The Libertarian Party is the third largest and fastest growing political party in the U.S. The Libertarian party is dedicated to strictly limited government, a pure free market economy, private property rights, civil liberties, personal freedoms with personal responsibilities, and a foreign policy of non-intervention, peace, and free trade. Libertarians of South Central Kansas (LSOCK) are an affiliate of the Libertarian Party of Kansas (http://www.lpks.org/) We meet every Tuesday night (except holidays) from 5:30 to 7:00 pm at Cathy's Westway Cafe located at 1215 W. Pawnee (just west of Seneca Street) in Wichita, Kansas. All who support personal responsibility and individual liberty are invited to attend!
LPKS/LSOCK P.O. Box 2456 Wichita, Kansas 67201
1-800-335-1776

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

LSOCK NEWS



Libertarians Of South Central Kansas (LSOCK) meet for Supper and discussion every Tuesday at Mike's Steakhouse located at 2131 S. Broadway in Wichita, Kansas at 5:30 PM. If we have official business to conduct or a featured guest speaker, that will begin at 6:00 PM. All who support personal responsibility and individual liberty are invited to attend.

To receive the LSOCK NEWS and LSOCK NEWS Alerts! via email please contact Steven Rosile at sarasile@att.net or 316 618-1339.

Contact the Kansas Libertarian Party or LSOCK at:

LPKS / LSOCK
P.O. Box 2456
Wichita, Kansas 67201

Ph. (800) 335-1776

On the Web please go to www.lpks.org  or to the LSOCK Blog at:


IN THIS ISSUE:

  1. From The Editor
  2. KSCADP Meets Tuesday, 7PM
  3. Kelly Wendln, Frankie Moore, RIP
  4. Kansas State Fair Volunteers Needed Now
  5. Jury Power, Jury Rights! Acquittal and Nullification 

1.   From The Editor

Hello everyone,

Libertarians in northeast Kansas celebrated open carry at a picnic in a Lenexa City Park Saturday, July 20. They celebrated the fact that Lenexa had repealed their ban on open carry, after a lot of prodding by members of the LPKS.

Our party has gotten a lot of recognition in the press and media the past year or so (including several mentions in our Wichita Eagle) from challenging several cities in Johnson County regarding their bans on openly carrying firearms within city limits. After politely meeting with city officials in the cities of Lenexa, Prairie Village and Leawood to try to persuade them to change their statutes to conform to the state law, the party initiated lawsuits against them, only to have the suits dismissed for lack of standing. The lack of standing was due to the fact that the LPKS was not harmed by these statutes because the party could not physically carry or strap on a loaded gun.

Undeterred, party members formed a new group, Johnson County Open Carry. This group found willing LPKS members that reside in these cities to request a permit to hold picnics in city parks where open carry would be featured. Of course the permits were denied on the grounds that open carry was banned by local statutes. When the individual that was requesting the permit made it clear to the Lenexa city council that he would be filing a lawsuit over the matter they had they good sense to actually vote to change the statute and allow open carry in Lenexa. This vote took place at the Lenexa City Council meeting June 18. This led to the “celebration” picnic on July 20.

Prairie Village and Leawood persist in maintaining their bans on open carry despite state law allowing it. The permits for open carry picnics in these cities were denied and this will lead to lawsuits being filed against them soon if they do not change their laws.

Permits have been granted for Johnson County Open Carry to hold picnics in these two cities but they will not feature open carry of firearms, only empty holsters. These are intended to publicize this issue and put pressure on the city councils to comply with state law.

In Wichita (and Salina), the city council did change their statutes to allow open carry when it was pointed out to them that state law now required it. That was over a year ago and was merely conforming to state law.

However, the Wichita City Council does not want to allow open carry in a number of city owned buildings as required by state law if adequate security is not provided. Armed guards with metal detectors at these city buildings that do not currently have them are being considered by the council so that they can maintain bans on open carry. The cost estimates for doing this is around $14.5 million per year. Wichita has had a spending problem the past decade and can not afford to do this but the council seems to want to so anyway.

