The Commercial Appeal

Records: ‘Sovereign citizens’ waged war of paper terror

- MATT LAKIN

KNOXVILLE - When Newport police cited Ronald James Lyons’ bar in Newport, Tennessee, for liquor sales without a license, Lyons walked into the police station and informed the chief his business wasn’t subject to U.S. law.

“He tried to serve me with a handwritte­n trespass notice,” police Chief Maurice Shults said. “I explained to him that as long as he lived in or operated a business within the city limits, if there was a violation of the law we’d be there.”

Based on court records, Lyons didn’t take the hint. A Davidson County grand jury indicted him and nine other East Tennessean­s arrested this week as part of a crackdown on adherents to the socalled “sovereign citizens” movement.

All face charges of forgery and of filing bogus liens against various public officials, a common tactic employed by members of the movement, who deny the legitimacy of federal, state and local authoritie­s, thumb their noses at the law, and often delight in waging private legal wars against those who challenge them. The Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks extremist groups, calls the strategy a form of “paper terrorism.”

Some of the liens amounted to as much as $12 million, according to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigat­ion, which handled the case with help from the FBI. The push for charges, filed in Nashville because that’s where the liens were filed with the Tennessee Secretary of State’s Office, got its start last year when Lee Harold Cromwell, accused of a backward driving rampage through a crowded Oak Ridge parking lot that killed a father of two, filed a series of multimilli­on-dollar liens against everyone from the officer who arrested him to the district attorney general and the judge presiding over his case.

TBI agents served Cromwell with the indictment Wednesday, just before an Anderson County jury found him guilty of vehicular homicide. Officers across the region rounded up the others on the same day.

The liens — easy and cheap to file online but time-consuming and expensive to fight — can ruin victims’ credit and unleash a swarm of financial difficulti­es. Lyons filed 30 such liens, according to the indictment.

He also filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court accusing Cocke County Sheriff Armando Fontes, General Sessions Judge John Bell and his creditors of “slavery, slavery-like practices and crimes against humanity” and demanded an “internatio­nal human rights investigat­ion” after being served with a judgment for failing to pay debts.

Sovereign citizens cling to a patchwork mythology in which the U.S. government at some point became illegally subverted from a constituti­onal system to one based on “admiralty law” and internatio­nal commerce that turned free citizens into slaves. The income tax, the Federal Reserve and the gold standard tend to figure prominentl­y in such histories.

The movement’s believers fight back by refusing to pay taxes and reciting incomprehe­nsible legal jargon, often cutand-pasted from online forums, that they see as a talisman to somehow exempt them from the law and help them reclaim their sovereignt­y. They often refuse to carry government documents and draw up handmade driver’s licenses, car tags and passports.

Lyons, for example, filed a “certificat­e of non-United States citizen status” in Cocke County Circuit Court, replete with misspellin­gs, random capitaliza­tions, clashing fonts and legal non sequiturs.

“The U.S. Government is a foreign corporatio­n,” the notice reads. “Any and all record of my being a ‘U.S. citizen’ is in error and must promptly be corrected . ... Thank you very much for your prompt and courteous compliance with this request.”

A Tennessee Highway Patrol trooper pulled over Austin Gary Cooper, another of those indicted, on state Highway 61 in Anderson County in April and cited him on a charge of driving without a license. Cooper blew off a court appearance, according to records, and filed liens against Sheriff Paul White and General Sessions Judge Don Layton.

Cooper, 68, of Clinton, has spent more than a quarter-century as a roaming apostle of the movement, records show. He was convicted in 1990 in Florida of failing to pay federal income tax but went on to set up a foundation, Take Back America, that charged clients $1,600 to learn what he billed as a secret legal formula for ducking taxes.

 ??  ?? Cooper
Cooper
 ??  ?? Birdsell
Birdsell
 ??  ?? Hauser
Hauser
 ??  ?? Lyons
Lyons
 ??  ?? Usinger
Usinger
 ??  ?? Bunch
Bunch
 ??  ?? Williams
Williams
 ??  ?? Foust
Foust
 ??  ?? Cromwell
Cromwell

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