PERSON
Texas Code of Criminal Procedure
Art. 17A.01. APPLICATION AND DEFINITIONS. (a) This chapter sets out some of the procedural
rules applicable to the criminal responsibility of corporations and
associations. Where not in conflict with
this chapter, the other chapters of this code apply to corporations and
associations.
(b) In this code, unless the context requires a
different definition:
(4) "Person," "he," and "him" include
corporation and association.
Added by Acts 1973, 63rd Leg., p. 979, ch. 399, Sec.
2(D), eff. Jan. 1, 1974.
{NOTE: This is the only place in the Texas Code of
Criminal Procedure that you find the term “Person” defined. Many court cases have found that the term
“include” means to keep within, not to expand. We have no reason for this other
than corporations commit crimes, where people commit civil offences against his
brother. This is referenced by Rule 137 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure
concerning “In
civil actions for assault and battery, slander and defamation of character,..”
The term person used to be directed to the Texas Penal Code
for reference, but for some reason, the Texas Legislature decided to remove the
reference.}
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JURISDICTION
NOTE:
Jurisdiction is by what
authority they can judge you; make them work for it, by using ‘by special
appearance.’
Title 18 U.S.C.
§ 3231. District courts
The district courts of the United States shall have
original jurisdiction, exclusive of the courts of the States, of all offenses
against the laws of the United States.
Need to designate statute # on indictment or information signed by the
attorney with bond # and not in case file, or the court is not vested with
jurisdiction.
Texas Penal Code, Sec. 1.03.
Effect of Code
(a)
Conduct does
not constitute an offense unless it is defined as an offense by statute,
municipal ordinance, order of a county
commissioners court, or rule authorized by and lawfully adopted
under a statute.
(b) The provisions of Titles 1, 2, and 3 apply to
offenses defined by other laws, unless the statute defining the offense
provides otherwise; however, the punishment affixed to an offense defined
outside this code shall be applicable unless the punishment is classified in
accordance with this code.
(c) This code does not bar, suspend, or otherwise affect a right or
liability to damages, penalty, forfeiture, or other remedy authorized by law to
be recovered or enforced in a civil suit for conduct this code defines as an
offense, and the civil injury is not merged in the offense.
Jurisdiction in the Texas
Code of Criminal Procedure
Art. 2.03. [27] [33] [34] Neglect of duty.
(a) It shall be the
duty of the attorney representing the State to present by information to the court
having jurisdiction, any officer for neglect or failure of any duty enjoined upon such officer, when such neglect
or failure can be presented by information,
whenever it shall come to the knowledge of said attorney that there has been a neglect or failure of duty upon the
part of said officer; and he shall
bring to the notice of the grand jury any act of violation of law or neglect or failure of duty upon the
part of any officer, when such violation, neglect or failure is not presented by information,
and whenever the same may come to his
knowledge.
(b) It is the duty
of the trial court, the attorney representing the accused, the attorney
representing the state and all peace officers to so conduct themselves as to insure a fair trial for
both the state and the defendant, not impair the presumption of innocence, and
at the same time afford the public the benefits of a free press.
Art. 2.04. [28] [34] [35] Shall draw complaints.
Upon complaint being made before a district or county
attorney that an offense has been
committed in his district or county, he
shall reduce the complaint to writing and cause the same to be
signed and sworn to by the complainant, and it shall be duly attested by said attorney.
Art. 2.05. [29] [35] [36] When complaint is made.
If the offense be
a misdemeanor, the attorney shall forthwith prepare an information based upon such
complaint and file the
same in the court having jurisdiction;
provided, that in counties having no county attorney, misdemeanor cases may
be tried upon complaint alone, without an information,
provided, however, in counties having one or more criminal district courts an
information must be filed in each misdemeanor case. If the offense be a felony, he shall
forthwith file the complaint with a magistrate of the county.
NOTE: The above should have been included in the
Information & Complaint Sections – Very Important
Art. 2.10. [34] [42] [43] Duty of magistrates.
It is the duty of every
magistrate to preserve the peace within his jurisdiction by the
use of all lawful means; to issue all process intended to aid in preventing and
suppressing crime; to cause the arrest of offenders by the use of lawful means
in order that they may be brought to punishment.
COURTS AND CRIMINAL JURISDICTION
CHAPTER FOUR--COURTS AND CRIMINAL JURISDICTION
Art.
4.01. [51] [63] [64] What courts have
criminal jurisdiction.
The
following courts have jurisdiction in criminal actions:
1.
The Court of Criminal Appeals;
2.
Courts of appeals;
3.
The district courts;
4.
The criminal
district courts;
5. The magistrates appointed by the judges of
the district courts of Bexar County, Dallas County, Tarrant County, or Travis
County that give preference to criminal cases and the magistrates appointed by
the judges of the criminal district courts of Dallas County or Tarrant County;
6.
The *county courts;
7.
All *county courts at law with criminal jurisdiction;
8.
*County criminal courts;
9.
Justice courts;
10.
Municipal courts; and
11.
The magistrates appointed by the judges of the district courts of
Lubbock County.
Note: * Notice that there are
3 distinct County Courts, to which one did they direct you?
Art.
4.03. [53] [68-86-87] Courts of Appeals.
The
Courts of Appeals shall have appellate jurisdiction coextensive
with the limits of their respective districts in all criminal cases except
those in which the death penalty has been assessed. This Article shall not be so construed as to
embrace any case which has been appealed from any inferior court to the county
court, the county criminal court, or county court at law, in which the fine imposed
by the county court, the county criminal court or county court at law does
not exceed one hundred dollars, unless the sole issue is the
constitutionality of the statute or ordinance on which the conviction is based.
NOTE: They (the judges) usually lower the fine to $90 so
you can’t appeal their decision, but you can appeal the unconstitutional
provision of the statute.
Art.
4.04. [53a] Court of Criminal Appeals.
Sec.
1.
The Court of Criminal Appeals and each judge thereof shall have, and is
hereby given, the power and authority to grant and issue and cause
the issuance of writs of habeas corpus, and, in criminal law matters, the writs
of mandamus, procedendo, prohibition, and certiorari. The court and each judge thereof shall have,
and is hereby given, the power and authority to grant and issue and cause the
issuance of such other writs as may be necessary to protect its jurisdiction
or enforce its judgments.
Sec.
2.
The Court of Criminal Appeals shall have, and is hereby given, final
appellate and review jurisdiction in criminal cases coextensive with
the limits of the state, and its determinations shall be final. The appeal of all cases in which the death
penalty has been assessed shall be to the Court of Criminal Appeals. In addition, the Court of Criminal Appeals
may, on its own motion, with or without a petition for such discretionary
review being filed by one of the parties, review any decision of a court
of appeals in a criminal case.
Discretionary review by the Court of Criminal Appeals is not a matter of
right, but of sound judicial discretion.
Art.
4.05. [54] [88] [87] Jurisdiction of district
courts.
District
courts and criminal district courts shall have original jurisdiction
in criminal cases of the grade of felony, of all misdemeanors involving
official misconduct, and of misdemeanor cases transferred to the district court
under Article 4.17 of this code.
Art. 4.07.
[56] [98] [91] Jurisdiction of county
courts.
The
county courts shall have original jurisdiction of all
misdemeanors of which exclusive original jurisdiction is not given to
the justice court, and when the fine to be imposed shall exceed
five hundred dollars.
Art. 4.08. [57] [101-897]
Appellate jurisdiction of county courts.
The
county courts shall have appellate jurisdiction in criminal cases
of which justice courts and other inferior courts have original jurisdiction.
NOTE: Notice the appellate
jurisdiction of the county courts comes from a case from a justice court or
other inferior court, which means that the county court does not have original
jurisdiction to here the trial de novo. This way the county court can only rule
on your paperwork or dismiss the case.
Art. 4.09.
[58] [105] [95] Appeals from inferior court.
If the jurisdiction
of any *county court has been transferred to the district court or to a *county
court at law, then an appeal from a justice or other inferior court will
lie to the court to which such appellate jurisdiction has been
transferred.
Art. 4.10.
[59] [99] [92] To forfeit bail bonds.
*County
courts and *county courts at law shall have jurisdiction in the
forfeiture and final judgment of all bail bonds and personal bonds taken in
criminal cases of which said courts have jurisdiction.
Art. 4.11.
[60] [106] [96] Jurisdiction of justice
courts.
(a)
Justices of the peace shall have original jurisdiction in
criminal cases:
(1) punishable by fine only; or
(2) punishable by:
(A) a fine; and
(B)
as authorized by statute, a sanction not consisting of confinement or
imprisonment that is rehabilitative or remedial in nature.
(b) The
fact that a conviction in a justice court has as a consequence the imposition
of a penalty or sanction by an agency or entity other than the court, such as a
denial, suspension, or revocation of a privilege, does not affect the original
jurisdiction of the justice court.
Art. 4.12.
[60a] Misdemeanor cases; precinct in which defendant to be tried in
justice court.
(a) Except as otherwise
provided by this article, a misdemeanor case to be tried in justice court shall
be tried:
(1) in the
precinct in which the offense was committed;
(2) in the
precinct in which the defendant or any of the defendants reside; or
(3) with the
written consent of the state and each defendant or the defendant's attorney, in
any other precinct within the county.
(b) In any misdemeanor case in which the offense was
committed in a precinct where there is no qualified justice court, then trial
shall be held:
(1) in the
next adjacent precinct in the same county which has a duly qualified justice
court; or
(2) in the
precinct in which the defendant may reside.
(c) In any misdemeanor case in which each justice of
the peace in the precinct where the offense was committed is disqualified for
any reason, such case may be tried in the next adjoining precinct in the same
county having a duly qualified justice of the peace.
