"The Law Doesn't Apply to Me": Why Sovereign Citizen Arguments Always Fail
3 hours ago
- #Traffic Law
- #Sovereign Citizen
- #Legal Defense
- A driver using a homemade license plate and refusing to identify himself during a traffic stop was convicted of obstructing a peace officer.
- The driver appealed his conviction and sentence, claiming to be a 'sovereign' or 'natural' person, but the B.C. Supreme Court dismissed the appeal.
- Sovereign citizen or freeman-on-the-land theories, which claim individuals can opt out of government authority, have no legal foundation in Canadian courts, as established in cases like Meads v. Meads.
- Driving on public roads requires a valid license, registration, insurance, and government-issued plates; using fabricated plates violates these laws regardless of personal beliefs.
- During a traffic stop, drivers are legally obligated to identify themselves to police; refusal can constitute obstruction under the Criminal Code, even without violence or confrontation.
- Appeal courts do not re-try cases but review for legal errors or unreasonable verdicts; here, the trial judge correctly applied settled law, so the appeal failed.
- Sentence appeals require showing a sentence is 'demonstrably unfit' or based on an error in principle, not disagreement with the law.
- Pseudo-legal arguments like sovereign citizen theories often worsen legal situations, as seen when a driver's obstruction charge led to a criminal record instead of just traffic penalties.
- Frustrations with the legal system are understandable, but pseudo-legal theories can crowd out legitimate defenses; effective legal arguments should work within the law.
- In British Columbia, for driving charges or disputes, seeking advice from knowledgeable legal professionals is recommended over denying the rules.