
True heroes, free-thinkers, radicals, leaders.

The proper role of law enforcement by Richard Mack.
What you should know before serving as a juror.
Here is a good explanation of the differences between a peace officer and law enforcement officer.
From the
decrees of the constitution there can be no appeal, for it emanates from the
highest source of power, the sovereign people. Phoeve. V. Jay
1 Ill. 268
The government used to recognize that the People were the true source of authority.....what happened? It's time to refresh their memory.
MarkMcCoy.com - Articulate Anarchy, Reasoned Rebellion, Paroxysmal Philosophy
Here is a Power Point presentation I used when
I spoke at the Illinois Libertarian Party Convention in 2006. My
speech focused on the Common Law, and how it is still operative in
Illinois. Officials often portray individuals who invoke the
Common Law as being fringe, patriot or militia radicals; and there
is much confusion and misunderstanding of what the Common Law is.
The Common Law embodies long-held judicial decisions dating back
hundreds of years. It stands in distinction to statutory law,
which is man-made law and often mala prohibita in nature. The
application of statutes in relation to the Common Law is to
modify, amend, or address shortcomings in the Common Law to
address the application of the Common Law to modern-day issues
where the Common Law had not previously been applied. The notes
below I gleaned from the Corpus Juris Secundum which is the
authoritative Legal Encyclopedia used by legal professionals and
jurists. I have also included an additional analysis of the City
of St. Louis, Missouri Earnings Tax, which imposes a 1% tax upon
the "wages" of "taxpayers" working within the corporate limits of
the City of St. Louis, Missouri. I attempt to clarify and
illustrate the chicanery and confusion used in the wording of the
City Code which attempts to impose a tax upon working people. You
will need the ability to view Microsoft PowerPoint slide shows to
view the presentation.
Click here to view the Slide Show Presentation.
Common Law in Illinois
Corpus Juris Secundum on the Common Law § § 11 et seq.
The common law of England, so far as applicable and of a general
nature, is in full force in Illinois until repealed by legislative
authority.
There is no national common law operative as such throughout the
United States, and the adoption and application of the common law
were matters left to the several states for determination.
Under the Act of March 5, 1874, which is still in effect, the General Assembly provided: "The common law of England, so far as the same is applicable and of a general nature, and all statutes or acts of the British parliament made in aid of, and to supply the defects of the common law, prior to the fourth year of James the First, excepting the second section of the sixth chapter of 43d Elizabeth, the eighth chapter of 13th Elizabeth, and ninth chapter of 37th Henry Eighth, and which are of a general nature and not local to that kingdom, shall be the rule of decision, and shall be considered as of full force until repealed by legislative authority." The fourth year of James the First began March 24, 1606.
This statute, without the exceptions, was passed by the general convention of the Colony of Virginia, May, 1776, and in its present form was carried into the legislature of the Indiana Territory by the Act of September 7, 1807, was in force in the territory of Illinois and was reenacted by the first state legislature by Act of February 4, 1819, and has been retained in the same form in succeeding revisions. The statute is declaratory of what was the law by which the inhabitants of the territory now constituting the State of Illinois were governed, and of the rights, privileges, and immunities to which they were entitled ever since Anglo-Saxon civilization first obtained a foothold in it.
The legislature fixed the fourth year of James the First,
instead of the date of the Declaration of Independence, or of the
formation of our Constitution, as the period for transplanting the
common law of England because that was the period at which the
first territorial government was established in America, and with
it the common law of England as it then existed.
As a result of the Act, the great body of the
English common law became, so far as applicable, in force in this
state, and remains in force except so far as it has been modified
or repealed by statute, or changed or modified by custom as found
in decisions of our courts. The common law, when applicable, is as
much a part of the law of the state, where it has not been
expressly abrogated by statute, as the statutes themselves. In
other words, Illinois is a common law state.
