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About
the Author |
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Mr.
Leo Donofrio is a semi-retired New Jersey
attorney who brought a case in 2008 against the
New Jersey secretary of state for allowing threelegallyunqualified presidential
candidates to be placed on the general election
ballot in that state. This case was reviewed and
dismissed by the Supreme Court of New Jersey,
and then was reviewed by all nine justices of
the U.S. Supreme Court in a private
closed-door session. At least five of the
nine U.S. Supreme Court justices felt that this
case should not be heard in a public session of
the Court.
In
addition to being a prominent legal scholar and
essayist, Mr. Donofrio is also a nationally
known chess champion, poker champion and
musician. | |
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All of us may one day
serve as grand jurors in federal court, and I hope this
article will educate the reader to his/her true power as
granted by the Constitution. For that power, despite
having been hidden for many years behind the veil of a
legislative fraud, still exists in all of its glory in the
5th Amendment to the Constitution. The US Supreme Court
has confirmed and reinforced that power.
So please, copy this
report and paste it far and wide. It is not spin. It is
not false. It is not for sale, it is not copyrighted by
me, so paste and quote it freely. This report is the truth
and we need truth, now, more than ever.
The Constitutional power of
"we the people" sitting as grand jurors has been
subverted by a deceptive play on words since 1946 when the
Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure were enacted.
Regardless, the power I am going to explain to you still
exists in the Constitution, and has been upheld by the
United States Supreme Court despite the intention of the
legislature and other legal scholars to make our power
disappear with a cheap magic trick.
Repeat a lie with force and
repetition and the lie becomes known as truth. In the case
of the 5th Amendment to the Constitution, the power of the
grand jury, to return ?presentments? on its own
proactive initiation, without reliance upon a US Attorney
to concur in such criminal charges, has been usurped by an
insidious play on words.
Most of this article is
going to quote other scholars, judges and legislators as I
piece together a brief but thorough history of the federal
grand jury for your review. But the punch line is my
personal contribution to the cause:
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"Investigating seditious acts of government
officials can be deemed inappropriate or unavailing
by the prosecutor, or the judge can dismiss the
grand jurors pursuing such investigations.
Consequently, corrupt government officials have few
natural enemies and go about their seditious
business unimpeded."
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UNITED STATES CITIZENS
SITTING AS FEDERAL GRAND JURORS ARE THE FOURTH BRANCH OF
THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT.
My input into this vital
fight is no more than the analysis of a few carefully used
words. It only took a small sleight of pen back in 1946 to
hide our power, and it won?t take more than a few words
to take that power back. But a proper overview is
necessary for most of you who are unfamiliar with the
issue at hand. So let me provide you with some history and
then we?ll see what went wrong and how to correct it.
HISTORY OF FEDERAL GRAND JURY POWER
I want to draw your
attention to a law review article, CREIGHTON LAW REVIEW,
Vol. 33, No. 4 1999-2000, 821, IF
IT?S NOT A RUNAWAY, IT?S NOT A REAL GRAND JURY by
Roger Roots, J.D.
"In addition to its traditional role of
screening criminal cases for prosecution, common law
grand juries had the power to exclude prosecutors from
their presence at any time and to investigate public
officials without governmental influence. These
fundamental powers allowed grand juries to serve a
vital function of oversight upon the government. The
function of a grand jury to ferret out government
corruption was the primary purpose of the grand jury
system in ages past."
The 5th Amendment:
"No person shall be held to answer for a
capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a
presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury."
An article appearing in American
Juror, the
newsletter of the American Jury Institute and the Fully
Informed Jury Association, citing the famed American
jurist, Joseph Story, explained :
"An indictment is a written accusation of
an offence preferred to, and presented, upon oath, as
true, by a grand jury, at the suit of the government.
An indictment is framed by the officers of the
government, and laid before the grand jury.
Presentments, on the other hand, are the result of a
jury?s independent action:
'A presentment, properly speaking, is an
accusation, made by a grand jury of its own mere
motion, of an offence upon its own observation and
knowledge, or upon evidence before it, and without any
bill of indictment laid before it at the suit of the
government. Upon a presentment, the proper officer of
the court must frame an indictment, before the party
accused can be put to answer it.' "
Back to the Creighton
Law Review:
"A 'runaway' grand jury, loosely
defined as a grand jury which resists the accusatory
choices of a government prosecutor, has been virtually
eliminated by modern criminal procedure. Today?s ?runaway?
grand jury is in fact the common law grand jury of the
past. Prior to the emergence of governmental
prosecution as the standard model of American criminal
justice, all grand juries were in fact ?runaways,?
according to the definition of modern times; they
operated as completely independent, self-directing
bodies of inquisitors, with power to pursue unlawful
conduct to its very source, including the government
itself."