The Wichita chapter of the Campaign for Liberty is spearheading a petition drive to stop this infringement of the 2nd Amendment and unnecessary expenditure of city tax money. You can find this petition on their website at:


Please click the above and sign their petition.

The petition is below and reads:


Petition to Protect our Right to Self Defense and Stop Wasteful Spending to Wichita’s Mayor and City Council

WHEREAS: The United States and Kansas Constitutions both recognize the right to self-defense as an unalienable right; and
WHEREAS: The Kansas legislature recently passed, and the Kansas governor signed into law, legislation allowing concealed carry in non-secure public buildings; and
WHEREAS: It will cost an estimated additional $14.5 million per year in salaries to provide real security for Wichita public facilities currently posted “Gun Free”.
THEREFORE: The citizens and tax payers of Wichita demand that the City Council order the “Gun Free” signs removed immediately from non-secure buildings.

I will have printed copies at the LSOCK Supper Meetings to sign as well.

The Campaign for Liberty, Wichita Chapter meet the last Thursday of every month at the Wichita Marriot at 7:00 PM in one of the meeting rooms on the ground floor in the southwest area of the motel. I try to attend every month as do several other LSOCK members. Hope to see you there soon.

For Liberty,

Steven A. Rosile
Editor, LSOCK NEWS


2.        Kansas Coalition Against the Death Penalty

Meeting Tuesday, July 30, 7pm, 3450 North Rock Road, Building 2
(across the street from Sam's Club on N. Rock Rd.)

Bills have been introduced in both the House and the Senate regarding death penalty abolition here in Kansas .  Though the bills were introduced last session, we purposefully waited until now to push them forward.  With so many new legislators in Topeka , we had a challenging task of developing these new relationships and educating them on Kansas ' death penalty.  We have never seen such a strong level of bi-partisan support on this issue!  KCADP and our various teams have been working diligently toward seeing the death penalty come to an end, and the time to push even harder is upon us. We need a strong turnout, as it's time to take things to the next level!

For more information about this organization please go to:



   3.   Kelly Wendln, Frankie Moore, RIP

The Freedom Movement lost two long time activists this past April. Kelly Wendln passed away on April 7 and his long time partner of 41 years, Frankie Moore, passed away just sixteen days later, on April 23. Kelly was 71 and Frankie was 74. These two have been at the core of LSOCK’s efforts to educate the public by regularly handing out Jury Rights information at the Sedgwick County Courthouse for many years now.

Kelly had made it his mission in life to protest and advocate change of the 55 MPH speed limit and motorcycle helmet laws. He challenged these laws in court  in and actually appealed three of his cases to the Kansas Supreme Court, and one of these he appealed to the US Supreme Court!

He more recently fought the seat belt law after receiving a ticket for failure to wear his seatbelt. The charge was dismissed with prejudice when Kelly demanded a jury trial. The prosecutors said that they dismissed the charges because they didn’t think that the $10 fine involved was worth the expense of a jury trial. They may have also been worried that the jury would acquit Kelly since one or more of them may have been educated on their right to do so by Kelly himself.

These two were active in LSOCK and another local group you have read about in the LSOCK NEWS, Kansans Advocating Responsible Zoning (KARZ). Frankie was Secretary of the KARZ group. She called every KARZ member to remind them of the  monthly KARZ meetings. KARZ meets at Spangles Restaurant at Broadway and Kellogg (US 54) at 7:00 PM on the third Wednesday of every month.

Kelly and Frankie will be missed by all who knew them. Gob bless them both.


   4.   Kansas State Fair Volunteers Needed NOW

Once again, it is time to prepare for the Kansas State Fair . We need volunteers to staff the LPKS Outreach Booth, aka the Politically Homeless Booth, this coming September.

Our booth must have at least one (preferably two or more) person(s) manning the booth from 9:00 AM to 9:00 PM every day from September 6 through the 15.
That is Friday the 6th to Sunday the 15th.

