Defining Bills of Attainderby Thomas M. Saunders Bill
Of Attainder Project
In 1986 I happened upon a phrase in the Constitution, in
Article 1, Section 9, Paragraph 3, which stated, "No Bill Of Attainder or
Ex-post Facto Law, shall be passed." I was reasonably secure I knew what
an ex-post facto law was, but I had no idea what a bill of attainder was.
I am a Certified Linguist, and the prospects that came about from finding
out what a bill of attainder really is, have led me into 1997, as the
director of a program which is associated with Libertarians and others
called the Bill Of Attainder Project.
As I stated I am a Certified Linguist. Linguists write your
encyclopedias, dictionaries, and different texts which define things. They
do a lot more but one of the fundamental things they do is define things.
Linguists are usually very pleasant, cerebral people who really enjoy
studying the aspects of language. They are scientists, and do what
scientists do - they measure things.
For the linguist as well as the scientist if they need to know if
something is a yard long, it is put to the test of 36 inches, and three
feet, and however many other measurement instruments and scales "is" as
needed to safely establish the yard. Proving what a bill of attainder
really is, was as simple as holding up a yardstick. The yardstick is a
little different than the thirty-six inch kind, but very simple. It works
along the lines of, "If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, quacks
like a duck".....that simple, you define the "thing" by describing its
essential parts. The law does not do this. There is no complete applicable
definition of bill of attainder in the law. Americans deserve to have
"Bill Of Attainder" defined into the law, in a way that actually protects
their rights, and will not let the legal community and the legislature use
the law to plunder.
To establish what a bill of attainder really is requires a trip to the
local public library. You saunter in and you start looking up bill of
attainder, and attainder in every dictionary, and encyclopedia you can lay
your hands on. I picked a very small library, and with good reason.* I'd
still be at some of them heaping up definitions and descriptions to this
day. All you need to establish a definition is enough sources of your
target "thing" to give it a complete picture. It is simple comparative
analysis of establishing the basic elements of which your target "thing"
is composed. Line up your collection of definitions and sources to see
what they have in common. What my collection of definitions told me a bill
of attainder was: "A Bill Of Attainder" is a law, or legal device used to
outlaw people, suspend their civil rights, confiscate their property, or
put them to death, or punish them without a trial. Nothing anyone has sent
me has changed any of the definition I have put forth.
I contend the original intent of the bill of attainder mandates were to
prevent laws that punish without trial, suspend civil liberties, and
confiscate property. The doctrine of "pains and penalties" is included as
just as much a bill of attainder as any other part of the mandate. A
punishment less than death without a trial is considered to be a bill of
pains and paenalties. A bill of attainder is more than one thing and they
are almost different things. This is why the elements of what a bill of
attainder is, must be included in the law to understand the entirety of
the phrase bill of attainder. The continuity of the Constitution has been
weakened without this information included in the law. It is certain that
the original intention of the Constitution was to protect people from the
tyranny Americans had just suffered from the British Empire. Today's asset
forfeiture is almost the exact tyranny as Americans fought against in the
Revolutionary War, and almost all the other wars we have fought. Without
bill of attainder defined in the law, the law can ignore the rights
Americans are supposed to have. That is what has happened.
The definitions that exist in the law, the U.S.C. ( United States Code)
are statements or precedents which are confusing, incomplete, and do not
reflect all the rights the mandates were meant to insure. They come from
single unrelated cases. They may have even served to detract from the
rights the mandates were meant preserve because they only reflect portions
of what a bill of attainder actually is. U.S. v. Brown (1965), U.S. v.
Lovett (1946) , and re: Yung See Hee (1888) all qualify the doctrine of
pains and penalties as punishment without trial, and inclusive as a bill
of attainder. The only statement in the U.S.C. that reflects most of the
original intention of the mandates is from Cummings v. Missouri (1867). It
states, "A bill of attainder, is a legislative act which inflicts
punishment without judicial trial and includes any legislative act which
takes away the life, liberty or property of a particular named or easily
ascertainable person or group of persons because the legislature thinks
them guilty of conduct which deserves punishment."
The preservation of a group or individual's protection of life liberty
and property have fallen by the wayside in American law. Any prosecutor
that waves the case, Calero-Toledo in front a judge takes any property he
wants, and in some cases without a trial. It has also been ruled in U.S. v
Ursery, that it is not a violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause to pursue
both criminal and civil punishment in cases arising from the same offense.
Further, the Court has allowed the confiscation of property from "innocent
owners" without due process.* So much for "any" legislative act, so much
for "any" protection at all from the bill of attainder mandates. No matter
what relevance the mandates had in our past without the protection from
bills of attainder in our law we have been robbed of the civil rights the
Constitution was meant to preserve.
It is not the purpose of the Bill Of Attainder Project to raise some
long lost Phoenix out of the ashes of our judicial system. The fact is
that "goose" has long been cooked. We need a new and fresh start to
restore our rights. Bills of attainder need to be defined so the essential
elements, and the rights they reflect, are understood by everyone. If the
Court has to rule on a case which is suspect of plundering life, liberty,
or property, the fact that the law is a bill of attainder, will not go
unchallenged if the law is put in place so as to preserve our rights. The
Court is a lost cause for establishing these rights, it must be done with
legislation.
All of the mentioned properties in our definition of bill of attainder
will stay the same if you pile on the research from all the libraries in
the nation. The same goes if you want to pile case law on top of that.
