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Wednesday, November 12, 2025

Mapping the New Peacekeeping Landscape: County Soil Jurisdiction and Lawful, Legal Authority in America


Public Notice, County Sheriff Empowerment, and Emergency Communications Cooperation Amidst Federal Transition—A PKTFnews Update


Recent updates to the topographical map highlighting the American peacekeeping presence across all 3,142 American counties mark a pivotal development in the sovereign Land and Soil Jurisdiction framework that comprises the fabric of our nation-states.

These updates, accessible and continuously enhanced on [pktfnews.org], graphically represent the lawful, legal deployment and operational readiness of County Sheriffs and Continental Marshals within their jurisdictional borders, reinforcing an emerging peacekeeping paradigm based on original lawful authority.



as found halfway down the Homepage of pktfnews.org



Importantly, the map currently highlights data indicating American communications for emergency purposes across a growing spectrum of emergency services along the lines of all service providers previously mentioned—including local police departments, state police, FEMA, United States Marshals Service, and others. However, it does not yet reflect which counties currently have a deputy Continental Marshal assigned, though this detail will be added as additional emergency service cooperation data is supplied to the Peacekeeping Task Force by the Continental Marshals service.

Furthermore, there are likely several dozen more communication operators not yet represented on the map due to pending data updates from various counties across the 50 States of the Union. Anyone who owns or operates emergency radio and dispatch communications equipment but does not see their county reflected is encouraged to reach out to their dispatch training service provider in development and confirm that their local emergency network node is accounted for. The Peacekeeping Task Force plans to update the map again soon to include these communication ports as part of closing out the 2025 update cycle.

Similarly, counties that have asserted their lawful County Sheriff presence under Soil and Land Jurisdiction but do not see their peacekeeper noted on the map should contact the Peacekeeping Task Force promptly to ensure their lawful presence is acknowledged and documented in the next update. Near-future map revisions will also show deputy Continental Marshals assisting local Soil Jurisdiction Sheriffs, serving as international peacekeeping counterparts in alignment with traditional American practices similar to those employed by the United States Marshals Service today. The map’s purpose is to visually highlight all lawful emergency presence for each Land and Soil Jurisdiction, thereby supporting ongoing cooperation among current emergency responders and fostering community-wide peacekeeping awareness.

The presence of peacekeepers, recognized as matching the purpose and intent of the Public Notices issued by the Fiduciary Office in 2024, is critically important. A Public Notice that carries the weight of valid recognition but sees no one step forward to assume those roles leaves emergency service providers facing an unnecessary burden. Without a clearly identified peacekeeping presence, current de facto law enforcement agencies lack the starting point needed to initiate collaboration shortly after these notices have been published. This disconnect can hinder the establishment of proper emergency response interfaces, which are vital for coordinated actions during crises.

For example, if a natural disaster strikes a county with no recognized peacekeeper stepping forward, neighboring counties' de facto law enforcement and emergency services may have no choice but to delay coordination efforts, unsure who holds jurisdictional authority or how to share communication channels efficiently. This delay results in slower response times and a potential increase in harm to lives and property.

Similarly, in a complex manmade disaster involving cross-jurisdictional criminal activity or terrorism, an absence of recognized lawful, de jure peacekeepers creates confusion regarding command structure, law enforcement responsibilities, and life-saving intelligence sharing. This confusion can lead to operational missteps, failure to engage appropriate resources, and weakened public safety outcomes.

All current de facto law enforcement agencies have expressed to the Peacekeeping Task Force, and other affiliated sources have confirmed that their offices have indeed received the Public Notice published last year and have been actively making proper jurisdictional arrangements to shift transitional authority and cooperation where applicable in accordance with the Public Law concerning self-governing responsibility of the American people. Those who have voluntarily stepped forward in honor are helping protect their local and State Border Defense against multiple threat potentials.

Without reliable, tangible means—such as the Peacekeeping Task Force’s updated map—to verify the general presence of these lawful, legal Americans, local, State, and Federal agencies often faced challenges confirming or denying the actual peacekeeper presence beyond the Public Notice. This gap has posed difficulties in aligning outreach efforts and operational coordination. The Peacekeeping Task Force plays an essential role in bridging that gap by tying Public Notice acknowledgments to the physical presence and active participation of lawful peacekeepers across the American landscape.

This map and its ongoing updates mark a historic step in ensuring that emergency service providers—fire departments, EMS, sheriff’s offices, state patrols, federal law enforcement, and others—are continually informed of the growing peacekeeper presence as well as associated communication and dispatch capabilities. It supports a cooperative, jurisdictionally respectful, and professionally prepared emergency response network capable of addressing natural and manmade disasters with efficacy and lawful authority.


The American peacekeeping presence is no longer a theoretical doctrine but an evolving reality that significantly impacts how every level of government service and every sector of emergency response functions within their legal and lawful boundaries.

As more County Assemblies and emergency responders come online and are highlighted on the PKTF News map, all agencies can better align their service subcontracting priorities within the proscribed jurisdictional limitations.


This development fosters stronger cooperation, preserves community sovereignty, and prepares the entire country for greater resilience in times of crisis.

We very much look forward to welcoming more and more Soil Jurisdiction County Sheriffs as they step forward to declare peace beyond themselves, as part of the most pivotal first step in bringing lawful peacekeeping awareness to their nation-state assembly. Please know that your current de facto law enforcement is already well aware of your current and future presence. Most leadership among them welcome your noble efforts in this capacity. The next logical step in this evolving service relationship is for more American Soil Jurisdiction County Sheriffs to step forward, become properly elected after having stepped forward, and then become recognized as meeting your de facto emergency service counterparts who are gladly expecting you.

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Mapping the New Peacekeeping Landscape: County Soil Jurisdiction and Lawful, Legal Authority in America

Public Notice, County Sheriff Empowerment, and Emergency Communications Cooperation Amidst Federal Transition—A PKTF news Update Recent upd...