naaip american aborigine international affidavit and notice foreign trade scanned

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NationaI Association for the Advancement of lndigeno C軸丁昨iED MAiし構: 7012 1010 0001 INTERNATIONAL AFFIDAVIT and NOTICE O IDENTITY THEFT, UNLAWFUL CONVERSION) HC CLEANSING AGAINST AMERICAN ABORI DEMAND FOR IDENTITY CORRECTIO To: John H・ Thompson, Director, Foreign Trade Processing Uni 1201 EAST lOTH street, Je節ersonvi11e,血diana 47132 and Penny PritZker, Secretary of Commerce’United States of Amer With all due respect and courtesy, “You” are hereby served “Your” o鉦cial capac垂I aS O餓cial govemment representatives o accordance with ``Your” OATH of OFFICE and “Your” promise and acts of ‘`FRAUD”, aS Well as all other domestic and intemational DEFINITIONS : ・ “YOU” and “YOUR” means and refers to: John H. Thompson, Penny Bureau, United States Department of Commerce, State Of Teme America and the United States Coxporation; ・ “PETITIONER(S)” means: Signatories to this presentment wh validating their claims of being classified as高Negro�or %CoI those known as Choctaw’Chahta, Chatot, Xulae, Chickas Onondaga, Creek, Nahaganset, Cherokee, Aniyunwlya’Kituw Geechee, Shawnee, Shaawanwaki heritage and others; αAMERICAN ABORIGINE�within the context of this %NOTIC Indians reclassified as “CoIored” and in many instances `Negro” . “EMGRANT”: A person who leaves their own country in order ・ “NEGRO” within血is “NOTICE” means: Dark, black, mulatto, Whit OCCaSionally capitalized for the purpose of bringmg reSPeCt benefit of“YOU’’the recipient, and not as special entitlement or POlitical legal reference・ FIRST: This is lawful ConstnlCtive Notice and is sent purs Nations Declaration on the Rights for Indigenous People, th PurSuant to “Your” Oath swom by you to the Constitution of C‘Your” written response to me specific to the su切ect matter. C‘Your Pagelof21 留意帥 ‖‖」聞 鳳硝 急博 聞問

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Page 1: NAAIP American Aborigine International Affidavit and Notice Foreign Trade Scanned

NationaI Association for the Advancement of lndigenous PeopIe

C軸丁昨iED MAiし構: 7012 1010 0001 9134 1317

INTERNATIONAL AFFIDAVIT and NOTICE OF CONSTRUCTIVE FRAUD

IDENTITY THEFT, UNLAWFUL CONVERSION) HCONOMIC DECEPTION and ETHNEC

CLEANSING AGAINST AMERICAN ABORIGINE PEOPLE

DEMAND FOR IDENTITY CORRECTION

To: John H・ Thompson, Director, Foreign Trade Processing Unit Bureau

1201 EAST lOTH street, Je節ersonvi11e,血diana 47132

and

Penny PritZker, Secretary of Commerce’United States of America

With all due respect and courtesy, “You” are hereby served in “Your” individual capacity and in

“Your” o鉦cial capac垂I aS O餓cial govemment representatives of the United States of America; and in

accordance with ``Your” OATH of OFFICE and “Your” promise and obligation to promote integrity and reject

acts of ‘`FRAUD”, aS Well as all other domestic and intemational crimes.

DEFINITIONS :

・ “YOU” and “YOUR” means and refers to: John H. Thompson, Penny Pritzker, Foreign Trade Processlng

Bureau, United States Department of Commerce, State Of Temessee’State OfVirginia’United States of

America and the United States Coxporation;

・ “PETITIONER(S)” means: Signatories to this presentment who are in po誓Sion of o縦cial records

validating their claims of being classified as高Negro�or %CoIored�; aboriglnal beneficiaries related to

those known as Choctaw’Chahta, Chatot, Xulae, Chickasaw, Chikasa, Saktchihuma’Chakchiuma,

Onondaga, Creek, Nahaganset, Cherokee, Aniyunwlya’Kituwa) Lenape, Yamassee) Wyandot’Seminole,

Geechee, Shawnee, Shaawanwaki heritage and others;

● αAMERICAN ABORIGINE�within the context of this %NOTICE,, means: American Indians, American

Indians reclassified as “CoIored” and in many instances `Negro” and or “Freedman’’;

. “EMGRANT”: A person who leaves their own country in order to settle pemanently in another;

・ “NEGRO” within血is “NOTICE” means: Dark, black, mulatto, White, COIored, Indian, aborigme and is

