The document outlines a proposed structure for organizing a county militia to help establish a constitutional county. It suggests designating citizens to lead functions like communications, recruiting, training, and petition management. It then describes organizing the militia by subdividing it based on the county's political framework, with subdivision committees building from signature drives. Each year of militia service would exempt an individual from jury duty the next year. The rest of the document provides sample organizational charts and lists roles for committees, parties, and operational functions within the proposed county structure.
1. Beginning: County Militia Structure
A Citizen or a group of citizens who
are willing to lead their county to
become a Constitutional County
with overlap or “Shared Functions.”
May be one person in the beginning.
Many of these functions can overlap
or be “shared functions.”
Sheriff
Comms
P/R
Recruiter
Trainer
Petition
Mgr.
Events
Coordinator
Other Civics
Activist Orgs.
Unorganized
Militia
County
Legislators
School
Boards
Other Public
Positions
Your public servants/government
2. Organizing the Framework
Comms
P/R
Recruiter Trainer
Petition
Mgr.
Events
Coordinator
Other Civics
Activist Orgs.
Unorganized
Militia (UM)
The framework of the Unorganized Militia (UM)
needs to be modeled after the political framework of
the County or Parish, both are subdivided.
The 1A Petition signature drives to hold local public
servants accountable must be used to build each
subdivision committee, educating the electorate, and
recruiting signers to help gather signatures and attend
meetings.
Each full year of active service in the Unorganized
Militia the subsequent year they individual will not be
required to serve in Jury Duty
3. County Central Committee Org
Structure Sample
UM County
Central
Committee
Subdivision
Committee’s
Executive
Committee’s
Precinct
Representatives
The number of Subdivision (i.e. District,
Ward, etc.) Committees are based upon
how many exist in the County.
The number of representatives are based
upon the number of voting precincts in the
subdivision.
Library/
Librarian
4. UM County CC Voting Membership
County / Parish
Commissioners
Petition
Director
UM Central
Committee
Chair and Vice
Chair
Subdivision
Chair and Vice
Chair
Common Law
Court Director
Community
Watch Director
County
Committeeman
Militia
Commander
and Executive
Officer
Sheriff
The Sheriff is only a voting member when it is necessary to break a tie vote.
Treasurer
ISP
Secretary
6. Recruiting
Roles Within A Constitutional County
Jury
Administration
Petit Jury
Grand Jury
Court
Document
Filings ‐‐
Paralegals
Common Law
Equity
Developments
Burroughs
Areas
Towns Small
Cities
Some roles and functions below may need to support new counties until the new County obtains full functionality
Education
Trainer
Public Servant
Liaison Librarian
Petition
Management
Common Law
and Legal
Management
Community
Watch &
Security
Events
Management
Health
Constitutional
Compliance
Infrastructure
Commerce
Press/Media
7. County Central
Committee
Democratic Party
Administrative Roles
Some roles and functions may need to support new counties until the County obtains full functionality
Librarian
Committeeman
Public Servant
Liaison
Trainer
Recruiter
Other County
Public Servants
Party Liaison
County/District
Legislators
Political
Vetting
Organizational
Vetting –
(State/National)
County Central
Committee
Libertarian Party
County Central
Committee
Republican Party
County Central
Committee
Constitution Party