Art. 4.14. [62] [108] [98] Jurisdiction of municipal court.
(a) A municipal court,
including a municipal court of record, shall have exclusive original jurisdiction
within the territorial limits of the municipality in all criminal cases that:
(1) arise under the ordinances of the municipality;
and
(2) are punishable by a fine not to exceed:
(A)
$2,000 in all cases arising under municipal ordinances that govern fire safety,
zoning, or public health and sanitation, including dumping of refuse; or
(B) $500 in all other cases arising under a
municipal ordinance.
(b) The municipal court
shall have concurrent jurisdiction with the justice court of a
precinct in which the municipality is located in all criminal cases
arising under state law that:
(1) arise within the territorial limits of the
municipality; and
(2) are punishable by fine only, as defined in
Subsection (c) of this article.
(c) In this article, an
offense which is punishable by "fine only" is defined as an offense
that is punishable by fine and such sanctions as authorized by statute not
consisting of confinement in jail or imprisonment that are rehabilitative
or remedial in nature.
(d) The fact that a
conviction in a municipal court has as a consequence the imposition of a
penalty or sanction by an agency or entity other than the court, such as a
denial, suspension, or revocation of a privilege, does not affect the
original jurisdiction of the municipal court.
(e) The municipal court
has jurisdiction in the forfeiture and final judgment of all bail bonds
and personal bonds taken in criminal cases of which the court has jurisdiction.
Art. 4.15. [63] [109] [99] May sit at any time.
Justice courts and
corporation courts may sit at any time to try criminal cases over
which they have jurisdiction.
Any case in which a fine may be assessed shall be tried in accordance
with the rules of evidence and this Code.
Art. 4.16. [64] [63] Concurrent jurisdiction.
When
two or more courts have concurrent jurisdiction of any criminal
offense, the court in which an indictment or a complaint shall first be
filed shall retain jurisdiction except as provided in Article 4.12.
Art.
4.17. Transfer of certain misdemeanors.
On
a plea of not guilty to a misdemeanor offense punishable by confinement in
jail, entered in a *county court of a judge who is not a licensed attorney,
on the motion of the state or the defendant, the judge may
transfer the case to a district court having jurisdiction in the county
or to a *county court at law in the county presided over by a judge who
is a licensed attorney. The judge may
make the transfer on his own motion. The attorney representing the state in the
case in *county court shall continue the prosecution in the court to which the
case is transferred. Provided, in no case may
any such case be transferred to a district court except with the written
consent of the judge of the district court to which the transfer is sought.
Art. 21.26. [419] [483] [471] Order transferring
cases.
Upon the filing of an
indictment in the district
court which charges an offense over which such court has no jurisdiction,
the judge of such court shall make an order transferring the same to such
inferior court as may have jurisdiction, stating in such order the cause
transferred and to what court transferred.
Art.
21.30. [423] [487] [475] Cause
improvidently transferred.
When a cause
has been improvidently transferred to a court which has no jurisdiction
of the same, the court to which it has been transferred shall order it to be
re-transferred to the proper court; and the same proceedings shall be had as in
the case of the original transfer. In
such case, the defendant and the witnesses shall be held bound to appear before
the court to which the case has been re-transferred, the same as they were
bound to appear before the court so transferring the same.
Art.
27.08. [511] [575] [564] Exception to
substance of indictment.
There is no
exception to the substance of an indictment or information except:
1. That it does not appear therefrom that an
offense against the law was committed by the defendant;
2. That it appears from the face thereof that a
prosecution for the offense is barred by a lapse of time, or that the
offense was committed after the finding of the indictment;
3.
That it contains matter which is a legal defense or bar to the
prosecution; and
4.
That it shows upon its face that the court trying the case has no jurisdiction
thereof.
Art. 36.11. [655] [731-733] Discharge before verdict.
If it
appears during a trial that the court has no jurisdiction of the
offense, or that the facts charged in the indictment do not
constitute an offense, the jury shall be discharged. The accused shall also be discharged, but
such discharge shall be no bar in any case to a prosecution before the proper
court for any offense unless termination of the former prosecution was
improper.
NOTE: The above article should be used for a motion to
dismiss, stating that a statute charged against someone not required by
applicability of such charge creates no offense. Example:
being charged for failure of having a log book or weight scale
certificate in your car, when you are not required to do this, if not operating
an eighteen wheeler on the highway, creates no offense. The same argument could
be used with every statute in the transportation while not in commerce.
Art. 44.0426. [834] [922] Filing bond perfects appeal.
(a) When the appeal bond
has been filed with the justice or judge who tried the case not later
than the 10th day after the date the judgment was entered, the appeal in such
case shall be held to be perfected.
(b) If an appeal bond is not timely filed, the
appellate court does not have jurisdiction over the case and shall remand the
case to the justice or municipal court for execution of the sentence.
(c) An appeal may not be dismissed because the
defendant failed to give notice of appeal in open court. An appeal by the defendant or the state may
not be dismissed on account of any defect in the transcript.
Art. 45.043. [915] [1010] [975] Effect of Appeal
When a defendant files the appeal bond
required by law with the justice or municipal court, all further proceedings in
the case in the justice or municipal court shall cease.
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Jurisdiction in TEXAS
Jurisdictional Statement:
Pursuant to Article 5 Section 8 of the Texas
Constitution: The District Court
jurisdiction consists of exclusive appellate and original jurisdiction of all
actions proceedings and remedies, except in cases where exclusive appellate or
original jurisdiction maybe conferred by this Constitution or other law on some
other court tribunal or administrative body.
District Court did show power to issue writs necessary to enforce their
jurisdiction. The District Court shall
have appellate jurisdiction as general supervisory control of the County
Commissioners Court with certain exceptions and under such regulation as may be
prescribed by law.
Venue Statement:
Venue and instant
action is proper in that, in all times enumerated herein, all actions have
taken place within the City of which is in the County of ________________.
1. Lasher v. State, 30 Tex. App. 387, 17 S.W. 1064 (1891):
State prosecution for forgery occurring at Fort
McIntosh, in U.S. jurisdiction. Court took judicial notice of this fact and
held state had no jurisdiction over the offense.
2. United States v. Schwalby, 8 Tex. Civ. App. 679, 29 S.W. 90 (1894):
Schwalby claimed interest in real property alleged to
be owned by U.S., for which a cession of jurisdiction existed. Suit commenced
for trespass and Schwalby prevailed. On appeal, court held that jurisdiction
within U.S. depended on title, and here the U.S. had only partial title;
jurisdiction of state court upheld.
3. Baker v. State, 47 Tex.Cr.R. 482, 83 S.W. 1122 (1904):
Assault with intent to murder prosecution, the crime
occurring outside Fort Brown on a street. U.S. had title and jurisdiction of
the street, and defendant attempted to prove this but trial court excluded
evidence holding U.S. had jurisdiction only within fort. Court reversed and
held that actual boundaries were all important as the state would have no
jurisdiction for an offense occurring on any spot within U.S. jurisdiction.
4. Curry v. State, 111 Tex. Cr. 264, 12 S.W.2d 796 (1928):
Defendant convicted of a fishing offense occurring on
federal property, the land being owned by U.S., but there being no proof of
cession of jurisdiction pursuant to state law. Court held that cession of
jurisdiction by Governor pursuant to statute was essential to transfer
jurisdiction, thus state court had jurisdiction here.
5. United Services Automobile Ass'n. v. Harman, 151 S.W.2d 609 (Tex.Civ.App. 1941):
Soldiers stationed at Fort Hoyle, military reservation
in Maryland, but in U.S. jurisdiction, involved in auto accident in Baltimore;
suit in Maryland had process served upon soldier in enclave. Suits in Texas
instituted to recover against insurer on Maryland judgments, and insurer
attacked Maryland process. Court held that Maryland process regarding a
non-resident was entirely proper.
6. City of Wichita Falls v. Bowen, 143 Tex. 45, 182 S.W.2d 695 (1944):
City annexed adjoining military bases, and bus company
owner was engaged in transportation between city and bases. His argument that
city taxes on fares paid at bases were invalid on jurisdictional grounds was
not sustained.
7. Independent School Dist. of City of El Paso
v. Central Education Agency, 247 S.W.2d 597 (Tex.Civ.App. 1952): El Paso, in
agreement with military officers at Fort Bliss, annexed the reservation to
school district and then sought additional state funding. The court found
nothing improper in such arrangement.
8. Sandel v. State, 158 Tex.Cr.R. 101, 253 S.W.2d 283 (1952):
Auto accident on highway in Fort Hood; defendant was
intoxicated and death resulted, hence murder prosecution. Defendant attacked
state court's jurisdiction and proved title of land in U.S. and act of cession.
State replied by showing that jurisdiction over the road was reserved to the
state. Conviction upheld.
9. Garcia v. State, 169 Tex.Cr.R. 30, 331 S.W.2d 53 (1959):
Defendants employed by U.S. government at El Paso
International Bridge were prosecuted by state for assault with intent to rape.
Because the U.S. Immigration Building at the bridge was only leased to the
U.S., court held state court had jurisdiction.
10. Board of Equalization v. General Dynamics
Corp., 344 S.W.2d 489 (Tex. Civ. App. 1961):
U.S. owned land and had obtained cession of
jurisdiction, and General Dynamics had substantial amount of property located
there which City of Fort Worth taxed. Court held that city had no jurisdiction
to impose this tax.
11. Calvert v. Adams, 388 S.W.2d 742 (Tex. Civ. App. 1965):
Amusement machines located at Fort Hood had tax
imposed. In suit to recover taxes, court held same could not be recovered;
reversed, Adams v. Calvert, 396 S.W.2d 948 (Tex. 1965).