I will be doing the scheduling for this event again this year. The day is split into morning (9 AM to 3 PM) and evening (3 PM to 9 PM) shifts but I can schedule you for anytime through the day that you may have available to volunteer.

The LPKS does outreach booths at a variety of festivals around the state but the Kansas State Fair allows us to contact a wide cross section of Kansans from all over the entire state at this one event.

If you want to assist us please contact me, Steven Rosile, by replying to this email or sarasile@att.net , or calling me at 316 618-1339.


  1.    Jury Power, Jury Rights! Acquittal and Nullification

by Steven A Rosile
  

“….to secure these rights Governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.”

Thomas Jefferson, in the Declaration of Independence of the United States of America

"It may not be amiss, here, Gentlemen, to remind you of the good old rule, that on questions of fact, it is the province of the jury, on questions of law, it is the province of the court to decide. But it must be observed that by the same law, which recognizes this reasonable distribution of jurisdiction, you have nevertheless a right to take upon yourselves to judge of both, and to determine the law as well as the fact in controversy. On this, and on every other occasion, however, we have no doubt, you will pay that respect, which is due to the opinion of the court: For, as on the one hand, it is presumed, that juries are the best judges of facts; it is, on the other hand, presumbable, that the court are the best judges of the law. But still both objects are lawfully, within your power of decision."

Chief Justice John Jay in Georgia v Brailsford, 3 Dallas 1, (1794)


“The people are the masters of both congresses and courts, not to overthrow the Constitution, but the men who pervert it”

Abraham Lincoln


“Jury has undisputed power to acquit, even if its verdict is contrary to law as given by judge and contrary to evidence

Westlaw Key System, Criminal Law Key 731, also see US v Moylan, 417 F.2d 1002, (1969), US v Dougherty, 473 F.2d, 1113 DC Court of Appeals, (1972) 


The Rights referred to above, among others, include Life, Liberty and Pursuit of Happiness. You probably have some understanding of what these mean.  But what does “consent of the governed” mean?

It does not mean just electing officials to enact laws that we must obey. No, it is much grander a concept than that.

The nobles or people of England had not elected King John. John was King by right of descent from William The Conqueror, who invaded England in 1066 and claimed the throne.

King John was not popular with the noblemen. His rule was heavy-handed and arbitrary, so much so that the nobles felt threatened and drew up what later came to be known as the Magna Carta (Great Charter). The King and his forces were pursued and then challenged by superior forces at Runnymede, near London, in 1215 AD. The King was forced at sword point to sign this document that listed rights of the nobility that the King could not transgress.

Among these rights was trial by jury of ones peers. The King’s laws could be (and often were) ruled invalid by such a jury. This is the basis of the Common Law right and power of the jury to nullify the law or the application of the law in the case before it if the jurors feel the law is unjust or improper or should not apply in the case before them..

This is the source of the power of the jury (people) to grant or withhold their consent to laws enacted by Kings or legislatures.

This power has not been popular with Kings, courts, legislatures and others so all manner of effort has been exerted by them through the centuries to limit or evade this power.

In 1670 William Penn was tried in London before a panel of judges and a jury of 12 freemen for holding church services (Quaker) in Gracechurch Street in front of his church which had previously been padlocked by authorities as all religions except the Church of England had been made illegal. see The Trial of William Penn and William Mead, at the Old Bailey, London, for a Tumultous Assembly: 22 Charles II. A.D. 1670

The jury in the case came back with a verdict of Guilty of Speaking in Gracechurch Street which greatly irritated the judges as “speaking” was not a crime they could punish the defendant for. They sent the jurors to a cell overnight and the next day they still returned the same verdict. They were again confined and again returned the same verdict. This went on for several days until the jury changed their verdict to not guilty.

This enraged the judges who had to release the defendant, William Penn (yes, that William Penn, who later founded Pennsylvania) but fined the jurors for their insolence. Several paid the fine but a group of eight, led by a wealthy merchant named George Bushell refused to pay the fine and were sent to prison.

