Oath is technically an employment contract. Violation of an oath is technically breach of contract and automatic termination of conditional employment that is based on not violating the oath. I suggest getting copy of state official's oath of office and filing "breach of contract" lawsuit in Federal District Court pro-se (for yourself) without an expensive lawyer for $402 and see what kind of damage you can do.
I recommend Federal Court because most of the State Courts appear to be corrupt, bought off, or captured. Jurisdiction is Federal since all state contract law is based on common law that governs commercial activities. Contract common law actually predates the US Constitution, but is still codified in both general contract law and the UCC: http://jec.unm.edu/education/online-training/contract-law-tutorial/the-uniform-commercial-code-ucc
Here is the Federal Lawsuit form PDF for "Breach of Contract": https://www.uscourts.gov/forms/pro-se-forms/complaint-civil-case-alleging-breach-contract; Just fill it out and mail it into the appropriate Federal District Court with your check for $402. If you wish to expedite and minimize mailing fees, then include the Summons document for the Defendant along with the original filing. I recommend sending USPS Express Mail with green return receipt card (usually about $30 total).
Oath is technically an employment contract. Violation of an oath is technically breach of contract and automatic termination of conditional employment that is based on not violating the oath. I suggest getting copy of state official's oath of office and filing "breach of contract" lawsuit in Federal District Court pro-se (for yourself) without an expensive lawyer for $402 and see what kind of damage you can do.
I recommend Federal Court because most of the State Courts appear to be corrupt, bought off, or captured. Jurisdiction is Federal since all state contract law is based on common law that governs commercial activities. Contract common law actually predates the US Constitution, but is still codified in both general contract law and the UCC: http://jec.unm.edu/education/online-training/contract-law-tutorial/the-uniform-commercial-code-ucc
Here is the Federal Lawsuit form PDF for "Breach of Contract": https://www.uscourts.gov/forms/pro-se-forms/complaint-civil-case-alleging-breach-contract; Just fill it out and mail it into the appropriate Federal District Court with your check for $402. If you wish to expedite and minimize mailing fees, then include the Summons document for the Defendant along with the original filing. I recommend sending USPS Express Mail with green return receipt card (usually about $30 total).
$432 to create big problems for a state official seems like a bargain to me. Note if you are challenging a state law as unconstitutional (typical for "color of law" violations), you must include the Attorney General and the State of XX as defendants as well.
Oath is technically an employment contract. Violation of an oath is technically breach of contract and automatic termination of conditional employment that is based on not violating the oath. I suggest getting copy of state official's oath of office and filing "breach of contract" lawsuit in Federal District Court pro-se (for yourself) without an expensive lawyer for $402 and see what kind of damage you can do.
I recommend Federal Court because most of the State Courts appear to be corrupt, bought off, or captured. Jurisdiction is Federal since all state contract law is based on common law that governs commercial activities. Contract common law actually predates the US Constitution, but is still codified in both general contract law and the UCC: http://jec.unm.edu/education/online-training/contract-law-tutorial/the-uniform-commercial-code-ucc
Oath is technically an employment contract. Violation of an oath is technically breach of contract and automatic termination of conditional employment that is based on not violating the oath. I suggest getting copy of state official's oath of office and filing "breach of contract" lawsuit in Federal District Court pro-se (for yourself) without an expensive lawyer for $402 and see what kind of damage you can do.