12. Humble Oil & Refining Co. v. Calvert, 464 S.W.2d 170 (Tex.Civ.App. 1971):
Held, state could not impose occupation taxes on
company exploiting minerals at Corpus Christi Naval Air Station, in U.S.
jurisdiction. Affirmed, 478 S.W.2d 926 (Tex. 1972).
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DUE PROCESS
Due Process defined under Goldsberg
v. Kelly, 397 US 254
1. Timely Notice.
2. Confront your
adversary witnesses.
3. Oral Arguments.
4. Oral
presentation of evidence.
5. Cross
examination of adverse party
6. Right to an
attorney.
7. Disclosure of
evidence.
8. Determination
of outcome of a Court of Record. (so you don't have to do it again.)
9. Right of finding facts and conclusions of
law. (you have the right to ask the reasoning why a judge is doing what he is
doing.)
10. Right to an impartial judge.
Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, Sec. 2.01 - all other attorneys are charged, "with the
primary duty not to convict but to see justice done. They shall not suppress
facts or secrets witnesses capable of establishing the innocence of the
accused."
Chapter 45
of the Code of Criminal Procedures are where the rules of the Municipal Courts
supposedly use.
Tex. Cod. of Crim. Proc. 45.025 - Defendant may waive jury.
Tex. Cod. of Crim. Proc. 45.024 - If defendant
refuses to plead, the justice shall enter a plea of not guilty.
Tex. Cod. of Crim. Proc. 45.020 - The defendant
has a right to appear by counsel as in all other cases. State's counsel may
open and conclude the argument.
Tex. Cod. of Crim. Proc. 45.011 - The rules of
evidence shall apply to such actions in justice courts.
Tex. Cod. of Crim. Proc. 45.037 - An application
for a new trial must be made within one day after the rendition of judgment and
sentence, and not afterward.
Tex. Cod. of Crim. Proc. 45.040 - In no case
shall the State be entitled to a new trial.
Tex. Cod. of Crim. Proc. 45.041 - All judgments
and sentences and final orders of the justice shall be rendered in open
court.
Tex. Cod. of Crim. Proc. 45.051 Sec. 6 - Records relating to a complaint dismissed as
provided by this article mat be expunged under Article 55.01 of this code.
Government Code
Book 2, Chapter 29, is on General Law, Chapter 30 gets into separate Court
rules of Municipal Courts.
Gov. Code 30.266 - If the defendant or the state requests a court reporter prior to
trial, the judge shall appoint an official court reporter.
Due process of law. Due process of law implies the right of the party
affected thereby to be present before the tribunal which pronounces judgment
upon the question of life, liberty, or property, in its most comprehensive
sense: to be heard, by testimony or otherwise, and to have a controvert right,
by proof, every material fact which bears on the question of right in the
matter involved. If any question of fact or liability be conclusively presumed
against him, this is not due process of law.
An orderly proceeding wherein a party is served with
notice, actual or constructive, and has an opportunity to be heard and to
enforce and protect his rights before a court having power to hear and
determine the case. Kazubowski v. Kazubowski, 45 Ill.2d 405, 259 N.E.2d 282, 290. Phrase means
that no party shall be deprived of life, property or of any right granted him
by statue, unless matter involved first shall have been adjudicated against him
upon trial conducted according to established rules regulating judicial
proceedings, and it forbids condemnation without a hearing. Pettit v.
Penn, La. App., 180 So.2d 66, 69. The concept of “due
process of law” as it is embodied in the Fifth Amendment demands that a law
shall not be unreasonable, arbitrary, or capricious and that the means selected
shall have reasonable and substantial relation to the object being sought. U.S.
v. Smith, D.C.Iowa, 249 F.Supp. 516. Fundamental requisite of
“due process “ is the opportunity to be heard, to be aware a matter is pending,
to make an informed choice whether to acquiesce or contest, and to assert
before the appropriate decision-making body the reasons for such choice. Trinity
Episcopal Corp. v. Romney, D.C.N.Y., 387 F.Supp. 1044, 1084. Aside from all
else, “due process” means fundamental fairness and substantial justice. Vaughn
v. State, 3 Tenn. Crim. App. 54, 456 S.W.2d 879, 883. Refer.
BLD. 6th page 500.
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BEFORE ARRAIGNMENT
At the Clerks office, ask for and get the Verified
Complaint and a list of all Judges and Attorneys that may confront you during
trial.
If the Clerk will not give
this to you, ask if they are an attorney, if not, then get their
supervisor. If the supervisor will not
help, ask to speak to the judge or someone with the authority to speak. Don’t take NO for an answer. You must get the
list, so you can check them out. Texas Const. Article 1, Section 10 verifies
this right.
If you do not get this information, File a Motion to Dismiss for not following Article
1, Section 10.
Always check to see if the Judge is a judge in
different courts, which is illegal. This
can be done by checking with the City and State, under the authority of Article
16, Sec. 40. of the Texas Constitution.
Use the 'Request for Access to Public Information' form. An example form
is found in this reference book.
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ARRAIGNMENT
Always ask, “by what authority do you speak to me on
this mater?” Other possible demands:
By Texas Constitution, Article 5, Section 21, a
City Attorney cannot prosecute for the State of Texas, so I don’t have to talk
to you.
I’ve done a search and he is not an Attorney.
I’ve done a search and you are not a judge.
You will state that you cannot plead because the court
is not properly set. The proper person is not there to represent the
State.
I can’t plead, I haven’t got a copy of the complaint, per 45.018 of the Texas code of Criminal Procedure.
(The
Judge will always plead “Not Guilty” for you. This is in the Code of Criminal
Procedures, to let him do this, but only if you refuse to plead. See previous page
& page 26.)
In some situations, you may want to try to plead,
“confession and avoidance.” This means
the accusation filed against you does not apply to the activity that you were
engaged in at the time of being detained. The judge will ignore this, but in a
court of record, this will be an issue for appeal. If the court is a court of
non-record, then everything you do is for practice and does not mean anything
as the appeal to the higher court is considered a trial de novo, meaning that
it action against you starts over as though nothing was done before in the previous court. Bazaar
State to the Judge that he does not have Subject
Matter Jurisdiction, since his clerk swore to the Verified Complaint and
that the Clerk is an agent
working for the Principal, which is the Judge, and the judge cannot preside or
anything, where he is involved as being the damaged party, which is stated in
the Code of Criminal Procedure.
Texas Constitution, Art.1, Sec. 13 says that all trials will be OPEN; don't go in his
Chambers unless you bring in a witness.
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PRE-TRIAL
After arraignment, put in Motion To Show Cause, using
Rule 12 in the Texas Rules of Court, asking the judge to send an Order to the
prosecutor to bring—to a Show Cause Hearing—his delegated authority to represent the State of Texas
in this court case. Usually the time
limit is ten days till the Show Cause Hearing.
If the judge won’t do it, you could always write up a Writ of Mandamus send it to
district court and make him do it. You
know by now or can find in this reference only the county attorney can
represent the state, and the city attorney doesn’t have the authority to
represent it unless you give him/her consent.
When the Judge asked if you are ready for trial, you
are NEVER "ready", because the court is not properly set.
NOTE: Rules of argument states that you get to open arguments
of motions, then after the prosecutor, you get to close, before the judge makes
a ruling. Found in the Rules of Criminal Procedure in article 28.08 .
CCRP 28.01(2) Pre Trial
TCCrP Art.
28.01. [522] [587] [576] Pre-trial.
Sec. 2. When a criminal case is set for such
pre-trial hearing, any such preliminary matters not raised or filed seven
days before the hearing will not thereafter be allowed to be raised or
filed, except by permission of the court for good cause shown; provided that
the defendant shall have sufficient notice of such hearing to allow him not
less than 10 days in which to raise or file such preliminary
matters. The record made at such
pre-trial hearing, the rulings of the court and the exceptions and objections
thereto shall become a part of the trial record of the case upon its merits.
The Texas Code of Criminal Procedure (CCRP) does not
have an enacting clause and is not law.
But by making special appearance and challenge
jurisdiction, and telling them that they do not have the threshold
prerequisites that are required for them to have jurisdiction.
*****************
TRIAL
After Pretrial and when you know when the trial date
is set - Subpoena the Clerk, Cop, and whoever else you can show of Non - Due
Process. If the attorney tries to squash (quash) the subpoenas, your argument
is that you have the right to be faced with your accusers, per Article 1,
Section 10 of the Texas Constitution.
You ask the person who swore to the complaint - Where &
How do you know me or about the case?
Did you see me do this? Do you
know that a crime even happened? Why did
you swear to my complaint? Who did you
swear to? How many complaints do you
swear to that day?
*****************
MOTIONS
The following
pages show an Affidavit, a Certificate of Service (that is used with Motions, etc., to notify
the court), an Order (something you write up to get the judge
to make a Court Order—if it’s ready to go, it’s all the easier for him
to sign off; he doesn’t have to think about it much), and some Bills and
Notices. See external files for original and/or modern
Motions.
The
Table of Contents AND the original Motions (2001-2003
era) themselves are in file:
EasyREF_Motions-originals.doc.
The
Table of Contents for the newer (2006) separate set of Motions,
annotated with instructions & usage suggestions, is file: MotionsModernINDEX-anno.rtf. Then those new Motions are listed by their
assigned number, and each Motion is a separate file. See also an unannotated list of
Motions-by-number in Appendix B at the end of this Easy Ref. Book,
below.