They were confined for weeks when a friend of Bushell convinced a retired Chancery (Ecclesiastical or Civil) Court Judge to come out of retirement and take on the case of the imprisoned jurors. The doctrine of Habeas Corpus (bring me the body) had been established by Magna Carta as well as Trial by Jury but both had long been ignored by the courts.

The case of these jurors changed that as the Judge ordered them released.  There could be no punishment of jurors for rendering their verdict whether it pleased the judge(s) or not. This case established “firmly and finally” the power of the trial jury to judge the law as well as the facts in the case before them and also the Right of Habeas Corpus to challenge the unjust imprisonment of persons and why Habeas Corpus is a civil procedure in a criminal case.

see Penn and Mead's Case, 6 How. State Tr. 951, and Bushell's Case, Vaughan, 135, 6 How State Tr. 999; 1 Freem. 1; T. Jones, 13.

*eds note, September 5, 1670 was the first day of these jurors confinement. In 1993 Kansas Governor Joan Finney made a proclamation that September 5 1993, marked the 323rd Anniversary of that day and would be celebrated as “Jury Rights Day” in their honor.

From the days of Magna Carta onward, English jurisprudence had deferred to the power of juries to decide criminal cases in nearly all ways, including the right and power to acquit a man based on their conscience, which of course is the core value of having a jury in the first place. Independent citizens tend not to simply rubber-stamp government activities but instead reject such activities when they become obnoxious to Liberty.

In the time before the American Revolution, some English judges tried to get around this by ordering juries to return a certain verdict and punishing them for rendering the “wrong” verdict.

This caused a huge debate amongst English judges as to whether such acts by the courts were legitimate. In the colonies, when the English judges began interfering with the proper functioning of juries, this issue became one of the reasons listed in the Declaration of Independence to justify our separation from England.

The colonies, later American States, adopted the Common Law of England and so these rights are also a part of our heritage and birthright. Our revolutionaries were originally fighting for their rights as Englishmen until it became clear that the Crown and Parliament were not going to respect these rights. Only then did their goal become outright Independence.

In New York Colony in 1734, John Peter Zenger, a newspaper publisher, was arrested and charged under British law with libel for his criticism of the colony’s Governor. At the time truth was not a defense to charges of libel under British law. Indeed, truth was deemed more offensive than unfounded allegations as it was more likely to lead to unrest and a breech of the King’s Peace.

Zenger was brought to trial in New York City after eight months in confinement. The jury, who knew that the statements made by Zenger against the Governor were true (and who also detested him) found Zenger not guilty. They believed truth was a proper defense in this case in spite of British law stating otherwise. This case led to the 1st Amendment clauses regarding freedom of speech and press in the United States. see Zenger’s Case, 17 Howell’s State Trials, 675 (1735)

Later, in what had become the United States, the Alien and Sedition Act of 1798 was enacted by Congress. This was widely condemned as unconstitutional and led to the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions (written by Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, respectively) that were passed in these two states and which declared the federal law unconstitutional and null and void. Congress repealed the law shortly thereafter.*

Slavery was a difficult issue for our young nation and federal law made aiding a fugitive slave a crime. Citizens of the northern states protected each other from these laws by refusing to indict in the Grand Juries and in the extremely rare cases that the government could get a Grand Jury to indict, there are very few instances that I have found where a jury in a free state convicted anyone under this law. Southern juries were a different matter but at least northerners were able to protect their fellow citizens from this bad law thanks to the provision in the Constitution that federal prosecutions must be in the state the crime is committed in and not some other state or Washington, DC.

Some sociopolitical forces do not like the right of the jury to acquit on its conscience and in the late 1800’s the robber barons were pressuring the government to do something about “lawless juries” that would not enforce the anti-union labor laws and so the courts began to refuse to recognize this right even though most of the people were still aware that they had the power to adjudge a case on their sense of justice.

The robber barons position eventually prevailed with the US Supreme Court ruling in Sparf and Hanson v United States, 156 US 51 (1895), a case that specifically (and wrongly) denied the right of juries to exercise this power.