OCCaSionally capitalized for the purpose of bringmg reSPeCt and attention to the tem “NEGRO” for the

benefit of“YOU’’the recipient, and not as special entitlement or identifier o亀Or for Petitioners; uSed as a

POlitical legal reference・

FIRST: This is lawful ConstnlCtive Notice and is sent pursuant to Common Intemational Law, the United

Nations Declaration on the Rights for Indigenous People, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and

PurSuant to “Your” Oath swom by you to the Constitution of the United States of America, and requlreS

C‘Your” written response to me specific to the su切ect matter. C‘Your” failure to respond or rebut as stipulated,

Pagelof21

留意帥

‖‖」聞

鳳硝

急博

聞問

Page 2: NAAIP American Aborigine International Affidavit and Notice Foreign Trade Scanned

with particularity, eVerything in this Constructive Notice and A鯖davit with which ``You” disagree, is “Your”

law珊, legal and binding agreement with and admission to the fact that everything in this Constructive Notice

and Intemational A飾davit is true, COrreCt, 1egal, law餌and fully binding upon “You” in any court in America

and the World Court, Without “Your” protest or objection or that of those who may represent “You”. “Your”

silence is�Your�acquleSCenCe and shall be met with tort for “fraud�and other causes to remedy violations of

United States Federal Law and Customary Intemational Law and Trade at the District Court in Washington,

D.C.

SECOND: This communication is extended in the Spirit of“Peace’Hamony and Balance’宜om the National

Association for the Advancement of Indigenous People aOAAIP) located in the region of Cherokee, North

Carolina, America;

and comes j.om Hemoc Xelup, Member and National Director for the National Association for the

Advancement of Indigenous People (NAAIP). NAAIP is a United Nations registered NGO and was established

by Bureau of Indian A厳正s 25 CFR recognized aborigine and Native Americans [msn。m。r] and non-reCOgnized

aborigine and Native Americans [misnomer] along with signatories foreign and domestic.

The puxpose of this cormunication is for the specific action of establishing an o飾cial record of this

COmmunication and for the expeditious correction of “Your” o飾cial public United States Census records as

applied to the herein mentioned and listed American Aborigine.

For centuries prlOr tO American invasion by Europe, aboriginal tribes, tlans, PeOPle and nations flourished

during pre and early coIonial history. Thousands of aboriginal groups occupied the lands of North America,

and during the development and fomation of the United States, U.S. policy makers devised concepts to deny

Certainわoriginal groups rights to exist as members of the human family. These specific groups were denied

the right to identity, Culture and nationality; all due to United States of America policies implemented for the

beneficial enrichment and interests of the European ruling class under a system of suppression and

coIonization.

The United States exists as an abstract entity, and within and beyond its o飾cial buildings and vaults of

infomational documents are創es reflecting the unrevealed secret lives, Cultures, PeOPle and nations of

Aborigines in Americans where truth lies uurevealed to血e misclassified benefactors. “You” and “Your”

O飾ce, COmPlicit with United States policy, have applied and continue to apply methods of coIonization and

disenfrmchisement through concerted national acts of political misidentification, raCe misclassification,

COmmerCial identity theft, ethnicdy-based judicial oppression, SOCial and economic inequality and constructive

fraud. Today, in North America 2014 AD, m皿ons of unidentified, unreCOgnized and unaccepted aborigine

PeOPle exist in the shadows, PurPOSefully hidden within United States domestic policy.

The United States agenda of coIonization adopted from Spain and France of pre-1500 AD continues today

through means血at are constructively cIoaked; “Your” agency is one such construct aiding in the continuation

Of ethnic cleansing and colonizing through race misclassification. Not allowing the descendants of colonized

and enslaved Negro aborigine to have a culture or identity is a violation of Intemational Law and Treaties.

The United States of America and “Your” agency are co-COnSPlratOrS in the denial and prohibition of the

American Aborigines’protection of their basic human rights, identity, SaCred a正facts and nationality; aCtions

that are contrary to intemational law and “Your” constitutional obligations. The actions of deliberate race and

et血ic misclassification with the intent to ethnically cleanse and sl璃ugate Aborigines in the founding coIonies

Of the united states, and the continuation of such acts, PraCtices and tactics by “Your” Agency and the United

States must now cease in the year 2014; ``Your” Agency and the United States must begin a cessation of

Page2QfZl

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misidentification, misclassification and ethnic cleansmg POlicies and begin the removal of and forever

denounce the coIonial methods and doctrines that have been utilized.

