": the CLS is about to render government corruption almost extinct.
It's irrelevant whether Dimond's ever seen the CLS before. He hasn't seen the dark side of the moon, either, but it's there. The real point to Dimond's statement is that in all his experience, he's never seen one bit of evidence, precedent, statute, case law, or Constitutional prohibition to say the Commercial Lien is illegal. If he'd seen or found any evidence that the lien was illegal -- anything at all -- it would certainly have been cited in his affidavit. Instead, the sworn affidavit of the president of the Florida bar offers not one single citation to support his apparent hope that the CLS is illegal.
OPEN SEASON
According to the U.S. Constitution, all powers not specifically granted to government are reserved to the People. Which means that if the laws don't specifically say you can't do something, you can do it until the Congress legislates otherwise or the Supreme Court rules to the contrary. Which means, the "new creation" of the Commercial Lien is legal and lawful until law can be found or made to the contrary. Since Mr. Dimond didn't produce any previous law to prohibit the CLS, it appears there's no previous prohibition and the CLS should be lawful until some future date when Congress or the U.S. Supreme Court says otherwise. And that means, at least for now, it's open season on corrupt government officials.
Lawyer Dimond seems to agree. He points out that the CLS "...causes irreparable harm to the system of the administration of justice."
Oh dear me, NO! Not "irreparable harm" to the "system of administration of justice" (not justice, itself). Oh, pulleeese! ANYTHING but that!! Why...why, the very thought of it is enough to jus' make me swoooon.
Well, better stock up on smelling salts, Scarlet, cuz if lawyer Dimond's right about the paucity of defenses and remedies against the CLS, the entire government's about to pass out cold.
Faced with the CLS's "direct attack on...the general reputations of those named in the `lien'", and even though the CLS "may negatively impact on their financial credit rating," Dimond will only concede that "some of damage may be compensable at law."
"Some?" "May"? Hardly the optimistic prognosis the defendants had hoped for. He's equivocating. Mr. Dimond's limp assessment of their chances to sue to recover damages caused by the CLS should scare every corrupt government official in the USA into packing his bags for Brazil. And it gets worse (or better, depending on your point of view).
Even though Dimond claims the CLS is "an abuse of civil process", he nevertheless concludes that the Lien "cannot be adequately remedied by an action at law." Although Dimond does not absolutely say there's nothing government officials can do to protect themselves against the Commercial Lien Strategy, he comes pretty close. At minimum, he's warning the government defendants that they're in a losing proposition, and even if some kind of later litigation "may" generate compensation for "some" of their damages, that compensation will be, at best, inadequate. In short, they're going to lose more than they can ever hope to recover, which means they're gonna lose. Which means the Commercial Lien Strategy is solid.
In fact, it appears so solid that Dimond predicts the CLS "will probably have a negative impact on [corrupt government officials'] willingness to continue to serve [steal] as representatives of the United States"!
Reader, do you understand what you just read? The president of the Florida bar has stopped just a few words short of saying the Commercial Lien Strategy is so powerful it will probably chase corrupt officials right out of government!
It's one thing to read the theories and notions of paralegals, pro se's, and would-be writers. We've shared some good ideas on the CLS but, still, it's hard to trust our judgement. But when the president of the Florida state bar implicitly agrees that the CLS is so strong that his best advice to government officials is "RUN, YOU MUTHA'S! RUN!!!", well, you gotta agree the Commercial Lien Strategy looks a whole lot more reliable.
A word of caution: Although I interpret Mr. Dimond's remarks as a general commentary on the overall Commercial Lien Strategy, he was only talking about a specific Commercial Lien. Just because he was impressed by one Commercial Lien does not mean all liens are similarly formidable. No matter what I say, no matter what Mr. Dimond says, you must do your own research, and personally confirm the CLS before you start "liening on" government officials.
In the first five paragraphs of his affidavit, Mr. Dimond outlines his considerable background as a lawyer. Then, in the last two paragraphs, he swears under oath that:
"6. I have reviewed a document entitled "A Security (15 U.S.C.) Claim of Commercial Lien and Affidavit," recorded at Official Record Book 7358 [the last digit in this number wasn't quite clear in the photocopy; it might be "7355"] at pages 703-705, in the Official Records of Palm Beach County, Florida, on August 13, 1992. I note that the document names a number of public figures including the Attorney General of the United States, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of Florida, the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service, ..., the Chief United States District Court Judge for the Southern District of Florida, ..., [another] United States District Court Judge for the Southern District of Florida, and others at least one of whom is participating as counsel for the United States in this case."
