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Back to jail for Doreen Hendrickson

Posted: Fri Sep 08, 2017 9:38 pm
by Famspear
On Friday, September 8, 2017, Doreen Hendrickson was found guilty of violating the terms of her supervised release from prison. She was therefore sentenced to serve another four months in prison.

She has been ordered to report for incarceration at an institution to be designated by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Prisons, pending notification to be provided by the United States Marshal. See docket entry 168, United States v. Doreen Hendrickson, case no. 13-cr-20371-VAR-LJM, U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan.

Why?

Doreen refused to file correct, non-"Cracking the Code" amended 2002 and 2003 Federal income tax returns within sixty days of her release from prison on supervision. She was originally released on or about September 2, 2016 -- over a year ago.

Re: Back to jail for Doreen Hendrickson

Posted: Fri Sep 08, 2017 11:27 pm
by notorial dissent
Quelle surprise, the stupit runs deep in that pair. I had a faint hope that she'd get with the program, but all it was was a VERY faint hope, and I see it was in vane.

Re: Back to jail for Doreen Hendrickson

Posted: Sat Sep 09, 2017 12:05 am
by Famspear
notorial dissent wrote:Quelle surprise, the stupit runs deep in that pair. I had a faint hope that she'd get with the program, but all it was was a VERY faint hope, and I see it was in vane.
Yeah, she was originally sentenced to 18 months in prison, and served only about 15 and half months (May 15, 2015 to September 2, 2016). Tack on the four months coming up, and she will have ended up serving about 19 and a half months total -- unless they let her out early again.

:|

Re: Back to jail for Doreen Hendrickson

Posted: Sat Sep 09, 2017 12:35 am
by The Observer
But when she gets out, then what? She will still have not filed correct returns. So it appears the price of not having to file correct returns is 18 months or more in prison. I just wonder if Pete will issue a future edition of CtC that adds that particular step in his methodology.

Re: Back to jail for Doreen Hendrickson

Posted: Sat Sep 09, 2017 1:34 am
by Famspear
The Observer wrote:But when she gets out, then what? She will still have not filed correct returns. So it appears the price of not having to file correct returns is 18 months or more in prison. I just wonder if Pete will issue a future edition of CtC that adds that particular step in his methodology.
Maybe so. Only people like Hendrickson would be goofy enough to claim "victory" for having to spend 18 or 19 months in prison for failure to file a Federal income tax return -- when the maximum penalty for willful failure to file is actually only one year. (Of course, Doreen's conviction was not for failure to file, anyway. The conviction was for contempt of court.)

From the standpoint of amusement, the Hendrickson family is the gift that keeps on giving......

Re: Back to jail for Doreen Hendrickson

Posted: Sat Sep 09, 2017 12:15 pm
by notorial dissent
Sadly yes. I keep worrying that the kids will follow in their parent's path of stupid.

Re: Back to jail for Doreen Hendrickson

Posted: Sat Sep 09, 2017 3:18 pm
by The Observer
Famspear wrote:Of course, Doreen's conviction was not for failure to file, anyway. The conviction was for contempt of court.
Yes, my bad. I lost track of why she was in prison originally. Even so, this was all a result of her refusing to file a legitimate return in the first place, because she wanted to prove that she believed everything that Pete was preachin'.

Re: Back to jail for Doreen Hendrickson

Posted: Sat Sep 09, 2017 4:04 pm
by notorial dissent
She must really like jail food is all I can figure. On the plus side, she is undoubtedly meeting a better class of felon on the inside than the one she regularly hangs out with.

Re: Back to jail for Doreen Hendrickson

Posted: Sat Sep 09, 2017 7:20 pm
by Famspear
notorial dissent wrote:......On the plus side, she is undoubtedly meeting a better class of felon on the inside than the one she regularly hangs out with.
Ouch!

