Bob
Schulz is on his way to Michigan where he has pledged the support of We The
People to save the life of Rose Lear and to affect the release of her
husband William Wallace Lear following his recent questionable conviction
following a 26 USC 7203, Willful Failure to File indictment.
Rose Lear of Muskegon, Michigan is now in the fourth day of a hunger
fast. Mirroring the words of Schulz from July 2001, she announced that
she will not eat again until she dies or until the federal government agrees
to meet with the experts from the tax honesty movement in a recorded, public
forum to address the evidence and answer the questions about the fraudulent
income tax system.
She said she "will only eat and drink the body and blood of Jesus Christ
during her fast," (meaning she will only receive communion). She just
recently notified Schulz of her situation, telling Schulz that she will not
talk to the press and has directed all press inquiries to Schulz.
Lear’s husband William Wallace Lear must surrender himself to the Federal
prison in Duluth, Minnesota before midnight on Monday, March 10, 2003, where
he is scheduled to begin serving a one year sentence for the conviction.
Schulz has scheduled three press conferences and meetings on Monday, March
10th. The first will be at 10 AM in Muskegon, Michigan at the
Muskegon Harbor Holiday Inn, 939 Third Street (231-722-0100). The second
will be at 6:30 PM in Minneapolis at the Holiday Inn, I-494, Exit 3 (12th
Ave and Portland Ave) 814 East 79th St, Bloomington, Minnesota
(952-854-5558). The third will be at 11:00 PM outside the gates of the
Federal prison in Duluth, Minnesota, 6902 Airport Road. (218-722-8634).
A film crew will film these events so that the nation can witness firsthand
the destruction of an honest American family caught in the thrasher of a
unlawful tax prosecution and a corrupt judicial machine.
Bob spent all of last week working with William Lear and various WTP
attorneys, examining records of the trial, Lear’s experience with the IRS
and the "justice" system and the legal issues surrounding both his
indictment and Lear’s denial of due process.
In a nutshell: in 2001, the IRS told William he was under investigation for
failing to file a tax return for 1995 and 1996 and that if William filed the
return and paid the tax for any one of the two years the IRS would forget
about the other year. Lear refused based on his beliefs that no law required
him to file a return and that a substantial and credible body of evidence
showed the income tax to be fraudulent in its origin and illegal in its
operation.
Without hearing from Lear, a grand jury handed down an indictment charging
William Lear with two counts of failure to file under 26 USC 7203 (the
indictment did not include any other charges or statutes). The
court-appointed attorney immediately told William he did not share William’s
beliefs and would only help William if William plead guilty and plea
bargained (William refused based on his beliefs that no law required him to
file a return and that the income tax was fraudulent in its origin and
illegal in its operation).
The judge instructed the court-appointed attorney to sit in the back of the
room while Lear was forced to represent himself. The judge would only allow
the jury to hear about William’s beliefs regarding his obligation to file a
tax return as long as William’s testimony remained within the meaning and
confines of the Internal Revenue Code itself. Lear was not allowed to
present his beliefs regarding the constitutionality and/or the validity of
the tax law that allegedly compelled him to file a tax return.
On the record, William Lear asked four prosecution witnesses (IRS employees)
a total of 17 times to identify the specific law that required him to file a
return – the IRS employees refused to do so.
Off the record William raised the jurisdiction issue. During jury
instructions, and critical to Section 7203’s legal prong that requires "willfullness"
to obtain a conviction, District Court Judge Quist characterized Lear’s
beliefs about his obligations under the law as being "unreasonable".
Bob and the WTP organization have decided to do all they can to save the
life of Rose Lear and to get William Wallace Lear out of prison.
The meetings in Muskegon and Minneapolis will be followed by a series of
large regional meetings the We The People Congress has decided to schedule
around the country during the next five weeks. Bob will speak at each of the
meetings and is making arrangements with leading credentialed professionals
and former IRS agents to attend and speak. The first of these meetings has
been scheduled for Sunday, March 16, 2003 in Nashua, New Hampshire, near
Boston.
Thus continues We The People’s national "REDRESS BEFORE TAXES" campaign
to earnestly appeal to companies, workers, retirees and the self-employed to
stop withholding, filing and paying the individual income tax until the
government properly responds to the People’s Petition for Redress and
remedies the grievances relating to the income tax. "NO ANSWERS, NO TAXES."