"admiralty law"
24 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke hosted a three-hour episode of The Intelligence Report on November 5, 2025, covering multiple topics including New York City politics and communist control, the Harvard bombing, a UPS plane crash near residential areas, a suicide on the Mackinac Bridge, tariff impacts on small businesses (with guest commentary from Jared of Blackout Coffee Company), nuclear weapons testing claims by Trump, Venezuelan military intervention, and ongoing Second Amendment threats from anti-gun litigation targeting pistol designs like the Ruger RXM. The show emphasized militia organization, preparedness, weapons procurement, and constitutional resistance to federal overreach.
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Mark Koernke discussed planned civil unrest expected on Saturday, October 31st, framing it as a government-orchestrated operation involving AIPAC, Israeli interests, and both Democratic and Republican parties. He analyzed a DOJ court filing demanding membership lists from gun rights organizations, explaining how the ruling against post office firearm bans creates nationwide de facto relief requiring compensation for wrongfully incarcerated individuals. Koernke also covered Massachusetts' defiant response to Second Amendment lawsuits, promoted humanitarian rations and CETME rifle kits as preparedness items, and urged listeners to organize as militia for mutual defense while maintaining operational security.
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Mark Koernke discussed constitutional law concepts including jurisdiction, legal fictions, and admiralty law, with callers debating the distinction between common law and administrative courts. The show covered preparedness topics including walnut hull processing for iodine production, natural food sources like acorns and chicory, and the importance of maintaining diverse medicinal and nutritional supplies. Koernke also addressed current events including police shootings, immigration policy, and the Trump legal proceedings, arguing these represent communist overreach rather than legitimate governance.
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Mark Koernke discussed multiple topics on December 23, 2022, including Antifa's historical origins in communist movements, fusion technology suppression by the federal government, the case of Ronald Strauser facing additional charges in California, and commentary on music production and social engineering. He criticized government overreach, discussed the mechanics of fusion reactors and their potential applications, and addressed the legal situation of a caller's friend facing what he characterized as fabricated charges and harassment by prosecutors.
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Mark Koernke discussed New York's Concealed Carry Improvement Act and ongoing lawsuits challenging its constitutionality, the FBI's ambush of My Pillow CEO Mike Lindell at a Hardee's drive-through, and the legal strategy of not responding to admiralty-law warrants targeting property rather than individuals. He extensively covered health solutions for long COVID and respiratory illness, including doxycycline, nebulizers, colloidal silver, mullein, digestive enzymes, and vitamin supplementation. The show included caller contributions on medical treatments and preparedness, and concluded with tactical guidance on weapons deployment and casualty care.
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Mark Koernke discussed a militia-related incident in Massachusetts on July 3rd involving a group called the Moors who were stopped by state police while refueling on I-95 North near Wakefield. The group, traveling in tactical gear from Rhode Island to Maine, claimed they were exercising constitutional rights to travel and carry firearms. Koernke analyzed the legal arguments around militia rights, sovereignty movements, and the distinction between common law and admiralty courts. He criticized police escalation tactics and emphasized the importance of understanding constitutional protections during potential conflict. The show also covered ammunition deals, Freedom Palooza event recap, and preparedness resources.
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Mark Koernke discussed police response patterns to crime, the George Floyd case and its implications for law enforcement, drug addiction and societal breakdown, the role of Masonic lodges and foundational American principles, the DC statehood vote, election fraud evidence from Mike Lindell, and the War Powers Act of 1933. He argued that police are becoming reluctant to respond to calls due to political pressure, that the southern border represents a greater threat than overseas conflicts, and that the current government represents an illegitimate occupation requiring armed resistance.
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Mark Koernke discussed economic strategies for surviving the communist occupation of America, advising listeners to abandon mortgages and acquire rural property as a hedge against government collapse. He analyzed the oil industry job losses as a deliberate attack on skilled American workers, explained the history and symbolism of Liberty Poles as declarations of freedom, and argued that defensive violence is now necessary to prevent concentration camps. Koernke criticized Republican politicians for failing to defend Trump and the Constitution, warned that National Guard members in Washington D.C. have been compromised by communist ideology, and called for listeners to prepare for armed conflict while building community networks based on shared values.
