Due Process Power

The Power of Words

Hidden for Centuries

Blind Justice

Due Process is a set of simple rules that empower you to use simple words to control judges.

It's not complicated.

It's simple step-by-step: alleging facts, proving facts, and moving the court to sign orders.

This simplicity has never been explained to the public … until now!

There are only two (2) sets of rules that are so simple any average 8th grader can learn them quickly.

  • The Rules of Procedure
  • The Rules of Evidence

These rules and common-sense tactics explained here empower you to enforce your God-given rights!

Rules and tactics hidden far too long by the legal profession, its Bar associations, and its law schools.

Rules and tactics to command biased judges, conquer crooked lawyers, and control evasive witnesses.

Rules and tactics that now belong to each and every one of you.

Due process power to get Justice for yourself and change the world!

Rules & Laws

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Let’s start with some basics.

Rules and laws are not the same.

Laws are laws.

Rules are rules.

This course will teach you how to “find the law” you need to win your case. It will teach you how to “cite the law” in your pleadings and motions. It will teach you how to “argue the law”. But, to teach you every law that could control the outcome of your case is beyond the scope of this or any other course. There are millions of "laws". Not even the smartest supreme court justice or law professor knows every "law".

You will learn the rules and common-sense tactics that enforce "the law".

Those rules and common-sense tactics are super easy to learn.

The Law of the Case

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You only need to know what we lawyers call "the law of the case", i.e., the specific law or laws that controls the outcome of your case. This course will show you how to know which laws you need, how to find them in the official sources, how to cite them properly in your paperwork, and how to use them to enforce your rights.

You don’t need to know any other laws.

The law of your case will state a simple set of “essential fact elements”. There will usually be only 3 essential fact elements in any law and rarely more than 4 or 5 essential fact elements.

Once you know the "essential fact elements" in the law that controls your case, you will use the rules and tactics explained here to allege those fact elements, prove them with the five (5) discovery tools you will learn here, then move the court to enter orders in your favor enforcing the rights those laws guarantee.

If you are defending yourself, you win by preventing your opponent from alleging or proving the essential facts of his case.

Every case in court is won or lost on whether or not the party bringing the case can allege and prove all and every one of the essential fact elements stated in the law he or she relies upon.

That’s due process in a nutshell.

The one who starts the fight must first allege each and every fact element of the case-controlling law. If he fails at this early stage, the defendant will succeed with a Motion to Dismiss, Motion to Strike, or Motion for More Definite Statement. (Explained later with sample forms and simplified explanations.)

If the one starting the fight succeeds in alleging the essential facts to get his proverbial "foot in the courthouse door", then he must prove that each and every one of those essential facts is true. The defendant needs prove only that any one of the essential facts is false or unprovable.

Winning is this easy!

Fair to Both Sides

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The "game" of court is simple and fair to both sides, if both sides know the rules and common-sense tactics.

Both sides have the same opportunity to use tactics, if the rules allow.

Both sides have the same opportunity to rely on the power of the rules.

Case-winning tactics are incredibly simple, and the rules of court apply fairly to control both sides.

  • Rules of Procedureabout 30 pages
  • Rules of Evidence about 20 pages

Rules of Procedure decide things like what must be said to start a case; what must be done when an opponent files a form; who gets to speak first at hearings or trial; how evidence is obtained from parties and non-parties; how much time is allowed to respond to motions or discovery requests … that sort of thing. None of them are difficult to learn or understand.

Rules of Evidence decide what facts can be presented, considered, and made part of the official court record. They are simply “fact filters”. They keep some facts out while requiring other facts to be admitted.

That’s all they are!

They are ridiculously easy to understand.

Simplicity

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The key to the courthouse is simple.

There’s a lot to learn.

But it is simple.

If you tell yourself it's hard, it will be, and you'll be tempted to give up before you see the simplicity.

As you study the lessons, however, the simplicity will appear, and it will all make perfect sense.

Read each sentence one word at-a-time, and you will understand every concept. Don't read as you do when reading a novel or newspaper. Read critically. Think about the meaning of each word and how it relates to each other word in the sentences you read here. The words form complete thoughts as sentences. Learn to think in complete thoughts. Examine what is being said and why it is said the way it is said.

You will quickly understand due process as the power of words that controls courts.

You will be empowered by this knowledge.

You don't need to memorize anything. You will understand each concept in the order it is presented. You will see how each concept fits together with the others. You will see the power of due process, power that belongs to you, power to command biased judges, conquer crooked lawyers, and control evasive witnesses.

Everyone deserves this power!

Use it to get Justice for yourself, your loved ones, and others threatened with in-Justice.

This power begins to grow as you study what follows, but you cannot learn it all at once! Spend a few hours at-a-time, then take a break, then come back and spend a few more hours. Don't try to learn it all-at-once. Take your time. Someone asked, "What's the best way to eat an elephant?" There's only one way to eat an elephant. It's one bite at-a-time. That’s how you will learn due process. One concept at-a-time. One rule at-a-time. One tactic at-a-time. One lesson at-a-time.

Think in single bites, each concept, each sentence, each word. Examine what is being said. Do this as you study this course to acquire your due process power, then use this same "one thought at a time" method when you are reading legal documents, appellate court opinions, and other writings you will encounter as you use your due process power to enforce your God-given rights in actual court proceedings.

Learning will be easier as you progress step-wise through the lessons and ideas ... one at-a-time.

Your Most Valuable Right

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Due process is your most valuable right, because without it the rest of your rights are just promises.

If you cannot enforce your rights when they are challenged, what good are they? Your right to free speech is worthless if your government prevents you from speaking your mind about an issue politicians don’t like. Your right to peaceably assemble is worthless if your community leaders provide no public venue or require a permit that limits your ability to parade or use signs. Your right to enjoy the unfettered educational benefits of a free press is worthless if men in power can block the content of your newspaper, blog, or website when it disagrees with their political party’s agenda. Your right to vote isn’t much good if giant corporations and foreign interests can spend multiple millions for media time influencing the general populace to vote for people you don’t like.

Your most valuable right is your most important right, your most powerful right.

It is your right to enforce your rights.

With the knowledge of due process you will gain from this amazing course, you will know how to enforce your rights, and you will teach others so they may also enforce their rights. You'll know how to fight and win when someone abuses your rights or the rights of those you love.

We don’t yet have "Liberty and Justice for ALL", as our Pledge of Allegiance claims … but as more of you share the due process power presented in this course, the promise of “Justice for ALL” will soon be true for ALL!

It is our privilege to present this due process power for you to use. We trust you will find the course enjoyable and enlightening, as it has been for tens of thousands before you.

We pray you will tell everyone.

Now, mark this lesson complete and move to the next.

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Criminal copyright infringement, including infringement without monetary gain, is investigated by the FBI and is punishable by fines and federal imprisonment. No portion of this course may be published, duplicated, shared, or used by anyone other than the current subscribers.

© 1997-2025 by Dr. Frederick Graves
d/b/a Jurisdictionary®
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