It is time to remove the obstacles, quagmlreS, COnCePtS and policies developed by the United States to

disenfranchise mi11ions of Aboriginal People across America leavlng them lost in perpetual ancestral

confusion, SearChing to find what was taken and hidden by the institutions of the United States govemment.

In 2005, at the United Nations World Summit, President Bush submitted a Salvage Claim with the United

Nations to detain, arreSt, Or remOVe immlgrantS from the United States; in part because Bush policy supported

the belief that immlgrantS had destroyed the United States economic infrastructure as dependants in need of

welfare, food stamps, free housmg, Student loan defaults and were the cause of the expansion of criminal

justice systems and processes.

Today, in 2014, the Negro has been relabeled負African-American�; nOW, the legal classification of “African

Immlgrant’ブbelongs to the Negro, and as misclassified benefactors, the Negro descendants are su助ect to listed

Claims made against immigrants by the United States govemment; therefore, immediate redress is sought.

As we approach the Mi11emium Development Goal’s Deadline of 2015言t is imperative to enlist “You” in

making lmmediate change to and correctmg “Petitioners’’’classification. The mandates associated with the

United Nations Sustainable Development Agenda 21 requlreS Written claims of indigenous people, lands,

identity and missions be submi請ed and engaged in writing before 201 5; this submission ofA飾davit to “You”

Satisfies the United Nations requlrement for claims of Petitioners.

Petitioners and signatories to this presentment are in possession of o鎖cial records validating their claims of

being classified as `Negro” and “CoIored”; beneficiaries of “0” blood lines related to those organically known

as Choctaw, Chahta, Chatot, Xulae, Chickasaw, Chikasa, Saktchihuma, Chakchiuma, Onondaga, Creek,

Nahaganset, Cherokee, Aniyunwlya, Kituwa, Yamassee, Wyandot, Seminole, Geechee, Shawnee,

Shaawanwaki, Lenape heritage and various others.

PETITIONERS MAKE THE FOLLOWING CLAIMS:

・ Claims to ancestors who were natural inhabitants of America, Pre-COIonization;

● Claims to inheritance工ights and treaties as prescribed to Petitioners’ancestors;

・ Claims to rights of identity and rights of full reclassification in accordance with intemational law and

the law of nations of and to Petitioners’cu血ral standing via historic family locations, reCOrds, Oral

testimonies and other valid and intemationally accepted means resulting m immediate change to status

and standing as “American Aborigme”.

POINTS AND AUTHORITⅢS

● VaIidated References ofthe Negro livlng m COmmOn and not being enslaved pre trans-Atlantic Slave

Trade in America;

● Evidence showing the負dark Indian�referenced as Negro in United States Acts and laws promotmg

and perpetuating slavery without African slaves from transatlantic slave invoIvement, and

● The genocide, ethnic cleansmg and force餌removal ofNegro Indians to colonized lands ofWest

Africa.

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HISTORY

1640 Evidence suggests that Negroes are becoming enslaved in the tobacco coIonies (Virginia, Delaware,

and Maryland). (Jordan, 44) During this period there is no Trans-Atlantic slave trade to America.

1649 Three hundred Negroes in Virginia - about 2 percent ofthe population, (Jordan, 73); and during this

Period there is no Trans-Atlantic slave trade.

1662 Virginiapasses an anti-miscegenation law. (Jordan, 79) This law was passed to end Negro and

European relations including marrlage.

1680 Slaves begin an increase in population from 4・6% in 1680 to over 20% in 1750; in the South from

5.7% to腿arly 40%. (Klinker and Smith, 12); this was also accomplished wi血out transatlantic slave

trade participation.

1691 Virginia pass?S an anti-miscegenation law that prohibits a11 interracial liaisons. (Jordan・ 80)

Virginia requlreS manumitted Negroes to leave the state. (Jordan, 124). This law ended all relations

With the Negro and all free Negro had to leave the coIony.

1700 Negroes are now co午lTOnly being treated as chattel slaves・ (Jordan’44)

In the Southem colomeS, free Negroes are unable by law to testify′ against white persons. In New

England, free Negroes can testify against anyone. (Jordan, 123). Prior to 1700 the Negro was not

treated commonly as chattel property.

1705 Southem coIonies begin e?aCting slave codes・ (Brown and Stentiford, 223), and the Y重畳垂

Assembly declares Negroes meligible to hold public o飾ce・ (Jordan, 126)・ Before this ruling, Negroes

Were allowed to hold any public o飾ce.

