indigenous claim on 125,126 bayou road

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CHAKGlIUMA SEKTGlI ClAN Title 4 U.S.c. Sec 1&2 ; United Nations Charter; United Nations Convention on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights,[UN] Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People NOTICE TO PRINCIPAL IS NOTICE TO AGENT, NOTICE TO AGENT IS NOTICE TO PRIINCIPAL International Notice of Indigenous Claim of Right NO TRESSP ASSERSI CORPRA TE ENTITIES TRAVERSERS ALLOWED!! u.c.c. 9-607; 9-609 This Quantum Claim and Lien is hereby exercised by Indigenous Autochthbn Hand and Seal Internationally protected by [UN] Declaration of Rights on the IndigeJous People and other Indigenous Internal & National related Law; Constitution for the unired states - of America, Magna Carta et al and Constitution of Empire Washitaw Indigenous Nation 215: . s/rJJ' - {t ::T pCt 'J(34'fW\ARNING - PRIVATE PROPERTY (4)ulJ~~ NO TRESPASSING :3; All I WITHOUT EXPRESS VERBAL OR WRITTEN AUTHORIZATION GIVEN BY rh':lWi;t' I ~~;hiuma Sektchi Clan Holders of DAWESTRUST , Post: 126 Bayou Rd. Physical: 125 Bayou Rd. Greenville, Washington-Washitaw County Mississippi State Republic DMM122.3 Liber#2011 page#S2-60

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Page 1: Indigenous Claim on 125,126 Bayou Road

CHAKGlIUMA SEKTGlI ClAN

Title 4 U.S.c. Sec 1&2 ; United Nations Charter; United Nations Convention on Economic,Social and Cultural Rights,[UN] Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People

NOTICE TO PRINCIPAL IS NOTICE TO AGENT, NOTICE TO AGENT IS NOTICE TOPRIINCIPAL

International Notice of Indigenous Claim of Right

NO TRESSP ASSERSI CORPRA TE ENTITIES TRAVERSERS ALLOWED!!u.c.c. 9-607; 9-609

This Quantum Claim and Lien is hereby exercised by Indigenous Autochthbn Hand andSeal Internationally protected by [UN] Declaration of Rights on the IndigeJous People andother Indigenous Internal & National related Law; Constitution for the unired states - ofAmerica, Magna Carta et al and Constitution of Empire Washitaw Indigenous Nation215: . s/rJJ' -{t ::TpCt

'J(34'fW\ARNING - PRIVATE PROPERTY(4)ulJ~~ NO TRESPASSING

:3;All

I WITHOUT EXPRESS VERBAL OR WRITTEN AUTHORIZATION GIVEN BYrh':lWi;t' I~~;hiuma Sektchi Clan Holders of DAWESTRUST ,

Post: 126 Bayou Rd.Physical: 125 Bayou Rd.Greenville, Washington-Washitaw CountyMississippi State RepublicDMM122.3Liber#2011 page#S2-60

Page 2: Indigenous Claim on 125,126 Bayou Road

use TITLE 18, This includes any and all Government Agents,

Except in case of fire or medical emergency, those so trespassing are Isubject to civiland criminal penalties per Sections 241 & 242

and any and all other applicable Federal and State civil or criminal "TRESPASS" IStatutes.

This N0 TRESPASS notice is also subject to the following provisions:

You are hereby notified that the current possessors of this pro~pal requires all public officials, agents orperson(s) abide by the "Supreme Law of the Land", the Constitutio for the United States of America and the

ratified Amendments thereto. CHAKCHIUMA SEKTCHI CL refuses to permit access, search, audit,assessment or inspection, whatsoever of this property without the presentation of a warrant prepared as

prescribed by the 4th and 14th Amendments of the u.s. Constitution and "particularly describing the place to besearched and the persona or things to be seized". Alleged zoning or land use code violations do not establish

constitutional reasons for entering this property

CHAKCHIUMA SEKTCHI CLAN.

VIOLATORS WILL BE TREATED AS INTRUDERS.A governmental official, agent, or any other person( s) entering this property without the express consent of theCHAKCHIUMA SEKTCHI CLAN and without proper warrant as described above, will be considered anintruder attempting to trespass, extort, injure, threaten, harass, intimidate, or otherwise jeoparrize the life andproperty of CHAKCHIUMA SEKTCHI CLAN that owns this property. Violations can trigger fines of up to$10,000 and prison sentences of up to 10 years, or both, pursuant to trespass law, as above listed. Use ofnecessary force may be used, at the sole discretion of CHAKCHIUMA SEKTCHI CLAN.

