Jural Assemblies are the organizational units of land and soil jurisdiction courts. During the assembly phase of reconstruction, the Jural Assembly bears the responsibility of getting these courts up and running. The State Jural Assembly takes up judicial issues that affect the People of the State and the
From Article 1501 – “For All the Jural Assemblies”
enforcement of the Public Law, including enforcement of the Constitutions and running the People’s Court and elections related to the Courts and Peacekeeping functions and officials.
Unlike the State General Assembly, the State Jural Assembly runs all year long and pretty much twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week. The State Jural Assembly, like the State General
Assembly, is composed of qualified Jurors who are State Citizens and State Electors, that is, people of the republican states who have volunteered to serve the State Government in the capacity of Jurors. Jurors are typically not paid unless they are called to serve as part of a jury, either a Grand Jury or a Trial Jury. Sheriffs and Justices, both State Justices and Justices of the Peace, Clerks, Bondsmen, Coroners, and other elected and hired members of the People’s Court
are paid either a monthly salary or on a case by case basis, or as agreed upon.
Jural Assembly meetings are special meetings organized by the active members of the Jural Assembly, all of whom are members of the Jury Pool, able to serve on both the Grand Jury and Trial Juries or as officers of the courts.
Jural Assemblies are the organizational units of land and soil jurisdiction courts.
Jural Assemblies organize the land and soil jurisdiction courts owed to the people of each State.
Jural Assembly organizers are responsible for the making sure that candidate members are eligible to serve
As a result, land and soil jurisdiction courts organized by Jural Assemblies are courts for people
In most States, candidates must be at least 21, must have permanent homes declared within the geographic boundaries of their State, must be landowners (even if the land owned is only their reclaimed Good Name and bodily Estate)
State or County?
State Jural Assembly members are, by default, County Jural Assembly members. If you think about it, if you live on a particular state, you also live on a county within that state, right?
Sub Committees
Court Venue Committee
Law Education Committee
Jury Pool Committee
Court Oversight Committee
Sheriff’s Committee
Coroner’s Office Committee
Litigation Committee
Jury Pool Committee
Our Common Law courts need capable and willing jury members to step up and take the bull by the horn to curtail the injustice in our great country today.
A Jury Pool is not a body of water. It is a group of living woman and men 21 years of age or older and able to meet all the criteria for serving on a jury in court.
What kind of court? Good question. Not a volley ball or basketball or tennis court. But a common law court. A fully functional court of real law, by and for the People.
To participate in the Jury Pool on Tennessee we must first have changed our status to that of an American State Citizen or to an American State National willing to serve as an American State Citizen for the duration of jury duty.
The obligation to be present as a juror for the duration of jury duty may involve one day or a month of volunteer service to our state. It could entail just one trial or several.
We on Tennessee don’t yet have a good mental picture of how common law court will look or how long it will take to stand up our Republic system of law, but one thing is for sure, until we do and do it well, we will continue to be subjected to the a system of justice and law that was never intended to exist.
Injustice as the color of law prevails on our land. We are taken advantage of everyday by incorporated courts, corruption from the squad car to the flag pole on top of the State of State of Tennessee Capitol building.
To bring our land and soil back under the Constitution, the Bill of Rights and the inalienable rights designed into our very being then we must start by standing up our Tennessee Jural Assembly with all of it’s components.
While there are several sub-committees that make up the Jural Assembly, our Jury Pool must be among the first to become fully functional. To make this a reality we need 35-50 ready, willing and qualified Tennesseans to sit on a Grand Jury and to be ready for lessor courtroom situations.
Sheriffs Committee
Works with the County Sheriffs to evaluate and bring forward the concerns of the Assembly County Sheriffs to better assist them in the performance of their duties.
Coroner’s Office Committee
Takes on the oversight functions for the Coroner’s Office, investigates complaints and works with the Coroner and his staff to improve their service and capabilities, record keeping, and end of life services.
Litigation Committee
Works with Assembly Members who have active litigation concerns to assist them with asserting their position with respect to the foreign courts and educating them to avoid entrapment.