:wink:

Re: Back to jail for Doreen Hendrickson

Posted: Sat Sep 09, 2017 10:51 pm
by Pottapaug1938
Famspear wrote:
The Observer wrote:But when she gets out, then what? She will still have not filed correct returns. So it appears the price of not having to file correct returns is 18 months or more in prison. I just wonder if Pete will issue a future edition of CtC that adds that particular step in his methodology.
Maybe so. Only people like Hendrickson would be goofy enough to claim "victory" for having to spend 18 or 19 months in prison for failure to file a Federal income tax return -- when the maximum penalty for willful failure to file is actually only one year. (Of course, Doreen's conviction was not for failure to file, anyway. The conviction was for contempt of court.)

From the standpoint of amusement, the Hendrickson family is the gift that keeps on giving......
Of course they will claim victory! After all, The Powers That Be are so terrified of the CtC (ahahaha) truth coming out that they will persecute anyone who dares to try to awaken the sheeple.

Or something like that.... :whistle:

Re: Back to jail for Doreen Hendrickson

Posted: Tue Oct 17, 2017 2:21 am
by jcolvin2
On October 10, 2017, Doreen filed a motion to stay her sentence for violating the terms of her supervised release, essentially attempting to relitigate her conviction (government reply is due on October 24):

EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
SOUTHERN DIVISION
UNITED STATES,
Plaintiff,
v.
DOREEN HENDRICKSON,
POOR QUALITY ORIGINAL
Case No. 13-cr-20371
Judge Victoria A. Roberts

DOREEN HENDRICKSON'S MOTION FOR THE STAY OF EXECUTION,
OF SENTENCE, THE VACATING OF HER CONVICTION, AND OTHER RELIEF

Pursuant to the provisions of FRCP Rules 60(b)(4) and (6), Dtfendant
Doreen Hendrickson, being without representation and therefore proceeding in propria persona, respectfully MOVES the Court to vacate Mrs. Hendrickson's conviction and provide such other relief and remediation as seems proper, due to the Court's lack of jurisdiction throughout all proceedings concerning Mrs. Hendrickson as a consequence of the operation and effects of26 U.S.C. § 7206(2), as laid out in the accompanying brief. Mrs. Hendrickson further Moves the Court, pursuant to FRCP Rule 62(b)(4) to stay the execution of the sentence it imposed on September 8, 2017 pending the full adjudication of this Motion.

Concurrence was sought from government counsel but was refused.

ISSUES

Whether Doreen Hendrickson's conviction and the questions of her compliance with the terms of supervised release do not fail in the face of Congress having made it a criminal offense to procure or attempt to procure a tax return believed by the signer to be false in any material matter.

STATEMENT OF MOST APPROPRIATE AUTHORITIES

26 U.S.C. § 7206(1) and (2) and FRCP Rules 60(b)(4) and (6) and 62(b)(4) are the most appropriate authorities controlling the issues raised herein.

BRIEF IN SUPPORT OF DOREEN HENDRICKSON'S MOTION FOR THE
STAY OF EXECUTION OF SENTENCE, THE VACATING OF HER CONVICTION, AND OTHER RELIEF

ARGUMENT

I. Under the special condition which this Court recently found her to have violated, and the Department of Justice-written ruling and decree for resistance of which she was tried and convicted on a charge of "criminal contempt", Doreen Hendrickson was ordered to create so-called "amended returns" containing government-dictated content as replacements for her own freely-made returns concerning the years 2002 and 2003. The decree, as clarified by Judge Nancy Edmunds in an order on December 17, 2010, and as re-iterated by this Court in its "special condition" of supervised release, commands Mrs. Hendrickson to sign those dictated-content "amended returns" under penalties of perjury without disclaimers of any kind, for the express purpose of inducing the Internal Revenue Service to process them. See Exhibit 1.1 Though several courts have left them undisturbed, none has ever ruled that these orders are lawful.