If you need to provide any notice to CHAKCHIUMA SEKTCHI CLAN the mailing address is available from theCounty Assessor's Office. Any such notice must be mailed by U.S. Mail, postage prepaid, Fertified-Return

Receipt Requested. I

WARNING-PRIVATE PROPERTY, .( '-',.I_eke II~ <; \NI\ ~C t'>(7f..rt~

c iuma Sektchi Clan Holders of DAWES TRUST"'" <5.R.J..- 1ct\- 0(,

Page 3: Indigenous Claim on 125,126 Bayou Road

Constructive and Public

CHAKCHIUMA SEKTCHIVVASHITAW CLAN

CHAKCHIUMA SEKTCHI WASHITA W TRIBAL TRUST

REGISTERED MAIL # RB 468 127 592 US

David ConradDirector, Tribal and Intergovernmental AffairsOffice of Congressional and Intergovernmental AffairsU.S. Department of Energy

Greetings Mr. David Conrad:

This is lawful Notice and is sent pursuant to Bill of Rights, in particular, the First, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Ninthand Tenth Articles in Amendments to Constitution for the United States of America Republic, and pursuant to your Oath, andrequires your written response specific to subject matter. Your failure to respond, as stipulated, and rebut, with particularity,everything in this Notice with which you disagree, is your lawful, legal and binding agreement with and admission to the fact thateverything in this Notice is true, correct, legal, lawful and binding upon you, in any court of law, without your protest or objectionor that of those who represent you. Your silence is your acquiescence. See: Connally v. General Construction Co., 269 U.S. 385, 391.Notification of legal responsibility is "the first essential of due process of law". See also: U.S. V. Tweel, 550 F.2d.297. "Silence canonly be equated with fraud where there is a legal or moral duty to speak or when an inquiry left unanswered would be intentionallymisleading."

Please take Notice and respond to the following truths:

Chakchiuma Sektchi Washitaw Clan, from the land of ATLAN/TURTLE ISLAND, whose variousmembers and families of the tribal clan are recognized through American Indian DA WES ROLLSnumbers, are not seeking "recognition" through the Bureau of Indian Affairs. The Chakchiuma SektchiWashitaw Clan are filing this "Constructive and Public Notice" of existence of the "CHAKCHIUMASEKTCHI WASHITA W TRIBAL TRUST", an American Indian Tribal Trust established under theauthority of Empire Washitaw De Dugdahmoundyah nation chief, Fredrix Joe Washington, Principalautochthon holder of ancestral lands and foreign international Trusts established by Land Grant Trust,No. 923, Certificate: June 14, 1797; Plan No. 1516; Registered No.3, April 12, 1802, and Us. vs. TheHeirs of Henry Turner; also including the following: 1) The Marquis de Maison Rouge/The BaronBastrop "Spanish/Washo" Land Grant #923; 2) The Fontainbleau Treaty of an Il-defonso I [November3, 1762: via The Louisiana Dauphin and heir to the de Bourbon Washo-Tunica estate, nun pro tunc

1

Page 4: Indigenous Claim on 125,126 Bayou Road

owned lands, properties, and peoples shall be protected in accordance with Tribal Trust Charters,Orders, Constitutions, Declarations, Constructive Notices, and other lawful constructs.

CHAKCHIUMA SEKTCHI WASHITAW TRIBAL TRUST

Trenciiie. 1farriOr gr~ gr~ great qranddauqhter if 'Martiia. 'P~ Vdl'WTS # 1174 Census.Card #455; 1(OJliece,y~VdlW'ES #597;dl1iG!A:~VdlW'ES# 1168,· Veluzrafv~·dl~1f~. 'M~~. 'Midiael1(~· 'Meloie Tean- T~,· 'Errol.Detvante: 1(emn, 'Me Clintan.T~· T'araniece- 1farri& VdlWTS # 596; 1farJ?Y'Poole: 13reBf]ieAJilkey/;Lareal. Ve-Vante.,· Trique1(icftardcs£l¥V;Ernest: T~,. 'W~ William,&,· Greneka. 'William,&,. TeJ7Y' Green; T eJ7Y' Green; Tru/ytM(jreen.

Please send all correspondence addresses listed below.

Cultural AttacheEmpire Washitaw De DugdahmoundyahJoreal DeVanteC/O.-~.6.GaIJli!la Street # 403 B~'~~)See [38104]

,--~; .- • 4It ~i!~'vY, ~\\1ta~~ •• ~\~ ...

I ,~'b-#.,.. -.~~'~-~/0'C, , ,4i ,Y/I, • illI I.. Ii,

• I • • I g :J. orea - vante:tlI I~~~,. . '

',-.' ~. ~, , #1 Chakchiuma Sektchi Washitaw Clan~I." ~ •• .;;. ~ ow •• # to" , 't,"" Meke Hahkdar Shemot (Holy Leader of the Exodus)

'\ ;':;~~IJ'""2!1 't.!~~o·:' Cultural Attache, Empire Washitaw De Dugdahmoundyah~~t.",dePUI\\"~ ~

Chief Fredrix Joe WashingtonEmpire Washitaw de DugdahmoundyahC/O 3637 South Parker StreetSan Pedro, California [90731]

county otshelby ~ss:state of Tennesssee

:joreal-devante-bey-el:©declares to be the age of majority, one capable of making this complaint, and that thiscomplaint is made with clean hands in good faith, with Explicit Reservation of Rights, acknowledged, executed andcertified this "Constructive and Public Notice", to be true and correct to the best of his knowledge pursuant to Law,except as to matters stated to be on information and belief, and as to those, believes those to be true, this Third Day ofthe Third Month, A.D. Two-thousand Eleven.