"7. I have been told by counsel for the United States that the Security Claim of Commercial Lien and Affidavit has no basis in fact or law and is a creation of one of the litigants herein. In my 24 years of experience, I have never seen or heard of any Lien such as those that were filed relative to this matter. Assuming the truth of this representation, and based on my experience in civic and bar activities and as a practicing lawyer and as the president of The Florida Bar, it is my opinion that the document causes irreparable harm to the system of the administration of justice. While some of the harm may be compensable at law, no degree of compensation will adequately remedy the damage to the appearance of integrity of those named and of the system of the administration of justice. In my opinion, the filing of this type of lien is a direct attack in the justice system and on the general reputations of those named in the 'lien'. It may negatively impact on the financial credit rating of those individuals. It will probably have a negative impact on their willingness to continue to serve as representatives of the United States. And, it constitutes an abuse of civil process that cannot be adequately remedied by an action at law."
(signed) Alan T. Dimond;
Sworn to and subscribed before me
this 7th day of October, 1992. He is
personally known to me and did take
an oath. Notary: H. Valdes
LINE BY LINE
Damn.
Dimond's affidavit was apparently intended to help defend the government officials, but if you stop to reread it, line by line, you'll see that one of the nation's premier lawyers (president of the Florida bar) pretty much says the Commercial Lien's got the defendants by the short and curlies.
But before you re-read Dimond's sworn statement, consider some of the background information. First, Mr. Dimond is a lawyer. His stock in trade are words. Linguistic precision is everything in law. Second, he was asked to provide an opinion in defense of several very powerful government officials and federal judges. Third, he was asked to present his opinion under oath.
Conclusions: 1) Mr. Dimond's purpose was to prove the CLS was unlawful; 2) he should have done some considerable research into the CLS to prove it's unlawful; and 3) he must have chosen the words used in his affidavit very carefully.
Point: If Mr. Dimond writes very carefully, we must read very carefully.
For example, Dimond opens paragraph 7 with, "I have been told by counsel for the United States that the Security Claim of Commercial Lien and Affidavit has no basis in fact or law..."
ANALYSIS: Very strange. The defendant judges and government officials presumably sought attorney Dimond's personal affidavit because either 1) he's recognized as a legal genius whose opinions carry great technical weight, or 2) he's recognized as a legal whore who'll say anything for anyone (if the price is right) but whose opinion still carries great political weight by virtue of his status as Florida bar president.
Curiously, lawyer Dimond does not say the Commercial Lien is unlawful -- he merely says he's "been told it has no basis in fact or law" by someone else. Hell, any first year law student can tell you his second hand opinion is essentially hearsay and, as such, almost meaningless in court.
Dimond continues, saying "Assuming the truth of this representation [that the lien "has no basis in fact or law"]..." Assuming? Are we to "assume" lawyer Dimond didn't bother to research the issue himself and prefers to base his sworn testimony, on behalf of some of the most powerful government officials in the country, on nothing but hearsay?
By attributing the opinion of the Commercial Lien's lawfulness to an unnamed "counsel of the United States" and "assuming" that opinion is valid, attorney Dimond is ducking personal responsibility for a statement that implies (but never declares) that the CLS is unlawful. Under oath, Dimond sounds strangely unconvinced that the CLS is truly "without basis in fact or law".
Dimond's evasiveness is telling. The powerful defendants must have sought Dimond's opinion because they expected him to rescue them with a brilliant denial of the lien's lawfulness. If Dimond didn't take time to analyze the lien's lawfulness and merely dashed out an affidavit on a moment's notice as a sort of "political favor" to the powerful defendants, why didn't he "go the distance" and swear that, based on all his years of experience, he knew the CLS was absolutely worthless? The only reason I can imagine is that something in the CLS scares him more than the government officials who sought his help. (Could it be that he was scared that if he lied under oath, that someone would file a Commercial Lien on him?)
On the other hand, if Dimond thoroughly analyzed the lien (as we can expect from a bar president handling a very hot issue for several very powerful government officials), why didn't he "go the distance" and swear under oath that he knew the lien was worthless? I can imagine only one explanation -- Dimond suspects the Commercial Lien strategy is lawful.
Why else would Dimond base his affidavit on inadmissible hearsay and unprofessional "personal experience", rather than hard, professional research in a law library? Are we to believe that the president of the Florida bar, a member of a substantial law firm, a recognized professional in his field, didn't bother to crack open a single law book to find evidence that the CLS is unlawful? Six important federal officials (people who can play a serious role in Dimond's financial and political future) asked for his help, and the best he can do is vaguely recollect that "I ain't nevah seen nuthin' lahk it, nevah befo'"?
Pretty hard to believe.
A more plausible scenario would be that Dimond did his level best to please the powerful defendants by digging through the law library for statutes and case law that proved the CLS invalid, but failed to find anything. If Dimond researched the CLS, but couldn't prove it unlawful, he'd have to concede it was lawful. Perhaps, he couldn't reference his own opinion under oath since, based on his legal research, he knew the CLS was valid. Therefore, Dimond could only support the defendants by skating around the issue with an affidavit based on hearsay and "assumptions" rather than facts and law.
Next, Dimond notes that the CLS "is a creation of one of the litigants herein. In my 24 years of experience, I have never seen or heard of any [such] 'lien'..."
