Re: The Law, The DNR, The Truth/CREDITOR


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Posted by steve to Paul Ehorn on November 18, 19100 at 13:35:54:

In Reply to: The Law, The DNR, The Truth posted by Paul Ehorn on September 27, 19100 at 21:23:20:

Federal Law is fully preempted by PRIVATE
CONTRACT, divers TITLE and his redeemed
Birth Certificate documents, contracts, and a Certified Mailed to the King contract, by the
YOU being THE-CREDITOR. Yes, pre-empted. Priority.
Yes, the Creditor in any Court.
Debtor allways looses,
Creditor always wins.
What are you? Diver? What are you?
Care to change your STATUS? When?
If you do this, it is presumed that you WILL
obey all laws and Religion, yours, to be a
good men, not a scrapper. It is presumed you
will be an honest and preserving man of God,
and help others on their way. You will aid in
preservation methods, but ONLY after you are
no longer a subject slave of taxation, and can
stand on your own two feet, and as well help
others for their well being. Good lack.
steve. - diveonz@yahoo.com

: I believe all of the states surrounding the Great Lakes have adopted some form of law to protect shipwrecks. The Federal Government also has laws which govern shipwrecks.
: The DNR in Michigan, Wisconsin and Illinois claim ownership to virtually all of the wrecks on the bottom lands of the lakes. Michigan in a further attempt to protect shipwrecks created underwater preserves. The States claim their right of ownership from the 1987 abandoned shipwreck act.
: The truth is that Federal law prempts state law. The 1987 abandoned shipwreck act was not a new law but a clarification of the 1953 Submerged Lands Act. The 1953 Submerged Lands Act did not specify whether the states owned non-natural objects such as shipwrecks that rested on or within submerged lands. The 1987 Abandoned Shipwreck Act(ASA)was passed by Congress to clarify that title to only certain shipwrecks be transferred to the state. The ASA transfers title of an abandoned shipwreck to the state in which the shipwreck is found if that shipwreck is (1)embedded in submerged lands of a State; (2)embedded in coralline formations protected by a State on submerged lands of a State; or (3) on submerged lands of a State and is included in or determined eligible for inclusion in the National Register. Admiralty and maritime laws of salvage and finds still are applicable to all other abandoned shipwrecks. State laws which are prempted by Federal law were invalid from their inception. This brings up another interesting question, are any of the abandoned shipwrecks in Michigan's underwater preserves really protected?




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