Come Home to the Land: Correct Your Status

The 1779 Declaration

These are the minimum required documents to correct your status and come home to the Land jurisdiction:

  1. Cover Sheet
  2. 1779 Declaration
  3. Two Witness Testimonies
  4. Your Birth Certificate (will not recorded or published)

The one page 1779 Declaration, recorded along with two Witness Testimonies, are sufficient on their own to replace the “928” documents for  purposes of participation in the Oklahoma General Assembly and conduct of all business that people may normally engage in. The 1779 Declaration adequately rebuts all presumptions being held against you and blocks any further interference by the “governmental services corporations” and their officers. The only inputs required are the name of the State where you were born (your native state), and the name of the Oklahoma County where you currently live, plus the day, month, year, and your hand-printed autograph, plus the participation of the Recording Secretary of the State Assembly as Notarial Witness. You will autograph your name in printed Upper and Lower Case, as taught in Grade School; not in cursive. The Recording Secretary will need a copy of your certified Birth Certificate to determine that you were born on a state, but it is not necessary to record it.

To receive more information about starting your paperwork and participating in the assembly, Contact your Oklahoma Coordinator.

State National or State Citizen?

Overall, the first step is to correct your political status to that of American State National. The next step is to choose between participation in the General Assembly as a State National, or serving in the special assemblies as a State Citizen. A State National owes no duties or obligations to the civil government (our republican form of government), and the State Citizen is a State National who has accepted the duties and obligations to serve in the republic. In other words, the State National has no obligations other than keeping the peace and reporting crime, but State Citizens have chosen the obligation to provide a republican form of government for State Nationals. A State Citizen provides this government by participating in the Jural Assembly, the Militia Assembly or the International Business Assembly.

During this initial period of reconstructing our Republic and Common Law Courts, we are asking all State Nationals to consider offering their talents and skills as State Citizens. The sooner our civil government is fully functioning, the sooner Oklahomans will have the republican form of government they are owed. Please read below for more information on the 928’s.

What are the 928’s?

The “928’s” is a reference to Anna Von Reitz’s Article # 928, and these documents are required to qualify people to serve in the capacity of State Citizen. Click here to learn about the “basic package” of documents popularly referred to as “the 928’s”.

Chart Your Course

Visit the main TASA website to read more about the paperwork process and how to go about correcting your status.

Other Documents To Record:

Whether you use the 1779 Declaration process – or the 928’s – these documents (below) may also be necessary; depending on your circumstances and what specific actions you would like to take.

  1. Recording Cover Sheet – whichever documents you are recording; you will list the titles of each document on this Cover Sheet, as the first page of the group of documents. A typical Cover Sheet will contain the 1779 Declaration, followed by the 2 Witness Testimonies, followed by any of the documents listed below which you would like to include. You may choose to record everything together in one large group of documents, or you could record them in several smaller groups of documents, depending on your schedule or other factors.
  2. Cover Letter for U.S. Secretary of State.
    • Many Americans believe this is an indispensable component of correcting your political status, because when sent Registered Mail, it is considered “properly served” to the principal office of the US Department of State; which is the US Secretary of State. Here in this explanation it is helpful to remember that the Department of State is a department of an incorporated entity – the UNITED STATES, Inc. – and that company is domiciled in the International Sea jurisdiction (commerce) and operated by the IMF. In all regards, the UNITED STATES, Inc. is foreign to Americans who are domiciled on the international Land jurisdiction of a State. So American State Nationals, and the nation state Oklahoma (Land), are foreign to the UNITED STATES, and visa versa.
    • Bringing it home: because the US Department of State is tasked with keeping track of political statuses, and is currently presuming that you are a US Citizen; it is now necessary for you to properly serve notice to the Secretary of State; that you have exercised your right of self determination and have declared yourself an American State National, and therefore your status is now foreign to their jurisdiction.
  3. Declaration of Political Status
  4. Notice of Voter Registration Cancellation
    • State Citizens are required to cancel their voter registration to rebut any presumption that they are an “enfranchised voter” domiciled in the foreign International Sea jurisdiction.
  5. Notice to Oklahoma Attorney General
  6. Severance Letter for Veterans
  7. 2 Letters of Revocation of Election to Pay Taxes; both Washington DC, and New York
  8. Marriage Paperwork
  9. Baby Deed
  10. Common Carry Declaration
  11. Fee Schedule
  12. Diagram of the Fraud (Optional)

Professional Services for American State Nationals

Keep in mind that you always have the option to print, review and record your documents with your Oklahoma Recording Secretary for a very reasonable price. Many State Nationals choose this route, and we also recommend it because it helps you understand what your documents accomplish and how to use them in the future.

However, if you would like to purchase additional services from a Recording Secretary, and would appreciate extra guidance in completing your documents, here are two companies worth checking out:

Status Select can be found at https://www.mystatusselect.com/ and is staffed by Dominic Knipfing, Evangeline Grace Knipfing and Shoshannah Myers. The team provides professional services to those seeking to change their political status to American State Nationals by preparing the necessary documentation for recording and submission. 

ASN Consulting can be found here, https://www.asnconsulting.co/about. Titus Osborne is an American State National on Tennessee, and he is also offering his services as well, to help people get their documents together.

Choosing Document Versions by Recording Method

All documents will be recorded by a Recording Secretary on the Land & Soil jurisdiction, and the Recording Secretary can also provide Notary services for you. You have several options for accomplishing both the Notary and Recording services.

