In March last year, Neely Blanchard allegedly abducted her twin daughters from the court-ordered care of their grandmother in Kentucky. In letters she sent to the Logan County Sheriff, Blanchard maintained that the authorities had no legal jurisdiction over her. The girls were rescued two days later, when Blanchard was arrested hiding out in a motel in the company of others who shared her legal views. Freed on bond, in November she was arrested again in Georgia after she allegedly murdered a Florida man who purported to have the legal expertise to help her reclaim her children. A few months later, in September 2020, Cyndie Abcug allegedly became convinced that a Denver foster home was abusing her son. According to police reports, she was armed, in the company of a supposedly trained sniper, and had made plans to raid the foster home and kidnap her child. When authorities were tipped off by her daughter, Abcug’s plan failed. A well-connected Arkansas politician fond of filing bizarre court documents in her own child custody case then took up Abcug’s cause. Accompanied by various like-minded companions, Abcug also traveled to Wisconsin, Virginia, Florida, and Arkansas, until finally arriving in Kalispell last December, where she and a companion were arrested. In October 2020, Emily Jolley allegedly abducted her 6-year-old son after the boy’s father dropped off the child with Jolley’s Millcreek, Utah mother for a supervised visit. When police questioned Jolley’s mother, she produced spurious legal documents regarding her daughter’s actions and was arrested on obstruction of justice charges. In the charging documents, Jolley is reported to have maintained that the boy was her property and should be returned to her. An Amber Alert determined that the mother and a companion had traveled to Oregon, where they were arrested on federal kidnapping charges. The boy was returned to his father. Murder, kidnapping, and interstate flight are so out of the pale that these horrifying stories could all too easily be dismissed as the actions of emotionally unbalanced parents. But there is something far more sinister here. The Kentucky mother wrote letters questioning the legal jurisdiction of the authorities; one of the Colorado woman’s allies filed briefs insisting that the foster care system had no legal authority, and the Utah woman’s mother bandied about fictitious government documents to the same effect. What we see here is the pernicious influence of the so-called “sovereign citizens” movement, at work in over 100 websites. Given to filing lengthy court briefs and fabricating spurious legal documents, sovereign citizens maintain that our current legal system has illegally usurped the “common law” of the founding fathers. A “domestic terror threat,” according to the FBI, sovereign citizens proclaim themselves free to violently disobey the law. For the sovereign citizen, our entire legal system is illegitimate, even more so child protection laws. As Will Sommer writes, sovereign citizens believe that “children in the custody of a relative or foster parent are instead headed toward an abuse-and-torture network run by global elites.”
