The Redemption Movement: Anatomy of the Sovereign-Citizen Federal Reserve Conspiracy

Fellowship Discussion Essay | May 19, 2026

Occasion: In the Reid critique on May 13, I described the sovereign-citizen movement’s theology as “a stew of King James-only literalism, redemption-movement conspiracy theory about the Federal Reserve, and an inflated reading of the individual believer’s standing before God that displaces the legitimate role of civil authority.” Thomas asked, properly, what was meant by redemption-movement conspiracy theory about the Federal Reserve — and whether I was pointing at the Jekyll Island / Aldrich / Warburg origin story that he and others have studied carefully. I was not. The legitimate historical critique of Federal Reserve formation — Jekyll Island, Aldrich, Warburg, Vanderlip, Davison, the Austrian-school case against central banking, G. Edward Griffin’s The Creature from Jekyll Island, the audit-the-Fed transparency tradition — is real historiography and real political argument. You can accept or contest it on the merits. It is not what the essay was naming.

What the essay was naming is something specific and distinct: the redemption movement, a pseudolegal doctrine originated in the late 1980s and 1990s by Roger Elvick and his Posse Comitatus circle, claiming that the Federal Reserve administers a secret multi-hundred-thousand-dollar account for every American citizen, accessible through arcane paperwork rituals. This essay maps the doctrine element by element, traces each element to its origin, names what is true in the neighborhood of each element and what is false in the element itself, surveys the court record, names the antisemitic root the doctrine rose from, and lays out what the fellowship needs to keep in view as it continues to think about Christian standing under civil authority — particularly as Susan’s ambassador / testamentary-trust frameworks come up for the legal review I called for in the Reid essay.

This is a Christos Conspiracy Review essay as much as a fellowship-discussion essay. CCR’s operating system insists on dual-track analysis (intentional conspiracy vs. de facto pattern), an evidence hierarchy, a bigotry firewall, and the courage to call a false conspiracy a false conspiracy when the evidence requires. The redemption movement is one of CCR’s clearer cases: a fully developed Level 5: Dubious claim with extensive court-tested falsification, traceable origins in identifiable antisemitic and white-supremacist movements, and a documented record of catastrophic harm to its adherents. Examining it carefully serves the CCR’s larger work by showing what the framework looks like when it rejects rather than affirms a conspiracy claim. The CCR is not a credulous instrument. It must be willing to dismiss what cannot stand, with the same rigor it uses to expose what can.

I. Why This Essay Belongs in CCR

The Christos Conspiracy Review framework distinguishes:

  • Level 1 (Documented): Primary sources, admissions, leaked documents, court records.
  • Level 2 (Demonstrated): Clear patterns with no innocent explanation; multiple independent data points.
  • Level 3 (Inferred): Reasonable conclusion from circumstantial evidence.
  • Level 4 (Speculated): Possible but unproven; clearly labeled.
  • Level 5 (Dubious): Weak evidence, better alternative explanations; included only for refutation.

The CCR is most useful when it discriminates rather than collapses. A framework that accepts every claim labeled “conspiracy theory” cannot serve the Kingdom; it produces a mind that cannot tell a Twitter Files-class disclosure from a sight-draft scam, and a community that loses credibility precisely as it is needed most. The CCR Operating System is explicit on this point: “We are not credulous. We do not accept every claim labeled ‘conspiracy theory.'” The bigotry firewall is also explicit: “Claims that reduce to ethnic or religious scapegoating are rejected regardless of framing.”

The redemption movement fails both tests. It is unfalsifiable in form (no court ruling, no government denial, no failed paperwork can disprove the secret account — that just means the procedures were filed wrong), reducible to ethnic scapegoating in origin (Elvick’s original theory specifically attributed the secret accounts to a “Jewish-run international banking cabal,” and his Posse Comitatus / Aryan Nations milieu was openly antisemitic), and demonstrably destructive in fruit (decades of federal prosecutions of its promoters and adherents, with people losing their savings, their property, their custody of children, and in some cases their freedom for years). It is not a Twitter Files-class disclosure. It is not even a plausible-but-unproven speculation. It is a Level 5 claim that the CCR is obligated to refute as part of distinguishing itself from the credulous fringe.

This is also the right place to make the distinction explicit between two things that often get rhetorically merged: the redemption-movement Federal Reserve conspiracy (this essay’s subject) and the legitimate Federal Reserve critique (a separate tradition). The first is pseudolaw; the second is economic and historical argument. Fellowship members who are awake to the second sometimes encounter the first without realizing they are two different things — and absorb claims from the first that contaminate their otherwise sound thinking about the second. The CCR’s work here is to keep them clearly distinguished.

II. The Origin: Roger Elvick and the Posse Comitatus Lineage

The redemption movement has a name and a date. Its originator is Roger Elvick, a former North Dakota farmer who lost his farm in the late 1970s during the farm-credit crisis and became, in the 1980s, a national spokesman for the Committee of the States — a Posse Comitatus successor organization founded jointly with William Potter Gale, the founder of Posse Comitatus itself. Posse Comitatus was an explicitly antisemitic, white-supremacist, anti-government movement that emerged in the 1970s and held that the legitimate American government was the county sheriff and his “posse,” with all higher levels of government being illegitimate impositions controlled by a Jewish banking conspiracy. The Anti-Defamation League documents Elvick’s association with Aryan Nations during the 1980s, and the Southern Poverty Law Center traces the redemption doctrine’s emergence directly from this milieu.

Elvick’s specific contribution was the conversion of generic Posse-Comitatus anti-government grievance into a paperwork procedure people could buy. He sold a manual called The Redemption Package and a set of fraudulent financial instruments — “sight drafts,” issued through his own front company, Common Title Bond & Trust — that adherents were told they could use to discharge debts and obtain large IRS “refunds” by drawing on their alleged secret Treasury accounts. The federal government called these “sight drafts” what they were: bogus checks. By 1990, according to court records and the SPLC, Redemption groups advised by Elvick were active in thirty states and several Canadian provinces and had attempted to pass more than fifteen million dollars in bad paper.

In June 1991, Elvick was convicted by a federal jury in Hawaii of conspiracy to impede justice in connection with federal tax filings (18 U.S.C. § 371) and of passing more than $1 million in false sight drafts. He was fined $100,000 and sentenced to five years in federal prison, plus three years of supervised release. He was released on December 8, 1997, and immediately resumed the Redemption seminars. Around 1999 he developed the strawman theory — the all-capitals-name doctrine — as a tying mechanism for the various pseudolegal claims he had been promoting. In August 2003 the state of Ohio indicted him on multiple felony counts; during preliminary hearings he denied his identity, claimed the court had no jurisdiction over him or his strawman, and so disrupted the proceedings that the court initially ruled him mentally unfit to stand trial. He was ultimately convicted on forgery, extortion, and engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity, and sentenced to four years in Ohio state prison.