So, it?s clear that
the Constitution intended to give the grand jury power to
instigate criminal charges, and this was especially true
when it came to government oversight. But something
strange happened on the way to the present. That power was
eroded by a lie enacted by the legislative branch. The 5th
Amendment to the Constitution still contains the same
words quoted above, but if you sit on a grand jury and
return a "presentment" today, the prosecutor must sign
it or it probably won?t be allowed to stand by the judge
and the criminal charges you have brought to the court?s
attention will be swept away. And the reason for this can
be found in a legislative lie of epic proportions.
Mr. Roots weighs in again:
"In 1946, the Federal Rules of Criminal
Procedure were adopted, codifying what had previously
been a vastly divergent set of common law procedural
rules and regional customs.[86] In general, an effort
was made to conform the rules to the contemporary
state of federal criminal practice.[87] In the area of
federal grand jury practice, however, a remarkable
exception was allowed. The drafters of Rules 6 and 7,
which loosely govern federal grand juries, denied
future generations of what had been the
well-recognized powers of common law grand juries:
powers of unrestrained investigation and of
independent declaration of findings. The committee
that drafted the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure
provided no outlet for any document other than a
prosecutor-signed indictment. In so doing, the
drafters at least tacitly, if not affirmatively, opted
to ignore explicit constitutional language."[88]"
Rule
7 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure (FRCP):
"An offense which may be punished by
death shall be prosecuted by indictment. An offense
which may be punished by imprisonment for a term
exceeding one year or at hard labor shall be
prosecuted by indictment?"
No mention of "presentments"
can be found in Rule 7. But they are mentioned in Note 4
of the Advisory
Committee Notes on the Rules:
"4. Presentment is not included as an
additional type of formal accusation, since
presentments as a method of instituting prosecutions
are obsolete, at least as concerns the Federal courts."
The American Juror
published the following commentary
with regards to Note 4:
"[W]hile the writers of the federal rules
made provisions for indictments, they made none for
presentments. This was no oversight. According to
Professor Lester B. Orfield, a member of the Advisory
Committee on Rules of Criminal Procedure, the drafters
of Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure Rule 6 decided
the term presentment should not be used, even though
it appears in the Constitution. Orfield states [22
F.R.D. 343, 346]:
'There was an annotation by the Reporter on
the term presentment as used in the Fifth Amendment.
It was his conclusion that the term should not be used
in the new rules of criminal procedure. Retention
might encourage the use of the run-away grand jury as
the grand jury could act from their own knowledge or
observation and not only from charges made by the
United States attorney. It has become the practice for
the United States Attorney to attend grand jury
hearings, hence the use of presentments have been
abandoned.' "
That's a fascinating
statement: ?Retention might encourage?the grand jury
[to] act from their own knowledge or observation.? God
forbid, right America? The nerve of these people. They
have the nerve to put on the record that they intended to
usurp our Constitutional power, power that was intended by
the founding fathers, in their incredible wisdom, to
provide us with oversight over tyrannical government.
And so they needed a
spin term to cast aspersions on that power. The term they
chose was, "runaway grand jury", which is nothing more
than a Constitutionally mandated grand jury, aware of
their power, and legally exercising that power to hold the
federal beast in check, as in "checks and balances".
The lie couldn?t be
inserted into the Constitution, so they put it in a
statute and then repeated it. And scholars went on to
repeat it, and today, as it stands, the grand jury has
effectively been lied into the role of submissive puppet
of the US Attorney.
The American
Juror publication
included a very relevant commentary:
"Of course, no statute or rule can alter
the provisions of the Constitution, since it is the
supreme law of the land. But that didn?t prevent the
federal courts from publishing a body of case law
affirming the fallacy that presentments were
abolished. A particularly egregious example:
?A rule that would permit anyone to
communicate with a grand jury without the supervision
or screening of the prosecutor or the court would
compromise, if not utterly subvert, both of the
historic functions of the grand jury, for it would
facilitate the pursuit of vendettas and the
gratification of private malice. A rule that would
open the grand jury to the public without judicial or
prosecutorial intervention is an invitation to anyone
interested in trying to persuade a majority of the
grand jury, by hook or by crook, to conduct
investigations that a prosecutor has determined to be
inappropriate or unavailing." [7]
What is the result?
