Department of Justice Gets Retention For Convicted Felons
Department of Justice's Breakdown Of Retention Earnings
It is one thing to do wrong and get arrested and another to get a conviction for a crime done by a United States Citizen.
The Judge, prosecuting attorneys, and public defenders receive retentions for convictions.
For every conviction, the Department of Justice receives, they, for finding a "ward of the state" guilty of a crime that may or may not be true will get retentions. Here's the procedure that is done to do so:
The day of Arrest: A case number is generated and the Court Clerk fills out an SF 273 which requests for bonds for this arrest to be sold off and it is taken from the Penal Sum, which gets it from everyone's Ceste Que Vie Account, ordering for bonds be liquified for a potential conviction to take place within the next three years. The CQV investors hypothecate the bonds and sell them, then these bonds are sold off and liquified for a future court date. Two months is usually the next court date and what it would take for the bonds to be hypothecated on average. If these bonds are not hypothecated by the given court date, the clerk extends the court date to a date that is the day it will be sold off and liquified. It brings you to the day of an Arraignment & Plea, the next scheduled date below is what procedures are taken.
On Arraignment & Plea day of the court: This given day, of assurance, is what determines that the case is viable to move forward and be tried. The court clerk fills out an SF 274 which, then, requests a status on the bonds sold. [Note: The day these bonds are sold off and liquified is the day that the court is given to schedule this procedure of the Arraignment & Pleas. It is rumored that this is the day when the judge decides whether or not this case is a valid case with enough evidence to move forward. This is a front or rather a facade to the actual truth. This has been proven.
On the day of Sentencing: The Clerk fills out an SF 275 which is to deposit or transfer the funds from the Penal Sum to the DOJ's account that the criminal is now a convicted felon and the money is to be transferred into the Department of Justice's account.
The Courts get $2 Million for their heroic conviction and this is dispersed amongst the Judge who gets $90,000.00 per count, the prosecution gets $50,000.00 per count and the defense gets $20,000.00 per count.
The defendant gets "railroaded" a term used in the bar association which means: to lead down a path that has a predetermined outcome which is to be convicted of the crime even if the person didn't do it.
P.A.T.H. is the "Path" that the criminally alleged is taken through to be rail-roaded. Here's how an arrest is determined and the protocol for an arrest to take place.
A Police Officer follows this code: They.....
Presume: Your Status as a United States Citizen
Assume: Your Status as a United States Citizen
Tacit: Agreement that you are a Person, Citizen, or a Resident
Hearsay: Agree that, You, the alleged, which is hearsay, and this is the path that a person, citizen, or a resident is led down on to a pre-determined decision deeming you as a convicted felon. This is what it is to be "Rail-Roaded".
A hearing made of former judges as panelists explains their experiences based upon retentions campaigned for accuracy that rumored the past, a mystery known by no one else but the justices, who many didn't feel comfortable about that imposed upon their positions.