Traffic - Common Law Q - A

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Common Law Tactics for Traffic – Common Questions

Q: How much time is required to do your common law traffic ticket default process?
A: You will need at least 20 days time before your trial date to serve and file your legal
documents.
Q: What if I have less than 20 days until my trial date?
A: Ask for a postponement of your trial. Call the traffic court clerk. Most traffic court
clerks are authorized to grant you a one time postponement of at least 30 days of your
trial date, and sometimes they are authorized to grant more time. After the court clerk has
granted you a postponement of your trial date and you still need more time, you will
usually have to appear before the judge in court to ask for more time.
If you have less than 20 days until your trial date and the court will not grant you a
postponement
Q: Why is there c/o next to my street address and the word ‘by’ followed by brackets
surrounding my zip code on my legal court documents?
A: The federal government or corporate UNITED STATES attempts to unconstitutionally
expand its jurisdiction of power beyond the ten square mile area of Washington, D.C., its
legal possession and territories, and its lawfully ceded state lands (military bases and
installations, national parks and monuments) by the creation of federal zones, which the
street address and zip codes are a part. By using the street address and the zip code you
are assumed by the courts to be living within a federal zone and within the jurisdiction of
corporate UNITED STATES, and therefore a U.S. Citizen. A U.S. Citizen is the creation
of the state and what the state creates it can control. A creation of the state only has
privileges and not unalienable rights as guaranteed to you in the Constitution.
Q: How many days should I give the prosecutor to rebut my claims in my documents?
A: About 99 percent of the courts across the nation require only 10 calendar days. Check
the traffic court rules for the court where your trial is to be held (usually found on the
internet these days) for this information. If the time limit is not specified in the traffic
court rules then, call the court and ask the clerk for the time limit. Don’t be surprised if
the court clerk says he or she does not know. If this is the case then, give the prosecutor
10 calendar days to respond. Please keep in
mind; if the traffic court requires you to give the prosecutor 10 business days to respond,
- 10 business days equals 14 days, plus any court holidays that may fall within that time.
Also, please keep in mind that, you are serving two documents each requiring a 10 day
time limits for a response.
Q: What is the process for serving and filing my documents.
A: See the ‘READ ME’ file that came with your documents.
Q: Who is the prosecutor in my traffic case?
A: This gets to be somewhat confusing at times. Generally the prosecutor is the attorney
who prosecutes crimes in your local community. This prosecutor is known by several
different names across the country. In California and in most other states, the prosecutor
for crimes in general is called the county district attorney. In some states, the prosecutor
is called the state attorney. The prosecutor is also known by other names too in some
areas of the country.
If all of this is not confusing enough for you, the prosecutor for crimes in general may not
be the prosecutor for traffic. The county, city or township in your area can legally
designate another attorney be the prosecutor for traffic. I will use California again as an
example. Within the state of California, some counties and cities have designated the
county district attorney as the prosecutor for traffic case, while others will designate the
city attorney as the prosecutor for traffic cases.
Please keep in mind that the officer can not legally be the prosecutor. You must serve the
legal prosecutor in your case. (This is further discussed in the ‘READ ME’ files.)
Q: Can the citing officer be the prosecutor in my traffic case?
A: No! Not legally. Reason; the courts maintain the legal falsehood that only an attorney
licensed by the BAR can represent a ‘person’ in court (fictional corporate entity). The
prosecutor represents the people or The State of _____in court (a corporation). The state
is an artificial or corporate person which, the law presumes to have the same legal
rights and privileges as do flesh and blood people, IF you do nothing to assert your rights
and declare yourself a living man/woman, and force THEM to prove their claim and
prove you status as a corporate fiction entity, which you are not. For this reason the state
being a legal person ( a mere corporate entity), must be represented in court by a BAR
attorney. (This is a secondary defense to get your case dismissed, discussed in the ‘READ
ME’ files.)
Q: What do I do if the judge refuses to dismiss my case based upon the default of the
prosecutor?
A: The ‘READ ME’ file contains the answers to this question.

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