Saturday, January 28, 2012

Helen Carew, please let me know if the NJ Sate Constitution protects individuals from "excessive fines".

Helen Carew, Dir. of Constituent Casework
NJ State Senator Steven Oroho
NJ State Assemblywoman Alison McHose
NJ State Assemblyman Gary Chiusano
115 Demarest Rd. suite 2B
Sparta, NJ 07871

Dear Helen Carew,

Greetings on this glorious day! I hope that you and the loved ones are in good health and are getting along. Good health is such a wonderful blessing from the good Lord, our Creator Lord! How is your spirit on this glorious day? Please remember that we humans are more than flesh and blood. Also, please remember that we humans are created by our Creator Lord, in His image, with inalienable rights! I am very thankful to our loving, gracious, merciful Creator Lord for this opportunity to write to you. I am also very thankful to our awesome, marvelous Creator Lord to be able to get up out of bed in the morning, and to go to work. I received your letter, dated 1/23/12, regarding a previous letter asking about what the words "excessive fines shall not be imposed" mean in the U.S. Constitution. Please let me know if I'm protected by the NJ Constitution. Please let me know what the NJ State Constitution, Article 1, Rights and Privileges #12, means when it says that "excessive fines shall not be imposed". For the last 16 1/2 years, or so, I've have been living in relative poverty (I had a condo. but was out of work for a while and had no money to pay the mortgage, so the bank foreclosed on the condo. - it ended up being worth a lot less than the purchase price, and I also owed lots of money). Over the years I've worked to pay off my debts, and I believed that I'd paid back all my debts (all the ones that weren't forgiven, or that I couldn't track down) until I tried to withdraw a corporation that was formed in Virginia, and was always inactive, but I never filed the corporate returns because I didn't believe that I had to because the corporation was always inactive (just an FYI: there were years that I didn't make the federal minimum $ amount for paying income taxes, so I didn't file a 1040 for those years - I believe that is something that I was not required to do, please correct me if I'm wrong). Now I'm led to believe that I owe the government more money than I have (thousands of $'s more - about $6,400 more) in back taxes, penalties, and interest for not paying, or not filing returns, for corporate taxes.

After about 43 years of starting out to work (albeit not always full time, and not always above the minimum wage, and not always being gainfully employed) I believe, from what I'm being told, that I will still owe the government thousands of dollars more than what I have. If I'm able to make arrangements with the government to pay off what I owe, then after I pay off the government, the Lord willing, I can start saving up for retirement (for full disclosure: D.O.B. 3/23/56). That is why I'm asking what the NJ Constitution means by the words "excessive fines shall not be imposed" contained within Article 1, Rights and Privileges #12. FYI: I am presently blessed with two jobs - one full-time, and one part-time, but do not make a lot of money (definitely a lot less than what a U.S. Senator, or a Governor, or a Supreme Court Justice, or a lawyer makes).

Thank you very much for all your help. Hope that you and the loved ones have a joyous and peaceful day. May the good Lord, our Creator Lord, bless you and the loved ones with love, joy, peace, and patience!


Sincerely,



Ken Miller
Main St. Rm. 103
still one of the working poor!

Jesus is the Holy One of Israel!!!

All glory, honor, praise, and thanks be to our Creator Lord - maker of heaven and earth!!!!

Love is the fulfilling of the Law.

P.S. I've been living in relative poverty for the last 16 1/4 - 16 3/4 years, and the cost of the lawyer, accountant, the amount of penalties, interest, and the cost of corporate taxes on inactive corporations, and the time spent on the withdrawal/dissolution process has been incredible - more than I even imagined back in May of 2011 when I first started saving for the process.

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