October 1705-CHAP. rV. An act declaring who shall not bear o縦ce in this country stated [The text of

this act suggests that a free man of coIor did hold an o鎖ce sometime before October of 1705. The

Statute COntains the first definition of a mulatto in Virginia’s laws.]: ’’Be it enacted and declared, and it

is hereby enacted and declared, that the child of an Indian and the child, grandchild, Or great

grandchild of a Negro shall be deemed, aCCOunted, held and taken to be a mulatto.’’Source: Hening,

ed., VIRGINIA, the Statutes at Large, VOl. 3, PP・ 250-251, 252. This is one ofthe first recorded acts

Showing mis-identification and misclassification as a prelude to a new type of ethnic cleansing,

PerPetuated even today, by the United States govemment agency et al.

1715 North Carolina and South Carolina bar Negroes from the polls; North Carolina does not continue the

PrOhibition after the 1 730s. (Jordan, 126); No巾h Carolina adopts an anti-miscegenation law. (Jordan,

139);血is was before mass slavery in the southem states.

For historians ofthe coIonial south, Particularly the lands south of血e Tennessee River and east ofthe

MississIPPi, the trade in Indian slaves has Iong been one ofthe reglOn’s greatest unsoIved mysteries. In

the half century before 1 7 1 5, inte巾ibal warfdre, kidnappmg, and enslavement displaced thousands and

reshaped the lives of a11 of the reglOn’s inhabitants. Slave raids depopulated the missions of Spanish

FIorida and complicated French e節brts to coIonize Louisiana. Disparate Indian communities formed

POWerful confederacies in an e徽)rt tO take advantage of the lucrative trade and avoid enslavement. By

exporting their human cargoes everywhere from Boston to Barbados, the British slave traders of South

Carolina spurred the coIony’s economy while extending its influence anong slave-hunting Indians as

far west as the MississIPPi River. No comer of the reglOn eSCaPed the hunt for slaves or its

COnSequenCeS.

1717 South Carolina adopts an anti-miscegenation law. (Jordan, 139); and ”In 1719, South Caro量ina decided

Who should be an ’’Indian’一for tax puxposes since American slaves were taxed at a lesser rate than

African slaves. The act stated: “And for preventing all doubts and scruples that may arise what ought

to be rated on mustees, mula請OeS, etC. a11 such slaves as are not entirely Indian shall be accounted as

Negro. The act is also significant because it asserts that part-Americans Natives with or without

A宜ican ancestry could be counted as Negroes, thus having an implication for a11 later slave census

accounting”. h請P:〃www.usgwarchives.net/va/1unenburg.htm

1723 Virginia bars Negroes from the polls. (Jordan, 126)

Virginia prohibits manumission ofNegroes. (Jordan, 1 24)

1745 Massachuse請S PrOhibits Negroes from participating in a govemment lo請ery. (Jordan, 130)

1758 Carl Linnaeus develops a simple classificatory system ofraces - Caucasian, Ethiopian, Mongolian, and

American - based largely on extemal, Visible factors. (Brown and Stentiford, 528)

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1775 American Revolution begins and last unti1 1783

1762 Virginia disenfranchises Negroes. (Keyssar, 354);

DEFENITION of disenfrmchise: Verb (transitive)

l. To deprive (a person) ofthe right to vote or other rights ofcitizenship;

2. To deprive (a place) ofthe right to send representatives to an elected body;

3. To deprive (a business concem, etC) ofsome privilege or right;

4. To deprive (a person, Place, etC) ofany franchise or right・

1776 5,000 Negro soldiers participate in the American Revolution・ (Brown and Stentiford, 281)

Declaration of Independence describes Indians as “merciless Indian Savages.” (Nugent, 4)

Thomas Jefferson’s indictment of slavery lS remOVed from the Declaration of Independence out of fear

that the Southem coIonies, eSPeCially South Carolina and Georgia, WOuld refuse to sign. (Brown and

Stentiford, 462); Thomas Je節erson had many fears, the greatest of which was Negro over-POPulation

and the fear that slavery would increase Negro anxiety; he preferred removal of Negro to Africa.