*****************
AFFIDAVITS
A Bill of Exception - is an affidavit, which states that the court room procedure was not
followed at stated in the Texas Rules of Criminal Procedure. You need three
witnesses or a court of record transcript.
Affidavits should be done at any and every incident
which do occur in your life, where they may need to be remembered in the
future. (Like being stopped for a traffic ticket.) Writing down what you remember at the time or
shortly there after. This will show
credibility to your affidavit, than filling one out a month down the road.
Affidavits should be attached
to each Motion to give it force and effect.
EXAMPLE
AFFIDAVIT
I, ______________________________, a Natural Born
Native, herein further known as Affiant, am more than twenty-one (21) years of
age and fully competent to testify to the facts stated herein to which Affiant
has direct and personal knowledge. The
facts testified to are the truth, whole truth, and nothing but the truth to the
best of Affiant's belief.
Affiant believes that Motion For _____________________
has been researched and verified to be correct in every way and should be
considered as Prima Facie until which
time the prosecutor can rebut such information contained is
such attached document.
Further Affiant Sayeth Naught.
_____________________________________________
On this_______ day of __________________, ______,
Before me, ___________________________________, personally appeared as the
above-signed affiant, known to me to be the one who's ascertained name is
signed on this affidavit, and has acknowledged to me that s/he has executed
under ascertained full faith and full knowledge of the same under such
authority of fact would invoke.
Witness Witness
___________________________________ ___________________________________
*****************
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
NOTE: Each Court pleading needs a Certificate of Service document
attached which tells the court how, when and to whom the pleading was sent or
handed to.
EXAMPLE
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I certify that I
delivered, by hand, the original MOTION FOR ____________________________, with
the ORDER ON Accused's MOTION FOR ____________________________,, to the Clerk of the Court
for filing in the ____________________ Court,
at ______________________, _________________, Texas, for Cause #
____________________, on ___________________, 20___. I certify that I
delivered, by hand, a true and correct copy of
MOTION FOR ____________________________,, with the ORDER ON DEFENDANT'S
MOTION FOR ____________________________, to the Prosecutor of the
_______________________ Court, at ________________________,
____________________, Texas, for Cause # __________________, on _____________,
20___.
______________________________
, sui juris
****************
ORDER
Do-it-Yourself NOTE: The Order for the judge
to sign is usually attached to the pleading, where the judge doesn’t have to
take the time to write one up. Most
prosecutors do it and word it the way that the prosecutor would like it to say.
EXAMPLE
IN THE _________________ COURT
IN AND FOR THE CITY OF __________________
STATE OF
TEXAS
Cause No.
_________________
The STATE OF TEXAS § In the ____________________ COURT
§
VS.
§ § City of ________________
_________________________ § County
of _____________
The Accused
ORDER ON DEFENDANT'S MOTION
FOR NATURE AND CAUSE OF THE ACCUSATION(S)
On this the day of ,
A.D., 20___, came on to be heard Defendant's Motion for Nature and Cause of the
Accusation(s) in the above entitled and numbered cause(s), and the court,
having heard the said motion, and the evidence thereon submitted, is of the
opinion that said Motion should be
Granted
Denied, Grounds
Being ________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
It is therefore considered, ordered
and adjudged by the Court that the Defendant's Motion for Nature and Cause of
the Accusation(s) is hereby
Granted
__________ Denied, Grounds
Being ________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
Signed and entered this day of , A.D., 20___.
_____________________________
Judge
Presiding
City
of _________________
______________
County, Texas
****************
BILL OF DISCOVERY
NOTE: The below
document can be sent to the judge, right after arraignment. Just to get his blood a pumping. You can
revise it a little, then send it to the prosecutor, also.
BILL OF DISCOVERY
TO THE HONORABLE JUDGE OF SAID
COURT:
COMES
NOW ____________________________________, sui juris, Aggrieved Party herein,
appearing in propria persona and presents this BILL OF DISCOVERY to aid him in
understanding the charges and thereby enabling him to prepare his defense to
the charge to which he will be asked to plead, which is his right under Article
6 of the Bill of Rights of the Constitution for the United States of America,
and Article I, Section 10 of the Texas Constitution.
Aggrieved
Party believes the statutes used for these charges in this supposedly criminal
court (alleges offenses and collects fines) are from Vernon's Texas Civil
Statutes. Since civil statutes are only
for certain classes of people, Accused is not at all sure the statutes used in
this instant case apply to him, in fact Accused believes the opposite, absent
competent documentary proof.
Accordingly,
if a plaintiff's allegations of jurisdictional facts are challenged by the
defendant, the plaintiff bears the burden of supporting the allegations by
competent proof.
Thomson v. Gaskill 315 US 442, 446
Lack
of jurisdiction is considered to be fundamental error with or without motion or
assignment of error.
County
of Harris v. Black 448 SW 2d 850 (1970)
In
other words, even if not challenged by a party, without jurisdiction all
subsequent proceedings are a nullity, and can be challenged at any later time
by a defendant.
It is noted the 1916 Texas
Penal Code Title I, Article 3 states:
In
order that the system of penal law in force in this state may be complete
within itself, and that no system of foreign laws, written or unwritten, may be
appealed to, it is declared that no person shall be punished for any act or omission,
unless the same is made a penal offense, and a penalty is affixed thereto by
the written law of this state.
Aggrieved Party cannot find this
charge in the Penal Code. This BILL OF
DISCOVERY is in keeping with the spirit of the mandate of Article I, Section 10
of the present Texas Constitution, wherein the Accused "shall have the
right to demand the nature and cause of the accusation against him, and have a
copy thereof."
That
these questions are necessary and authorized, is clearly established law.
Every
ingredient of which the offense is composed must be accurately and clearly
alleged. It is an elementary principle
of criminal pleading, that where the definition of an offense, whether it be at
common law or by statute, 'includes generic terms, it is not sufficient that the
indictment shall charge the offense in the same generic
terms as in the definition; but it must state the species; it must descend to particulars'.
U.S. v. Cook, 84 U.S.
539
...and,
second, to inform the court of the facts alleged, so that it may decide whether
they are sufficient in law to support a conviction, if one should be had. For this, facts are to be stated, not
conclusions of law alone. A crime is
made up of acts and intent; and these must be set forth in the indictment, with reasonable particularity
of time, place and circumstances.
Arch. Criminal Practice and Pleadings, 291
Accused demands the court, or in
the alternative, the Plaintiff be
directed to inform him:
1. Are the laws these charges are based on, laws foreign to the
Texas Constitution?
2. If so, are they written or unwritten?
3. If so, which foreign jurisdiction are they based on?
4. If they are domestic laws, are they of the only civil
jurisdiction with criminal penalties, ie. Admiralty?
5. If yes, how did this case get in Admiralty?
6. Does this court proceed according to the Constitutions for Texas
and the United States of America?
7. Is the Alleged Plaintiff asking this Court to sit judicially or
ministerially?
IF THIS IS A CRIMINAL COURT
8. Does the Texas Constitution Article 5, Section 12 (b) mean that
Aggrieved Party is entitled to have an information for a charging instrument filed with the court
before the court has any jurisdiction in this matter? If not, why not?
9. Does 38 Am. Jur page 621 mean the "nature" of a
complaint is common law or equity, or possibly martial
law or admiralty? If not, why not?
IF THIS IS A CIVIL COURT
10. Is Aggrieved Party accused of some tort against Alleged Plaintiff?
11. Is Aggrieved
Party accused of a breach of some alleged contract which the Alleged Plaintiff
is attempting to enforce? If so,
Aggrieved Party hereby demands production of a valid contract with his bona
fide signature on it, and that it be entered into evidence so he can see if he
did in fact enter into a contract.
Absent such contract, Aggrieved Party is thinking of pleading
non-assumpsit.
12. Is this charge brought under general law?
13. What is general law (Norton v. Shelby County, 118 US 425, 439)?
14. Exactly who is the Plaintiff in this matter? Is it the people of Texas, or the corporate
State of Texas, or some other entity?
15. If Alleged Plaintiff is the corporate State of Texas, why
did the District Attorney's Office bring this suit in this court despite Article
III, Section 2, Clause 2 of the Supreme Law of the Land, the Constitution for the United States of
America, wherein it commands:
"In
all cases ... and those in which a State shall be a Party, the supreme Court shall have original
Jurisdiction"?
You
are reminded, that at the time this was enacted, there were no law dictionaries
with funny definitions such as "shall" means "may"
sometimes, and are reminded that the intent of the legislators is the law.
16. Does the ALLEGED PLAINTIFF have any treaties affecting this case
with the totally bankrupt, functionally dead at law, foreign municipal
corporation domiciled in Washington, D.C. called the "United States"?
(See
In re Merriam 36 NE 505, 20 CJS 1785; and Congressional Record March
17, 1993 page H1303 at the start of Mr. Trafficant's remarks)
17. Were these treaties made before or after the bankruptcy?
18. In
what ways do these treaties affect this case?
19. Does the prosecution consider this Aggrieved Party to be sui juris
and one of the sovereign Public of Texas?
20. If not, why not?
21. Is this charge brought from the Texas Penal Code?
22. Was the Texas Penal Code created by and now controlled by the Texas
Legislature?
23.
Was the Texas Legislature created by and now controlled by the Texas
Constitution?
24. Was the Texas Constitution created by and now controlled by the
Sovereign Public of Texas?
25. Can a creation of a creation of a creation of the sovereign public
control said sovereign public?
26. If so, how so?
27. If this is not what is happening, does this court have jurisdiction
over all non-diplomatic personnel living in __________________________ County?
28. If this court does have such jurisdiction, how is it achieved?
29.