5

Page 5: Indigenous Claim on 125,126 Bayou Road

Book 201 i P.3se 10

O~:~./ii/201104; 16:50 PN

(1682-1713)]; 3) Treaty of Utrecht: France, April 11, 1713; and Spain, December 9, 1713; 4) TheDeBourbon Compact, August 15, 1761; and Treaty of San Lorenzo, November 17, 1762; 5) KingGeorge III: The British Royal Proclamation [October 7, 1763: via The British Quebec Act of 1774; andthe U.S.A. Northwest Ordinance [1 Stat. 50, July 13, 1787],6) Treaties for Cession of Louisiana [April13,1803, and April 30, 1803; and U.S. Congressional Acts: 1817, February 10: Act #253; 1920,December 12: Act #325; 1821, January 22: Act #329]; 7) U.S. Supreme Court Judicial Affirmation

. United States v. Henry Turner's Heirs [Nos. 31 & 191, June 19 & 20,1848] ofthe de BourbonTunica/Turner estate [Indigenous Land Claim Trust, U.S. Grant No. 923]; 8) The Charter of 1945:United States, Artical [sic] 75 through 85, via Officer of Special Trustee, 1994 Bureau ofIndian Affairs,# 1824, U.S. Department of Interior, The corpus of the Trust/Grant is perpetual with the duration of theUnited States of America; and Units of Beneficial Interest [UBI's].

This honorable, respectful, and proper "Constructive and Public Notice" formally initiates the genuineefforts of the autochthon Chakchiuma Sektchi Washitaw Clan to engage and establish its lawful,political, and legal status, intentions, and standing with regard towards coexisting within the territorialboundaries established as the Tennessee State Republic.

Although the U.S. Supreme Court recognized the ownership of autochthon free and independent peoplein United States v. Henry Turner's Heirs, the United States government has failed to formally recognizethe descendants of ancient mound builders, and has failed to properly identify territorial boundaries; theleadership council for Empire Washitaw de Dugdahmoundyah is currently petitioning before U.S.Congress. It is the intent of the autochthon Chakchiuma Sektchi. Washitaw Clan to provide fullinformation and documentation necessary to aid in your acknowledgement of our existence and our rightto exercise human rights and cultural rights, protecting the history of our ancestors via the following:

• Article VI of United States Constitution

•• Article VI. - Debts, Supremacy, Oaths - All Debts contracted and Engagements entered into,before the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be as valid against the United States under thisConstitution, as under the Confederation. This Constitution, and the Laws of the United Stateswhich shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, underthe Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in eve,yState shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution. or Laws of any State to the Contrary

. notwithstanding. The Senators and Representatives before mentioned, and the Members of theseveral Stale Legislatures, and all executive and judicial Officers, both of the United States andof the several States, shall be bound by Oath or Affirmation, to support this Constitution; but noreligious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under theUnited States.

• Vienna Convention on Treaties 1969; specifically Article 49, Article 60 Parts I and IIArticle 49- Fraud

Article 2 Use of terms

Page 6: Indigenous Claim on 125,126 Bayou Road

Book 201i' Pase li1. For the purposes of the present Convention: 08./11/2011 04: 16~50 PH

(a) 'treaty' means an international agreement concluded between States in written form andgoverned by international law, whether embodied in a single instrument or in two or more relatedinstruments and whatever its particular designation;(b) 'ratification', 'acceptance', 'approval' and 'accession' mean in each case the international act sonamed whereby a State establishes on the international plane its consent to be bound by a treaty;(c) 'full powers' means a document emanating from the competent authority of a State designating aperson or persons to represent.the State for negotiating, adopting or authenticating the text of atreaty, for expressing the consent of the State to be bound by a treaty, or for accomplishing any otheract with respect to a treaty;(d) 'reservation' means a unilateral statement, however phrased or named, made by a State, whensigning, ratifying, accepting, approving or acceding to a treaty, whereby it purports to exclude or tomodify the legal effect of certain provisions of the treaty in their application to that State;(e) 'negotiating State' means a State which took part in the drawing up and adoption of the text ofthe treaty;(f) 'contracting State' means a State which has consented to be bound by the treaty, whether or notthe treaty has entered into force;(g) 'party' means a State which has consented to be bound by the treaty and for which the treaty is inforce; ~---(h) 'third State' means a State not a party to the treaty;(i) 'international organization' means an intergovernmental organization.

Indigenous Rights are protected as per United States Executive Order 12803 and 49 Statute 3097 TreatySeries 881, also, United Nations Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries andPeoples on 14 December 1960, UN GA/Res 1514(XV) and by provisions of customary and treaty basedinternational law, granting the people all powers that had previously been claimed and exercised by alienpeoples and their agents and assigns. Basic requirements that colonizing people transfer all powers to thecolonized peoples is mandated at Article 5 of this Declaration and the affirmation of the Declaration onthe Rights of Indigenous Peoples by the General Assembly Al61/L/67 September 7,2007

United Nations Declaration ofIndigenous Rights 2007; including; Article 37, (l)Indigenous peopleshave the right to the recognition, observance and enforcement of treaties, agreements and otherconstructive arrangements concluded with States or their successors and to have States honor andrespect such treaties, agreements and other constructive arrangements, (2) Nothing in this Declarationmay be interpreted as diminishing or eliminating the rights of indigenous peoples contained in treaties,agreements and other constructive arrangements. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his property,per the dictates of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 17(2)

It is also the intent of the autochthon Chakchiuma Sektchi Washitaw Clan to endeavor towards therecovery and protection of both known and unknown, or hidden artifacts and burial grounds located onancestral lands of the ancient autochthon Washo Mound-builders who lost their lands after '" ~'S"m-••••.•...

