Post by Darren Dirt on May 11, 2007 16:50:00 GMT -5
www.lawresearchgroup.com/cart/product.php?productid=112
"The Anti-Government Movement Handbook," a training manual for judge and court staff against pro se litigants, was published in 1999 by the National Center for the State Courts (NCSC) in Williamsburg, Virginia. This book, along with "Dealing With Common Law Courts. A Model Curriculum for judges and Court Staff," published in 1997 by NCSC, was developed from an Institute for Course Management (ICM) course on dealing with common law courts held in Scottsdale, Arizona, February 5-7, 1997.
The curriculum for this course and manuals was developed under a grant, Award No. SJI-96-02B-B-159, "The Rise of Common Law Courts in the United States: An Examination of the Movement, The Potential Impact on the Judiciary, and How the States Could Respond," from the State Justice Institute (SJI). SJI is a non-profit 501C(3) corporation that was started in 1986, and is funded by Congress to develop courses and training manuals for state courts and judicial training organizations.
The course and training manuals were developed by a group of 27 judges, court clerks, court administrators, and prosecutors in Arizona to learn about the history and procedures of the Common Law Court Movement (CLC) and to develop training curriculum and responses the courts, judges, and court administrators can use when dealing with common law courts in their own jurisdictions. My contact at the conference said one of its goals was to identify ways the courts can make pre-emptive strikes against the CLC movement.
The purpose of the guide is clearly to INSTRUCT JUDGES HOW TO DENY, IGNORE, DISMISS ANY CITIZEN'S ATTEMPT TO CLAIM THEIR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS
The purpose of the guide is clearly to INSTRUCT JUDGES HOW TO DENY, IGNORE, DISMISS ANY CITIZEN'S ATTEMPT TO CLAIM THEIR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS
The purpose of the guide is clearly to INSTRUCT JUDGES HOW TO DENY, IGNORE, DISMISS ANY CITIZEN'S ATTEMPT TO CLAIM THEIR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS
The grant was made by the State Justice Institute.
On November 2, Attorney General Ashcroft submitted the Department of Justice's statutorily- mandated evaluation of SJI's effectiveness to the House and Senate Judiciary Committees. The report concluded that:
SJI appears to have been effective in awarding grants to improve the quality of justice in the state courts, facilitating better coordination and information sharing between state and federal courts, and fostering solutions to common problems faced by all courts.
The Attorney General also observed that "some degree of support for state court innovation and improvement is a Federal interest. . . . given overlapping state-federal jurisdiction, it is in the federal government's interest to have effective and fair state courts, lest litigants turn to federal courts to resolve matters properly within state court responsibilities."
An excellent expose as to how Judges are trained to railroad the pro se litigant in court.
- - -
New info for some AiLLers, familiar to others...
LawResearchGroup.com also offers Richard Cornforth's 5-DVD set, and some of his newer materials, which I believe are a good complementary resource alongside of AiLL and related intellectual ammunition. (watch some excerpts on Google Video to see why...)
"The Anti-Government Movement Handbook," a training manual for judge and court staff against pro se litigants, was published in 1999 by the National Center for the State Courts (NCSC) in Williamsburg, Virginia. This book, along with "Dealing With Common Law Courts. A Model Curriculum for judges and Court Staff," published in 1997 by NCSC, was developed from an Institute for Course Management (ICM) course on dealing with common law courts held in Scottsdale, Arizona, February 5-7, 1997.
The curriculum for this course and manuals was developed under a grant, Award No. SJI-96-02B-B-159, "The Rise of Common Law Courts in the United States: An Examination of the Movement, The Potential Impact on the Judiciary, and How the States Could Respond," from the State Justice Institute (SJI). SJI is a non-profit 501C(3) corporation that was started in 1986, and is funded by Congress to develop courses and training manuals for state courts and judicial training organizations.
The course and training manuals were developed by a group of 27 judges, court clerks, court administrators, and prosecutors in Arizona to learn about the history and procedures of the Common Law Court Movement (CLC) and to develop training curriculum and responses the courts, judges, and court administrators can use when dealing with common law courts in their own jurisdictions. My contact at the conference said one of its goals was to identify ways the courts can make pre-emptive strikes against the CLC movement.
The purpose of the guide is clearly to INSTRUCT JUDGES HOW TO DENY, IGNORE, DISMISS ANY CITIZEN'S ATTEMPT TO CLAIM THEIR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS
The purpose of the guide is clearly to INSTRUCT JUDGES HOW TO DENY, IGNORE, DISMISS ANY CITIZEN'S ATTEMPT TO CLAIM THEIR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS
The purpose of the guide is clearly to INSTRUCT JUDGES HOW TO DENY, IGNORE, DISMISS ANY CITIZEN'S ATTEMPT TO CLAIM THEIR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS
The grant was made by the State Justice Institute.
On November 2, Attorney General Ashcroft submitted the Department of Justice's statutorily- mandated evaluation of SJI's effectiveness to the House and Senate Judiciary Committees. The report concluded that:
SJI appears to have been effective in awarding grants to improve the quality of justice in the state courts, facilitating better coordination and information sharing between state and federal courts, and fostering solutions to common problems faced by all courts.
The Attorney General also observed that "some degree of support for state court innovation and improvement is a Federal interest. . . . given overlapping state-federal jurisdiction, it is in the federal government's interest to have effective and fair state courts, lest litigants turn to federal courts to resolve matters properly within state court responsibilities."
An excellent expose as to how Judges are trained to railroad the pro se litigant in court.
- - -
New info for some AiLLers, familiar to others...
LawResearchGroup.com also offers Richard Cornforth's 5-DVD set, and some of his newer materials, which I believe are a good complementary resource alongside of AiLL and related intellectual ammunition. (watch some excerpts on Google Video to see why...)