The Sydney sovereign citizen sign warns trespassers of a fine of 330 oz in silver
Read the bizarre restraining order on a sovereign citizen’s gate: ‘You can hope this resident never receives his deliveries’
- Sovereign citizen ridiculed over sign
- Strange sign quoted the Nuremberg Code and the Bible
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A sovereign citizen has been ridiculed for placing a sign on the front of his home warning trespassers that they would be fined 330 oz in silver.
The sign was affixed to the fence of the Sydney home, warning visitors of swift consequences if they entered the property without permission.
The strange sign not only threatened a fine in the form of silver payments, but also cited the Nuremberg Code and the Bible.
The Nuremberg Code is a set of principles established after World War II and is intended to guide ethical human experimentation.
It is often misused by Covid-19 anti-vaxxers and sovereign citizens who use it to insist that they are exempt from local laws.
A sovereign citizen has been ridiculed for placing a sign on the front of his home warning trespassers that they would be fined 330 oz in silver
A passerby snapped a photo of the sign attached to the fence outside Sydney’s grounds.
“Private Property Notice of Violation,” the sign read in bold letters.
“Trespass applies without prior authorization or private invitation.
‘Access to this property is strictly by invitation or by appointment only or trespass will apply. Access to this property constitutes acceptance of this notice.’
The sign then threatens violators with a silver fine of 330 oz.
It then quotes part of the Nuremberg Code and a passage from Ephesians, the tenth book in the New Testament.
Social media users poked fun at the sign, pointing out several of its flaws.
“How are you going to enforce private property rights without a state,” one wrote.
A second added: “They are most likely sovereign citizens who feel that the law does not apply to them, but it does to you if you do something wrong.”
Another joked, “Just tell them you’re a sovereign citizen and their laws don’t apply to you.”
“You can hope this resident never receives his deliveries,” a third added.