On the other hand, it has long been settled that the adoption has
extended only to cases where the common law is applicable to the
habits and condition of our society and in harmony with the
genius, spirit, and objects of our institutions. The statute
adopting the common law of England does not require the courts to
enforce the local customs of England, but, on the contrary, they
are excluded.
What the statute adopted was not just those doctrines which happened to have already been announced by English courts at the close of the Middle Ages, but rather a system of law whose outstanding characteristics are its adaptability and capacity for growth. The Supreme Court pointed out in the very early case of Penny v. Little, which was quoted in Amann v. Faidy, "That if we are to be restricted to the common law, as it was enacted at fourth James, rejecting all modifications and improvements which have since been made, by practice and statutes, except our own statutes, we will find that system entirely inapplicable to our present condition, for the simple reason that it is more than two hundred years behind the age."
Adoption of English statutes. The Act of March
5, 1874, which is still in effect, adopted not only the common law
of England, but also all statutes in aid thereof or to supply
defects therein passed prior to the fourth year of James the
First, except the second section of the sixth chapter of 43
Elizabeth, the eighth chapter of 13th Elizabeth, and ninth chapter
of 37th Henry the Eighth, which were of a general nature and not
local to that kingdom.
English statutes are not in force in Illinois which were passed
since the fourth year of James the First, or which are
inapplicable to our conditions and inconsistent with our
institutions.
Corpus Juris Secundum on the Common Law § § 14, 15
Various maxims and principles of the common law which are of general application and are suited to the conditions and surroundings of our state have been adopted and are in force to the extent that they have not been superseded by statutory enactment.
Thus, the courts have applied the doctrine of
Mobilia sequuntur personam and the maxim De minimis non curat lex.
In addition, other maxims and principles have been applied, such
as ignorance of the law excuses no one, and everyone of sound and
pure mind is bound at his peril to take knowledge of both the
common and statute law; the law only favors the vigilant; the law
abhors forfeitures and will show them no mercy or favor; persons
must so use their own property and so exercise their own
privileges that they do not thereby destroy or peril the rights of
others; the law does not permit a person to do indirectly what he
cannot do directly; and the law does not require the performance
of a useless act.
Statutes
Rules for the construction of statutes are not rules of law, but are only aids which courts use to ascertain the legislative intent not clearly manifest from the language of the statute.
The purpose of all rules or maxims adopted by the courts for the construction or interpretation of statutes is to discover the true intent and meaning of the law. These rules or maxims are not rules of law, but are merely aids used by the courts in arriving at the real intention of the legislature when that intention is not clearly manifest from the language used.
These rules are useful only in cases of doubt, and are never to be used to create a doubt, but only to remove it.
Definitions.
The General Assembly has the power to make a reasonable definition of the terms used in an act, even though such definitions do not correspond with those contained in other acts. Statutory definitions control in the construction of the terms in an act, and the common-law definitions of those terms must yield to the statutory definitions.
Words defined
The words in a statute may be defined by common usage, by previous judicial construction, as well as by statutory definition, to render the statute certain.
§ 52. Construction as including or binding sovereign
General legislative enactments do not impair the rights of the
sovereign unless such an intent is expressly declared in the
statute.
The rights of the sovereign are never impaired by a general
legislative enactment unless such an intent is expressly declared
in the statute, and the words of a statute applying to private
rights do not affect the rights of the state. The state is not
bound by or included in any act of the General Assembly unless
expressly named or necessarily implied to give effect to the act,
although the rule that general legislative enactments are not
applicable to the state is not violated when the state is made
subject to the provisions thereof by reason of the expressed
intention of the General Assembly to make it subject thereto.
In common usage the word "person" does not include the sovereign,
and statutes employing the word are generally construed to exclude
the sovereign, although the purpose, subject matter, context,
legislative history, and executive interpretation of a statute are
aids to construction which may indicate an intent, by the use of
the term "person," to bring the state or nation within the scope
of the statute. According to the Statute on Statutes, the words
"person" or "persons," as well as all words referring to or
importing persons, may extend and be applied to bodies politic and
corporate as well as individuals.