2. It has recently come to Mrs. Hendrickson's attention that under the provisions of 26 U.S.C. § 7206- Fraud and false statements, Congress has expressly criminalized the seeking, issuance, and enforcement of exactly the so called "amended return" order that Mrs. Hendrickson is found to have disobeyed in a violation of her supervised release and which was the basis for her trial and conviction in the frrst place. (It is worth noting in the same breath that there is NO law under which any American can ever be required to create or submit amended tax returns-- not even when she would believe what is said on them, and not even when outside "expert" opinion has expressed a conclusion to a filer that her original returns were materially incorrect. See Exhibit 2, an excerpt of a 2008 analysis of this subject by Calvin Johnson, Andrews & Kurth Centennial Professor of Law, Univ. of Texas, Austin, School of Law and T. Keith Fogg, Villanova Univ. School of Law).

3. 26 U.S.C. § 7206- Fraud and false statements, subparagraph (2) reads as follows:

Any person who willfully aids or assists in, or procures, counsels, or advises the preparation or presentation under, or in connection with any matter arising under, the internal revenue laws, of a return, affidavit, claim, or other document, which is fraudulent or is false as to any material matter, whether or not such falsity or fraud is with the knowledge or consent of the person
authorized or required to present such return, affidavit, claim, or
document. .. shall be guilty of a felony and, upon conviction thereof, shall be fined not more than $100,000 ($500,000 in the case of a corporation), or imprisoned not more than 3 years, or both, together with the costs of prosecution.

26 U.S.C. § 7206(2) Aid or assistance2

The definition of "false" used in the text of the statute IS derived from the preceding subparagraph of the statute:

Any person who willfully makes and subscribes any return, statement, or other document, which contains or is verified by a written declaration that it is made under the penalties of perjury, and which he does not believe to be true and correct as to every material matter; ...

26 U.S.C. § 7206(1) Declaration under penalties of perjury

4. Mrs. Hendrickson has endlessly sworn under penalties of perjury and attested and shown in every other way possible that she does not believe what she is told to say by this order, and that, in fact, she believes that what she is told to say on these so called "amended returns" is false. See, for example, the affidavits and sworn statements attached as Exhibit 3. Mrs. Hendrickson's beliefs have always been known to representatives of the United States and to every court to have had the matter before it, again as shown by Exhibit 3. At the same time, the United States has had many opportunities-- and, in fact, circumstances in which it was under a duty, or at least powerfully incentivized-- to produce any evidence whatsoever available for the proposition that Mrs. Hendrickson believes what she is ordered to say. It has produced none whatsoever.

5. The view of those seeking, issuing or enforcing the preparation or presentation of the returns contemplated by 7206(2) as to the correctness or incorrectness of the compelled returns is immaterial to the criminality of the act. The seeking, issuance or enforcement is a crime if the signer believes any material thing on the return(s) at issue to be false. The signer's belief is the sole metric, and seeking, issuing or enforcing an order to create return(s) the signer does not believe true as to every material matter is the willful commission of the crime.

6. As shown, under the express terms of 26 U.S.C. § 7206(2) any effort to procure or to counselor advise the preparation or presentation of a return which contains or is verified by a written declaration that it is made under the penalties of perjury, and which the signer does not believe to be true and correct as to every material matter, whether or not with the consent of the signer, is a felony. It is thus an expressly criminal act for a court to order the creation and submission of the so called "amended returns" at issue in Mrs. Hendrickson's case, completely independently of the manner in which such efforts to procure the preparation or presentation of the false returns violate Mrs. Hendrickson's rights or command her to commit a crime. Likewise, it is a felony for the United States or its representatives to seek to have these so-called "amended returns" prepared and presented.

