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The British Accredited Registry or BAR
Who or what is the BAR ? Who do they work for? What jurisdiction do they operate in?
During the middle 1600’s, the Crown of England established a formal registry in London where barristers were ordered by the Crown to be accredited. The establishment of this first International Bar Association allowed barrister-lawyers from all nations to be formally recognized and accredited by the only recognized accreditation society. From this, the acronym BAR was established denoting (informally) the British Accredited Registry, whose members became a powerful and integral force within the International Bar Association (IBA). Although this has been denied repeatedly as to its existence, the acronym BAR stood for the British barrister-lawyers who were members of the larger IBA.
When America was still a chartered group of British colonies under patent – established in what was formally named the British Crown territory of New England – the first British Accredited Registry (BAR) was established in Boston during 1761 to attempt to allow only accredited barrister-lawyers access to the British courts of New England. This was the first attempt to control who could represent defendants in the court at or within the bar in America.
Today, each corporate STATE has it’s own BAR Association that licenses government officer attorneys, NOT lawyers. In reality, the courts only allow their officer attorneys to freely enter within the bar while prohibiting those learned of the law – lawyers – to do so. They prevent advocates, lawyers, counselors, barristers and solicitors from entering through the outer bar. Only licensed BAR Attorneys are permitted to freely enter within the bar separating the people from the bench because all BAR Attorneys are officers of the court itself.
Does that tell you anything? Read more about the tricky word-game used at:http://www.angelfire.com/az/sthurston/Hiding_Behind_the_BAR.html
BAR is an acronym for ‘British Accreditation Regency’ which forms individual state and provincial bars. The “bar” is literally the wooden railing which separates the spectator section of the courtroom from the front section where the judge and lawyers (those ‘admitted to the bar’) sit. Ask an attorney about the BAR oath; it specifies the 1st loyalty is to the court, the 2nd to the State.
BAR facts: http://www.nationallibertyalliance.org/files/docs/DocumentsEssays/Bar-Facts.pdf
http://www.1776reloaded.org/joomla30/index.php/unlearn/502-the-british-accredited-registry-or-bar