, \\l.U a 8-commercial transaction with France, c~tH0-~n as "The Louisiana Purchase" ipi'~,;t'!iO'f't~ -.c.'t.f;'~that time, the Chickasaw, Choctaw~~.~iraVli ~hiuma Sektchi Raccoon C.rtt~~~~l>~~ 0). t~~,exercised complete and unfettere~'~E!i~~~a ~~~ice in their territory. Ac£or4~f'~_ta'~ , ,

~~# ,'I, I·' (" #~ ~ , • • I, II ,. ..'" 'tdl , , ,I 'I .3' • • ',\ \ ~~ l-g.'''', ~ ~~, , ;;;. , -A. "" # ",-G'#'\\.. , J. ""~, I~' ',: IJ..•• ~-lb;I i:'~~'o~~,

''''0 './"';6'" - ~,."" ..,6\, .••f#-61. -. ••• _ •••••••• ~.,',~~ al T1,#" 0.·' ~ ••t.", d. I)1l.1\••, :~jt."'"-: ~...k.~iJ,' ••- _.•'"

Page 7: Indigenous Claim on 125,126 Bayou Road

Book 201i Page 12of United States' history, the Louisiana Purchase was a purported sale b}'if.rance to the United States of530 million acres (2.1 million sq.km.) for $15 million, but is actually L,ililftlti?&t.gi-Qenitifta~rrrlust;Internationally Protected property of the Heirs of Henry Turner (Tunica), who never had knowledge of,nor gave consent to, the sale of the ancient nation territory.

This "Constructive and Public Notice" is presented by the following appointed Representatives toestablish this first "Public Notice" to the Department of Energy and the State of Tennessee based on theabovementioned tribal govemment declarations:

1fereJ:i:Jfor8knaasn. as. Trendiie. 'lfarriY 'lfere1:lJjo:r8knaam. a& 1f~ T~

1feretoJo:r8knaosn. a&Joreal V8'VanJ;e, 1feretoJor8 knaan. as. 1{0.niec8G~

1feretoJor8 krum9-fVas-Allison. 'Hammond. 'lferei:o!o:r8knaom: ad! velwIafi"hJa9.e,

1ferwfo:r81eJw~ a& 'M~ Taylor 1ferei:tJfor8knaosn. a& 'Rgl2ert fee, yo.ung/

1ferei:tJfo¥8~ as.J~fee, y~ 'lfere/:ofor8knaosn. a&Te/T)f' Wayne- Greev

Chakchiuma Sektchi \Vashitaw Clan formally, unilaterally, and publically declares our independence,and withdraws from all agreements, bonds, and fraudulent contracts imposed by the United StatesGovemment on members of the Chakchiuma Sektchi Washitaw Clan. Chakchiuma Sektchi WashitawClan families have endured years of fraud and destruction, with forced adherence to provisions ofsubstandard in-humane existence because of the colonizing legacy of the United States of America. Thecontinuance of degrading standards and hidden histories have resulted in the near annihilation of ourpeople physically, spiritually, and culturally, and are rejected by the Chakchiuma Sektchi Washitawpeople. from beginning to the present.

The Chakchiuma Sektchi Washitaw Clan shall gain proper respect through lawful international and U.S.Congressional means, seeking the required and mandatory diversity actions, which must be put in placeby the State of Tennessee. Under the "Chakchiuma Sektchi Washitaw Tribal Trust", the autochthonChakchiuma Sektchi Washitaw Clan of Empire Washitaw de Dugdahmoundyah is self empowered to re-discover, re-introduce, and protect the true heritage, spirituality, and culture of the "hidden, but notgone" descendants of ancient mound-builders, intemationally recognized autochthon American Indians,with rights established by Treaty, American Indian law, United States of America law, International lawand the LAW of the GREAT SPIRIT.

i

The names, DAWES ROLLS numbers, land ownership, and other information provided below lendstruth and validation of lawful and legal rights and s~w;J"O~tfileJ=~lakchiumaSektchi Wa~hj,t?-<w'CIalOl.~ldautochthon Tribal Trust established via the pro"\4t~6f~~tt~~ndian law, Inte~)rJa~~2"States law and treaties, which have establishetl~li~l~a ~t~~us tribes as/~~~!~u~ ""-(.,,the Chakchiuma Sektchi Washitaw Clan TritaJ,'t1t~t~_tu't<1:~d ci>mmerciaf acrt"4ie~,_' ly~:¢", .,

I .' II II # •• • • •• ., f • I •

• I I~. , 1 , 1~' ,,~, _II Iv' I -"'.