This is the originator. This is the documented record. The redemption movement is not an ancient pseudolegal tradition surfacing modern truth; it is a specific, dateable, identifiable scheme created and marketed by an identifiable Aryan-Nations-adjacent figure who served two prison terms for its underlying frauds. Every doctrinal element that follows in the next section traces to his teaching or to his immediate successors and imitators — Eldon Warman in Canada, Barton Buhtz, Glenn Richard Unger, the Montana Freemen, Family Farm Preservation, and the various 1990s “common-law court” pseudo-judges. The continuous lineage is documented in federal indictments and academic studies (notably J.M. Berger’s Without Prejudice: What Sovereign Citizens Believe, 2016, prepared for the Program on Extremism at George Washington University).

The fellowship needs this origin in front of it. When a doctrine is being evaluated, it is legitimate to ask where the doctrine came from and what fruit its originator bore. This is not the genetic fallacy; it is what Scripture commands us to do — by their fruits ye shall know them (Matt 7:16). The fruit of Roger Elvick’s teaching is two federal/state prison terms for its originator and a multi-decade record of prosecutions, ruined finances, lost homes, broken families, and occasional violence among its adherents. This is not the fruit of the Spirit. It is the fruit the CCR Operating System calls the kingdom of darkness, dressed in a costume of legal-religious sophistication.

III. The Full Story the Theory Tells

To examine the redemption doctrine honestly, the fellowship should see it whole — as its proponents tell it — before any element is dissected. Here, then, is the redemption story in the form Elvick and his successors taught it. I am giving it sympathetically, not because it is true, but because the fellowship cannot evaluate what it has not actually heard.

In 1933, when President Roosevelt took the United States off the domestic gold standard and required citizens to surrender their gold (Executive Order 6102; House Joint Resolution 192), the federal government was bankrupt and could no longer pay its debts in gold. To remain solvent, the government secretly pledged its citizens themselves — their bodies, their labor, their future earnings — as collateral against the national debt. The legal mechanism was the Social Security Act of 1936 and the contemporaneous reorganization of the Federal Reserve system. From that point forward, the United States ceased to operate as a Constitutional Republic and became a corporate entity (the corporation styled “UNITED STATES” or “U.S. INC.”) doing business under admiralty / maritime / commercial law rather than common law. Every American baby born since 1936 has, at the moment of birth, two persons created: the flesh-and-blood living human being, and a corporate-fiction “strawman” — represented in all official documents by the name in ALL CAPITAL LETTERS (JOHN HENRY DOE rather than John Henry Doe). The birth certificate is, in fact, a bond — a financial instrument that is traded on the international markets and that capitalizes a hidden Treasury Direct Account / Cestui Que Vie Trust in the strawman’s name. The amount in this account varies by version — Elvick’s original number was $630,000 per citizen; later promoters inflated this to millions. The Social Security number is the account number. The “real” American — the flesh-and-blood man — is the beneficiary of this trust, but he has been kept ignorant of its existence so that the government can use his collateralized future to fund the national debt. The flesh-and-blood man stands outside the corporate/admiralty jurisdiction; only the strawman is inside it. American courts are admiralty courts (the gold-fringed flag, displayed in courtrooms, is the maritime ensign and indicates this); they have jurisdiction only over the strawman, not over the living man. Once a person understands this, he can “redeem” his strawman by performing certain paperwork rituals: filing a UCC-1 financing statement listing himself as the secured creditor of the strawman; sending notarized “Acceptance for Value” (A4V) instruments to the Treasury; copyrighting his all-caps name; declaring himself a “secured-party creditor” rather than a “debtor”; and so on. Once redeemed, he can use the strawman’s hidden Treasury account to discharge his debts — mortgages, credit cards, child support, taxes — by sending A4V instruments to creditors that draw on the secret account. He can also assert that he, as flesh-and-blood, is outside the jurisdiction of admiralty courts and so beyond the reach of ordinary law.

That is the story. It has the structural features of a complete worldview: a fall narrative (1933 bankruptcy and the secret pledging of citizens), a hidden truth (the strawman/Treasury account), a saving knowledge (the UCC redemption procedure), a sacrament (the proper filing), and a promised liberation (escape from debt and from the law). It is a gnostic salvation story, structurally — a redemption-by-secret-knowledge — wearing legal-financial clothing. That structural recognition is part of why it has been so attractive to certain religious-fringe communities, and it is part of why this essay belongs in the CRF (Christos Rigorous Framework) reference set as well as in CCR. Gnostic salvation is one of the recurring counterfeits the Christos framework has to be able to detect.

Now to the elements.

IV. Element-by-Element Examination

Element 1 — The 1933 collateralization claim

The claim: When the U.S. went off the gold standard in 1933 (HJR 192, Executive Order 6102), the bankrupt federal government secretly pledged its citizens themselves — their bodies, future labor, and future earnings — as collateral against the national debt.

What is actually in the neighborhood that is true: 1933 was a real and significant monetary event. Executive Order 6102 (April 5, 1933) did require private holders to surrender most monetary gold to the Federal Reserve. House Joint Resolution 192 (June 5, 1933) did suspend the gold clauses that had been written into private and public debt contracts, so that creditors could no longer demand payment in gold. These were dramatic peacetime interventions in private contracts, and they have been the subject of legitimate constitutional and economic argument ever since. The Gold Clause Cases (1935) upheld them by 5-4 majorities at the Supreme Court, with substantial dissents that read more strongly as time passes. Reasonable people argue, with serious historical and economic scholarship, that this was a watershed in the relation between American citizens and the dollar, and the beginning of the modern fiat-currency regime.

What is false in the redemption-movement claim itself: Nothing in HJR 192, in EO 6102, or in any subsequent legislation or treaty pledged American citizens themselves — their bodies, labor, or future earnings — as collateral against the national debt. The text of HJR 192 is publicly available; it suspends gold clauses in contracts, declaring such clauses against public policy. It says nothing about persons. It creates no trust. It establishes no account. The “citizens as collateral” claim is not an interpretation of the actual statute; it is a story invented in the 1980s and grafted onto the statute’s date. No researcher who has read HJR 192 — and the text is one page long — finds anything in it resembling what the redemption movement claims it does.

Why the substitution works rhetorically: A real event (the 1933 monetary reorganization) is replaced in adherents’ minds by an invented event (citizen collateralization) of the same date. The real event is dramatic enough that adherents do not realize the invented event has been smuggled in. The U.S. went off the gold standard in 1933 (true) becomes the U.S. went off the gold standard in 1933 and pledged its citizens as collateral (false), and the truth of the first clause is borrowed to lend plausibility to the second.

