In May 2024, an
Oklahoma man was
arrested and charged
with kidnapping and
murdering two women,
becoming the fifth
member of an
anti-government
group called “God’s
Misfits” to face
such charges.
With the
investigation still
underway, details
about God’s Misfits
remain scarce. The
group’s members may
be part of the
so-called “sovereign
citizen” movement –
people who believe
they owe no
allegiance to any
government and are
not required to obey
laws.
My research into
sovereign citizens
has found they have
long been active in
the U.S. and other
countries. At the
core of their
beliefs is the
denial of the
government’s
legitimacy. They
commonly do not
register their
vehicles, acquire
driver’s licenses or
car insurance, or
pay taxes. And they
pose a significant
threat to the
public.
Harassment and abuse
One threat they pose
is “paper
terrorism,” which
involves harassing
public officials
with legal threats
to intimidate them.
Sometimes officials
are targeted because
they arrested or
prosecuted someone
from the movement.
This method involves
filing fake deeds
and liens against
public officials the
sovereign citizens
think wronged them.
County recorders are
sounding the alarm.
This type of act – a
form of fraud that
can be illegal – is
rare nationwide but
common in some
places, local and
federal officials
have said.
For instance, in
2023, a New Mexico
man allegedly filed
a US$20 million lien
against property
owned by federal
employees he
believed were
connected with the
termination of his
Social Security
benefits. All told,
he has allegedly
filed $1 billion in
false liens against
federal employees.
Federal prosecutors
have charged him
with retaliating
against a federal
employee by making a
false claim. Court
documents identify
the man as a
sovereign citizen
who describes
himself as a
“private attorney
general.” He is
awaiting trial.
More violent threats
The FBI considers
sovereign citizens a
domestic terrorism
threat.
In April 2024, a
Utah man was charged
in federal court
with stalking after
allegedly telling
staff at the Salt
Lake County
Recorder’s Office
that they had
committed treason
and the penalty was
death.
Court documents show
that the man has
identified himself
as a “sovereign
citizen” and made
quasi-legal claims
that prosecutors
characterize as
arguments commonly
used by sovereign
citizens – claims
that were dismissed
by a judge as
“frivolous and
without merit.”
Trial is set to
begin July 1, 2024.
Killings
Sovereign citizens
have killed police
officers and
civilians. Darrell
Brooks, who
represented himself
in court as a
sovereign citizen,
was found guilty in
October 2022 of
killing six people
when he drove an SUV
through a Christmas
parade.
Dejaune Anderson, a
self-declared
sovereign citizen,
is accused of
neglecting her
5-year-old son so
badly that he died
of dehydration. Her
trial is pending.
Traffic stops can be
especially dangerous
for police because
sovereign citizens
often will not
comply with
officers’ basic
commands. At times,
this tendency can
lead to violence.
In April 2024, two
police officers in
Florida investigated
a report of a man in
a vehicle in a
public park after
the park’s closing
time. The person
identified himself
as a “Moorish
sovereign citizen,”
a type of sovereign
citizen who claims
that people of
African American
descent are not
subject to U.S. law
because of a 1787
treaty between the
U.S. and Morocco,
which says nothing
of the sort.
During the
confrontation that
ensued, the man
allegedly shot and
wounded the officers
before being killed
by police.
A new subgroup
Over the past
several years, a new
variation of
sovereign citizens
has emerged, known
as American State
Nationals. In my
research, I learned
that they have been
congregating on
social media and
gathering at
seminars. Their
leaders teach
traditional
sovereign citizen
ideology along with
new methods that
supposedly let them
live outside the
law.
For instance,
leaders teach their
followers that
driver’s licenses,
marriage licenses,
Social Security
cards, car
registrations and
voter registrations
are “contracts with
the government,”
which to them form
the basis for
requirements that
they obey laws.
American State
Nationals are urged
to cancel or rescind
these documents by
filling out a set of
forms, which are
sold by the seminar
leaders for about
$250, in addition to
the $150 seminar
fee. Then they are
told to submit the
documents to county
recorders and even
the U.S. State
Department. They are
told that doing so
will remove them
from the reach of
the U.S. government.
Paul Grice, the
fifth member of
God’s Misfits to be
arrested in that
Oklahoma kidnapping
and murder case,
reportedly sent his
packet of paperwork
by certified mail to
Antony Blinken, the
U.S. secretary of
state.
Perhaps
paradoxically,
American State
Nationals are also
told to acquire a
federal document
that group members
call a “noncitizen
national passport.”
They believe this
document gives them
many special
privileges,
including no longer
being a U.S. citizen
and having immunity
from U.S. laws. They
believe this even
though U.S. law
applies to everyone
within the borders
of the U.S.
In reality, this
document does none
of what they think
it does. The
document, officially
called a
“Certificate of Non
Citizen
Nationality,” is
really for use by
people born in one
of several U.S.
possessions, such as
American Samoa.
Directly contrary to
what sovereign
citizens think, the
document certifies
that its bearer does
“owe permanent
allegiance to the
United States.”
Sovereign citizens’
beliefs have yet to
hold up in any court
of law in the U.S.
or overseas.
As an Australian law
school lecturer said
of a case involving
a sovereign citizen
in Australia, “No
court in Australia,
no court in the
U.S., Canada,
anywhere that I’ve
seen, has ever
accepted the legal
arguments raised by
sovereign citizens.” |