~ ~ oII!I, " I.,'~ " ~ ~ ,'" '~I '\' " ~.. , ••.•., 'bl>:o,

';..,':./6;1 :r,,~~':.~' '~~":ib;l1:'t~;~o.~',f'~1j •••_ _ •• ' ~,:.p;,, " •.•.•. •• _ _ fI/I 6..~,

, ,IIt'l'( de D\l,a~fI/I " :.'."., do P~'fI/I ;••• fI/I _._-

Page 8: Indigenous Claim on 125,126 Bayou Road

800k 2011 PaSte i3f'1l:=.CO~:~./ii/20i i 04: it:: 50 PN

~J~shinton Cot~nt;::i:t NSI cer trrs this instrunent !.i,f·3::;· filedCl(j 08.l11./2011 04: if:: 50 Pt:land recorded in theNisct;;)ok 2011 P·3ge 8 13Nari I :::lr-= Hsnsel l , Ch.3rIcer:::! Cler k

~~

Page 9: Indigenous Claim on 125,126 Bayou Road

CHAKCHIUMA SEKTCHI WASHITAW CLAN TRIBAL STATUS DECLARATION

Empre Wzh iav de Dugdlllooundpil

CHAKCHIUMA SEKTCHIWASHITAW CLAN

r;t~ri1:~n Hsnsal l , Ch.~r!c:2r:~Cl~r kConstructive Declaration and Public Notice of Tribal Status

CHAKCHIUMA SEKTCHI CLANGOVERNMENT STATUS DECLARATION

To:All AMERICA AND INTERESTED PARTIES:

I CERTIFIED MAIL # XXXXXX

CHOKMAH,

United Nations International Criminal CourtOrganization of American StatesU.S. Department of Energy David Conrad I Office of Congressional and IntergovernmentalAffairsUnited States Attorney General, Eric HolderUnited States Treasury Department, Timothy GeithnerInternational Monetary FundUnited States Comptroller of CurrencyUnited States Secretary of State, Hillary Rodham ClintonTennessee Governor Bill Haslam

Chakchiuma Sektchi Clan, from the land of ATLAN/TUR TLE ISLAND, whose variousmembers and families of the tribal clan are recognized through American Indian DAWES ROLLnUl$I.l:~.€rtS,~renot seeking "recognition" through the Bureau of Indian Affairs, but have filed.".. ..,

# ~ . ~~R ACKNOWLEDGEMENT" with Department of Energy, Bureau of,.c.,~A~'!tw~~~\, ,.~ l(;, __- -. t"./. ~ ~.,

, , # -'~' ,. , . " , .I I I I''01~ I~~..d?' ,,~ ~. ~, , oCI'I;..:~~, .,

~"O ~~. - _" 'Q'" bl>i,\ .!;.~I.".f!al1't~~o·;thakchiuma Sektchi Clan P.O. Box 124, Memphis, Tennessee [38101]~.i - _ •• ~,..

--. ..,tlll'V de D\1~Il", '•......... .,

,"

1

Page 10: Indigenous Claim on 125,126 Bayou Road

CHAKCHIUMA SEKTCHI WASHITAW CLAN TRIBAL STATUS DECLARATION

The Chakchiuma Sektchi Clan is filing this "Constructive and Public Notice" of existence ofthe "CHAKCHIUMA SEKTCHI WASHIT AW TRIBAL CLAN and TRUST", an AmericanIndian Tribal Clan and Trust established under the Tribal authority, International law, and rightsof Tribes of Empire Washitaw de Dugdahmoundyah Nation under Chief Fredrix JoeWashington, Principal autochthon holder of ancestral lands and foreign international Trustsestablished by Land Grant Trust No. 923, Certificate: June 14,1797; Plan No. 1516; RegisteredNo.3, April 12, 1802, and us. vs. The Heirs of Henry Turner; also including the following: 1)The Marquis de Maison Rouge/The Baron Bastrop "Spanish/Turner" Land Grant #923; 2) TheFontainbleau Treaty of an II-defonso I [November 3, 1762: via The Louisiana Dauphin and heirto the de Bourbon Washo-Tunica estate, nun pro tunc (1682-1713)]; 3) Treaty of Utrecht:France, April 11, 1713; and Spain, December 9,1713; 4) The DeBourbon Compact, August 15,1761; and Treaty of San Lorenzo, November 17,1762; 5) King George III: The British RoyalProclamation [October 7, 1763: via The British Quebec Act of 1774; and the U.S.A. NorthwestOrdinance [1 Stat. 50, July 13, 1787], 6) Treaties for Cession of Louisiana [April 13, 1803, andApril 30, 1803; and U.S. Congressional Acts: 1817, February 10: Act #253; 1920, December 12:Act #325; 1821, January 22: Act #329]; 7) U.S. Supreme COUli Judicial Affirmation UnitedStates v. Henry Turner's Heirs [Nos. 31 & 191, June 19 & 20, 1848] of the de BourbonTunica/Turner estate [Indigenous Land Claim Trust, U.S. Grant No. 923]; 8) The Charter of1945: United States, Artical [sic] 75 through 85, via Officer of Special Trustee, 1994 Bureau ofIndian Affairs, # 1824, U.S. Department of Interior. The corpus of the Trust/Grant is perpetualwith the duration of the United States of America; and Units of Beneficial Interest [UBI's].