Element 2 — The birth certificate as bond

The claim: Every American birth certificate is a financial instrument — a bond — that is traded on the international markets and that capitalizes a hidden Treasury account in the newborn’s name. The Social Security number is the account number.

What is actually in the neighborhood that is true: Birth certificates are state-issued documents recording vital statistics. Social Security numbers are federal taxpayer-identification numbers. The federal government does keep extensive records on its citizens. None of this is conspiracy; it is administrative reality.

What is false in the claim itself: Birth certificates are not financial instruments. They are not registered as securities with the SEC or with any state securities regulator. They cannot be traded; no market for them exists; no exchange lists them; no clearinghouse settles them; no broker-dealer makes a market in them. The Treasury Department has no system for opening individual accounts upon birth registration; the Federal Reserve has no system for funding such accounts; the Social Security Administration has no fund tied to individual accounts (Social Security is a pay-as-you-go program in which current workers pay current beneficiaries, as decades of Congressional Budget Office analysis make plain). The IRS, the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration, the Federal Reserve, and the FBI have all issued public warnings that there are no secret Treasury accounts, that “strawman” claims are frivolous tax positions, and that A4V instruments drawn on imagined accounts are fraudulent paper. The IRS includes the strawman doctrine on its list of frivolous tax positions; submitting a return based on it triggers a $5,000 penalty under 26 U.S.C. § 6702 in addition to whatever fraud penalties may apply.

Why the substitution works: Birth certificates look like financial-instrument paper. They have serial numbers, watermarks, stamps, registrar signatures. Real bonds and notes also have serial numbers, watermarks, stamps, and signatures. The visual family resemblance lets the claim slide past a reader who has never compared a birth certificate to an actual security. If you have never bought a Treasury bond, the leap from my birth certificate has a serial number to my birth certificate is a bond feels more plausible than it is. It is not plausible. It is wrong.

Element 3 — The strawman / all-capitals-name doctrine

The claim: When a person’s name appears in all capital letters in official documents (JOHN HENRY DOE), this designates a separate legal entity — a “strawman” — distinct from the flesh-and-blood human being (John Henry Doe). The strawman is a corporate fiction; the flesh-and-blood man is sovereign. Legal claims attach to the strawman, not to the man.

What is actually in the neighborhood that is true: It is true that legal systems recognize the distinction between natural persons (human beings) and legal persons (corporations, trusts, partnerships). It is true that all capital letters appear frequently in legal documents — in case captions, on driver’s licenses, on tax forms, on courtroom signage. It is also true that the doctrine of legal personhood is conceptually subtle and has been debated by jurists for centuries.

What is false in the claim itself: The use of all capital letters in legal documents is a typographic convention with no juridical significance whatsoever. It is the same convention that puts STOP on a stop sign, EXIT over a doorway, and headlines in newspapers in caps. It does not create a corporate entity. It does not establish a separate legal personality. No statute, no rule of civil or criminal procedure, no judicial decision in any American jurisdiction recognizes any distinction between John Henry Doe and JOHN HENRY DOE — both refer to the same natural person. Courts have rejected the strawman doctrine so consistently that the rejection has become a doctrinal commonplace: the Seventh Circuit’s holding in United States v. Schneider (910 F.2d 1569, 7th Cir. 1990) called sovereign-citizen identity arguments of this form “having no conceivable validity in American law”; the same circuit’s holding in United States v. Benabe (654 F.3d 753, 7th Cir. 2011) stated that, “Regardless of an individual’s claimed status of descent, be it as a ‘sovereign citizen,’ a ‘secured-party creditor,’ or a ‘flesh-and-blood human being,’ that person is not beyond the jurisdiction of the courts. These theories should be rejected summarily, however they are presented.” Hundreds of district-court and appellate-court decisions follow this line. There is no published American case in which a court has accepted that the all-caps name on a charging document refers to a different person than the defendant standing in the courtroom.

Why the substitution works: The doctrine offers an explanation for an experience many adherents have already had: the experience of being treated by impersonal bureaucracies as a case-number rather than as a person. The phenomenology is real; the metaphysical interpretation is invented. You felt depersonalized at the DMV (true) is conflated with therefore there are two of you, and the depersonalized one is a corporate fiction the government has been hiding from you (false). The doctrine takes a real grievance about bureaucratic dehumanization and supplies a (false) explanation that promises (false) escape.

Element 4 — The secret Treasury / Federal Reserve account

The claim: A secret account is held in the strawman’s name at the Treasury or the Federal Reserve, capitalized by the birth-certificate bond, containing somewhere between $630,000 (Elvick’s original figure) and several million dollars (later promoters). These funds are the citizen’s by right and can be accessed through proper procedures.

What is actually in the neighborhood that is true: The Treasury and the Federal Reserve do administer enormous sums. The federal debt is real. The monetary system is structurally complex and not transparent to the average citizen. There are legitimate critiques of the Federal Reserve’s accountability, transparency, and economic effects — critiques developed by Austrian-school economists, by Ron Paul’s End-the-Fed tradition, by various audit-the-Fed efforts, by serious historians of central banking. None of these legitimate critiques claim or require what the redemption movement claims.

What is false in the claim itself: No such secret accounts exist. Every major American financial regulator and law-enforcement agency has stated this in writing: the IRS (in its annual Dirty Dozen tax-scam publications and in its frivolous-positions register), the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (in multiple investigative reports), the Federal Reserve Banks (in plain-language warnings to consumers), the FBI (in its public-affairs material on sovereign-citizen schemes), and the Federal Trade Commission (in its consumer-fraud bulletins). The accounts cannot be found because they do not exist. The “$630,000 per citizen” figure has no statutory, regulatory, or actuarial source; Elvick simply made it up. Different promoters have used $400,000, $700,000, $1.2 million, and other invented figures, with no method shown for arriving at any of them.

Why the substitution works: Most Americans cannot, in fact, see what the Federal Reserve does on any given day. The Fed’s operations are technical, the Fed’s balance sheet is enormous, the Fed’s accountability is genuinely contested. Into this real opacity, the redemption movement projects a specific imagined content (the secret accounts). The Fed is opaque (true) becomes the Fed is hiding millions of dollars per citizen from each citizen (false). The opacity is real; the projected content is not.

Element 5 — The UCC-1 “redemption” filing

The claim: By filing a Uniform Commercial Code financing statement (UCC-1) naming oneself as the secured creditor of one’s all-caps strawman, the flesh-and-blood man can “separate” himself from the strawman and gain the right to draw on the strawman’s secret account.