ANALYSIS: Roughly correct, but irrelevant. The CLS is a recent innovation previously unknown to the lawyers and legal system. But labelling the CLS as a "creation" hints that it's been spawned out of some twisted pro se litigant's delusions rather than the law, that the CLS is without legal and lawful foundation, and is therefore unlawful.
But that's just Dimond's words. If I were spinning those words, I wouldn't say the lien's a new "creation". I'd say it's a new "application" and thereby imply the Commercial Lien has a lawful foundation, and as such, is probably lawful itself.
Further, just because Mr. Dimond has never seen such a lien in his "24 years of experience" doesn't prove a thing. How many lawyers had seen a law that blacks could ride in the front of an Alabama bus prior to the 1964 Civil Rights Act? How many lawyers had seen a Constitutional "right to privacy" before the U.S. Supreme Court found it in Roe v. Wade? The law, as lawyers like to remind us, is constantly changing, growing, evolving. Well, on behalf of "We, the Mammals", I'd like to welcome "You, the Dinosaur Lawyers" to a brand new wrinkle in the "theory of evolution": the CLS is about to render government corruption almost extinct.
It's irrelevant whether Dimond's ever seen the CLS before. He hasn't seen the dark side of the moon, either, but it's there. The real point to Dimond's statement is that in all his experience, he's never seen one bit of evidence, precedent, statute, case law, or Constitutional prohibition to say the Commercial Lien is illegal. If he'd seen or found any evidence that the lien was illegal -- anything at all -- it would certainly have been cited in his affidavit. Instead, the sworn affidavit of the president of the Florida bar offers not one single citation to support his apparent hope that the CLS is illegal.
OPEN SEASON
According to the U.S. Constitution, all powers not specifically granted to government are reserved to the People. Which means that if the laws don't specifically say you can't do something, you can do it until the Congress legislates otherwise or the Supreme Court rules to the contrary. Which means, the "new creation" of the Commercial Lien is legal and lawful until law can be found or made to the contrary. Since Mr. Dimond didn't produce any previous law to prohibit the CLS, it appears there's no previous prohibition and the CLS should be lawful until some future date when Congress or the U.S. Supreme Court says otherwise. And that means, at least for now, it's open season on corrupt government officials.
Lawyer Dimond seems to agree. He points out that the CLS "...causes irreparable harm to the system of the administration of justice."
Oh dear me, NO! Not "irreparable harm" to the "system of administration of justice" (not justice, itself). Oh, pulleeese! ANYTHING but that!! Why...why, the very thought of it is enough to jus' make me swoooon.
Well, better stock up on smelling salts, Scarlet, cuz if lawyer Dimond's right about the paucity of defenses and remedies against the CLS, the entire government's about to pass out cold.
Faced with the CLS's "direct attack on...the general reputations of those named in the `lien'", and even though the CLS "may negatively impact on their financial credit rating," Dimond will only concede that "some of damage may be compensable at law."
"Some?" "May"? Hardly the optimistic prognosis the defendants had hoped for. He's equivocating. Mr. Dimond's limp assessment of their chances to sue to recover damages caused by the CLS should scare every corrupt government official in the USA into packing his bags for Brazil. And it gets worse (or better, depending on your point of view).
Even though Dimond claims the CLS is "an abuse of civil process", he nevertheless concludes that the Lien "cannot be adequately remedied by an action at law." Although Dimond does not absolutely say there's nothing government officials can do to protect themselves against the Commercial Lien Strategy, he comes pretty close. At minimum, he's warning the government defendants that they're in a losing proposition, and even if some kind of later litigation "may" generate compensation for "some" of their damages, that compensation will be, at best, inadequate. In short, they're going to lose more than they can ever hope to recover, which means they're gonna lose. Which means the Commercial Lien Strategy is solid.
In fact, it appears so solid that Dimond predicts the CLS "will probably have a negative impact on [corrupt government officials'] willingness to continue to serve [steal] as representatives of the United States"!
Reader, do you understand what you just read? The president of the Florida bar has stopped just a few words short of saying the Commercial Lien Strategy is so powerful it will probably chase corrupt officials right out of government!
It's one thing to read the theories and notions of paralegals, pro se's, and would-be writers. We've shared some good ideas on the CLS but, still, it's hard to trust our judgement. But when the president of the Florida state bar implicitly agrees that the CLS is so strong that his best advice to government officials is "RUN, YOU MUTHA'S! RUN!!!", well, you gotta agree the Commercial Lien Strategy looks a whole lot more reliable.
A word of caution: Although I interpret Mr. Dimond's remarks as a general commentary on the overall Commercial Lien Strategy, he was only talking about a specific Commercial Lien. Just because he was impressed by one Commercial Lien does not mean all liens are similarly formidable. No matter what I say, no matter what Mr. Dimond says, you must do your own research, and personally confirm the CLS before you start "liening on" government officials.
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