This honorable, respectful, and proper "Constructive and Public Notice" formally initiates thegenuine efforts of the autochthon Chakchiuma Sektchi Clan to engage and establish its lawful,political, and legal status, intentions, and standing with regard towards peacefully coexistingwithin the territorial boundaries established as the Tennessee State Republic. After centuries ofTreaty violations, theft of lands, genocide and identity annihilation of dark Marikanos Indianautochthons by the United States Government, we have absolutely "NO INTEREST" in"TRIBAL RECOGNITION" by or through the "BUREAU OF INDIAN AFFAIRS".

A prime example of these governmental abuses is the U.S. Supreme Court recognition of theownership of autochthon free and independent people in United States v. Henry Turner's Heirs,yet the United States government has failed to formally recognize the descendants of ancientmound builders, and has failed to properly identify territorial boundaries of the Turner heirs'estate; the leadership council for Empire Washitaw de Dugdahmoundyah is currently petitioningU.S. Congress to enforce compliance upon the State of Louisiana to identify and re-establishboundaries of the lands belonging to the Turner heirs, the bloodline of the Seminole, Cherokee,Yamasee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Blackfeet, Shoshone, the Chakchiuma and many dark pre-colonial aboriginal tribes, clans and nations. It is the mission and intent of the autochthonChakchiuma Sektchi Clan to provide research information and documentation and resourcesnecessary to aid in the re-acknowledgement of our existence and our right to exercise humanrights, tribal rights, and cultural rights, protecting the history of our ancestors via, but notexclusive to the following:

• Article VI of United States Constitution

Book 2011 Pas€: 15GS.ll i/2011

Chakchiuma Sektchi Clan P.O. Box 124, Memphis, Tennessee [38101]

IV

Page 11: Indigenous Claim on 125,126 Bayou Road

CHAKCHlUMA SEKTCHI WASHITAW CLAN TRIBAL STATUS DE¢t.fu496iJ P.3ge iE,nl::·C08,/11 /20i 1 04; 17~43 PN

• Article VI. - Debts, Supremacy, Oaths - All Debts contracted and Engagements enteredinto, before the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be as valid against the United Statesunder this Constitution, as under the Confederation. This Constitution, and the Laws ofthe United States, which shall be made in Pursuance thereof' and all Treaties made, orwhich shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Lawof the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in theConstitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding. The Senators andRepresentatives before mentioned, and the Members of the several State Legislatures,and all executive and judicial Officers, both of the United States and of the several States,shall be bound by Oath or Affirmation, to support this Constitution; but no religious Testshall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the UnitedStates.

• Vienna Convention on Treaties 1969; specifically Article 49, Article 60 Parts I and II• Article 49- Fraud• Article 1 Scope of the present Convention, The present Convention applies to treaties

between States.Article 2 Use of terms

1. For the purposes of the present Convention:(a) 'treaty' means an international agreement concluded between States in written form andgoverned by international law, whether embodied in a single instrument or in two or morerelated instruments and whatever its particular designation;(b) 'ratification', 'acceptance', 'approval' and 'accession' mean in each case the internationalact so named whereby a State establishes on the international plane its consent to be boundby a treaty;(c) 'full powers' means a document emanating from the competent authority of a Statedesignating a person or persons to represent the State for negotiating, adopting orauthenticating the text of a treaty, for expressing the consent of the State to be bound by atreaty, or for accomplishing any other act with respect to a treaty;(d) 'reservation' means a unilateral statement, however phrased or named, made by a State,when signing, ratifying, accepting, approving or acceding to a treaty, whereby it purports toexclude or to modify the legal effect of certain provisions of the treaty in their application tothat State;(e) 'negotiating State' means a State which took part in the drawing up and adoption ofthetext of the treaty;(f) 'contracting State' means a State which has consented to be bound by the treaty, whether

. or not the treaty has entered into force;(g) 'party' means a State which has consented to be bound by the treaty and for which thetreaty is in force;(h) 'third State' means a State not a party to the treaty;(i) 'international organization' means an intergovernmental organization.

HISTORICAL RIGHTS PROVIDED UNDER LAW AND TREATY

3Chakchiuma Sektchi Clan P.O. Box 124, Memphis, Tennessee [38101]

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CHAKCHIUMA SEKTCHI WASHlTAW CLAN TRIBAL STATUS DEg&-~1J~ PaS2 17

