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From: d1b2c3@rconnects.com To: DRFROG68@aol.

com Subject: Fw: Grand Juries Date: Sat, 23 Jun 2012 04:30:11 -0700

http://citizensfcg.com

Think About This Long and Hard

Who cares if a solder dies?

Take a man and put him alone, Put him twelve thousand miles from home. Empty his heart of all but blood, Make him live in sand, in mud. This is the life I have to live, This the soul to God I give. You have your parties and drink your beer, While young men are dying over here. Play your poilitics and have your fun, Then refuse to use a gun. There's nothing else for you to do, Then I'm supposed to die for you? There is one thing that you should know; And that's where I think you should go! I'm already here and it's too late. I've traded all my love for all this hate. I'll hate you till the day I die. You made me hear my buddy cry. I saw his leg and his blood shed, Then I heard them say, "This one's dead". It was a large price for him to pay, To let you live another day.

He had the guts to fight and die, To keep the freedom you live by. By his dying, your life he buys, But who cares if a soldier dies!
- Rachel

Laws governing citizen grand juries in Nevada


From Ballotpedia Jump to: navigation, search Nevada is one of six states that allow citizens to collect signatures on petitions in order to request a county grand jury to convene. NRS 6.130 (Nevada Revised Statutes) governs the process. A affidavit to summon a grand jury must be filed with the clerk by a committee of petitioners consisting of five registered voters from the county in question. No later than 180 days after the affidavit has been filed, a petition must be filed containing the signatures of registered voters equal in number to at least 25 percent of the number of voters voting within the county at the last preceding general election. The county clerk is given 20 days from the time that petition is filed to scrutinize and certify the signatures as legal and numerically sufficient. If the petition is deemed to be sufficient, the clerk presents a certificate to that effect to the county court, which must then convene the grand jury requested by the petition.

Permissible summoning of grand jury by filing of affidavit or petition by taxpayer


NRS 6.130 says: "In any county, if the statute of limitations has not run against the person offending, the district judge may summon a grand jury after an affidavit or verified petition by any taxpayer of the county accompanied by and with corroborating affidavits of at least two additional persons has been filed with the clerk of the district court, setting forth reasonable evidence upon which a belief is based that there has been a misappropriation of public money or property by a public officer, past or present, or any fraud committed against the county or state by any officer, past or present, or any violation of trust by any officer, past or present. The district judge shall act upon the affidavit or petition within 5 days. If he fails or refuses to recall or summon a grand jury, the affiant or petitioner may proceed as provided in NRS 6.140.

Summoning of grand jury by filing of petition by committee of registered voters


NRS 6.132 A committee of petitioners consisting of five registered voters may commence a proceeding to summon a grand jury pursuant to this section by filing with the clerk of the district court an affidavit

In February 2009, I was researching Obama's eligibility and I found a way to have the Courts hear the ineligibility case against Obama without them using the excuse of "no standing." Originally all states had Citizens' Grand Juries, where citizens can petition the courts to convene a grand jury. The 14th Amendment gave States the option to eliminate the Citizen Grand Jury and even regular Grand Juries. All but six states eliminated the Citizens' Grand Jury. Those six states still have Statutes for citizens petitioning a grand jury. The reason to be cited on the Petition was that a Candidate on the ballot was ineligible to be President in accordance with the US Constitution. This was what I composed for the reason for the Petition: This first reason I cited is about not knowing if Obama was born in the US in order to enable us to get all his blocked files. The second reason for the GJ is the actual reason for his ineligibility due to his father being a British subject which negates Obama from being defined as a Natural Born Citizen. Can also include Arpaio's Report. "In accordance with (State name)State Statute (blank), we request a Grand Jury be convened because President Barack Hussein Obama, has not provided sufficient proof (e.g., validated long form birth certificate, valid social security number, passport records, school/college records, etc.,) that he was born in the United States of America and is a Natural Born Citizen in accordance with Article I, Section II of the US Constitution. Also the fact that his father was a British subject, makes him ineligible for the US Presidency under the above cited Article in the Constitution." DO NOT CONFUSE THE CITIZENS' GRAND JURY WITH THE AMERICAN GRAND JURY, which is only symbolic . The six states with LEGAL Citizens' Grand Juries are Nebraska, Oklahoma, Kansas City, North Dakota, Nevada and New Mexico. I tried to get people to start petitions in those states but to no avail. In Kansas, a few years ago, Dr. Tiller appealed a subpoena to turn over his patients' medical records and the State Supreme Court said the Citizens' Grand Jury had subpoena power. http://www.kscourts.org/Cases-and-Opinions/opinions/supct/2008/20080506/99951.htm Here's part of Nebraska's Statute as an example: 29-1401.02. Grand jury by petition; procedure; failure to call; filing. The procedure for calling a grand jury by petition of the registered voters of the county shall be as follows: (1) The petitions shall be filed in the office of the clerk of the district court, comply with the requirements in section 29-1401, and be filed without a filing fee; (2) Upon receipt of such petitions, the clerk of the district court shall forthwith certify the petitions so filed to the county clerk or election commissioner in the county in which the signers of such petitions are registered to vote and shall request that the signatures on such petitions be validated according to the list of registered voters; (3) The county clerk or election commissioner shall, within thirty days after receipt of such petitions, determine the number of valid signatures appearing on such petitions and certify the findings along with the total vote cast for Governor at the most recent election for such office in such county to the presiding judge of the district court in which the petitions were filed; (4) The presiding judge of the district court shall, upon receipt of the certificate from the county clerk or election commissioner, examine the petitions and within fifteen days after the receipt thereof shall determine: (a) Whether the requisite number of valid signatures appear on such petitions; and (b) whether the formal requirements as to the form of the petition have been satisfied; http://www.nebraskalegislature.gov/laws/statutes.php?statute=29-140... Kansas: http://kansasstatutes.lesterama.org/Chapter_22/Article_30/22-3001.html North Dakota: http://www.legis.nd.gov/cencode/t29c10-1.pdf Oklahoma - State Statute 38, Section 101 Nevada: http://ballotpedia.org/wiki/index.php/Laws_governing_citizen_grand_...

New Mexico: http://www.ballotpedia.org/wiki/index.php/Article_II,_New_Mexico_Co... This may be a way to convene a grand jury and subpoena records. Each state has their own specifications for the format of the petitions and the percentage of signatures (usually 10%) of the registered voters who voted in the last general election. You only need one county in each of these states to file a petition. Also, I just read where a petition is being started in Kansas to convene a Citizens' Grand Jury, pertaining to an indecent statue in a public park, here's the link: http://campaign.r20.constantcontact.com/render?llr=7tknoqcab&v=0015U2tEoPRVkgw8308J3P6h8fa_RZ 5aVJ5cxGaAcdvtshzRbpsmdgzPT8Blu6uajn6GACRPy4TK2BpERWCQi8m2QrWbhRy_Azjq51HwZ4u4NZ50DQapKjf4ATtuxIymJDusBePYpdkQdLaDcYtBJyozFk3v3vuuXcTZeKIQylrZba2obGtDCqe8hfHAUzZD3UcmsqtUIrI%3D

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