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Mark Koernke discussed the federal government's alleged unconstitutional actions against Arizona, arguing that appealing to the United Nations constitutes treason against the states. He extensively analyzed the American Civil War, contending that European bankers and Wall Street manipulated both North and South to weaken American sovereignty, and that slavery was not the primary cause but rather a tool for economic control. Koernke covered the post-Civil War Reconstruction period, the westward migration caused by northern banker foreclosures, and historical parallels between southern plantation exploitation and northern industrial labor abuses including the forced importation of Welsh and Irish miners. He fielded caller questions about constitutional law, admiralty court symbolism, and state sovereignty.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Declaration of Independence on the second anniversary of what he characterized as socialist occupation of America, reading the full text and listing the signers. He analyzed a 1994 Cessna incident at the White House, comparing it to the 9/11 Pentagon attack and questioning the official narrative. Callers contributed perspectives on the founding fathers, the Commerce Clause, common law rights, and updates on political prisoner Gail Lynn Lomaster in Minnesota.
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Mark Koernke discussed military gun restrictions at Fort Carson, Colorado and Fort Campbell, Kentucky, drawing parallels to similar policies from 1992 and arguing they represent government disarmament of troops to use families as hostages. He extensively analyzed American constitutional history, the role of British law and admiralty law in subverting the republic, the alteration and destruction of legal documents including Title 50 United States Code, and historical figures like Thomas Paine and Alexander Hamilton. Koernke also addressed geopolitical conflicts, criticizing Israeli foreign policy, discussing World War I and planned world wars, and emphasizing the need for grassroots preservation of American liberty and constitutional principles.
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Mark Koernke discussed geopolitical tensions in Korea, arguing that reunification between North and South Korea is feasible and would create a regional powerhouse, comparing it to German reunification. He criticized U.S. foreign policy regarding Iraq and Somalia, arguing that Iraqi refugees should remain in Iraq rather than be resettled in America. Koernke and his co-host Dave covered financial markets, including stock market declines and commodity prices, and discussed preparedness and survivalism, noting a 700% increase in sales of survival gear since the beginning of 2009. The show emphasized the importance of ammunition stockpiling, food production, and emergency preparedness as tools of freedom and resistance.
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Mark Koernke discussed a December 1st raid by Department of Agriculture SWAT teams on the Mana Storehouse food co-op in which armed agents terrorized a family of nine, including children, and seized food products. He contextualized this as part of a broader pattern of government overreach, drawing parallels to piracy and privateering by corporate federal agencies operating under admiralty law rather than constitutional authority. Koernke emphasized the historical role of the militia in the American Revolution (beginning April 19, 1775, not 1776) and argued that an armed citizenry is the only check against tyranny. A caller joined to discuss the need for resistance and accountability, with both expressing that a breaking point is approaching where peaceful compliance will no longer be possible.
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Mark Koernke discussed the financial enslavement of Americans through fraudulent bond schemes and straw man contracts, explaining how the government uses citizens as collateral for international banking operations. He covered the October 2008 bailout bill, its hidden provisions including mental health legislation, and the unconstitutional nature of martial law declared during congressional proceedings. Guest Dave from New York presented extensive U.S. Code citations demonstrating that all federal officers are technically United Nations employees bound by international law rather than the Constitution, and explained how courts use competency declarations as a modern equivalent of Soviet commissar tactics to disarm citizens.
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Mark Koernke discussed militia organization and interstate cooperation meetings scheduled for August through October, including events in Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Kentucky. He analyzed the Georgia-Russia conflict as a result of U.S. interference rather than Russian aggression, drawing historical parallels to Cold War-era Eastern European conflicts. The show focused heavily on ammunition scarcity solutions, including J&D Components' discarding sabot cups that allow shooters to use lighter projectiles in 30-caliber rifles at high velocities, and emphasized the importance of reloading skills and brass recovery. Callers discussed ammunition supply chain disruptions from the Georgia conflict, admiralty law corruption in U.S. courts, and military officers' resistance to unlawful orders. Koernke provided contact information for militia training manuals and military surplus suppliers.
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Mark Koernke discussed militia training materials, including newly completed rifle marksmanship and medical SOP manuals, and promoted an upcoming event at Washington on the Brazos in Texas. Caller George from Florida raised concerns about Department of Transportation regulations targeting truckers and asked about the writ of attainder, which Koernke explained as an unconstitutional legal tool used against families and individuals. The show covered admiralty law principles, corporate jurisdiction tactics, and child protective services as foreign entities. Mike presented information on the 2001 anthrax attacks and scientist Bruce Ivins, with Koernke arguing the attacks targeted war opponents rather than war promoters, suggesting government involvement. The episode concluded with discussion of honey trap operations, interrogation tactics, and recommendations for gas masks.