When and where did the sovereign public grant it? ("All political
power is inherent in the people" - Texas Constitution)
30. Are the God-given rights of said sovereign public under some
earthly control?
31. Are the God-given rights of this Aggrieved Party under some earthly
control?
32. If so, how is such control lawfully gained?
33. Is such control gained only by the cooperation of the members of
the sovereign public individually?
34. How is personam jurisdiction established over this Aggrieved Party?
35. If it is gained by cooperation, what is the nature of this
cooperation?
36. If it is not gained by cooperation, how are sui juris people
brought within the scope and purview of statutes?
37.
How does the law allow Alleged Plaintiff to exact the compelled
performance of the seatbelt law?
38.
Aggrieved Party hereby demands production of all notes, reports, books
and laws the Alleged Plaintiff intends to use to establish that this court has
the lawful authority to enforce compelled performance (compelled performance is
slavery absent an agreement).
39.
Will peace officers be immune from charges of perjury for false
testimony on the witness stand?
40. This discovery shall be on-going and any new material including
exculpatory material will be provided Accused forthwith, and in any case, at
least 15 days before he is required to plead in order to give him time to study
the law involved and properly prepare a defense. Respectfully
submitted,
_____________________________
,
sui juris
*****************
ACCUAL DISCOVERY
“Discovery is not limited to information that will be admissible at trial; to increase
likelihood that all relevant evidence will be disclosed and brought before
trier of fact, the law circumscribes a significantly larger class of
discoverable evidence to include anything reasonably calculated to lead to discovery
of material evidence”. JAMPOLE v. TOUCHY, 673 S.W.2d 569 (Tex. 1984)
*****************
BILL OF PARTICULARS
NOTE: This
is used right after the arraignment, when the judge don’t get you a copy of the
complaint and pleads
Not-Guilty for you. It’s just a ‘Need To Know’ document. It’s sent to the
prosecutor.
Possibly FRCP Rule 12 e could be used in conjunction
with demand for bill of particulars.
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure – Rule 12(e)
(e) Motion For More Definite Statement.
If a pleading to which a responsive
pleading is permitted is so vague or ambiguous that a party cannot reasonably
be required to frame a responsive pleading, the party may move for a more
definite statement before interposing a responsive pleading. The motion shall
point out the defects complained of and the details desired. If the motion
is granted and the order of the court is not obeyed within 10 days after notice
of the order or within such other time as the court may fix, the court may
strike the pleading to which the motion was directed or make such order as it
deems just.
NOTE: If no
answer provided to B of P, then that is denial of due process; Remedy is
Mandamus to Appeals
Court to force lower court to respond.
An Example
BILL OF PARTICULARS
Need to know the nature and cause of any civil or
criminal charges being brought In any proceedings in which Requester herein
might be named as a party. All questions should be referred to an instrument
which the Requester is in receipt of, but reserves the right to refuse and not
accept, if the nature and cause show that Requester is not the party named
therein, not in the venue of the action, or if the Requester has any rights to
respond by way of either a dilatory plea or a plea in bar prior to offering an
Issueable plea.
1 Is the
action civil or criminal?
2 If
criminal, is it common law or admiralty?
3 Is the
charging instrument an Affidavit, an information, an indictment, or a complaint?
4 Is the
charging instrument signed?
5 Who
signed the charging instrument?
6 Where
was the charging instrument signed?
7 When
was the charging instrument signed?
8 What
is the title or position of the Person who signed the
instrument?
9 Who is
the damaged party?
10 Is the
damaged party a natural person?
11 If the
damaged party is a fiction, what is the name of the relator for the damaged
party?
12 If the damaged party is a fiction, is
the relator an officer, employee, agent, contractor, or subcontractor for the
damaged party?
13 If the
charging instrument is an affidavit, is it signed under penalty of perjury?
14 If the charging instrument is an
affidavit, is it brought under first hand knowledge of the
facts related therein?
15 If the
charging instrument is an affidavit. What venue
was the affidavit signed in?
16 If the charging instrument is a
complaint, is it signed by a prosecuting attorney or law
director?
17 In what
venue did the acts or actions complained of arise?
18 Who is
the controlling sovereign of the venue in which the charging instrument is
made?
19 In what venue is the action to be tried,
(i.e. that venue arising from Article I, Section 8, Clause 2 of the
Constitution for the United States of America setting forth the venue of the
exclusive jurisdiction of Congress to the 10 miles square of the District of
Columbia and its Federal territories, possessions)
20 Is this venue based upon acts or actions
conducted in law or based upon treaties, contracts and consents of the parties?
21 Is this proceeding being heard in the
jurisdiction of law, equity, admiralty, maritime, ecclesiastical, or military?
22 Is this court under the venue and jurisdiction
of the President of the United States, or the people of Texas?
23 Is the
named Defendant a statutory person?
24 How do
you spell the name of the person charged?
25 How do
you spell the appellation of the petitioner herein?
26 What facts are relied upon to determine that
the Defendant is a statutory person?
27 Is the
charging instrument an indictment?
28 Is the indictment signed by a
grand jury foreman? (When, where, who, is he a citizen or resident of some
venue / which venue)?
29
Is the indictment signed by a
prosecuting attorney? (Who, where, when, in what venue, Is he a citizen or
resident, of which venue?)
30 Is the indictment signed under
penalty of perjury? (Is the indictment said to be true, correct, complete?)
31 What is the true and correct spelling of
the Defendant party appellation is upper and lower case letters? (Is this the
appellation set forth on the charging instrument in correct spelling &
punctuation)?
32 What material facts does the charging
person rely upon to
set forth that the acts and actions of the Defendant are a violation of
<what ever charged with>?
33 If the action is criminal, did the crime
take place in the venue of the people of Texas or in the venue of the STATE OF
TEXAS?
34 If a warrant was issued for the
Defendant, when was the warrant signed?
35 If a warrant was issued for the
Defendant, who signed the warrant?
36 If a warrant was issued for the
Defendant, and it was signed, what is the title of the person signing the warrant?
37 If a warrant was issued for the
Defendant, and it was signed, by whom is the person who signed it employed, an
official for, an officer for, or an agent or contractor or subcontractor for in
the capacity of his signature?
38 If a warrant was issued for the
Defendant, was a hearing held before the signing of the warrant? (Where, when,
who was present, who testified, was it under penalty of perjury with first hand
knowledge, was petitioner notified and given opportunity to testify & bring
witnesses)?
39 If a warrant was issued for the
Defendant and a hearing was held before the issuance, who testified under
penalty of perjury at said hearing as to facts relied upon for the issuance of
the warrant?
40 Were any of the persons associated with
the petition for, the hearings of and testifying for the warrant public
officials? (Where are copies of their bonds filed, who is in charge of the bond
filings, how much is the face value of the bond, who bonds the action, is the
funds behind the bond public - i.e.,
post office, or private i.e.,- IMF)
41 If a public official, what venue have
they taken an oath to (i.e. United States or United States of America)? Is the oath in writing? Where are they kept, who is in charge of the
filing of the oath?
42 Have any public officials taken any oaths
that nullify, supersede, or cancel any written oaths on file? If so, what oaths, to what venues?
43 Have any public officials taken any oath
to any venue or jurisdiction that would override or negate that official in his
official duty from upholding petitioner's rights to unalienable rights set
forth under the venue and jurisdiction of nature's God and nature's laws? What oaths have you taken, have you taken a
Koll niedre oath, a Masonic oath, any others?
44 Do you
have a duty as part of your job, to uphold the Constitution of the United
States of America as set forth
in 1787 ?
45 Do you recognize that I have unalienable
rights? When did I lose them? What act
or action did I take to loose them? What
act or action did someone else take to make me loose my rights as they apply to
this Statutory prosecution? What
contract did I enter into that nullified my rights? Was 1 notified before I entered into the
contract that I would loose my rights in this matter? When was I noticed, how? By what document?
46 What statute was I charged under? When was it passed into law, who passed it,
who signed it, was it brought into law by proper process, does it have a
legislative enactment clause, what venue & jurisdiction does it apply to,
does it apply to me, is it constitutional as it applies to me, does it violate
unalienable rights set forth by nature's God and nature's law, does it violate
public policy, does it violate laws of nations, is it under police powers, is
it under revenue powers, is there regulations adopted to enforce it, enforce it
within what venue and jurisdiction?
47 Does the enforcement officer have proper
delegation of authority to enforce the statute, ordinance, rule or regulation?
48
Was the
enforcement officer within the proper jurisdiction and venue at the time of the
acts or actions being enforced? Were you in that venue or jurisdiction at the
time that the statute, ordinance, or regulation was being enforced?
49 Was the officer the one who personally
saw the act or action complained of in the statute, ordinance or
regulation? Was he in proper uniform /
on duty! etc. when any arrest or detention was made? Is the statute, ordinance, or regulation
civil or criminal? Is it necessary for
the officer to be in proper uniform, marked vehicle. etc. to enforce the statute,
ordinance, or regulation?
50 To what venue does the statute,
ordinance, or regulation apply? United
States, de jure people, Texas, Puerto Rico, creation of the State or creation
of nature?
51 Is the statute, ordinance, or regulation
founded upon duties owed by a citizen, resident, or creation of the State? If so, what state? Where is the definition of that State found in
the Statutes, ordinances, or regulations?
Is that duty one created by a trust?
What trust? When was it
established? Where was it
established? Am I a subject or resident
of said trust? How did I join the trust?
What instrument establishes my nexus to said trust that creates the duty and
obligation to said court? Do I have my
signature on said instrument? When did I
sign it? Who holds the original copy of
said instrument? Is it the policy of the
fiduciaries to disclose the purpose, duties, privileges, and rights of the
trust with full disclosure prior to soliciting my signature to said trust
application?