Investigating seditious acts of government officials can
be deemed inappropriate or unavailing by the prosecutor,
or the judge can dismiss the grand jurors pursuing such
investigations. Consequently, corrupt government officials
have few natural enemies and go about their seditious
business unimpeded.
By the way, they made a
rule to take care of runaways too, in 1946: Rule 6(g):
"At any time for cause shown the court
may excuse a juror either temporarily or permanently,
and in the latter event the court may impanel another
person in place of the juror excused.? Now judges
can throw anyone off a grand jury, or even dis-impanel
a grand jury entirely, merely for exercising its
discretion."
Now let me add my two
cents to this argument:
Most of the
discussion about Note 4 to Rule 7 of the FRCP takes for
granted that the common law use of ?presentments? (as
codified in the 5th Amendment) was made "illegal" in
1946 by this act. Nothing could be more false. Note 4 does
not contain language that makes the use of presentments
?illegal?, although it had chosen its words carefully
to make it appear as if that is what the legislative
branch intended. But let?s look at Note 4 again:
"4. Presentment is not included as an
additional type of formal accusation, since
presentments as a method of instituting prosecutions
are obsolete, at least as concerns the Federal courts."
The key word is, "obsolete".
Obsolete means ?outmoded?, or "not in use anymore",
but it does not mean "abolished" or "illegal". And
therein lies the big lie. The legislature knew it could
not directly overrule the Constitution, especially with
something so clearly worded as the 5th Amendment, which
grants a power to the people which has a long and noble
purpose in criminal jurisprudence. But the federal beast
legislative branch sought more power to protect themselves
from the oversight of "we the people", and in its
vampire like thirst for more governmental control, it
inserted this insidious Note 4 in the hope that scholars
and judges would play along with their ruse, or in the
alternative, their ruse would appear to be legally viable.
Let's look at some
authoritative legal resources which discuss Note 4:
Susan Brenner, THE
VOICE OF THE COMMUNITY: A CASE FOR GRAND JURY
INDEPENDENCE:
"Finally, federal grand juries' subservience to
prosecutors was exacerbated when the federal system
eliminated the use of presentments, which allowed a
grand jury to bring charges on its own initiative.
(N35) Now, federal grand jurors cannot return charges
in the form of an indictment without a prosecutor?s
consent. (N36) Elimination of the presentment
demonstrates the historical trend towards elimination
of proactive features in the grand jury system."
Did Brenner fall for the
lie or did she cleverly further it when she said, "[T]he
federal system eliminated the use of presentments?" The
federal system did no such thing. Note 4 said the use of
presentments was "obsolete." First of all, Note 4 is
not a law in itself. It is a Note to a law, and the law as
written, does not have anything to say about presentments.
You see the leap Brenner has made? The Constitution
provides for ?presentments?, then the FRCP are enacted
and the Rules therein do not mention presentments, nor due
they ban presentments, and if they did, such a ban would
be unconstitutional, since an administrative enactment
regarding procedure can not overrule the Constitution.
Regardless, it's
irrelevant, since the FRCP does not mention "presentments."
Note 4 simply states that ?presentments? allowed for
in the 5th Amendment of the Constitution have become "obsolete",
or outmoded, which is not to say that they were "eliminated".
Shame on you Susan Brenner. You know damn well that the
Constitution can only be changed by an official Amendment
to it. Nothing can be "eliminated" from the
Constitution by an administrative note.
The use of presentments had
become obsolete because the grand jurors were not aware of
their power. So the use of "presentments" became more
and more rare, and then in 1946 the legislative branch
seized upon the moment to make this power disappear by
waving its magic wand over the Constitution.
Mr. Root got it wrong in
the Creighton
Law Review as
well:
"Before the Federal Rules of Criminal
Procedure ? which made independently-acting grand
juries illegal for all practical purposes ? grand
juries were understood to have broad powers to operate
at direct odds with both judges and prosecutors?"
The FRCP did not make it
"illegal for all practical purposes". That's
patently false. I don?t know if Mr. Root, and/or Susan
Brenner, were acting as the magician?s assistant, but I
can?t imagine how these educated scholars could be so
incredibly ignorant of basic Constitutional law. Give me a
damn break.
But if enough people
repeat the lie, the lie appears to be the truth.
But we have it on good
authority, the Supreme Court, that the lie has no legal
effect.
