The RCMP could not enforce the Irving Oil petitioned court - TopicsExpress



          

The RCMP could not enforce the Irving Oil petitioned court injunction because a court injunction is not a law. The provinces do not have the constitutional authority to “enact” law. Laws can only be passed or changed with the approval of both houses of Parliament. A court injunction is nothing more than an prejudicial “administrative ordinance” based solely on a procedural error (is error within the procedure or steps in the experiment that cause the value received to not be the true one). A court Injunction can never be enforced because it is bias – prejudice. A court injunction is solicited by a “corporation”(Irving Oil) to influence the opinion of a Crown (City of London Corporation) judge in favor of the petitioning “corporation”. Irving Oil violated statute law – influence peddling and bribery of Judges or members of Parliament or Provincial Legislative. U.S. snipers were photographed (above image) by various news agencies targeting First Nations and Canadian citizens, with RCMP officers watching. Progressive Conservative David Alward and federal RCMP police officers allowed assault rifle armed foreign soldiers (snipers) to infiltrate Canada and target First Nations and Canadian citizens – an act of war. David Alward and the RCMP coordinated with heavily armed members of the United States military forces and engaged in an armed attack against First Nations Canadians. David Alward (representing the Crown a.k.a City of London Corporation) and the RCMP are guilty of high treason and treason – aiding and abetting another state - when they provided aid and comfort to U.S. infiltration forces in an armed attack against First Nations Canadians peacefully protesting a Irving Oil shale gas confidence scheme that is being perpetrated on Canadian soil. The RCMP stated at least one shot was fired by someone other than police and that police are also investigating suspected explosive devices at the scene. The single shot fired was from the above sniper – a U.S. soldier. Section 46 of the Criminal Code of Canada High treason (1) Every one commits high treason who, in Canada, (b) levies war against Canada or does any act preparatory thereto; or (c) assists an enemy at war with Canada, or any armed forces against whom Canadian Forces are engaged in hostilities, whether or not a state of war exists between Canada and the country whose forces they are...
Posted on: Sun, 20 Oct 2013 01:41:05 +0000

Trending Topics



Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015