DueProcess CriminalProcedure HabeasCorpus Securities Privacy
Do the United States Constitution, the United States Congress and/or the Constitution of the State of North Carolina have Government of Jurisdiction over a Moorish-American National under the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution pursuant to Subject Matter and Impersonal Jurisdiction?
Do the United States Constitution, United States Congress and/or the Constitution of the State of North Carolina have the right to deny the Status of a Moorish American National by forcing a questionable citizenship on him that he did not apply for and do not want?
Is it an 8th Amendment violation to the U.S. Constitution under "Cruel and Unusual Punishment," for the State of North Carolina to impose a life imprisonment on a Moorish American National that the State of North Carolina "do not" have the jurisdiction or status over?
Did the United States Congress violate the U.S. Constitution under the 5th, 14th, and 15th Amendments taking jurisdiction and status that it did not have in coining the word "Black" as an encompassment of a people (imported and enslaved) giving them a questionable citizenship that the 14th and 15th Amendments did not (and do not) allow them to have as "property", that the imported African Moor (created slave) did not ask for and/or seek, taking personal ownership away from the southern plantation owner and placing that ownership with the Federal and State Court system, while depriving him (me) of his (my) True Nationality and Birthrights (given by his (my) Creator) in a cruel, unjust, and unfair social, economical, and legal system?
How can the word "Black, Negro, Colored" find no former place within the nationalities of the human family and still can be made "citizen" of any free national and constitutional government?
Whether the United States Constitution, the United States Congress, and/or the Constitution of the State of North Carolina have government jurisdiction over an individual under the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution pursuant to subject matter and personal jurisdiction