What is actually in the neighborhood that is true: The Uniform Commercial Code is real law. UCC Article 9 governs secured transactions in goods and certain intangibles, and UCC-1 financing statements are real filings made in real secretary-of-state offices, real-time, to perfect security interests in real collateral. Lenders use them when taking security in business assets. They have a defined and important commercial function.

What is false in the claim itself: The UCC governs secured transactions between consenting commercial parties; it does not govern the relationship between a person and his own name, or his own legal personhood, or the federal government. A UCC-1 filed by a man naming his own all-caps name as “debtor” and himself as “secured party” is legally meaningless. The filing perfects no security interest because there is no underlying secured-transaction agreement, no collateral, no debt, and no separate person to be the debtor. Most secretary-of-state offices accept these filings because UCC clerks are administratively prohibited from rejecting filings based on substance — they are clerical, not adjudicative. The filing’s existence is therefore not evidence of the filing’s validity. Hundreds of court decisions have held these filings to be void ab initio, frivolous, and in many cases fraudulent (as for example when filed against police officers, judges, or other public officials as retaliatory “paper terrorism” liens). The National Association of Secretaries of State has documented the explosion of fraudulent UCC filings tied to sovereign-citizen schemes; many states (including North Carolina under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-118.6, enacted 2012) have made it a felony to knowingly file false liens against public officials.

Why the substitution works: The UCC is technical. Adherents have read just enough of it to see real-sounding terminology — secured party, debtor, financing statement, perfection of security interest — without grasping the framework that gives those terms meaning. The terminology supplies the costume; the substance does not match the costume.

Element 6 — A4V (“Accepted for Value”)

The claim: Writing the phrase “Accepted for Value” (or “Taken for Value”) on a bill, an indictment, or any other instrument and sending it back to the issuer causes the obligation to be discharged from the strawman’s secret Treasury account.

What is actually in the neighborhood that is true: Negotiable instruments — checks, drafts, promissory notes — are governed by UCC Article 3 and have real legal effects. Endorsements, acceptances, and discharges are real legal acts under that body of law.

What is false in the claim itself: “Accepted for Value” is not a defined operation under the UCC, under federal banking law, under any Treasury regulation, or under any other body of authority. The phrase has no juridical effect. A4V instruments drawn on imagined Treasury accounts are bogus paper, materially indistinguishable from forged or counterfeit checks. They have not paid a single legitimate debt of any kind. People who have tried to use them have not had their mortgages discharged, their taxes paid, their child support cleared, or their indictments dismissed — they have, however, frequently been prosecuted for bank fraud, mail fraud, or filing fraudulent financial instruments. The Internal Revenue Service flags A4V on the Dirty Dozen tax-scam list every year. The Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration’s 2017 report estimated that frivolous redemption claims were costing the government millions of dollars annually in administrative response — though the claims themselves produced no actual transfers, because the imagined accounts do not exist.

Why the substitution works: A4V is the doctrine’s sacrament — the ritual act that supposedly translates secret knowledge into material liberation. As with all sacrament-substitutes, its efficacy is sustained not by results (there are no results) but by the in-group’s mutual assurance that the failures are procedural — you stamped the wrong corner, the notary used the wrong seal, the date format was incorrect. The unfalsifiability is structural. No failed A4V can disprove the doctrine, because every failure is reinterpreted as a paperwork error.

Element 7 — The Cestui Que Vie Trust variant

The claim: The strawman trust is a Cestui Que Vie trust under English common law, traceable to the Cestui Que Vie Act 1666, which secretly made every subject of the Crown a trust beneficiary whose body and labor were held in trust for the Crown.

What is actually in the neighborhood that is true: The Cestui Que Vie Act 1666 is a real piece of English legislation. It is a procedural statute addressing what should happen to property when a tenant or grantee whose interest depends on the life of another person has been unheard-of for seven years; in such a case, the absent person may be presumed dead for purposes of property succession. It is a sensible Restoration-era statute about administering estates in cases of long absence — written, presumably, with seventeenth-century mariners and emigrants in mind.

What is false in the claim itself: The 1666 Act does not establish any general trust over the persons of the Crown’s subjects, does not capitalize any account, does not survive in any operative form into modern American law, and has no relationship whatever to the modern redemption-movement claims. The reference to it in pseudolegal literature is a fragment of medievalist costume jewelry — a real-sounding old statute name used to lend antiquity to a 1990s invention. Anyone who reads the text of the Cestui Que Vie Act 1666 (it is in the public domain and easily accessible) discovers that it bears no resemblance to what the redemption literature claims it does. It is the same move as the citation to HJR 192: a real document is named so that its reality can lend plausibility to a false claim about its contents.

Why the substitution works: The redemption movement attracts adherents who feel that something is being kept from them by the legal establishment. A musty old common-law statute, cited in Latin-derived terminology, supplies an atmosphere of recovered ancient truth. Most adherents will never read the actual 1666 Act, and the promoters know this. The citation is theatrical, not substantive.

Element 8 — The admiralty-jurisdiction / gold-fringed-flag argument

The claim: American courts are secretly admiralty (maritime) courts, not common-law courts. The gold-fringed flag displayed in many courtrooms is the maritime ensign and signals this. Admiralty courts have jurisdiction only over the all-caps strawman, not over the flesh-and-blood man, who is therefore not subject to their authority. Declaring this distinction in court should result in dismissal.

What is actually in the neighborhood that is true: Admiralty law is real. The federal courts have a real admiralty/maritime jurisdiction (Article III § 2 of the Constitution; 28 U.S.C. § 1333), grounded in cases involving navigable waters and certain maritime contracts. Gold-fringed flags are a real military and ceremonial convention — they are displayed in many official settings, including courtrooms, government offices, military ceremonies, and presidential events.

What is false in the claim itself: The gold fringe on a flag has no jurisdictional significance whatever. It is a ceremonial decoration governed by military flag-display protocols (notably U.S. Army Regulation 840-10 and related Department of Defense manuals); it does not indicate that the displaying institution is operating under admiralty law. Most American courts are not, in fact, admiralty courts; they are courts of general or limited jurisdiction operating under the U.S. Constitution, federal statutes, state constitutions, and state statutes. The admiralty argument has been raised in hundreds of cases and rejected in every one. The Seventh Circuit has flatly stated that “the idea that federal courts are secretly admiralty courts and thus have no jurisdiction over people has been repeatedly dismissed as frivolous.” Courts have, on occasion, removed gold-fringed flags from courtrooms at sovereign-citizen request in order to deny the defendant the argumentative theater — and have then proceeded with the prosecution, demonstrating that the flag had no jurisdictional effect either way.

Why the substitution works: Admiralty law is a genuinely specialized and unfamiliar branch of jurisprudence to most laymen. The gold fringe is a real visual marker that an observer might wonder about. Combine a real specialized legal field with a real visible curiosity, and you have the raw material for a story that connects them. The connection is invented; the elements are real.