Indigenous Rights are protected as per NATIVE AMERICAN FREE PASSAGE RIGHTSUNDER THE 1794 JAY TREATY, United States Executive Order 12803 and 49 Statute 3097Treaty Series 881, also, United Nations Declaration on the Granting of Independence to ColonialCountries and Peoples on 14 December 1960, UN GAiRes 1514(XV) and by provisions ofcustomary and treaty based international law, granting the people all powers that had previouslybeen claimed and exercised by alien peoples and their agents and assigns. Basic requirementsthat colonizing people transfer all powers to the colonized peoples is mandated at Article 5 ofthis Declaration and the affirmation of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples bythe General Assembly A161/L/67 September 7, 2007 United Nations Declaration of IndigenousRights 2007; including; Article 37, (l)Indigenous peoples have the right to the recognition,observance and enforcement of treaties, agreements and other constructive arrangementsconcluded with States or their successors and to have States honor and respect such treaties,agreements and other constructive arrangements. (2) Nothing in this Declaration may beinterpreted as diminishing or eliminating the rights of indigenous peoples contained in treaties,agreements and other constructive arrangements. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of hisproperty, per the dictates of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 17(2)

It is the intent of the Chakchiuma Sektchi people to navigate towards the recovery and protectionof both known, unknown, or hidden artifacts and burial grounds located on ancestral lands of theancient autochthon Washo Mound-builders who lost their lands after a U.S. commercialtransaction with France, commonly known as "The Louisiana Purchase" in1803. Prior to thattime, the Chickasaw, Choctaw, and Washitaw (Chakchiuma Sektchi Raccoon Crawfish) peopleexercised complete and unfettered freedom, and independence in their territory. According to thefantasy of United States' history, the Louisiana Purchase was a purported sale by France to theUnited States of 530 million acres (2.1 million sq.km.) for $15 million, but is actually landgranted and returned under Internationally Protected Trust; property of the Heirs of HenryTurner (Tunica), who never had knowledge of, nor gave consent to, the illegal sale of the ancientnation territory.

Declaration of Citizenship

Any document in which any member of Chakchiuma Sektchi Clan may have ever signed, inwhich tribal member answered "yes" to the question "Are you a U.S. citizen"?, such occasioncannot be used to compromise tribal membership status as a now acknowledged, recognized,identified aboriginal ofthe Chakchiuma Sektchi Clan, jurisdictional Citizen of EmpireWashitaw de Dugdahmoundyah Government, protected under the Treatv with the Comanche,Etc., 1835. August 24, 1835/7 Stat.. 474./ Proclamation, May 19, 1836, and the United NationsDeclaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which was accepted by United States ofAmerica President Barack Obama, December 17, 2010, nor can any such previously signeddocument obligate any member to perform in any manner, and this is because without fullwritten disclosure of the definition and consequences of such supposed "citizenship", provided ina document bearing member's signature given freely without misrepresentation or coercion, andthere can be no legally binding contract; therefore, members of the Chakchiuma Sektchi Clan arenot: a "resident of", an "inhabitant of", a "franchise of", a "subject of", a "legal fiction", a"ward of", the "property of", the "chattel of", a "PERSON", or "subject to the jurisdiction

4Chakchiuma Sektchi Clan P.O. Box 124, Memphis, Tennessee [38101J

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CHAKCHIUMA SEKTCHl WASHITAW CLAN TRIBAL STATUS DECt:~~:I''!W i'::i':;1~ .,.;.Pil:::'C08/11./2011 04; 17:43 PN

or' any corporate state or federal government, corporate state government, corporatecounty government, corporate city government, or corporate municipal body politiccreated under the authority of the U.S. Constitution. "The United States Government is aForeign Corporation with respect to the State". Volume 20: Corpus Juris Section 1785: NYre: Merriam 36 N.E. 505 1441 S. Ct. 1973,41 L. Ed. 287.

Points and Authorities

The Supreme Court has already explained that courts of law are required to interpret treaties asany other contract by giving effect to the intent of the parties as manifested by the terms thereof,reo more specifically, in Seufert Bros. v. Hoptowit et aI, 193 Or 317, 322-23, 237 P2d 949(1951), cert den, 343 US 926 (1952). The Constitution, of course, gives the federal governmentcomplete authority over all foreign affairs and foreign persons in America. Article 1, Sectio:ri 8,Clauses 3 and 4 of the Constitution grant powers to the federal government over foreign affairs,agreements, and persons; and Article I, Section 10, Clauses 1, 2 and 3 of the Constitutionprohibit the States from enacting agreements with foreign entities (King; Prince; Noble(Sovereigns) or Kingdom, Foreign State; Sovereign Political Bodies).

In Jim, 178 Or App at 556, we explained that "[tlhe criminal jurisdiction of the state, the federalgovernment, and the Indian [aboriginals] nations is a complex matter that may depend on thenature of the crime, the location of its commission, and the nationalities of the defendant andany victims. "

With regard to treaties, the United States Supreme Court has stated that it is the settled policy ofthe United States to deal fairly with Indian [aboriginals] tribes. Treaties are "not to be interpretednarrowly, as sometimes may be writings expressed in words of art employed by conveyance,but are to be construed in the sense in which naturally the Indians [aboriginals] would understandthem." United States v. Shoshone Tribe, 304 U.S. 111, 116 (1938).

Indian [aboriginals J treaties cannot be rewritten or expanded beyond their clear terms to remedya claimed injustice or to achieve the asserted understanding of the parties." (Citations andinternal quotation marks omitted.) See also Washington v. Washington State CommercialPassenger Fishing Vessel Ass'n, 443 US 658, 675, 99 S Ct 3055, 61 LEd 2d 823 (1979) ("Atreaty, including one between the United States and an Indian tribe, is essentially a contractbetween two sovereign nations.