The Sparf case involved a mutiny on a vessel in the Pacific ocean that resulted in death. The defendants were charged with murder and their counsel wanted to argue to the jury that they might find the defendants guilty of the lesser charge of manslaughter rather than murder. The prosecutors objected and the trial court judge ruled for the prosecution.

I want to point out that it does not make any sense that this case came to be about the right of the jury to render a verdict based on their conscious when what was involved here was the judge’s refusal to allow the jury to decide the fact of whether malice was involved. Malice is one essential difference between murder and manslaughter.

The issue was brought up on appeal to the US Supreme Court and resulted in one of the most anomalous opinions ever rendered by that court. Rather than decide the actual controversy of whether the trial court had usurped the exclusive province of the jury to decide whether there was credible evidence of malice, they turned it into a question of whose province, court or juror’s, it is to decide the law.

The Court also leaves it unclear as to whether it is using common law precedent to decide a case under maritime law, or whether it is imposing maritime law into common law jurisdiction.

Justice Harlan, writing for the Sparf majority, revisited the debate on the issue of a jury’s right to determine the law that transpired between two English judges, Mansfield and Camden, in the 1700’s and pretended it was not a debate at all. Harlan took Mansfield’s position, the side the English themselves rejected in the end, and took it as settled English law that the jury has neither the right nor power to ignore the instructions of the judge as to the law. Justices Gray and Shiras, however, in their dissent, showed that there indeed was disagreement between Mansfield and Camden, and that Camden’s view that the jury indeed had this right and power, had, in the end, prevailed.

Despite the confusion and uncertainty resulting from the Supreme Court’s decision in Sparf, the law. Justices Gray and Shiras, however, in their dissent, showed that there indeed was disagreement between Mansfield and Camden, and that Camden’s view that the jury indeed had this right and power, had, in the end, prevailed.

Despite the confusion and uncertainty resulting from the Supreme Court’s decision in Sparf, just one year later, in 1896, that same US Supreme Court affirmed a decision of the Kansas Supreme Court that, under the Kansas Constitution, the jury decides both law and fact . See In Re Lowe, Appellant, 46 Kan. 255, 26 P. 749 (1891) for this Kansas case that was later affirmed by the US Supreme Court

The next major event in the timeline of jury rights was the prohibition of alcohol via constitutional amendment. There was widespread non-compliance with this and so resulted in corruption of government officials, the growth of organized crime and turf wars between competing criminal factions.
The people eventually grew weary of the corruption and violence and began to exercise their sovereignty by bringing in verdicts of “not guilty” in increasing numbers of these cases, to the point that another amendment soon was proposed and ratified ending prohibition. The people had brought this about by refusing to continue giving their consent to the law.
In US v Moylan, 417 F.2d 1002 (1969) a case involving destruction of Selective Service records by priests and nuns, the 4th Circuit Court Of Appeals ruled that it was error on the part of the trial judge to deny the right of the jury to acquit based on their conscience. However, the court stated that this did not rise to reversible error because the people (jurors) commonly had knowledge of their power to acquit but that normally they would only do so when they were greatly offended by government misconduct. This reasoning from Moylan has been used by prosecutors, courts and legislatures (see Pattern Instructions of Kansas where the Kansas legislature has mandated that trial judges instruct jurors they must accept the law as he gives it to them) to justify not allowing defense counsel to remind and inform jurors of this power.
In fact, while the later ruling by the DC Circuit Court of Appeals in US v Doughherty, 473 F.2d 1113, 1132 (1972) plainly states that the jury has “an unreviewable and unreversible power to acquit in disregard of the instructions on the law given by the trial judge” that Court ruled that it is not error to fail to inform them of their power.
However, this right has a dark side. I mention it here to so that you will be aware of it and because it also illustrates the power does indeed exist in modern times.