Element 9 — The “two persons” anthropology

The claim, in its most ambitious form: The flesh-and-blood man and the all-caps strawman are not merely different legal categories but different persons. The flesh-and-blood man is sovereign, immortal in his eternal soul, free, accountable to God and to “common law” — not subject to civil statutes that bind the strawman. The strawman is a fiction that the man can repudiate, walk away from, refuse to be.

What is actually in the neighborhood that is true: Christian anthropology does affirm that the human being is more than his civil paperwork — that the imago Dei in each person is not exhausted by his name on a deed or his number in a database, that his ultimate accountability is to God rather than to any human tribunal, that no merely civil jurisdiction can claim ultimate authority over his soul. This is the seed of what is right in the New Testament’s render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s, and unto God what is God’s (Matt 22:21), unpacked in the Reid essay. There is a real Christian truth in the vicinity that the citizen is more than his civil identity.

What is false in the claim itself: The Christian truth that the human being is more than his paperwork is not the redemption-movement claim that the human being is two persons, with the legal one being a fiction the believer can repudiate. Scripture knows one person per body: and the LORD God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul (Gen 2:7). One man, one soul, one accountability. Christian tradition has never taught that there are two persons inside one body, one of which can be discarded by paperwork. To the contrary, the Christian tradition has always insisted that the believer carries his whole self — name, identity, civil obligations, social relationships, financial responsibilities — into the Kingdom; sanctification integrates the person rather than fissioning him.

The redemption-movement anthropology is, structurally, a kind of gnostic dualism — a doctrine that the real self is hidden behind an illusory legal self, and that salvation consists in escaping the illusory self by secret knowledge. This is precisely the structure that the early Church identified as the gnostic heresy and excluded from orthodox Christianity in the second and third centuries. The Christos framework, with its repeated insistence on the unity of the person and the integration of body, soul, and spirit (cf. the Theological Grammar §§ on three-tier consciousness), is structurally incompatible with the redemption-movement anthropology. The fellowship cannot accept the doctrine without abandoning the unity-of-person teaching that runs through the Grammar and the Founders Vision archive.

Why the substitution works: This is the most spiritually dangerous element of the doctrine, because the Christian truth in the neighborhood is real and important, and an adherent who has felt that real truth strongly may not notice when the (false) two-person doctrine slides in alongside it. You are more than your paperwork (true) becomes therefore there are two of you and the paperwork-one is a fiction (false). The first sentence is gospel; the second is gnosticism. The fellowship must learn to feel the difference.

V. The Pattern of Judicial Rejection

The redemption movement has been before American courts for thirty years. Its core claims have been adjudicated thousands of times, in state and federal courts at every level. The pattern is unambiguous: there is no published American case in which a court has accepted any of the doctrine’s load-bearing claims. The strawman has not been recognized; the secret account has not been credited; the A4V instrument has not been honored; the admiralty argument has not been sustained; the all-caps distinction has not been acknowledged. The doctrinal commonplaces that organize this rejection are:

  • United States v. Schneider (910 F.2d 1569, 7th Cir. 1990): sovereign-citizen identity arguments have “no conceivable validity in American law.”
  • United States v. Benabe (654 F.3d 753, 7th Cir. 2011): “Regardless of an individual’s claimed status of descent, be it as a ‘sovereign citizen,’ a ‘secured-party creditor,’ or a ‘flesh-and-blood human being,’ that person is not beyond the jurisdiction of the courts. These theories should be rejected summarily, however they are presented.”
  • Berman v. Stephens (N.D. Tex. June 2015): “His reliance on the UCC or a so-called ‘sovereign citizen’ theory that he is exempt from prosecution and beyond the jurisdiction of the state or federal courts is frivolous.”
  • Mason v. Anderson (S.D. Tex. Aug. 2016): collecting cases, holding that courts routinely dismiss sovereign-citizen claims.
  • Multiple Eleventh Circuit and other appellate panels: routinely rejecting sovereign-citizen legal theories as frivolous.

These are not isolated outlier holdings. They are the consistent pattern across forty years and every American jurisdiction. State courts have followed the federal lead. North Carolina has two published Court-of-Appeals opinions to this effect (State v. Phillips I, 149 N.C. App. 310 (2002); State v. Phillips II, succeeding case); Australia’s District Court of Queensland in 2021 described the strawman argument as “nonsense or gobbledygook”; Canadian courts have produced similar holdings under the rubric of “Organized Pseudolegal Commercial Argument” (OPCA) litigants, following the influential 2012 Alberta judgment in Meads v. Meads (2012 ABQB 571), which is one of the most thorough judicial dissections of pseudolegal doctrine on record and which fellowship members serious about this question should read.

The unfalsifiability of the doctrine within the movement, however, is precisely that this judicial pattern is expected and explained away. Adherents respond: of course the corporate courts reject the doctrine — they are part of the conspiracy. This is the standard structure of gnostic systems: every disconfirmation is reinterpreted as confirmation of the persecution, every failure is read as a sign that the secret powers are working against the awakening. The CCR Operating System anticipates this move: “If no evidence could falsify a claim, it is not a theory — it is an article of faith.” The redemption doctrine is, by this test, an article of faith. The fellowship should treat it accordingly: as a religion, not a legal analysis. And as a religion, it is a counterfeit one.

VI. The Antisemitic Root We Must Name

The CCR Operating System’s bigotry firewall requires this section. Naming antisemitism in a doctrine’s origin is not an evasion of the doctrine’s claims; it is a relevant fact about the doctrine’s intellectual lineage that anyone evaluating the doctrine has a right to know. The fact is: the redemption movement emerged from the openly antisemitic Posse Comitatus / Christian Identity / Aryan Nations milieu of the 1970s and 1980s, and its original form named who it imagined to be administering the secret accounts.

In Elvick’s earliest formulations, as documented by the SPLC, the $630,000 per-citizen accounts were administered by a Jewish-run international banking cabal which had captured the Federal Reserve and the federal government. Posse Comitatus’s foundational documents (William Potter Gale and others, 1970s) were explicitly antisemitic, identifying Jews as the controllers of the central-banking system, the courts, and the media. Christian Identity theology — which provided much of Posse Comitatus’s religious cover — held that Anglo-Saxon peoples were the true Israelites and that contemporary Jews were impostors and demonic counterfeits. The redemption movement was born in this soil; it is not a coincidence or a peripheral fact.