7. An order which is itself expressly illegal to seek or issue is manifestly one for which the issuing court can have no jurisdiction, and the same is true for the enforcing court. Seeking to have Judge Edmunds order the creation of false returns, seeking the enforcement of those orders by charging and having Mrs. Hendrickson held to trial, and seeking to again enforce the false-returns order by a proceeding over the alleged violation of a condition of supervised release are each and all felonies under federal law. Thus, the Department of Justice attorneys who sought each of these things failed to confer jurisdiction on either Judge Edmunds' court or this Court. Department of Justice attorneys-- even when nominally acting in the name of the United States-- cannot confer jurisdiction on any court as an effect of their attempt to commit a crime or co-opt a court into the commission of a crime.

8. This Court has been without jurisdiction to order Mrs. Hendrickson to create and/or submit the false returns commanded under the special condition of supervised release included in her initial sentence, and has been without jurisdiction to try and to sentence Mrs. Hendrickson ab initio, just as Judge Edmunds was without jurisdiction to issue her decree in 2007.

9. Courts are duty -bound to vacate judgments issued without jurisdiction:

"[A] court must vacate any judgment entered in excess of its jurisdiction."

Jordon v. Gilligan, 500 F.2d 701 (6th CA, 1974);

"If the trial court was without subject matter jurisdiction of defendant's case, his conviction and sentence would be void ab initio."

State v. Swiger, 125 Ohio.App.3d 456, (1998);

"[A void judgment is one that] has been procured by extrinsic or collateral fraud, or entered by a Court that did not have jurisdiction over subject matter or the parties."

Rook v. Rook, 353 S.E. 2d 756 (Va. 1987);

"[D]enying a motion to vacate a void judgment IS a per se abuse of
discretion. "

Burrell v. Henderson, et a/., 434 F.3d 826, 831 (6th CA 2006);

10. There is no time limit or other impediment to raising the jurisdictional issue and invoking the Court's obligations as Mrs. Hendrickson does now:

"[S]ubject-matter jurisdiction, because it involves a court's power to hear a case, can never be forfeited or waived. Consequently, defects in subject matter jurisdiction require correction regardless of whether the error was raised in district court."

United States v. Cotton, 535 U.S. 625, 630 (2002).

"A "void" judgment, as we all know, grounds no rights, forms no defense to actions taken thereunder, and is vulnerable to any manner of collateral attack (thus here, by habeas corpus). No statute of limitations or repose runs on its holdings, the matters thought to be settled thereby are not res judicata, and years later, when the memories may have grown dim and rights long been regarded as vested, any disgruntled litigant may reopen old wounds and once more probe its depths. And it is then as though trial and adjudication had never been. "

Fritts v. Krugh, Supreme Court of Michigan, 92 N.W.2d 604, 354 Mich. 97 (1958).

Further, FRCP Rules 60(b)(4) and (6) expressly provide that there is no time limit upon the raising of jurisdictional challenges such as this one.

11. A stay of execution of the sentence imposed by the Court on September 8, 2017 on its finding that Mrs. Hendrickson had violated a condition of supervised release, which this Motion challenges as having been imposed without jurisdiction and under circumstances of conviction which are also herein challenged as being void for want of jurisdiction, is allowed under FRCP Rule 62(b)(4).

WHEREFORE, Mrs. Hendrickson respectfully MOVES the Court to vacate her conviction and grant such other relief and remediation to Mrs. Hendrickson as seems proper under the circumstances, and to stay execution of its sentence imposed on September 8, 2017 pending the full adjudication of this Motion.

