When a court acts without jurisdiction, its orders carry no legal force. This deep dive explains why jurisdiction must be proven—not presumed—and how Americans have a constitutional right to challenge fraudulent, unlawful, or color-of-law actions. Know your rights, understand void orders, and stand on the law, not presumption.
Many officers act under "color of law" without realizing it—enforcing statutes that violate rights due to poor training or unchecked presumptions. This episode explores how police, sheriffs, and highway patrol officers can unknowingly cross legal boundaries and how the Constitution remains supreme over policy. Once properly noticed, officers are bound by their oath and must cease unlawful enforcement.
Peace officers like sheriffs are sworn to uphold the Constitution—but when they step outside their lawful authority, they act under "color of law." Even without bad intent, incompetence or poor training can lead to serious civil rights violations. Under 18 U.S.C. § 242, deprivation of rights—whether willful or through ignorance—is a federal crime. Ignorance of the law is no excuse, even for those sworn to enforce it.
Kevin Walker Estate has filed an Emergency Ex Parte Injunction against Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco and multiple deputies, citing ongoing harassment, theft, and extortion under color of law. The injunction, now self-executing and legally binding, orders Defendants to cease all stalking, intimidation, and unlawful deprivation of private trust property. Based on video evidence Defendants robbed Walker at gunpoint, "STOLE" his automobile, and extorted $4,388 USD in illegal fees. Violations of the injunction carry severe civil and criminal consequences, including federal prosecution under 18 U.S.C. §§ 241, 242, 1951, and 1962 (RICO).
A federal lawsuit has been properly filed in the U.S. District Court, Eastern Division (Riverside, CA), but the clerk’s office is seemingly engaged in concealment, tampering, and obstruction of justice. With all facts legally admitted due to non-rebuttal, judgment is now enforceable. The court must docket the case and comply with federal law immediately.
Judges, contrary to popular belief, are not above the law and can be held personally accountable when they act outside their constitutional authority, violate rights, or engage in misconduct. Through legal principles like the Clearfield Doctrine and statutes such as 42 U.S.C. § 1983, individuals have clear pathways to seek redress. Everything in the "public" is commercial thus those are "commercial" transactions, Congress regulates "interstate commerce," and the statutes and U.C.C. and United States Code are for a corporation, trust, ens legis, person, trust company, individual or similar. Not living men and woman.