Tag: Administrative Courts

  • Why Court Orders Are Often Color of Law

    By: Joel Stephen Mattson How Most Court Rulings Violate Due Process, Jurisdiction, and the Constitution 1. What Is “Color of Law” and Why Does It Matter? “Color of law” refers to actions taken by government agents under the appearance of legal authority that have no lawful basis. Many court orders, especially from administrative and lower…

  • Turning the 14th Amendment Fraud Into Your Legal Weapon – Part 2

    How to Reclaim Your Status, Challenge Jurisdiction, and Shatter Legal Presumptions 1. Reclaiming What Was Stolen: Status Is Everything The 14th Amendment created a second class of citizenship: “citizens of the United States.” This was not a clarification; it was a reclassification that placed Americans under federal jurisdiction as subjects of a municipal corporation. This…

  • HOW THE MAGISTRATE ACT WAS WEAPONIZED AGAINST YOU

    By: Joel Stephen Mattson Most people walk into a courtroom without realizing they’re not standing in front of a judge—they’re standing in front of a magistrate. A corporate employee. An administrative agent. And the scariest part? You probably gave them permission without even knowing it. In this article, we’ll break down how the Federal Magistrate…

  • Millions of Inmates, One Hidden Rule: Consent Makes or Breaks the Entire System

    By: Joel Stephen Mattson There’s a reason the United States has the highest incarceration rate in the world—and it’s not just about crime. It’s about jurisdictional fraud, hidden consent, and a silent legal presumption that traps millions of people without them even realizing it. The foundation of nearly every conviction in America is this one…

  • You Never Consented: Why Silence Is Not a Contract in Court

    By: Joel Stephen Mattson Most people believe that by simply showing up to court, they’re complying with a lawful process. But what they don’t realize is that just stepping into the courtroom—especially an Article I court—is being interpreted as consent to that court’s jurisdiction. Not because you agreed in writing, not because you signed a…