*****************
BILL OF PARTICULARS
SEE ALSO:
DISCOVERY
United States v. Madeoy, 652 F.Supp. 371 (D.D.C. 1987): The defendant was charged in a 121 count indictment involving
fraud, conspiracy and RICO. The district court held that he was entitled to a
bill of particulars specifying in detail the laws and regulations which were
allegedly violated. In particular, one count of the indictment stated that the
defendant had violated certain regulations, without specifying which
regulations in the 700 page code were violated.
United States v. Feola, 651 F.Supp. 1068 (S.D.N.Y. 1987): In this narcotics prosecution, the defendants were
entitled to the names of the persons whom the Government claimed were
co-conspirators; whether the individuals present during the commission of overt
acts were, in fact, informants or undercover agents; the names of witnesses to
overt and substantive acts; and the exact dates that the defendants joined the
conspiracy. The defendants were also entitled to the statements which the
Government intended to rely upon to show an agreement among the conspirators;
the quantity of cocaine distributed and possessed; and whether it was going to
be the Government's contention that certain defendants were aiders and
abettors. Finally, the Court held that the Government must specify the manner
in which one defendant used a vehicle to facilitate a conspiracy, the names and
place where the defendant met with others, and the time, place and manner in
which the Government would claim at trial that two defendants became members of
the conspiracy.
United States v. Williams, 113 F.R.D. 117 (M.D.Fla. 1986): This district court opinion in the Eleventh Circuit
holds that the statements of co-conspirators must be produced to the defendant
if the co-conspirator will not be called to testify. That is, Rule 16 which
requires the production of a defendant's statements includes statements which
will be introduced pursuant to Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(2)(E).
United States v. Rogers, 636 F.Supp. 237 (D.Colo. 1986): The district court dismissed a tax fraud indictment in this case
for failing to specify what deductions were fraudulent.
United States v. Santoro, 647 F.Supp 153 (E.D.N.Y. 1986): The defendants, charged with securities fraud, were
entitled to a bill of particulars describing as specifically as possible inside
information on that which
the defendants were alleged to have traded.
United States v. Bortnovsky, 820 F.2d 572 (2d Cir. 1987): The Government was required to provide a bill of
particulars in this mail fraud and RICO case specifying with connection to
various insurance fraud counts which insurance claims were fraudulent, and
which invoices were allegedly falsified. In this case, the Second Circuit held
that the failure to provide this information was reversible.
United States v. Davidoff, 845 F.2d 1151 (2d Cir. 1988): The Second Circuit reversed the defendant's
conviction based on the denial of his request for a Bill of Particulars. In
order to prove the existence of a RICO offense, the Government introduced
numerous instances of extortion which were not listed in the indictment but which the
defendant requested in his Bill of Particulars. The Second Circuit holds that
"it is simply unrealistic to think that a defendant preparing to meet
charges of extorting funds from one company had a fair opportunity to defend
against allegations of extortions against unrelated companies, allegations not
made prior to trial.
United States v. Chavez, 845 F.2d 219 (9th Cir. 1988): The Government provided a Bill of Particulars to the
defendant in this CCE prosecution. However, the Bill of Particulars misled the
defendant by stating that there would be no other individuals who were
"supervised" other than those listed in the bill and the indictment. At trial, the defendant was confronted with
additional supervisees.
United States v. Bailey, 689 F.Supp. 1463 (E.D.Ill. 1987): Charged with mail fraud and conspiracy, the defendant
was entitled to a bill of particulars describing how the defendants acted as an
enterprise. The Government alleged that the enterprise was an "association
in fact" and the bill of particulars appropriately sought something more
specific than this general language.
United States v. Earnhart, 683 F.Supp. 717 (W.D.Ark. 1987): The defendant, charged with income tax evasion, was
entitled to a Bill of Particulars setting forth the alleged gross income, the
adjusted gross income, the alleged unreported income, the alleged availability
of deductions and exemptions, and corporate expenditures which were alleged to
have been "constructive dividends."
United States v. GAF, Corp, 928 F.2d 1253 (2d Cir. 1991): In the third trial of the corporation, the defense
sought to introduce the bill of particulars which had previously been filed by
the government in an earlier prosecution. The trial court erred in excluding
this evidence. The bill showed that the government had abandoned its earlier
broad (and inconsistent) theory of the offense.
United States v. White, 753 F.Supp. 432 (D.Conn. 1990): Defendant's bill of particulars would be granted with
respect to the following matters: (1) co- conspirators; (2) the location of the
acts performed by the principals; (3) the location of where the principal
offense occurred.
*******************
NOTICES
NOTE: Notices are
necessary to make a public servant lose their immunity to prosecution because
they are under Good Faith. Giving Notice to a public
servant of the law and then they ignore the law, they lose their Good Faith and
show Bad Faith, whereby losing their immunity.
A Notice can be in any
form, just put the word NOTICE in it.
Giving Notice is giving
knowledge. Give them all the knowledge
they can handle.
An Interesting Notice to send:
State of Texas ) ____________________________________
ACCUSER ) ____________________________________
) ____________________________________
V. ) ____________________________________
) ____________________________________
___________________________ ) ____________________________________
ACCUSED ) ____________________________________
Cause #
_________________________________________________
Notice Of Desire To Pay All Traffic Fines, Fees, Costs and Penalties
I, _________________________________________, ACCUSED, if
found guilty, gives this, my “Notice Of Desire To
Pay All Traffic Fines, Fees, Costs and Penalties” to the Judge of the Court, on
this the ______ day of __________________________ , _______________.
However, due to the Constitution for the United States of
America, at Article 1, Section 10, Clause 1, which mandates that “No state
shall make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts,”
said Clause remaining UNREPEALED to date, and
Due to the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure at Article
43.02, which states that all fines, taxes, penalties and remunerances “shall be
collected in the lawful money of the United States only”, said Article
remaining UNREPEALED to date, and
Due to Federal Law, Title 12, Section 152, which defines
“Lawful Money of the United States” to ONLY be “gold coin” and “silver coin”,
said section remaining UNREPEALED to date, and
Due to 48 Stat. 2, (March 09, 1933) and 48 Stat. 113,
(June 05, 1933) all gold coin was removed from common circulation, at par, at
the banks in America, said Statutes, remaining UNREPEALED to date, and
Due to Public Law 8931, (July 23, 1965) Senate #2080, and
Public Law 9029, (June 24, 1967) Title 50 Section 9898 H, and 60 Stat. 596, all
silver coin was removed from common circulation at par, at the banks in
America, said Public Laws Sections and Statutes remaining UNREPEALED to date,
I, the ACCUSED, AM THEREFORE CONSTRAINED BY LAW FROM
PAYING THIS CLASS C fine, fee, cost or penalty, if found guilty.
Since Federal Reserve Notes, or checks or money orders
payable only in Federal Reserve Notes are not within the definition of those
things allowed by law to be received by the court, any threat to incarcerate me
for “failure to pay” those things will be deemed to be an attempt to solicit an
honorarium in violation of Texas Penal Code, Title 8, Section 36.07 or 36.08.
This
is neither contempt, nor default, but merely a declaration that until
Congress returns America to a Constitutional monetary system, it is impossible
for me to pay fines, and IMPOSSIBILIUM NULLA OBLIGTIO EST, that is; There is no
obligation to do impossible things.
Further, ACCUSED sayeth naught.
___________________________________________
____________________________________________
Witness
____________________________________________
Witness
***
Theoretical Case
The
following theoretical case is provided for educational purpose to view the
proper procedures that could be used to
confront a charge of a class C misdemeanor offense punishable by fine
only:
TRAFFIC STOP
A man
is stopped by a police officer and the officer writes a citation for expired
license plates and
expired inspection sticker. The accused
has two choices at this time:
1.
Demand to be
taken immediately before s magistrate pursuant to VTCS 6701d, Sec. 148, TCCP
Articles 14.06 & 15.17.
2.
Sign the
citation and promise to appear before a magistrate at a later date pursuant to VTCS
6701d, Sec. 148, TCCP Article 14.06.
This theoretical case will deal with the later
situation of being allowed to sign and promise to appear at a later date before
a magistrate.
THE NOTICE
Sign
the citation and go on your way. As soon
as possible prepare a constructive notice similar to that
in Appendix A, Figure 1. Examples are
given of two constructive notices listed in Appendix A, Figure 1 is designed
for the appearance before a magistrate.
This gives the proper notice to the magistrate that you will be coming
and informs him that you are aware of the ministerial duties that he is
required to perform. It demands that
those duties be performed.
THE APPEARANCE
When
the accused appears, the appearance is for a specific purpose. An attempt by the magistrate will probably be
made to change the purpose of this appearance.
All the accused is required to do is demand to be magistrated and is
required to give his name and address, nothing more. No other information is required by
law and the right to silence should be maintained except the demand to be
magistrated. A signature should never be
issued for any reason except for a future appearance in the county court.
Some
magistrates will not even show their face and will hide in their office. Others
will attempt to distract the accused into accepting something other than what
is required by law. The accused should
leave the court if the duties of the magistrate are not performed. If they attempt to make an arrest for
leaving, the accused should again demand to be magistrated for the arrest that
was just made and the process starts all over again.
THE SECOND NOTICE
When forty-eight
hours have passed after appearing before the magistrate, the second
constructive notice in Figure 2,
Appendix A, should be prepared and mailed certified mail to the magistrate. This
notices the magistrate that the accused did not appear before him and that the
law has performed his duties for him, because of his neglect to do so.