Most contemporary adherents of redemption-movement claims would deny antisemitic intent, and many genuinely do not hold antisemitic views consciously. The doctrine has been laundered and recirculated through second-, third-, and fourth-generation promoters who have stripped the explicit ethnic targeting. But the structural shape of the doctrine — a hidden cabal controls a secret financial system that has enslaved you, and only secret knowledge can free you — is the structural shape of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion and similar antisemitic conspiracy frameworks. The pattern does not change when the explicit ethnic naming is removed; it merely becomes more diffuse. The CCR Operating System’s bigotry firewall therefore requires us to flag this lineage even when contemporary adherents are unaware of it. Christians do not unknowingly inherit the structural shape of the Protocols and call it freedom in Christ. We refuse the inheritance whether or not the contemporary salesman has scrubbed off the original signatures.

This is also the place to say what the CCR has always said: critique of the Federal Reserve as an institution — its origins, its accountability, its monetary policy, its effects on savers and on the middle class — is legitimate and important Christian-citizenship work, and naming individual bankers, regulators, or policymakers who happen to be Jewish is not antisemitic when those individuals are named for what they did, not for what their ethnicity is. The bigotry firewall does not forbid identifying specific individuals; it forbids treating ethnicity or religion as causative. The fellowship can argue against the Federal Reserve on the merits without inheriting any of the redemption movement’s poison. The legitimate critique does not need the poison; in fact, it is undermined by the poison, because it gets associated by adversaries with the obviously-discredited pseudolegal claims when it should stand on its own.

VII. The Spiritual Problem: Gnostic Salvation by Paperwork

I want to put on the record, as a fellowship matter, what kind of spiritual structure the redemption movement is. It is not principally a legal error; it is principally a religious error wearing legal clothing. Its components map onto gnostic religion with disquieting precision:

  • A fall narrative: 1933, when the secret pledging happened. (Compare gnostic Demiurge myths in which humanity was secretly enslaved.)
  • A hidden truth: the strawman doctrine, the secret accounts, the admiralty courts. (Compare gnostic gnōsis — secret knowledge available only to initiates.)
  • An initiate community: the gurus, seminar leaders, “secured-party creditor” instructors. (Compare gnostic teachers.)
  • A sacrament: A4V, the UCC-1 filing, the notarized declaration. (Compare gnostic ritual practices.)
  • A promised liberation: debt discharge, escape from jurisdiction, recovery of the “real” self. (Compare gnostic return to the pleroma.)
  • An enemy: the corporate UNITED STATES, the admiralty courts, the (originally Jewish) banking cabal. (Compare gnostic Archons.)
  • An unfalsifiable structure: every failure is reinterpreted as procedural error or persecution. (Compare gnostic spiritualization of disconfirmation.)

The Christian who absorbs redemption-movement doctrine without realizing what he has absorbed has not learned a legal trick. He has converted, sub silentio, to a different religion. The fact that this religion uses American legal terminology rather than Greek or Coptic religious terminology does not change its underlying shape. Salvation by secret paperwork performed by initiates against a hidden enemy is gnosticism with a Department of Treasury costume.

This is why the Reid essay treated the redemption movement’s theology as a serious problem rather than as just a legal nuisance. Reid was right about that. The Christos framework’s anthropology — one person, made in God’s image, body and soul and spirit unified, accountable to God and integrated into legitimate human authorities — is incompatible with the redemption-movement anthropology. The fellowship cannot adopt the pseudolegal techniques without absorbing the gnostic anthropology that they are vehicles for. The two come together. The Christian Underground project is, by contrast, integrationist: it preserves the unity of the person, the legitimacy of civil authority within its function, the centrality of Christ rather than secret knowledge, the visible witness of conscientious refusal rather than the secret manipulation of paperwork. These are different religions. We are practicing the first; we are not practicing the second; the fellowship needs to be able to tell them apart.

VIII. Why Honest Federal Reserve Critique Survives This Essay

A reader of this essay who has serious concerns about the Federal Reserve might worry that I am, by debunking redemption claims, lending support to the institution as such. I am not. The point of the essay’s first move — distinguishing the redemption-movement conspiracy from the legitimate Federal Reserve critique — must be repeated here at the end so the distinction does not get blurred in summary.

The following lines of Federal Reserve critique are all legitimate, all contested, all worth fellowship engagement, and all outside the redemption movement:

  • The historical scholarship on the Jekyll Island meeting (November 1910): senators, bankers (Aldrich, Warburg, Vanderlip, Davison, Norton, Andrew), traveling under assumed names, drafting the plan that became the basis for the 1913 Federal Reserve Act. This is well-documented history. The participants admitted it in memoirs decades later. G. Edward Griffin’s The Creature from Jekyll Island (1994) is the major popular treatment; the scholarship can be debated, but the underlying historical event is not in dispute.
  • The Austrian-school critique of central banking: developed by Mises, Hayek, Rothbard, and continued by contemporary writers (Salerno, Hülsmann, Murphy, others). The Austrian argument is that central-bank credit expansion distorts capital structure, produces business cycles, and transfers wealth from late receivers of new money to early receivers. This is a serious economic argument. Fellowship members are free to find it compelling or not, but it is not pseudolaw.
  • The “End the Fed” tradition (Ron Paul and others): a political-philosophical argument that money creation should not be entrusted to a politically insulated central bank but should be returned to commodity backing or competitive issue. Again — a serious political-philosophical argument, traceable to a tradition that includes Jefferson and Jackson among American statesmen.
  • The “Audit the Fed” tradition: arguing for greater transparency and Congressional oversight of Federal Reserve operations. Many of the specifics have been adopted by both political parties at various points; it is mainstream political reform, not conspiracy theory.
  • Critique of recent Federal Reserve crisis responses: 2008 quantitative easing, COVID-era expansion of the balance sheet, the Fed’s role in asset-price inflation and wealth concentration, the consequences for savers under prolonged low-interest-rate policy. These are matters of active mainstream economic debate.
  • Concerns about Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) and the surveillance-and-control implications of programmable money. The CCR Operating System lists this as a legitimate Domain D analysis topic, and it is.

None of this requires the redemption movement. None of it asserts a secret account, a strawman, a UCC-1 escape hatch, a maritime-jurisdiction dodge. Honest Federal Reserve critique stands on its own — on economic theory, on historical record, on political-philosophical argument, on accountability concerns. The redemption movement parasitizes the legitimate critique by attaching its pseudolegal apparatus to the same target, with the result that the legitimate critique gets discredited by association in the public mind. This is one of the costs the legitimate Fed-critique tradition pays for not actively distinguishing itself from the pseudolegal version. The fellowship should help the legitimate critique by making the distinction sharply and publicly. We are not for the Federal Reserve when we reject the redemption movement. We are for the legitimate critique. We are simply refusing to let the legitimate critique be smuggled into a gnostic-pseudolegal religious framework that will destroy its credibility.

