Wyoming county sheriffs bust Big Brother!
BIG HORN COUNTY, Wyoming - May 1,
2008 - The duly elected sheriff of a county is the highest law enforcement
official within a county. He has law enforcement powers that exceed that of any
other state or federal official.
This is settled law of which most
people are unaware.
County sheriffs in Wyoming have
scored a big one for the 10th Amendment and states rights. The sheriffs slapped
a federal intrusion upside the head and are insisting that all federal law
enforcement officers and personnel from federal regulatory agencies must clear
all their activity in a Wyoming County with the Sheriff’s Office. Deja vu for
those who remember big Richard Mack in Arizona.
Bighorn County Sheriff Dave Mattis
spoke at a press conference following a recent U.S. District Court decision
(Case No. 2:96-cv-099-J (2006)) and announced that all federal officials are
forbidden to enter his county without his prior approval.
"If a sheriff doesn’t want the
Feds in his county he has the constitutional right and power to keep them out,
or ask them to leave, or retain them in custody."
The court decision was the result
of a suit against both the BATF and the IRS by Mattis and other members of the
Wyoming Sheriff’s Association. The suit in the Wyoming federal court district
sought restoration of the protections enshrined in the United States
Constitution and the Wyoming Constitution.
Guess what? The District Court
ruled in favor of the sheriffs. In fact, the court stated, “Wyoming is a sovereign
state and the duly elected sheriff of a county is the highest law enforcement
official within a county and has law enforcement powers exceeding that of any
other state or federal official." Go back and re-read this quote.
The court confirms and asserts that
"the duly elected sheriff of a county is the highest law enforcement official
within a county and has law enforcement powers EXCEEDING that of any other
state OR federal official." And you thought the 10th Amendment was dead
and buried - not in Wyoming, not yet.
But it gets even better. Since the
judge stated that the sheriff "has law enforcement powers EXCEEDING that
of any other state OR federal official," the Wyoming sheriffs are flexing
their muscles. They are demanding access to all BATF files. Why? So as to
verify that the agency is not violating provisions of Wyoming law that
prohibits the registration of firearms or the keeping of a registry of firearm
owners. This would be wrong.
The sheriffs are also demanding
that federal agencies immediately cease the seizure of private property and the
impoundment of private bank accounts without regard to due process in Wyoming
state courts.
Gosh, it makes one wish that the
sheriffs of the counties relative to Waco, Texas and Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
regarding their jurisdictions were drinking the same water these Wyoming
sheriffs are.
Sheriff Mattis said, "I am
reacting in response to the actions of federal employees who have attempted to
deprive citizens of my county of their privacy, their liberty, and their
property without regard to constitutional safeguards. I hope that more sheriffs
all across America will join us in protecting their citizens from the illegal
activities of the IRS, EPA, BATF, FBI, or any other federal agency that is
operating outside the confines of constitutional law. Employees of the IRS and
the EPA are no longer welcome in Bighorn County unless they intend to operate
in conformance to constitutional law." [Amen].
However, the sad reality is that
sheriffs are elected, and that means they are required to be both law
enforcement officials and politicians as well. Unfortunately, Wyoming sheriffs
are the exception rather than the rule . . . but they shouldn’t be. Sheriffs
have enormous power, if or when they choose to use it. I share the hope of
Sheriff Mattis that "more sheriffs all across America will join us in protecting
their citizens."
If Wyoming Sheriffs can follow in
the steps of former Arizona Sheriff Richard Mack and recognize both their power
and authority, they could become champions for the memory of Thomas Jefferson
who died thinking that he had won those "states’ rights" debates with
Alexander Hamilton.
This case is not just some amusing
mountain melodrama. This is a BIG deal. This case is yet further evidence that
the 10th Amendment is not yet totally dead, or in a complete decay in the
United States. It is also significant in that it can, may, and hopefully will
be interpreted to mean that "political subdivisions of a State are
included within the meaning of the amendment, or that the powers exercised by a
sheriff are an extension of those common law powers which the 10th Amendment
explicitly reserves to the People, if they are not granted to the federal
government or specifically prohibited to the States."
Winston Churchill observed, "If you will not
fight for right when you can easily win without bloodshed; if you will not
fight when your victory is sure and not too costly; you may come to the moment
when you will have to fights with all the odds against you with only a
precarious chance of survival. There may be a worse case. You may have to fight
when there is no hope of victory at all, because it is better to perish than
to live as slaves."