At
this time, the accused has received a full acquittal under the law pursuant to Texas
Code of Criminal Procedure 16.17. Any reprisals taken by anyone within the
office of the magistrate which includes the magistrate himself can result in
serious criminal charges being filed against him and carries long prison terms
if convicted.
Appendix A, figure 1
Constructive Notice for the first
appearance
CERTIFIED MAIL NO: _______________________
IN THE __________________________ COURT
____________________COUNTY, TEXAS
THE STATE OF TEXAS, §
§
V. § CAUSE NO.
__________________
§
_____________________ §
name §
CONSTRUCTIVE NOTICE
To the magistrate or the presiding magistrate:
In the above numbered causes #’s ______________ wherein the accused is charged with a fine
only, Class C misdemeanor(s), notices the magistrate that the accused will
appear as promised on the citation(s) and demands to be brought before a
magistrate in the county arrested and no other officer pursuant to the Texas
Code of Criminal Procedure Articles 14.06, and 15.17 and pursuant to Vernon’s
Texas Civil Statutes Article 6701d, Section 148.
The following points and authorities are furnished for
the presiding magistrate to make a clear decision as to his or her duties:
Article 14.06
– Must take offender before magistrate
(a)
Except as
provided by Subsection (b), in each case enumerated in this Code, the person making the arrest shall take the
person arrested or have him taken without unnecessary delay before the
magistrate who may have ordered the arrest, before some magistrate of the
county where the arrest was made without an order, or, if necessary to provide
more expeditiously to the person arrested the warnings described by Article
15.17 of this Code, before a magistrate in a county bordering the county in
which the arrest was made. The magistrate shall immediately perform the duties
described in Article 15.17 of this Code.
(b)
A peace officer
who is charging a person with committing an offense that
is a Class C misdemeanor, other than an offense under Section 49.02, Penal
Code, may, instead of taking the person before a magistrate, issue a
citation to the person that contains written notice of the time and place the
person must appear before a magistrate, the name and address of the person
charged, and the offense charged.
Acts 1965, 59th Leg., vol.2, p. 317, ch.
722. Amended by Acts 1967, 60th Leg., p. 1735, ch. 659, § 10, eff.
Aug. 28, 1967; Acts 1987, 70th Leg., ch. 455, § 1, eff. Aug. 31,
1987; Acts 1991, 72nd Leg., ch. 84, § 1, eff. Sept. 1, 1991; Acts
1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 900, § 1.05, eff. Sept. 1, 1994.
Article 15.17
– Duties of arresting officer and magistrate
(a)
In each case
enumerated in this Code, the person making the arrest shall without
unnecessary delay take the person arrested or have him taken before some
magistrate of the county where the accused was arrested or, if necessary to
provide more expeditiously to the person arrested the warnings described by
this article, before a magistrate in a county bordering the county in which the
arrest was made. The arrested person may be taken before the magistrate in
person or the image of the arrested person may be broadcast by closed circuit
television to the magistrate. The magistrate shall inform in clear language the
person arrested, either in person, or by closed circuit television, of the
accusation against him and of any affidavit filed
therewith, of his right to retain counsel, of his right to remain silent, of
his right to have an attorney present during any interview with peace officers
or attorneys representing the state, of his right to terminate the interview at
any time, of his right to request the appointment of counsel if he is indigent
and cannot afford counsel, and of his right to have an examining trial. He
shall also inform the person arrested that he is not required to make a
statement and that any statement made by him may be used against him. The
magistrate shall allow the person arrested reasonable time and
opportunity to consult counsel and shall admit the person arrested to bail if
allowed by law. A closed circuit television system may no be used under this
subsection unless the system provides for a two-way communication of the image
and sound between the arrested person and the magistrate. A recording of the
communication between the arrested person and the magistrate shall be made.
The recording shall be preserved until the earlier of the following dates: (1)
the date on which the pretrial hearing ends; or (2) the 91st day
after the date on which the recording is made if the person is charged with a
misdemeanor or the 120th day after the date on which the recording
is made if the person is charged with a felony, The counsel for the
defendant may obtain a copy of the recording on payment of a reasonable amount
to cover costs of reproduction.
(b)
After an accused
charged with a misdemeanor punishable by fine only is taken before a
magistrate under Subsection (a) of this article and the magistrate has
identified the accused with certainty, the magistrate may release the accused
without bond and order the accused to appear at a later date for arraignment in
the county court or statutory county court. The order must state in writing the
time, date, and place of the arraignment, and the magistrate must sign the
order. The accused shall receive a copy of the order on release. If an accused
fails to appear as required by the order, the judge of the court in which the
accused is required to appear shall issue a warrant for the arrest of the
accused. If the accused is arrested and brought before the judge, the judge may
admit the accused to bail, and in admitting the accused to bail, the judge
should say as the amount of bail an amount double that generally set for the
offense for which the accused was arrested. This subsection does not apply to
an accused who has previously been convicted of a felony or a misdemeanor other
than a misdemeanor punishable by fine only.
(c)
When a deaf
accused is taken before a magistrate under this article or Article 14.06 of
this Code, an interpreter appointed by the magistrate qualified and sworn as
provided in Article 38.31 of this Code shall interpret the warning
required by those articles in a language that the accused can understand,
including but not limited to sign language.
(d)
If a magistrate
determines that a person brought before the magistrate
after an arrest authorized by Article 14.051 of this code was arrested
unlawfully, the magistrate shall release the person from custody. If the
magistrate determines that the arrest was lawful, the person arrested is
considered a fugitive from justice for the purposes of Article 51.13 of
this Code, and the disposition of the person is controlled by that article.
Acts 1965, 59th Leg., vol.2, p. 317, ch.
722. Amended by Acts 1967, 60th Leg., p. 1736, ch. 659, § 12, eff.
Aug. 28, 1967; Acts 1979, 66th Leg., p. 398,ch. 186, § 3, eff. May
15, 1979; Acts 1987, 70th Leg., ch. 455, § 2, eff. Aug. 31,
1987; Acts 1989, 71st Leg., ch. 467, § 1, eff. Aug. 28, 1989; Acts
1989, 71st Leg., ch. 977, §
1, eff. Aug. 28, 1989; Acts 1989, 71st Leg., ch. 997, § 3, eff. Aug. 28, 1989; Acts 1991, 72nd Leg., ch. 16, § 19.01(2), eff. Aug. 26, 1991.
It is a violation of the law for any magistrate to
willfully and knowingly create a deviation from those duties as outline above,
and will not be tolerated by the accused.
The accused has a right to due process of law and will defend that
right.
If the arresting officer or magistrate or presiding
magistrate fails to comply with the requirements above, he/she will force the
accused to seek Mandamus and other
remedies such as, and not limited to, civil action pursuant to Title 28 USCS
and Title 42 USCS in the federal courts.
___________________________________
NAME
Name ___________________________________
ADDRESS ___________________________________
___________________________________
___________________________________
Sworn to and subscribed
before me this ________________ day of _______________, 20___
Notary Public ___________________________________
My Commission Expires: _________________________
Appendix A, figure 2
Second Constructive Notice
CERTIFIED MAIL NO: _______________________
IN THE __________________________ COURT
____________________COUNTY, TEXAS
THE STATE OF TEXAS, §
§
V. § CAUSE NO. __________________
§
_____________________ §
name §
CONSTRUCTIVE NOTICE
To the magistrate or the presiding magistrate:
A COPY OF THE PREVIOUS NOTICE AND THIS NOTICE IS BEING
FORWARD TO THE ___________________ COUNTY COMMISSIONERS COURT FOR REVIEW!
On ________________, 20___, the accused did appear
with Next Friend(s) ______________________ ________________________________,
pursuant to the Texas Penal Code, Chapter 38.10, Vernon’s Texas Civil
Statutes, Article 6701d, Section 148 and The Texas Code of
Criminal Procedures, Article 14.06 and 15.17. The magistrate
nor any other presiding magistrate performed any duties of a magistrate
pursuant to T.C.C.P. 15.17 or ordered the accused to appear at a later
date for arraignment in the county court or statutory county court. The order
must state in writing the time, date, and place of the arraignment, and the
magistrate must sign the order pursuant to the T.C.C.P. Article 15.17,
Section (b). Pursuant to the failure on the part of the magistrate or presiding
magistrate to issue such order, the law is self operative and finds no probable
cause pursuant to the T.C.C.P. Article 16.17.
Article 16.17
– Decision of Judge
After the examining trial has been had, the judge
shall make an order committing the defendant to jail of the proper county,
discharging him, or admitting him to bail, as the law and facts of the case may
require. Failure of the judge to make or enter an order within 48 hours
after the examining trial has been completed operates as a finding of no
probable cause and the accused shall be discharged.
Acts 1965, 59th Leg., vol. 2, p. 317, ch.
722.
Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, Article 2.09 – Who are magistrates:
Each of the following officers is a magistrate within
the meaning of this Code:
The
justices of the Supreme Court, the judges of the Court of Criminal Appeals, the
justices of the Courts of Appeal, the judges of the District Court, the
magistrates appointed by the judges of the district courts of Bexar County,
Dallas County, Tarrant County, or Travis County that give preference to
criminal cases, the criminal law hearing officers for Harris County appointed
under Subchapter L, Chapter 54, Government Code, <FN1> the magistrates appointed
by the judges of the district courts of Lubbock County or Webb County, the
magistrates appointed by the judges of the criminal district courts of Dallas
County or Tarrant County, the masters appointed by the judges of the district
courts and the county courts at law that give preference to criminal cases in
Jefferson County, the county judges, the judges of the county courts at law,
judges of the county criminal courts, the judges of statutory probate courts,
the justices of the peace, the mayors and recorders and the judges of the
municipal courts of incorporated cities or towns.
