I thought the interviewer had been rather gentle in the commentary and treatment of the Freeman movement and Mr. Alexander. It appears I was incorrect (
http://www.facebook.com/groups/13786930 ... 215839382/):
Wally Banger
Here's a nice piece of shit for you. Sounds like you did a good job, Brian but they slanted it and turned it into a propaganda piece just as I'm sure you knew they would.
Alexander Ream
Very pathetic article. They demonize everything.
Brian Alexander
I wasn't expecting it to be so slanted; the bitch gave me her eword it was going to be non biased, n I also told her right off the bat that Sovereign and Citizen were polar opposites...though obviosly its government propaganda with government labels.
One point though, this report suggests that there are as many as 30,000 Freemen in Canada. I suspect the source of that figure is this highly redacted CSIS domestic threat assessment report (
http://www.scribd.com/doc/118731437/Domestic), but the report simply points to "open sources". I'm not certain what those would be - does anyone have a source for this figure?
Frankly, I don't buy that number. At all. My guess would be an order of magnitude less. When you do a 'head count' on the number of persons who subscribe to even the most active Freeman-on-the-Land Facebook groups the numbers rarely break 1,000. Further investigation makes it is obvious that a significant number of those persons are from other countries. Similarly, though there are a large number of Freeman message forums and websites, the same names continually reappear, again and again. The granddaddy of Freeman online communities, the World Freeman Society website forums, says it has somewhat over 4,000 members.
Robert Menard has 235 followers on Facebook. Dean Clifford does not share that information in public. Mary Elizabeth Crofts "appreciation society" (
http://www.facebook.com/groups/87577448012/) has 591 members. Similarly, the regional World Freeman Society Facebook groups have smaller memberships: Ontario = 544, Alberta = 141, Inland B.C. = 46.
I just don't see 30,000 from that.
Now, there is a countervailing factor - in Canada there seems to be a second 'offline' branch of the Sovereign Citizen / Freeman-on-the-Land community. I do not know much about it, but I know it must exist because when one tracks back the Freemen / Sovereigns who appear in court, there are a significant number who have no apparent online presence. Furthermore, there have been events that would be extremely significant to Freeman / Sovereign community that remain all but unknown to the 'online' branch, such as the Killam RCMP shooting. I wish I had a better idea about the origin and character of the 'offline' part of the community but I do have some confidence that it is not ten times the size of the 'online' component.
My hunch is the Detaxer community was not much larger at its peak.
R. v. Porisky, 2012 BCSC 771 reports at para. 40 that Paradigm had about 800 subscribers. I don't think there is much dispute that Porisky's Detaxer scheme was by far the largest in Canada. The 30,000 cannot be a misattribution to the Detaxer period.
I would very much welcome observations on this point, as this is a question that has long troubled me. That is not to say I want to underplay the potential for disruption by Canadian Freemen / Sovereigns, but it also does not seem helpful to inflate the scope of this community.
And I don't think it's growing in number, but as a danger to the public? Quite possibly.
SMS Möwe