Respectfully submitted this 10th day of October, 2017,

Doreen M. Hendric on, in propria persona
232 Oriole St.
Commerce Twp., MI 48382
(248) 366-6858
doreen@losthorizons.com

Attached:

Exhibit 1
Exhibit 2
Exhibit 3

1 The other order which was issued by Judge Edmunds, conjoined with the "amended return" order in the indictment under which Mrs. Hendrickson was tried, and treated by this Court over Mrs. Hendrickson's objection as a part of one single order along with the "amended return" order, commands Mrs. Hendrickson to NOT make returns based on certain beliefs. In the original order the prohibited belief is a specific one falsely ascribed to the book, 'Cracking the Code- The Fascinating Truth About Taxation In America' (that only government workers are subject to the income tax), and in the special condition of supervised release this became "any theory contained in Cracking the Code". In either case the manifest object (or obvious effect) is to compel Mrs. Hendrickson to file returns saying what the government wishes to see upon them, rather than what she really believes to be true, since anything the government sees on her returns that it doesn't like would be deemed to be of the prohibited variety. Thus, the second order involved in Mrs. Hendrickson's contempt conviction also orders her to make false returns.

2 It is to be noted that the subtitle "Aid or assistance" conveys no meaning or mitigation of the nature of the offense described. Under the express terms of the statute, the wrongful act criminalized therein can be committed even without the knowledge or consent of the preparer or presenter of the false returns, thereby nullifying what might otherwise be imagined about the offense from the use of the label "Aid or assistance". Further, the text of the statute disjoins "aids or assists" from "procures, counsels or advises", making these two separate categories of offending behavior; and the origin of this statutory provision, § 1114( c) of the Revenue Act of 1926, contains no such subtitle.

Re: Back to jail for Doreen Hendrickson

Posted: Tue Oct 17, 2017 7:36 am
by notorial dissent
So Doreen was convicted, yet again, and is now using a (what appears to be)new approach to not following the court's order.

Re: Back to jail for Doreen Hendrickson

Posted: Tue Oct 17, 2017 10:04 am
by wserra
jcolvin2 wrote:POOR QUALITY ORIGINAL
Indeed.

Re: Back to jail for Doreen Hendrickson

Posted: Tue Oct 17, 2017 1:47 pm
by jcolvin2
wserra wrote:
jcolvin2 wrote:POOR QUALITY ORIGINAL
Indeed.
It was a court stamp on the first page of the document. It relates to the poor quality reproduction of the exhibits to the motion, which I did not attempt to post. If anyone wants copies of the whole shebang, feel free to email me.

Re: Back to jail for Doreen Hendrickson

Posted: Tue Oct 17, 2017 2:34 pm
by The Observer
Maybe I am missing something here, but I am getting the feeling that Doreen likes being in prison.

Re: Back to jail for Doreen Hendrickson

Posted: Tue Oct 17, 2017 2:55 pm
by notorial dissent
Maybe a better class of felon???? and/or she's as dumb as I think she is.

Re: Back to jail for Doreen Hendrickson

Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2017 2:40 pm
by Famspear
The Observer wrote:Maybe I am missing something here, but I am getting the feeling that Doreen likes being in prison.
If your alternative to prison consisted of having to live in the same house with Blowhard Hendrickson, how would you feel?

Re: Back to jail for Doreen Hendrickson

Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2017 3:04 pm
by The Observer
Famspear wrote:
The Observer wrote:Maybe I am missing something here, but I am getting the feeling that Doreen likes being in prison.
If your alternative to prison consisted of having to live in the same house with Blowhard Hendrickson, how would you feel?
I would feel that prison is a poor alternative to divorcing him.

Re: Back to jail for Doreen Hendrickson

Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2017 3:23 pm
by notorial dissent
The Observer wrote:
Famspear wrote:
The Observer wrote:Maybe I am missing something here, but I am getting the feeling that Doreen likes being in prison.
If your alternative to prison consisted of having to live in the same house with Blowhard Hendrickson, how would you feel?
I would feel that prison is a poor alternative to divorcing him.
I don't think she has any good alternatives at this point.

Re: Back to jail for Doreen Hendrickson

Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2017 5:58 pm
by The Observer
notorial dissent wrote:[I don't think she has any good alternatives at this point.
I am forced to agree with you. Our gang of idiots make so many bad decisions that they tend to find themselves facing dire situations with no way out. So nothing else can be done...pass the popcorn please.