When the signatory nations have not been at war and neither is the vanquished, it is reasonable toassume that they negotiated as equals at arm's length." (Citation omitted.) ; Antoine, 420 US at199-200 (treaty must be interpreted by liberally construing any ambiguities in the text in favor ofthe tribe). Treaty interpretation, then, is a form of contract interpretation.

At that first level, we also consider extrinsic evidence of "the circumstances underlying theformation of the contract." Id. at 317, finally, if the "provision remains ambiguous after the firsttwo steps have been followed, the court relies on appropriate maxims of construction" todetermine the provision's meaning. Yogman v. Parrott, 325 Or 358,364,937 P2d 1019 (1997).

5Chakchiuma Sektchi Clan P.O. Box 124, Memphis, Tennessee [38101]

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CHAKCHIUMA SEKTCI-IlWASHITAW CLAN TRIBAL STATUS DEq~1fH~ P-:3:iE: .19_If!'::':_

f"!8l1 i t~:nii nd.: i7:J."Z ~fMIn general, one of those maxims is that ambiguous language in a contract is ~~iistru;d ~gai~~t thedrafter. Berry, 210 Or App at 339. The analog in construing treaties between the United Statesand Native Marikanos (Americans) is, as the court stated in Seufert Bros., that ambiguitiesshould be construed in favor of the Native Marikanos (Americans), at least when the treaty termsare drafted by the United States. 193 Or at 323.

Chakchiuma Sektchi Clan formally, unilaterally, and publically declares our autonomy and self-sustainability, and withdraws from all actual and perceived agreements, bonds, and fraudulentcontracts imposed by the United States Government on members of the Chakchiuma SektchiClan. Chakchiuma Sektchi Clan families have endured years of fraud and destruction, withforced adherence to provisions of substandard in-humane existence because of the colonizinglegacy of the United States of America. The continuance of degrading standards and hiddenhistories have resulted in the near annihilation of our people physically, spiritually, andculturally, and are rejected by the Chakchiuma Sektchi people from beginning to the present.

The Chakchiuma Sektchi Clan seeks to gain proper respect as an acknowledged autochthon tribethrough lawful international and U.S. Congressional means, while collaterally seeking therequired and mandatory diversity actions, which must be put in place by the State of Tennessee.Under the "Chakchiuma Sektchi Washitaw Tribal Trust", the autochthon Chakchiuma SektchiClan of Empire Washitaw de Dugdahrnoundyah is self empowered to re-discover, re-introduce,and protect the true heritage, spirituality, and culture of the "hidden, but not gone" descendantsof ancient mound-builders, internationally recognized autochthon American Indians, with rightsestablished by Treaty, American Indian law, United States of America law, International law andthe LAW of the GREAT SPIRIT.

The names, DAWES ROLL numbers, land ownership, and other information on file with theDepartment of Energy' "Bureau Of Acknowledgement" lends truth and validation of lawful andlegal rights and status of the Chakchiuma Sektchi Clan and autochthon Tribal Trust establishedvia the provisions of American Indian law, International law, United States law and treaties,which have pre-established jurisdictions of indigenous tribes declared. Through the ChakchiurnaSektchi Clan Tribal Trust, all cultural and commercial activities, tribally owned lands, properties,and tribal members are protected in accordance with Tribal Trust Charters, Orders, Constitutions,Declarations, Constructive Notices, and other lawful constructs.

REVOCATION OF SIGNATURES AND ASSIGNS

In Final, the Chakchiuma Sektchi Clan members hereby revoke, rescind, cancel, and make voidab initio, all powers of attorney, in fact or otherwise, implied in law or otherwise, signed eitherindividually, collectively or by anyone else, as it pertains to all secret, in covin or hidden liensand loans, prison bonds, bid bonds, performance bonds, social security numbers and bondsassigned to me, including all issues as it pertains to all fraudulently filed and assigned birthcertificates, marriage or business licenses, or any other licenses or certificates issued by any andall United States government or quasi-governmental entities; all such are herein cancelled,revoked and rescinded due to the use of various elements of fraud, theft, silence,misrepresentation, influence, and duress, by said agencies in attempts to deprive the herein listedAutochthons of Natural Rights.

6Chakchiuma Sektchi Clan P.O. Box 124, Memphis, Tennessee [38101J

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7Chakchiuma Sektchi Clan P.O. Box 124, Memphis, Tennessee [38101]

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CHAKCHlUMA SEKTCHI WASHIT AW CLAN TRIBAL STATUS DECLARATION

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Al Sal'Chakc iuma Sektchi ClanCultural Attache, Empire Washitaw de Dugdahmoundyah

Book 2011 P.~~e 21

8Chakchiuma Sektchi Clan P.O. Box 124, Memphis, Tennessee [38101]

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\')~$Y\inT..OYl \::'O\Ar'i~'=~ M·:;.I certif'::l this in;::.tn...lfflent '.I.!as f iIson 08/i 1/2011 04~i7: 43 Pt1and r~c()rded in the

~~;l~~ler,