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Mark Koernke and Mike Nester discussed constitutional rights, preparedness, and government overreach on May 29, 2008. Topics included admiralty law in the U.S. court system, a caller's successful traffic case against unlawful enforcement, Homeland Security checkpoint operations planned for New York and other states, the Rochester Hamfest for radio equipment acquisition, Marine deployment to Indianapolis for urban warfare training, and the importance of physical fitness for militia readiness. The show emphasized resistance to federal overreach, self-sufficiency through ham radio and medical preparedness, and the need for citizens to understand legal procedures to counter corrupt court systems.
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Mark Koernke discussed Ron Paul's 2008 presidential campaign and encouraged listeners to promote Paul's message to bikers and other groups, arguing that Paul's consistent constitutional message appeals across demographics. The show featured extended caller discussions on jural societies, the Bar Association as a tool of control, the Federal Reserve's illegal implementation, and vehicle shutdown technology allegedly installed in cars since the 1990s. A caller named Julie, a military specialist, described her ongoing CPS nightmare in California involving her children in foster care, detailing alleged corruption in family courts where judges, prosecutors, and attorneys profit from cases. Koernke explained how court systems operate under admiralty law and discussed the financial incentives driving child welfare agencies. The final segment addressed government surveillance, keyword flagging, and the importance of veterans speaking truth about military operations and government deception.
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Mark Koernke discussed Ron Paul's 2008 presidential campaign and grassroots promotion efforts, covered militia activity and preparedness on the East Coast, and examined administrative law strategies for property disputes. The show featured extensive commentary on military history, including the Korean War under General MacArthur, the Vietnam War, and current Iraq operations, with criticism of CFR membership among military and political leaders. Koernke and guest George explored the Clinton family's alleged connections to the Rockefeller lineage, occult symbolism in jewelry and hand signals used by secret societies, and the role of mercenaries and CIA operations in destabilizing foreign conflicts.
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Mark Koernke discussed satellite communications infrastructure, militia training exercises, and Second Amendment issues. He criticized the NRA for betraying gun rights advocates by allowing firearms legislation to pass, advocating instead for Gun Owners of America. Koernke emphasized preparedness, the necessity of armed resistance against government tyranny, and the importance of preserving patriot movement history. He referenced Patrick Henry's speech on liberty and warned that Americans face an inevitable conflict with an overreaching federal government that has already declared war on its citizens through continuous emergency powers since 1933.
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Mark Koernke discussed Ron Paul's Second Amendment record and criticized the NRA's rating of Paul, arguing that Paul has consistently defended gun rights through constitutional remedies. Callers Dave and Tom joined to discuss the Violent Crime Control Act of 1993, militia law, veterans' rights, and federal overreach in confiscating firearms from veterans diagnosed with PTSD or taking psychiatric medications. The show covered the Gun Control Act of 1968 and 1933 as unconstitutional, the Waco siege and alleged federal involvement in killing Branch Davidians, VA attempts to strip veterans of gun rights, and the need to support Gun Owners of America over the NRA.
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Mark Koernke and Donald Betcher hosted Doug Hudson, author of 'How Government Disarmed Citizens,' to discuss the historical and constitutional foundations of the Second Amendment, government corruption, and the incremental erosion of citizens' rights through taxation, licensing schemes, and regulatory control. The hosts and guest examined how government agencies operate as privateering operations under admiralty law, traced the pattern of gun confiscation throughout history (including Britain's seizure of American-donated firearms after World War II), and argued against compromise on constitutional rights. They emphasized that the founding fathers understood government tyranny and that citizens must remain vigilant and armed to preserve liberty.
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Mark Koernke discussed media manipulation and press control, explaining how reporters are often intelligence assets and how interviews are used to gather information rather than disseminate it. He announced plans for 'Patriot Wood' video production and studio facilities for patriot musicians. Caller Tommy from Brooklyn engaged in an extended discussion about the federal court system, penal bonds, sentencing procedures, and the role of sheriffs in resisting federal overreach. The conversation covered constitutional authority, maritime law applications to citizens, and the need for local law enforcement to stand against federal agencies.
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Mark Koernke and Donald Betcher discussed a major civil rights victory in which California agreed to pay nearly $1 million to settle a lawsuit by the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club over a 1998 police raid that killed three dogs and violated constitutional protections. The hosts explained how public officials are not immune from liability and detailed the importance of personal bonds versus public bonds in holding government accountable. They also covered the Teamsters Union lawsuit against the Bush administration for illegally implementing a pilot program to allow Mexican trucking companies to operate across U.S. borders without proper safety standards or public comment periods. The show promoted Ramsey Electronics kits for building micro FM transmitters as a way to spread patriotic information, and discussed strategies for citizens to file pro se legal actions against companies and officials involved in border betrayal and constitutional violations.