IX. Pastoral Implications for the Fellowship

The fellowship is engaging questions about Christian standing under civil authority, conscientious objection, the Christian Underground, and the building of alternative institutions. Several members have, in good faith, encountered materials that overlap with sovereign-citizen and redemption-movement claims without identifying them as such. The pastoral implications follow.

For Susan. The Reid essay called for competent legal review by qualified counsel of Susan’s ambassador and testamentary-trust framings before any of them are recommended or adopted in fellowship practice. This essay does not pronounce on the specifics of Susan’s framings; I have not seen the source documents in detail, and I am not qualified to give legal opinions even if I had. What this essay does provide is the diagnostic test the fellowship and qualified counsel should run: does any of Susan’s framework rely on (a) a claimed distinction between the flesh-and-blood person and the all-caps “strawman,” (b) a claimed secret Treasury or Federal Reserve account, (c) UCC-1 filings naming the person as creditor of their own all-caps name, (d) A4V or similar “discharge” instruments drawn on imagined accounts, (e) claims about admiralty jurisdiction or the gold-fringed flag, (f) the Cestui Que Vie Act of 1666 as a basis for present claims, or (g) Roger Elvick or his successors as a cited authority? If yes to any of these, the framework needs to be rebuilt from a different foundation. If no to all of these, the framework may still need legal review, but it is not in the redemption-movement trap.

The pastoral spirit here matters. Susan’s underlying theological intuition — that the Christian belongs to a different sovereign than the American civil order — is sound. It is, in fact, the Christian Underground’s foundational intuition. The question is only whether the specific legal mechanisms she has explored are vehicles for that intuition or vehicles into a pseudolegal swamp. The conversation should be loving, respectful, and serious. Susan has been doing real theological work. She is not a sovereign citizen and should not be treated as one. She is, like all of us, navigating a difficult question with the materials at hand, and some of those materials are contaminated. The fellowship can help her separate the legitimate intuition from the contaminated mechanisms without telling her that the intuition itself is wrong, because the intuition itself is not wrong.

For Charlie. Charlie’s tax position — refusing the calculated portion of his federal taxes corresponding to abortion-related federal spending, while paying everything else and accepting IRS enforcement against the disputed portion — is not redemption-movement doctrine, as the Reid essay laid out at length. Charlie operates inside the tax system, files returns, pays the non-disputed portion, accepts legal consequences. He is doing classical conscientious objection. The fellowship’s distinguishing should make this clear: Charlie’s position survives every test in this essay; the redemption movement fails every test. If any sovereign-citizen-adjacent material ever recommends to Charlie that he stop filing, refuse to acknowledge IRS jurisdiction, file UCC-1s against his all-caps name, or send A4V instruments — the recommendations should be rejected. Charlie’s position is stronger, both legally and theologically, than the redemption-movement alternative, and he should not let the latter contaminate the former.

For the fellowship generally. When sovereign-citizen / redemption-movement language appears in fellowship discussion — whether through Susan’s reading, through video content circulating in adjacent Christian communities, through someone’s friend or neighbor — the fellowship should be ready with the diagnostic categories. Does this material claim a secret account exists? Does it claim a paperwork procedure unlocks it? Does it claim the all-caps name is a separate legal entity? Does it claim American courts are admiralty courts? Does it cite Roger Elvick, the Posse Comitatus, the Montana Freemen, Eldon Warman, the freeman-on-the-land movement, or any of the named gurus? Any one of those identifications is sufficient to flag the material as redemption-movement, and the fellowship should be prepared to say so plainly and to point those who have been exposed to it back toward sound Christian frameworks for the same underlying concerns.

For the broader Christian witness. When the fellowship encounters Christian brothers and sisters who have been drawn into this material in good faith, the pastoral move is not contempt or mockery. It is patient explanation. Many adherents are people who have suffered real injustices at the hands of bureaucracies, banks, the IRS, the courts — and the redemption movement promises them, falsely, that there is a paperwork-magic way to be restored. The right response to this is not to defend every aspect of the bureaucracy that hurt them, and not to dismiss their grievance, but to walk with them toward the real Christian framework for grievance under unjust authority: lament, lawful resistance where it applies, conscientious refusal when conscience requires, the lesser-magistrate strategy, prayer, and the cultivation of communities of mutual support. The Christian Underground project is precisely this real framework, and one of its functions is to be a place where those who have been seduced by the redemption movement’s promises can find the genuine article. They have been looking for the right thing in the wrong place. The fellowship can help them find the right thing.

X. What Remains Open

Several threads in this essay deserve fuller treatment.

First, the historical roots of pseudolaw more broadly — the Posse Comitatus movement (William Potter Gale, 1970s), the Christian Identity theology that supplied it cover, the Aryan Nations / Order milieu of the 1980s — is a CCR project of its own. The relationship between racialized religious extremism and pseudolegal doctrine is not specific to Elvick; the same pattern appears in Reichsbürger in Germany, in Moorish Nation pseudolaw in the United States, and elsewhere. Mapping the cross-pollination would be useful for CCR’s domain F (ideological movements). Filed for CCR future work.

Second, the legitimate Federal Reserve critique deserves its own essay — distinguishing the Jekyll Island history, the Austrian-school argument, the End-the-Fed tradition, the Audit-the-Fed reform tradition, and the CBDC concerns from the redemption-movement parasitism that has attached itself to all of them. The CEA (Christos Economic Annex) is the natural place for this work; CCR can cross-reference. Filed for CEA + CCR collaboration.

Third, the broader pattern of “salvation by paperwork” in contemporary spirituality and pseudo-spirituality deserves analysis. The redemption movement is one example; manifesting practices, certain self-help / law-of-attraction frameworks, and various ritualistic financial-freedom claims share the same gnostic-sacramental structure. The Christos framework’s anthropology and soteriology can be sharpened by contrast with these competitors. Filed for CRF (Christos Rigorous Framework) work.

Fourth, the diagnostic protocol for Susan’s framings suggested in §IX needs to be applied carefully and with qualified counsel. The Reid essay called for competent legal review; this essay supplies the theological-doctrinal screen that should run alongside the legal review. The fellowship should plan a working session with Susan, with the appropriate materials in front of us, and walk the screen together. Filed as a live pastoral task.

Fifth, the judicial-rejection survey in §V is illustrative rather than exhaustive. A more systematic compilation — perhaps as a CCR appendix — of the leading state and federal cases rejecting each redemption-movement element would be a useful reference for the fellowship and for any future engagement with adherents. The Alberta judgment in Meads v. Meads (2012 ABQB 571) deserves particular attention as the most thorough single judicial dissection of pseudolegal doctrine in any common-law jurisdiction. Filed for CCR appendix work.

