The Revelation of Policing: A Corporate Enterprise Disguised as Law
Exposing the financial and political structure behind municipal policing, and how to reclaim true justice.
The Political and Corporate Nature of Policing
Policing in America is not just law enforcement—it is a business. Police departments are subsidiaries of municipal corporations, operating under D-U-N-S numbers like private companies. This allows them to function as financial entities rather than public service institutions.
Their authority does not derive from the Constitution but from corporate municipal codes, which are often enforced as if they were law.
“All laws which are repugnant to the Constitution are null and void.”
Municipal Corporations: The Business of Law Enforcement
All cities and townships in the United States are structured as municipal corporations. These corporations:
- Hold assets and debt.
- Enter into contracts, including insurance bond agreements.
- Generate revenue through fines, asset forfeiture, and taxation.
- Operate courts as administrative tribunals rather than true constitutional courts.
Police do not uphold constitutional law—they enforce municipal policies that generate revenue.
The Insurance Bonds That Protect the System
Municipal police departments carry liability insurance bonds that shield them from the financial consequences of misconduct. When officers commit unconstitutional acts:
- Settlements are paid through municipal insurance, not from officer salaries.
- This creates plausible deniability, allowing officers to act without personal accountability.
- In some cases, police brutality bonds are sold to investors, profiting from injustice.
This financial protection encourages reckless policing, as there is no personal cost for officers who violate rights.
To request insurance bond information for your local police department, file a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request.
Constitutional Violations and Legal Loopholes
Municipal ordinances are not laws; they are corporate policies. Many interactions with police involve:
- Unlawful ID checks with no reasonable suspicion.
- Detainment under city ordinances rather than state or federal law.
- Fines and arrests issued for profit, not public safety.
Legal doctrines like qualified immunity further insulate officers, making it almost impossible to hold them accountable in court.
“A state of war only serves as an excuse for domestic tyranny.”
Scripture: A Higher Law That Condemns Corrupt Governance
“How long will ye judge unjustly, and accept the persons of the wicked? Selah. Defend the poor and fatherless: do justice to the afflicted and needy.”
The municipal corporate structure violates the very principles of justice and righteousness. The power they wield is financial, not moral.
The Solution: How Policing Should Operate Under Constitutional Law
To dismantle the financial and corporate entanglement of policing, the following must happen:
1. Enforce Constitutional Standards
Police must be trained in constitutional law, not just municipal policy.
2. Eliminate Qualified Immunity
Officers should face personal liability for unconstitutional actions.
3. End Revenue-Based Law Enforcement
Policing should not be a financial enterprise. The practice of using fines and forfeitures as revenue must end.
4. Demand Transparency in Municipal Bonds
Every insurance claim, settlement, and bond issuance should be made public.
5. Stop Illegal Detainment Under Corporate Ordinances
Civil rights lawsuits should challenge the unlawful enforcement of ordinances as criminal acts.
Final Revelation: The System Isn’t Broken—It’s Working as Designed
The policing system is functioning exactly as intended—to extract wealth from the public while protecting municipal corporations from liability.
It is time to demand accountability, transparency, and constitutional governance.
“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.”
The fight for true justice begins with knowledge. Share this, demand transparency, and reclaim the law.