Thomas Jefferson made the historic statement, Part Of which is inscribed on the Jeiferson Monument

in Washington, DC; it says: ’一Nothing is more certainly written in the book of fate than that these

PeOPle are to be free.�However’the rest ofhis statement has gone unnoticed; it clearly says:一一…Nor is

it less certain that the two races, equally free, CamOt live in the same govemment.’一End qαOte・

1777 Georgia disenfranchises Negroes. (Keyssar, 354)

1779 South Carolina disenflmchises Negroes. (Keyssar, 354)

1780 Society of Friends and the Pennsylvania Abolition Society petitioned the Pemsylvania legislature to

amend the Gradi“lAbolition Act Qf1780. The petition was a success, and as a result, the Pemsylvania

legislature made it i11egal to transport enslaved children or pregnant woman out of Pemsylvania. The

act made it impossible to use Philadelphia ports to build, Outfit or send ships containing hunan cargo.

Finally, the act also placed heavy fines on kidnappmg enSlaved African置Americans and made it i11egal

to separate slave families by more than ten miles.

Revolutionary era constitutions of Virginia, South Carolina, and Georgla eXClude Negroes from the

franchise. (Jordan, 4 1 2)

1781 An estimated 200,000 to 250,000 Indians are living east ofthe MississIPPl, and by 1780, almost all

Indians have been pushed west of the Appalachians. 0[ugent, 1 0)

1783 Treaty of Paris extends recognition to the United States as an independent nation. Acquisition of

Trans-Appalachia, 0[ugent, 4), O範cially established the United states of America as valid

govemment.

1786 In Massachusetts, an aCt Of 1786 voids marriages between whites and Negroes. (Jordan, 472)

Massachusetts legislature votes to expel all Negroes who are not citizens of one ofthe states. (Litwack,

16). It is clear Negroes in al)undance were being disenfrmchised and clearly not slaves from the trans-

Atlantic slave trade.

1787 Thomas Jeiferson publishes Notes on救aわQf "格inia, his claims endorsed racialism, Negro

intellectual inferiority, and calls for the coIonization of free Negroes to their native climate of all

Negroes. (Jordan, 547)

1788 The U.S. Constitution is made, and specifica11y excludes Indian nations from inclusion in the

American political system. Classified as foreign nations and “Indians not taxed,” the Constitution gave

Congress exclusive jurisdiction for dealing with Indian tribes. (Brown and Stentiford, 579)

South Carolina bans slave importations. (Jordan, 3 1 8)

1790 National campaign from 1790 through 1800 was openly waged to racially cleanse the existing united

StateS Of Negroes, Virginia in particular, Which contains 40% of a11 [EAST APPALACHIA] Negro

POPulation. (Jordan, 542) Over 860,000 Negro recorded throughout all the coIonies, (Russell, 7he F7.ee

Negro in Wginia, 16-41) Virginia Bureau ofthe Census; See also Zhe Jbumal QfNeg7.O HistoIy VIⅡ,

247-283.

The first federal naturalization law, the Naturalization Act of 1790, reStricts American citizenship to“free white persons.’’(Jordan, 34 1 ); Negroes are not pemitted, but they are highly populated.

1791 Vemont admitted to the Union. (Keyssar, 352)

1792 Kentucky admitted to the Union. (Nugent, 44), and Delaware disenfranchises Negroes. (Keyssar, 354)

1794 Congress passes a law forbidding Americans from participating in the intemational slave trade.

(Jordan, 327), and this is done because America already has too many Negro.

Page50f21

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1795 Treaty of Greenvi11e was delivered signed allegedly declaring Indians ceding title to 3/4ths of the

future state of Ohio (Nugent, 44), and血e Treaty of San Lorenzo, aCquisition of the Yazoo Strip

(Southem Mississippi and Southem Alabama) from Spain, OJugent, 1 00) were treaties which includedNegro Indians.

1796 Tennessee admitted to the Union. (Nugent, 44)

1799 New York adopts a law for gradual emancipation. (Davis, Xiv)

Ke血Cky disenfranchises 41,085 free Negroe? and (Keyssar, 354)), (Brown and Stentiford’437) not

any of these free people were brought to AmerlCa Via the trans-Atlantic slave trade.

A slave conspiracy known as Gabriel’s Rebellion is foiled in Richmond, Virginia (Hinks and

McKivigan, XXXix) where the Negro clearly shows the vent of rebellion against coIonization and

Slavery.

South Carolina outlaws residence of free Negroes. (Jordan, 399)

1801 Maryland statute disenfranchises Negroes. (Keyssar, 354)

1802 Georgla relinquishes claim to Alabama and MississIPP重m eXChange for a promise by the Jefferson

administration that the federal govemment would seek voluntary removal of Indian tribes within her

boundaries, (Howe, 256) areas abundant with Negro inhabitants; the first to be enslaved on southem

Plantations.