Sixth, the gnostic-structure analysis in §VII bears on more than the redemption movement. The pattern secret knowledge → ritual sacrament → escape from material constraint → identification of hidden enemies shows up across many contemporary movements, religious and quasi-religious. The Christos Theological Grammar could integrate this as a generalizable diagnostic category — the gnostic counterfeit — applicable across CCR analyses. Filed for Grammar v1.5 consideration.

Crescendo

The conclusion of the Reid essay was that the Christian Underground is the historic Christian conscientious-objection tradition applied to present American conditions — that it stands in the line of Daniel, of the midwives, of the apostles, of Paul, of the Reformers, of the Confessing Church. The conclusion of this essay is the corresponding negation: the redemption movement, and the sovereign-citizen movement more broadly, is not in that line. It is a different tradition entirely — a Roger-Elvick-and-William-Potter-Gale tradition, born in the 1970s and 1980s out of the antisemitic Posse Comitatus / Aryan Nations milieu, marketed as paperwork-magic in the 1980s and 1990s by a man who served two prison terms for the underlying frauds, and rejected as frivolous by every American court in every jurisdiction for more than three decades.

The fellowship’s Christian Underground is render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and unto God the things that are God’s — applied carefully, with full submission where submission is owed and faithful refusal where conscience requires, all in the open, all under the King who already reigns. The redemption movement is render to Caesar what you can hide from him through paperwork rituals, and trust in the secret accounts the hidden Jewish bankers are keeping for you. The first is the historic Christian witness. The second is a pseudolegal gnosticism with antisemitic roots. The first will bless the fellowship’s work for years to come. The second will destroy any household that adopts it.

The fellowship must learn to tell them apart, and to teach others to tell them apart, with patience and with love for the adherents who have been seduced in good faith. Roger Elvick is not the enemy; he is a captive. The bureaucracies that ground down the farmers of the late 1970s and produced Elvick’s rage are not blameless; their real failures supplied the energy he weaponized into the doctrine. The pastoral work is the same as it always is: name what is true, expose what is false, walk patiently with those who have been deceived, build the alternative institutions that make the genuine Christian framework visible and livable, and trust the King whose Kingdom is already here and is also still coming.

By their fruits ye shall know them. (Matt 7:16)

And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free. (John 8:32)

The fruit of the redemption movement is two prison terms for its originator and a thirty-year trail of ruined adherents. The truth that makes free is Christ — not the strawman, not the paperwork, not the secret account, and not the gold-fringed flag.

— Thomas


References

Primary court decisions (representative; not exhaustive):

  • United States v. Schneider, 910 F.2d 1569 (7th Cir. 1990).
  • United States v. Benabe, 654 F.3d 753 (7th Cir. 2011).
  • Berman v. Stephens, No. 4:14-CV-860-A, 2015 WL 3622694 (N.D. Tex. June 10, 2015) (collecting cases).
  • Mason v. Anderson, No. CV H-15-2952, 2016 WL 4398680 (S.D. Tex. Aug. 18, 2016).
  • State v. Phillips, 149 N.C. App. 310 (2002).
  • Meads v. Meads, 2012 ABQB 571 (Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench, Sept. 18, 2012) (Rooke A.C.J.) — the seminal common-law judicial dissection of pseudolegal doctrine.

Federal prosecutions of redemption-movement originator and successors:

  • United States v. Elvick, U.S. District Court for the District of Hawaii, case no. 1:90-cr-01570-ACK (1991 conviction; conspiracy to impede justice, 18 U.S.C. § 371; fraudulent IRS filings; sight-draft fraud).
  • State of Ohio v. Elvick (2003 indictment; subsequent guilty plea on forgery, extortion, engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity; four-year Ohio state-prison sentence).
  • United States v. Lorenzo, 995 F.2d 1448 (9th Cir. 1993) (related sight-draft prosecution).
  • United States v. Unger, U.S. District Court for the Northern District of New York, case no. 1:12-cr-00579-TJM (Glenn Richard Unger redemption-promoter prosecution).

Government and regulatory documentation:

  • Internal Revenue Service, “The Truth About Frivolous Tax Arguments” (annually updated); strawman doctrine listed as frivolous position triggering 26 U.S.C. § 6702 penalty.
  • IRS Dirty Dozen tax-scam list, multiple years (including 2019 specific inclusion of strawman / A4V schemes).
  • Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA) reports on frivolous redemption filings (notably 2017 report).
  • Federal Bureau of Investigation, public-affairs material on sovereign-citizen and redemption schemes (categorized as common fraud schemes; sovereign-citizen extremists categorized as domestic terror threat).
  • National Association of Secretaries of State, report on fraudulent UCC filings (2013).

Academic and journalistic sources:

  • J.M. Berger, Without Prejudice: What Sovereign Citizens Believe (Program on Extremism, George Washington University, June 2016).
  • Southern Poverty Law Center, multiple reports on Roger Elvick, the redemption movement, and the Posse Comitatus / Aryan Nations lineage; notably “His ‘Straw Man’ Free, a Scammer Finds the Rest of Him Isn’t” (SPLC Intelligence Report).
  • Anti-Defamation League documentation of Elvick’s Aryan Nations associations.
  • American Bar Association Journal, “Paper Terrorists: ‘Sovereign citizens’ plaster courts with bogus legal filings — and some turn to violence” (May 2014).
  • University of North Carolina School of Government, A Quick Guide to Sovereign Citizens (2013, updated).

Primary statutes (cited for what they actually say):

  • House Joint Resolution 192 (June 5, 1933) — suspension of gold clauses in contracts.
  • Executive Order 6102 (April 5, 1933) — gold confiscation order.
  • Cestui Que Vie Act 1666 (18 & 19 Cha. 2 c. 11) — English statute on presumption of death after seven years’ absence for property succession.
  • Uniform Commercial Code, Article 9 (secured transactions) and Article 3 (negotiable instruments).
  • 26 U.S.C. § 6702 (frivolous-tax-submission penalty).
  • 28 U.S.C. § 1333 (federal admiralty jurisdiction).
  • N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-118.6 (2012) (criminalizing false liens against public officials) — representative state response to “paper terrorism.”

Internal Christos cross-references:

  • 260513 fellowship essay, Render Unto Caesar, Render Unto God: On Civil Obedience, Conscientious Disobedience, and the Christian Underground — names but does not unpack the redemption-movement Federal Reserve conspiracy; this essay is the unpacking.
  • CCR Operating System v1.0 — supplies the evidence hierarchy, the bigotry firewall, and the dual-track analysis applied here.
  • Christos AI Theological Grammar v1.3 — supplies the anthropology (unity of body / soul / spirit) against which the gnostic two-person doctrine is measured.