Acts 1965, 59th Leg., vol.2, p. 317, ch.
722. Amended by Acts 1981, 67th Leg., p. 801, ch. 291, § 100, eff.
Sept. 1, 1981; Acts 1983, 68th Leg., p. 883,ch. 204, § 1, eff. Aug.
29, 1983; Acts 1989, 71st Leg., ch. 25, § 2, eff. Aug. 28, 1989; Acts
1989, 71st Leg., ch. 79, § 1,
eff. May 15, 1989; Acts 1989, 71st
Leg., ch. 916, § 1, eff. Sept. 1, 1989;
Acts 1989, 71st Leg.,
ch. 1068, § 2, eff. Aug. 28, 1989; Acts 1991, 72nd Leg., ch. 16, § 4.01, eff. Aug. 26, 1991;
Acts 1993, 73st Leg., ch.
224, § 2, eff. Aug. 30, 1993; Acts 1993, 73st Leg., ch. 413, § 1, eff. Sept. 1, 1993; Acts
1993, 73st Leg., ch. 468, §
1, eff. June 9, 1993; Acts 1993, 73st Leg., ch. 557, § 2, eff. Aug. 30, 1993.
Upon the failure of the magistrate or the presiding
magistrate to follow these procedures, the law provides for the accused to have
an extraordinary remedy against the magistrate or presiding magistrate and the
County of ___________________ for which he/she represents.
If the magistrate or the presiding magistrate
participates in any follow-up actions that are detrimental and against the
accused, knowing in advance that the law is self-executing for failure to act
and issue such order contrary thereto. He/she is committing an illegal act and
the denial of constitutional rights of the accused and this will not be
tolerated. Furthermore, such actions would constitute a violation of OATH
of office.
NAME
Name ___________________________________
ADDRESS ___________________________________
___________________________________
___________________________________
Sworn to and subscribed
before me this ________________ day of _______________, 20___
Notary Public ___________________________________
My Commission Expires: _________________________
*******************
JUDGES
NOTE: Always be respectful to all Judges. It is best to ask how the judge would like to
be addressed in court, at the beginning.
It serves no purpose to get the judge mad; he will do that on his
own. Remember, they (the judges) have
been instructed (by the seminars they go to) that they can LIE to you, because
you have the right to Appeal. Never
believe anything a judge or prosecutor says (always Object to everything),
get everything in writing, that is possible, but don’t push it. Just make an Affidavit of what happened,
afterwards. Remember that a court of Non-Record means NOTHING to you unless you
get a dismissal. When you appeal to a
court of record, they act as though nothing happened before, which it really
didn’t. So don’t worry about it, it’s
just time and money of which you also took from the court, by where you did
your job. This is cheep training, for
something major that might come along in the future. If you are doing this to save money and time,
you didn’t read the beginning of this document very well.
In a court or trial setting, you may be
able to request the judge’s book or evidence file in open court before the
jury. This will allow them to be put
into evidence. Generally, all evidence
needs to be put in during open court.
And if the judge refuses or denies anything, the jury will see that,
anyway.
A Judge’s duty is either Judicial, Administrative,
Ministrative or Ministerial
He
can do only one. You must show what he
was suppose to do and prove what he did or did not do in his capacity.
The main No-No for a judge is Abuse of Discretion.
Abuse of Discretion
Texaco, Inc. v. Zah, 5 F.3d 1374, 1376 (10th
Cir. 1993)(citing United States v.
Plainbull, 957 F.2d 724, 725 (9th Cir. 1992)), aff'd after remand, Texaco,
Inc. v. Hale, 81 F.3d 934 (10th Cir. 1996).
Under this standard the district court abuses its discretion
" if it does not apply the correct law or if it rests its decision on a
clearly erroneous finding of material fact."
United States v. Bank of New York & Trust Co., 296
U.S. 463, 480 (1936) ("Even where
the District Court has acquired jurisdiction prior to state proceedings, the
character and adequacy of the latter proceedings . . . may require in the proper
exercise of the discretion of the federal court that jurisdiction should be
relinquished in favor of state administration.").
"[T]he grant of jurisdiction to the District
Court in suits brought by the United States does not purport to confer
exclusive jurisdiction," Bank of New York , 296 U.S. at 479, and
"leaves open the question of the propriety of its exercise in
particular circumstances," id. at 480; see also Gulf Offshore Co. v.
Mobil Oil Corp., 453 U.S. 473, 479 1981)("[T]he mere grant of
jurisdiction to a federal court does not operate to oust a state court from
concurrent jurisdiction over the cause of action.").
ALSTON v. DEBRUYN (No. IP 91 C
1269 Seventh Circuit US Court of Appeals)
CUMMINGS, Circuit Judge.
Byron Alston, an Indiana state inmate,
appeals the dismissal of his civil rights com-
plaint as frivolous under 28 U.S.C. sec. 1915(d). This appeal questions the propriety of that dismissal,
which was with prejudice
and without leave to amend the complaint. We conclude
that the district court abused its discretion in dismissing the complaint because Alston
raised colorable claims and should have
had the opportunity to cure the
complaint's shortcomings by amendment.
The "abuse of discretion"
standard simply means that we shall not second-guess the decision of a trial
judge that is in conformity with established legal principles and, in terms of
its application of those principles to the facts of the case, is within the
range of options from which one could expect a reasonable trial judge to
select.
United States v. Koen, 982 F.2d 1101, 1114 (7th Cir. 1992).
*******************
PROSECUTORS
LIAR, LIAR, Pants on Fire !!!
NOTE: It is Prosecutor's duty and obligation to give you
the exculpatory evidence.
In any trial,
(ask to) put the prosecutor on the witness stand. He’ll refuse, but the jury will see it!! (He likely can’t witness because he works for
the State, but it’s a way to wind them up.)
Meshell v. State 739 S.W.2d 246
- "County attorney, having been
granted exclusive right within judicial department to represent State in all
cases in the district and inferior courts, is protected from legislative
encroachment on his prosecutorial discretion by the separation of powers."
"Under
separation of powers doctrine, legislature may not remove or abridge district
or county attorneys' exclusive prosecutorial function unless authorized by
express constitutional provision."
"Once
a defendant has raised a claim under the Act, the State must respond with proof
of its readiness for trial."
"A
defendant may only appeal those grounds either raised in a written pretrial
motion or appealed by permission of the trial court."
"He,
a judge, cannot ignore facts which bring into play laws he does not personally
approve , or disregard certain laws in order to reach a desired result in a
particular case..."
State Board of Dental Examiners v. Bickham 203 S.W.2d 563
- "The Constitutional authority
of county attorneys to represent the state in all cases in district and
inferior courts cannot be abridged or taken away and the state may not be
represented in such courts by any person other than county or district
attorney unless such officer joins therein."
TCCrP Art. 2.01
Duties of the District Atty.: It shall be the primary duty of all
prosecuting attorneys, including any special prosecutors, not to convict but to
see that justice is done. They shall not suppress facts or secrete
witnesses capable of establishing the innocence of the accused.
NOTE: The
County Attorney and not the city attorney must represent the State in JP,
County & Municipal Criminal Cases.
TCCrP Art. 2.02.
[26] [32] [33] Duties of county attorneys.
The county attorney
shall attend the terms of court in his county below the grade of district
court, and shall represent the State in all criminal cases under
examination or prosecution in said county; and in the absence of the
district attorney he shall represent the State alone and, when requested, shall
aid the district attorney in the prosecution of any case in behalf of the State
in the district court. He shall
represent the State in cases he has prosecuted which are appealed.
NOTE: Notice, above, the word ‘ALL’.
Art. 2.03. [27] [33] [34] Neglect of duty.
(a) It shall be the duty
of the attorney representing the State to present by information to the court
having jurisdiction, any officer for neglect or failure of any duty enjoined
upon such officer, when such neglect or failure can be presented by
information, whenever it shall come to the knowledge of said attorney that
there has been a neglect or failure of duty upon the part of said officer; and
he shall bring to the notice of the grand jury any act of violation of law or
neglect or failure of duty upon the part of any officer, when such violation,
neglect or failure is not presented by information, and whenever the same may
come to his knowledge.
(b) It is the duty of the trial court, the attorney
representing the accused, the attorney representing the state and all peace
officers to so conduct themselves as to insure a fair trial for both the
state and the defendant, not impair the presumption of innocence, and at the
same time afford the public the benefits of a free press.
NOTE: Document as described by 2.04 must be in
the case file or Judge ca not consider it!
According to
this code, the Judge and the Court are not vested with jurisdiction!
TCCrP Art. 2.04. [28] [34] [35]
Shall draw complaints.
Upon complaint being made
before a district or county attorney that an offense has been committed in his
district or county, he shall reduce the complaint to writing and cause the same
to be signed and sworn to by the complainant, and it shall be duly
attested by said attorney.
TCCrP - Article 45.09 Officers' Fees
Unless provided by special charter, the governing body
of each city, town or village by ordinance shall prescribe the compensation and
fees which shall be paid to the recorder, city attorney, city secretary and
other officers of said court, to be paid out of the municipal treasury.
1.
City Attorney
A
city attorney is not entitled to fees for prosecuting criminals in the
recorder's court in a county that has a county attorney. Harris County v.
Stewart (1898) 17 C.A. 1, 43 S.W. 52.
2.
County Attorney
The
county attorney has the exclusive right to appear in person or by deputy, and
represent the state in all cases pending in a corporation court to which
the state is a party, but he is entitled to no fees for so doing. Howth
v. Greer (1907) 40 C.A. 552, 90 S.W. 212, 213.
*****************
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