Pile up all the bill of attainder references you can get your hands on,
from history, government and political science, start a class project,
create a fire hazard. Your outcome of comparative analysis will be that
outlawing, suspension of civil rights, confiscation of property, and
punishment without a trial, are the primary elements of bills of
attainder. The troubling thing about this discovery is that the current
government denies Americans all the rights they are supposed to have to be
protected from bills of attainder. We have a Supreme Court that believes
it is perfectly all right to let the government plunder the life, liberty,
or property of anyone alleged or (outlawed). The growing number of
offenses used to take property, and suspend civil rights, numbers over 200
in the federal camp.
Experts are warning Americans that this country's asset forfeiture
programs are starting to cause the same social stresses as seen in the
days of the Inquisition.* This was never intended to happen in the United
States, the government was never supposed to have the right to steal
(confiscate) property, or suspend civil liberties. The Fifth Amendment
clearly states, "No property shall be confiscated."
It is an absolute fact that the government has enforced the
confiscation of property for over 200 years. It is an effect of the
practice of outlawing that has prompted the government to enforce these
bills of attainder. Some segments of American society have been dedicated
to seeing to it that different ethnic groups, especially Native Americans,
Irish, African Americans, and others have been suppressed, repressed, and
oppressed. It has not always been within the public sympathy to see to it
that there are enforced mechanisms in the law to make sure there is
equality.
With a major part of the American population dedicated to inequality,
and special interests, the advancement of the bill of attainder mandates
were put on the sidelines and ignored. America may be evolved enough today
to start demanding the rights they are entitled to have. They must
understand what their rights are, and in this case what they were meant to
be. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 may have made us equal only to the point
that we can be equally plundered.
One of the specifics given in many sources about bills of attainder
states that a bill of attainder can be administered by verdict. A verdict
is rendered in a trial, so the relevance of trial does not negate an
action as a bill of attainder. The Congress has no right to pass a bill of
attainder; they do it anyway. The courts and police administer them. As
long as the courts, congress, and the public condone the confiscation of
property or the suspension of civil rights as a fit punishment, American
civil liberties are lost. Americans do not realize they give up the
essence of their power as a people by giving up their right to private
property. That is what has happened and we are starting to see the drastic
consequences.
All the provisions in the Constitution that were meant to preserve the
right of private property over the right of the government to take
property have been abused to the point that there is no protection for
private property. The evidence that this was never meant to be is
overwhelming. Starting with a quote from Samuel Adams, "Now what liberty
is this when property can be taken without permission." Some case law
exists that reflects this idea. Cases like, U.S. v Brown, U.S. v Lovett,
and Nixon v. U.S., all state the government does not have the right to
confiscate property. One can wonder if the opposition in the Nixon case
had waved Calero-Toledo in front of the Judge, would President Nixon have
lost his rights to private property? Why did "Tricky Dick" get his rights
to private property, while the rest of us are plagued with a court and a
justice system that can take whatever they have an inclination to? What is
worse is how they can justify plundering our life, liberty, and property.
One of the biggest criticisms of the asset forfeiture plague is the use
of "personification" to confiscate property. Personification is the idea
that things or objects posses the free will and capacity to commit crimes.
It is an idea deeply rooted in the practice of witchcraft, the occult, and
devil worship. Objects are supposed to get that kind of power from the
devil, or a curse. I find it appalling that the Christian community, for
the most part, condones this practice by the courts of declaring "things"
capable of the free will to commit crimes. I want to hear a car, boat, or
house walk in, sit down on the witness stand and testify like "Mr. Ed" the
horse, before I will concede that this practice is anything but an evil
ploy to steal property. The idea that the American social fabric is
suffering from the same social stress as caused in the Inquisition is no
exaggeration. The courts are using some of the same terrorist tools as
used by Inquisitioners. This was never meant to happen in America. The
bill of attainder mandates were meant to keep the horrors of this kind of
law from being practiced.
Americans must demand their right to be protected from laws that
plunder our lives, liberty, and property. This can be accomplished by
demanding that bills of attainder be defined to protect American civil
liberties. It is time to define our rights so they cannot be ignored, or
abused. Until the basic elements of what a bill of attainder is becomes
defined in our law, the legislatures, the courts, and the police will
continue to violate the American rights the Constitution was supposed to
provide. Perhaps we as a people need to understand the warning given by
James Madison when he stated, "Do not seperate text from historical
background. If you do, you will have perverted and subverted the
Constitution, which can only end in a distorted, bastardized form of
illegitimate government."
References:
- Article 1. Sec. (9), and (10), U.S. Constitution.
- U.S. Commission On Civil Rights CC#93-1-1037
- U.S. v. Brown, (1965) 85 S Ct.1707, U.S. 437 (see also) Communist
Party of U.S. v. Subversive Activities Control Board (1961)
- U.S. v. Lovett (1946)
- re: Yung See Hee, (1888) 36 F. 437
- Cummings v. Missouri (1867) 71 U.S. 277, 323
- Calero-Toledo v. pearson Yaught, (1974) 416 U.S. L 2d 452
- Bennis v. Michigan (1996)
- F.E.A.R. Chronicles, Vol. 3, No.3, p. 11.
- Nixon v. U.S. (1992) 978 F. 2d 1269
For more information: The Bill Of Attainder Project,
, P.O.Box 584, Colbert, OK 74733.
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