  1. If using your Oklahoma Assembly Recording Secretary for both services, use the documents labeled “Recording Secretaries“. Make a video appointment with your Recording Secretary so they can remotely witness you autographing your documents, and then mail them to the Recording Secretary to be notarized, recorded, and published to the (Civil) Land Recording Office (LRO) system.
  2. If notarizing your documents with a Notary Public, then use the file labeled “State of State Notary“. Your bank may offer this service free to its members. If they refuse for whatever reason, many businesses around town will have a Notary Public on staff who will be happy to charge about $5 per document.
    • After the documents have been notarized, mail them to your Oklahoma Assembly Recording Secretary, or a Federation Recording Secretary, who will record them on the Land & Soil jurisdiction and publish them to the LRO.
  3. In addition to the LRO (civil government system on TASA servers), it is recommended to also record your documents with your local State of Oklahoma County Clerk’s Land Recording Office. If they refuse, have your documents recorded by a neighboring county.
  4. If you prefer to use the automated Form Generators, check out these two links.

Recording and Publishing Tips:

  • For the 1779 Declaration, the only inputs required are the name of the State where you were born (your native state), or the state you have adopted, and the name of the Oklahoma County where you currently live, plus the day, month, year, and your hand-printed autograph. [all the words in red will be edited to match your information, then change the font color to black again.]
  • Autograph your given name in printed Upper and Lower Case, as taught in grade school; not in cursive.
  • The Recording Secretary will need a copy of your certified Birth Certificate to determine that you were born on a state, but it will not be recorded or published.
  • For any of your documents, including the notary section, “nee” means “formerly known as”, or for a woman, this indicates her maiden name before she was married. Example; for a woman who was given the name Jane Marie Parker at birth (but now her married name is Smith), the text in the Notary section would read like this “… is the living woman known to me to be Jane Marie Smith (nee Parker) and she did issue this…”
  • For the 1779 Declaration, as well as the rest of the 928’s, the appropriate word is “autograph”, not “signature”. For the purposes of this comparison, a signature is made by a signatory, which indicates that “person” has been given the authority to sign for the benefit of a corporation, trust, or legal Person or other legal entity. By contrast, when a man or woman creates something – a piece of art, a book, or a lawful document, they write down their autograph. Signatures are written at the lower left of a legal instrument. Autographs are written at the lower right of a document.
  • Use a blue pen (not Navy), and a red ink pad for the 1779 Declaration.
  • The 1779 Declaration must be autographed and sealed with your thumb print in front of the Notary. The notary will require a form of ID (Driver’s License or Passport will work fine). They will then complete the Notary section with their signature, date, seal, license number, and the date of expiration of their seal. The function of the notary – and also the thumbprint seal – is to provide prima facie evidence that you are in fact a man or woman, that you are alive and not dead, that you are autographing your documents freely, willingly, and with full awareness of what you are doing.
  • The Witnesses testimonies are likewise signed in the presence of a notary. The people who sign the Witness Testimonies are people who have first hand knowledge of who you are (friends, family, classmates, long time employers, coworkers, etc.) and where and when you were born, clearly identifying a picture of you as “the” one who was born at such and such a time and place to such parents, and on an American state.
  • Notary services are offered at your local bank, a UPS or FedEx store, The Oklahoma Assembly Recording Secretary, and also your local County Clerk Recording Office. It is a good idea to call ahead and confirm that a Notary is in the office on the day you want to come in, and what fee they charge per document. Many people find a place to get their documents notarized, and then they proceed to the next step of getting them recorded. Alternatively, you can have your documents both notarized and recorded at the same place (read below).
    • Did you know there is a difference between a “Public Notary” and a “Notary Public”? The difference is in the capacity
  • There are two main methods for recording & publishing documents to the Land & Soil jurisdiction.
    1. Our Oklahoma Assembly Recording Secretaries use the LRO system (Land Recording Office). We recommend to do this first, as it is the easiest method of recording your documents. Reach out on The Oklahoma Assembly Telegram group or to the Oklahoma Coordinator via email to make contact with an Oklahoma Assembly Recording Secretary. Once your documents are prepared with everything except your autograph and thumb-print seal, reach out to a Recording Secretary, and they will schedule a video phone call with you, where they will remotely witness your autograph and seal. (Of course if you have already notarized your documents in town, then skip the remote witnessing and mail them to the Recording Secretary.) Then you will mail your documents to the Recording Secretary, and they will assign a land record number and publish your documents to the Land Recording Office system (LRO for short). The Land Recording Office is a recording system hosted on The American State Assemblies secure servers, and that system is on the public record, on the Land & Soil jurisdiction. Contact your Recording Secretary for instructions for using this system and to purchase credits to record on this system. The LRO was created because many State Nationals were encountering difficulty winning the cooperation of their County Clerk Land Records Office – read option #2 below.
      • FYI: Recording refers to the act of adding a serial number or “file marker” to the document for identification. The recording secretary will do this when recording your documents to the LRO, and if you also record at your local county Land Records Office, the clerk will add their own particular number to the document. Each system has its own document identification numbers. For this reason it is helpful to give at least a 1 inch margin at the top or bottom of all of your documents to allow for these numbers.
      • When a document is published, it is now on the public record, and available to be viewed, or printed from that system.
      • Did you know? Recording Secretaries on the International Land jurisdiction maintain “records” and (when used as a verb) they “record” documents. By contrast, the vast majority of our county courthouses and their associated Land Record offices are run by incorporated, enfranchised entities in the International Sea jurisdiction. Those county clerks and their staff often refer to documents as “files” and they refer to it as “filing” documents.
    2. Your local County Clerk Land Records Office. As with the Notary, it is a good idea to call ahead, and see what they charge to record your documents. If they have no issues recording documents they are not familiar with, then the experience may be even more convenient than recording to the LRO, because it will be in your home county.