In the southern states, at least into the 1950’s, 60’s and even 70’s, white people on trial for murdering black people often were acquitted and set free despite overwhelming evidence of their guilt. This was not a good thing. It came about because black people were not allowed on juries in the Jim Crow era. Perhaps the OJ Simpson trial put the shoe on the other foot but in that case I believe it more likely was Detective Mark Furman’s lies, the gloves not fitting and a few other inconsistencies that led to the acquittal, not black and minority jurors.

This leads us to what is a very exciting recent development. Several months ago
(September, 2012) the New Hampshire legislature passed a law requiring that trial judges must allow defense council to inform juries of their right to judge the law and circumstances of the case before them and render a verdict that they believe will result in justice even if the prosecution had met all their burdens of proof under the law. In a nutshell -  Jury Nullification.

This law had not even yet gone into effect when a defense attorney requested that a trial judge allow the jury to be informed of their rights as the new law would soon require. The judge agreed. This particular defendant was accused of growing several cannabis plants in his yard. The state’s proof was complete and yet the jury acquitted him outright.

Now remember, this New Hampshire law did not grant this right to the jury, the law just mandated that judges inform them, or allow the defense to inform them of these rights. As mentioned earlier, this right under common law dates back at least to Magna Carta, 1215 AD. This right and power is referenced in our Declaration of Independence where it says “governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed” and it is in the jury box, not the ballot box, where this consent is granted or denied. This is one of the most precious parts of our common law heritage. It is how the people can control their government(s) and protect their fellow citizens from bad law/bad government without resorting to violence.

Since the above mentioned case there have been other recent instances of Jury Nullification. In New Jersey shortly after the above defendant was acquitted another jury acquitted a defendant on cannabis charges. In Minnesota an Amish farmer/dairyman was charged with selling raw, unpasteurized milk by the state. The jury acquitted him.

In an August, 2011 case in Cook County, IL (Chicago) a woman was charged with eavesdropping/wire-tapping when she secretly recorded police internal affairs investigators as she was complaining about an officer that she alleged had sexually harassed her. The woman believed that the investigators were trying to dissuade her from pressing charges against the officer so she recorded the interview without the knowledge or permission of the investigators. In Illinois all parties being recorded must have knowledge and give consent. The jury in this case acquitted the woman. The jury here may have felt the law was proper but that in this set of circumstances the woman was justified in disobeying it. This is a proper use of Nullification that does not necessarily mean that the jury finds the law invalid, but that the circumstances in the case before them are such that the law should not apply.

However, after this acquittal, the ACLU challenged the state law in federal court and the federal district court ruled it unconstitutional. On appeal the federal circuit court of appeals upheld the lower court ruling and the Cook County Prosecutor appealed to the US Supreme Court who refused to hear the case, letting the trial court and appeals court rulings stand. I learned of this case in the email newsletter Liberty Crier, published by a group of Ron Paul supporters.

Just recently, I have read (also from a link in Liberty Crier) about San Diego, California’s mayor promoting jury nullification as a means to prevent the federal government from enforcing federal law against medical cannabis dispensaries.

The Fully Informed Jury Association (www.FIJA.org) has been educating the public nationwide about this for over twenty years and it is finally beginning to pay off as this power of jury nullification is being restored to the people’s minds. This will surely come into play if/when the federal government attempts to enforce their cannabis drug regulations in Colorado and Washington after those two states’ cannabis legalization efforts were successful in last November’s elections.

In Wichita, LSOCK has been providing FIJA and other information about jury rights on a regular basis at the Sedgwick County Courthouse and other locations since 1996. Please go to www.FIJA.org for more information.

So, spread the word and help save our Constitutional Republic!

*I want to again remind you of this other form of nullification, previously mentioned above when I referred to the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions. State legislatures can, and have recently again begun to, nullify unconstitutional federal law. One example of this is the Kansas law recently passed and signed by the Governor which declares firearms and ammunition manufactured and kept within Kansas’ borders are exempt from federal law and regulations. State legislatures can nullify unconstitutional federal law within their state, and the people can nullify both federal and state law in cases they are serving as jurors on.




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