An honest judge’s ruling on mortgage money… “It sounds like fraud to me,” says the judge, after the banker admits creating of money “out of thin air.”
Six months later, in June 1969., the judge dies in what appears to have been a fishing boat accident. His body was found pumped full of poison.
This article is taken from The Credit River Decision
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A Minnesota Trial Court’s decision
- holding the Federal Reserve Act unconstitutional and VOID;
- holding the National Banking Act unconstitutional and VOID;
- declaring a mortgage acquired by the First National Bank of Montgomery, Minnesota in the regular course of its business… Along with the foreclosure and the sheriff’s sale, to be VOID.
This decision, which is legally sound, has the effect of declaring all private mortgages on real and personal property… And all U.S. and State bonds held by the Federal Reserve, National and State Banks to be null and VOID.
This amounts to an emancipation of this nation from personal, national and State debt purportedly owed to this banking system.
Every True American owes it to himself/herself, to his or her country, and to the people of the world for that matter… To study this decision very carefully and to understand it, for upon it hangs the question of freedom or slavery.
Credit River Decision
A word from an associate justice who knew and worked with Justice Mahoney, State of Minnesota, about the case.
The “Credit River Decision” handed down by a jury of 12 on a cold day in December, in the Credit River Township Hall, was an experience that I’ll never forget.
The Chief Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court had phoned me a week before the trial. He asked if I would be an associate justice in assisting Justice Martin V. Mahoney since he had never handled a jury trial before.
I accepted, and it took me two hours to get my car running in the 22 below zero weather.
I got to the court room about 30 minutes before trial,. Then I helped get the wood stove going, since the trial was being held in an unheated store room of a general store.
This was the first time I met Justice Mahoney. I was impressed with his no nonsense manner of handling matters before him.
My OB was to help pick the jury, and to keep Jerome Daly and the attorney representing the Bank of Montgomery from engaging in a fist fight.
The court room was highly charged, and the Jury was all business.
The banker testified about the mortgage loan given to Jerome Daly.
But then Daly cross examined the banker about the creating of money “out of thin air.”
The banker admitted that this was standard banking practice.
When Justice Mahoney heard the banker testify that he could “create money out of thin air,” Mahoney said, “It sounds like fraud to me.”
Honest Judge’s Ruling on Mortgage Money
I looked at the faces of the jurors, and they were all agreeing with Mahoney by shaking their heads and by the looks on their faces.
I must admit that up until that point, I really didn’t believe Jerome’s theory, and thought he was making this up.
After I heard the testimony of the banker, my mouth had dropped open in shock, and I was in complete disbelief.
There was no doubt in my mind that the Jury would find for Daly.
Jerome Daly had taken on the banks, the Federal Reserve Banking System, and the money lenders, and had won.
It is now [fifty four] years since this “Landmark Decision.”
Justice Mahoney is quoted more often than any Supreme Court justice ever was.
The money boys that run the “private Federal Reserve Bank” soon got back at Mahoney… By poisoning him in what appeared to have been a fishing boat accident (but with his body pumped full of poison) in June of 1969, less than 6 months later.
Both Jerome Daly and Justice Martin V. Mahoney are truly the greatest men that I have ever had the pleasure to meet.
The Credit River Decision was and still is the most important legal decision ever decided by a Jury.
Bill Drexler
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