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Gary Amos' Essay Dred Scott & Terri Schiavo |
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Books you should read:
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Dred Scott and Terri Schiavo The Long and Tortured Death of the 14th Amendment At the Hands of the Federal Judiciary An Essay by Gary Amos, JD Copyright, April 2, 2005 All Rights Reserved Click Here for the Entire Essay in PDF format
In this article,
Gary Amos explains
that Terri Schiavo was denied her federally protected 14th Amendment
constitutional right to life. According to Gary Amos, Terri Shiavo is the
new Dred Scott, and federal appeals judge Stanley F. Birch is the new
Roger Taney. Amos calls for the impeachment of the federal judges
involved in her case except the few who dissented. The issue is not one of
judicial activism but judicial malfeasance since the judges failed in
their duty to protect Terri Schiavo's right to life, says Amos.
This is probably the most
stringing and tightly reasoned criticism of the courts to date in the
Terri Shiavo matter. Amos shows the analogy between the Nuremberg trials,
Dred Scott, and Terri Schiavo, and the evisceration of the 14th Amendment
by the federal courts. There are many voices calling for the reform of the
federal judiciary. Amos's explanation of the real meaning of the 14th
Amendment, and how it was nullified in the Shiavo murder at the hands of
the State of Florida and the federal courts, is indispensable to any
discussion about judicial activism or court reform.
Here is a statement by Gary
Amos on judicial impeachment in the killing of Terri Schiavo:
'In all my years dealing
with constitutional law, I have always said no to judicial impeachment
even when from time to time on various issues some conservative
activists have argued for it in specific situations. I can generally
provide people more arguments against impeachment than for it where
judges are concerned. Sometimes I cannot provide arguments for
impeachment at all, because all the valid arguments from my point of
view mitigated against judicial impeachment in those situations.
"The Schiavo matter is
dramatically different. Not only am I convinced that judicial
impeachment applies here, I am convinced that it applies to every
federal judge in the chain from the district court judge who first
received the case under the act signed by President Bush, through
the appeals judges of the 11th Circuit, to all nine sitting members
of the U.S. Supreme Court, with the exception of the one or two
judges that bucked the system.
"This is the first time
in my several decades of dealing with constitutional law that such a
situation exists. I never imagined that I would see this situation
in my entire lifetime or in my professional career.
First, Article III uses
the words "good behavior" as the term of art dealing with the
impeachment of federal judges. The Constitution uses the words "high
crimes and misdemeanors" as the standard of impeachment for the
executive and legislative branches. "High crimes and misdemeanors"
is a higher and more rigid standard than "good behavior" in Article
III. In the Schiavo matter, the misconduct on the part of the
federal judiciary violates both standards. It violates the "high
crimes and misdemeanors" standard because by refusing to protect the
substantive right to life of Ms. Schiavo under the 14th Amendment,
and treating the matter as strictly procedural, the various judges
made themselves accessories to murder. It violates the "good
behavior" standard for the sorts of reasons explained by William
Blackstone in his Commentaries on the Laws of England.
The federal courts
obstinately refused in the Schiavo matter to employ a jurisprudence
of constitutionally protected inalienable rights mandated by the
Declaration of Independence, the Constitution of the United States,
the rights model of original American jurisprudence from the era of
the Founders, and as extended to state misconduct by the 14th
Amendment.
The federal courts
refused to judicially notice that we prosecuted people for war
crimes at Nuremberg for the very sorts of actions taken and
required by the Florida state courts in clear violation of the
original meaning of inalienable rights and due process of law.
Under our federal
union, there has never been a power in any state to execute anyone
not convicted of a crime and who has not been indicted and/or tried
criminally. Under our federal union and under the constitutions and
bills of rights of every individual state, the right to life is
inalienable. At the state level, that right can only be lost by an
individual person through an act of wrongdoing constituting a
forfeiture and adjudicated as such through a criminal trial where
due process would apply. Executing an innocent person through a
civil process is ultra vires by definition and has been
ultra vires for over two hundred years of American experience.
Having occurred in the Schiavo matter, the question is not one of
due process because there can be no such process, period. Where
such occurs, as it has here, it is an act of state tyranny by
definition, the ground upon which we fired the king of England.
When people say Ms.
Schiavo received due process that is not true because the state is
not permitted to have such a process, period. For any state to have
a process that executes a person or citizen unconvicted of a crime
is not a matter of due process because there can be no such process.
The 14th Amendment mandates that the right to life be protected by
the federal government if a state materially fails in its duty to
secure the inalienable right to life. For any federal judge to fail
in that 14th Amendment duty is "bad behavior" and criminal
negligence. When the federal courts treated the matter pro forma as
a procedural one rather than one of substantive rights, the courts
materially breached their duty to a person who is also a citizen of
the United States under the 14th Amendment with both personhood and
citizenship rights. In light of the fact that the federal
judges' malfeasance has materially redefined (by inaction) something
as fundamental to all persons and American citizens as the right to
life, and demonstrated by precedent that the federal courts
criminally disregard their duty to uphold the right to life, they
have failed to maintain the standard of good conduct required of a
federal judge and forfeited the respect and obedience of the
American people.
For these and related
reasons, every federal judge involved in the execution of Terri
Schiavo has violated his/her office as judge and has committed the
high crime of being an accessory to murder. Therefore every judge so
tainted MUST be impeached by Congress and removed from the bench.
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