Justice
Powell, in United States v. Calandra, 414 U.S. 338,
343 (1974), stated:
"The institution of the grand jury is deeply rooted
in Anglo-American history. [n3] In England, the grand
jury [p343] served for centuries both as a body of
accusers sworn to discover and present for trial
persons suspected of criminal wrongdoing and as a
protector of citizens against arbitrary and oppressive
governmental action. In this country, the Founders
thought the grand jury so essential to basic liberties
that they provided in the Fifth Amendment that federal
prosecution for serious crimes can only be instituted
by 'a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury.'
Cf. Costello v. United States, 350 U.S. 359, 361-362
(1956). The grand jury?s historic functions survive
to this day. Its responsibilities continue to include
both the determination whether there is probable cause
to believe a crime has been committed and the
protection of citizens against unfounded criminal
prosecutions. Branzburg v. Hayes, 408 U.S. 665,
686-687 (1972)."
The Note 4 lie
is smashed on the altar of the U.S. Supreme Court, "The
grand jury?s historic functions survive to this day."
Take that Note 4!
Antonin Scalia effectively
codified the unique independent power of the Fourth Branch
into the hands of all citizens sitting as federal grand
jurors. In discussing that power and unique independence
granted to the grand jury, the United States Supreme
Court, in United
States v. Williams, 504 U.S. 36 at 48 (1992),
Justice Scalia, delivering the opinion of the court, laid
down the law of the land:
" '[R]ooted in long centuries of
Anglo-American history, Hannah v. Larche, 363 U.S.
420, 490 (1960) (Frankfurter, J., concurring in
result), the grand jury is mentioned in the Bill of
Rights, but not in the body of the Constitution. It
has not been textually assigned, therefore, to any of
the branches described in the first three Articles. It
"'is a constitutional fixture in its own right.'"
United States v. Chanen, 549 F.2d 1306, 1312 (CA9
1977) (quoting Nixon v. Sirica, 159 U.S. App. D.C. 58,
70, n. 54, 487 F.2d 700, 712, n. 54 (1973)), cert.
denied, 434 U.S. 825 (1977). ' "
I submit to you that
this passage sets the stage for a revolutionary knew
context necessary and Constitutionally mandated to "we
the people," THE FOURTH BRANCH of the Government of the
United States. Besides, the Legislative, Executive, and
Judicial branches, I submit that there is a fourth branch,
THE GRAND JURY, and "we the people? when sitting as
grand jurors, are, as Scalia quoted in US v. Williams, "
a constitutional fixture in its own right?. Yes, damn
it. That is exactly what the grand jury is, and what it
was always intended to be.
Scalia also stated, that
?the grand jury is an institution separate from the
courts, over whose functioning the courts do not preside??
Id.
And finally, to seal the
deal, Scalia hammered the point home:
"In fact, the whole theory of its function is
that it belongs to no branch of the institutional
Government, serving as a kind of buffer or referee
between the Government and the people. See Stirone v.
United States, 361 U.S. 212, 218 (1960); Hale v.
Henkel, 201 U.S. 43, 61 (1906); G. Edwards, The Grand
Jury 28-32 (1906). Although the grand jury normally
operates, of course, in the courthouse and under
judicial auspices, its institutional relationship with
the Judicial Branch has traditionally been, so to
speak, at arm?s length. Judges? direct involvement
in the functioning of the grand jury has generally
been confined to the constitutive one of calling the
grand jurors together and administering their oaths of
office. See United States v. Calandra, 414 U.S. 338,
343 (1974); Fed.Rule Crim.Proc. 6(a). [504 U.S. 36,
48] "
This miraculous quote
says it all, "?the whole theory of its function is
that it belongs to no branch of the institutional
Government, serving as a kind of buffer or referee between
the Government and the people." The Constitution of the
United States, as interpreted by the Supreme Court, gives
rise to a FOURTH BRANCH of Government, THE GRAND JURY. We
the people have been charged with oversight of the
government in our roles as grand jurors.
And at this critical time
in American history, we must, for the protection of our
constitutional republic, take back our power and start
acting as powerful as the other branches of government.
The law is on our side.
So please spread this knowledge as far and wide as you
can. We the people have the right and power under the 5th
Amendment of the Constitution to charge this government
with crimes by returning presentments regardless of
whether the US Attorneys or the federal judges agree with
us. As the Supreme Court has so brilliantly stated, we are
the "buffer between the Government and the people."
Take the reins America.
Pass it on. The Fourth Branch is alive and kickin?.