Lawsuit in the Admiralty Jurisdiction Court
Part 1. I have a lawsuit that I'm filing, and I will have to place a bond with the court to indemnify the court if the court happens to unlawfully damage the other party in the court action (Defendant), when the court grants my preliminary injunction or motion. According to what Jack Smith and Sam Kennedy teach, this is a standard procedure when in the Admiralty Jurisdiction Court.
see..... Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 65 (c) - SECURITY. The court may issue a preliminary injunction or a temporary restraining order only if the movant gives secuirty in the amount that the court considers proper to pay the costs and damages sustained by any party found to have been wrongully enjoined or restrained. The United States, its officers, and its agencies are not required to give secuirty.
Part 2. I'm looking to create a new bond using my birth certificate, similar to the $100 Million Dollar bond that's used in the Secured Party Creditor Process to send to the U.S. Treasury. Giving this type of bond to the court seems to be less laborous and time consuming than creating the public to public bond as suggested to me. After going to the: Articles/Trusts & Business section of the forum, it references How to issue corporate bonds, prospectus and get a cusip number. I think that method is viable if I want to sell the bond, but I don't want to sell this particular bond or use it for the Secured Party Creditor Process, I just want to issue the bond to the court to act as a surety for my requested injunction. Should I use the Secured Party Creditor bond to give to the court as a surety? If not please state why
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