Negroes excluded from su紐・age in the District of Columbia. (Jordan, 4 12)

Ohio disenfranchises Negroes. (Jordan, 4 12) (Keyssar, 354)

Maryland o餓cially disenfranchises Negroes, (Jordan, 412) as it is shown, a Pattem Of taking away

rights of the Negro pemits eligibility and prerequisite for joining the union of united states; it enforces

Petitioners’claims revealing relationships existed with the Negro benefactor of aboriglnal composition

Whose rights were subverted and ultimately eliminated.

1803 South Carolina reopens the slave trade. (Jordan, 318)

1804 Both houses ofthe Virginia legislature adopt resolutions calling for removal of free Negroes. (Jordan,

565)

Ohio restricts immigration of free Negroes. (Faman, 220)

1805 Yet again, both houses of the Virginia legislature adopt resolutions calling for the removal of free

Negroes. The resolution of 1805 instructed Virginia congressmen to press for a portion of the

Louisiana Territory for settlement of free Negroes. (Jordan, 565)

1806 Hb/勾’ins v. Wなht, the court decides that three generations of women with straight black hair were

Indian, nOt black, and therefore free. (Brown and Stentiford, 535)

Virginia restricts the right of masters to manumit their slaves; free blacks must leave the state within

One year. (Jordan, 574)

Ohio prohibits pemanent residence ofNegroes. (Jordan, 575)

1807 Slave trade abolished in the United States, (Hinks and McKivigan, XXXix) Maryland prohibits

Permanent reSidence of free Negroes, (Jordan, 575) and Louisiana prohibits immigration of freeNegroes. (Famam, 1 99-200)

Delaware bans racial intemarriage, (Jordan, 472) and Delaware prohibits immigration of free

Negroes. (Famam, 220)

New Jersey disenfrmchises Negroes; “No person shall vote in any state or county election for o飾cers

in the goverrment of the United States or ofthis state, unless such person be a white male citizen.”

(Keysser, 54)Ohio restricts immigration of free Negroes. (Famam, 220)

1808 Decemial Report ofthe Bureau of Census 1808; mOre than 80O,000 Nおro in the Current collective

StateS, With an alleged 340,000 from slave trade; nOt tranS-Atlantic. Current census records more than

500,000 free Negro.

U.S. Congress outlaws participation in血e African slave trade. (Davis, Xiv)

Negroes excluded from su紺age in the Mississippi and Indiana territories. (Jordan, 4 1 2)

Kentucky prohibits immigration of free Negroes, (Famam, 1 99-200) and has a population of more than

60,000 disenfrmchised Negro being now prepared for slavery into the southem states to work the

COttOn Plantations.

1810 Maryland constitution disenfrmchises Negroes (Keyssar, 3 54)

South Carolina disenfranchises Negroes. (Keyssar, 354)

Page 6 of21

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All Southem and two Northem states pass laws either restricting lmmlgration of free Negroes’bamlng

it altogether, Or requiring emigration of emancipated slaves. (Jordan, 4 1 0)

1811 The Geman Coast Slave血surrection erupts in Louisiana, (Hinks and McKivigan, XXXix) and

Tecumseh of the Creek Confederacy rallies the正bes and clans of the Old Northwest and O賞d

Southwest against the American advance. (Nugent, 47)

Paul Cu節e, a PrOminent Negro business man began working with the United States agencies and

assisted in the removal of Native Negro to Sierra Leone as Negro Emigrant; mOre than 48’000 were

removed to various Iocations along the West African coast.

Delaware prohibits irmigration of free Negroes, (Famam, 220) and as shown above, Negroes who

were not from a particular state were not allowed to come into血at state; again there existed a hope of

and preparation for southem slavery tra飾cking・

1812 Louisiana admitted to the Union, (Nugent, 70) and within weeks the state disenfranchises all Negroes.

(Keyssar, 354)1814 Treaty of Fort Jackson; Creeks are forced to cede much of their land in Alabama and Georgia・

(Nugent, 227)

1816 Bishop Richard A11en founds the African Methodist Episcopal Church, (Brown and Stentiford, 252)

Which was a prlmary tOOl for colonization; religion.

血diana admitted to血e Union; Indiana abolishes slavery; (Litwack, 3) Indiana disenfrmchises

Negro?S. (Keyssar, 354)

Virginla State legislature overwhelmingly endorses coIonization of free Negro emlgrantS in West

Africa and for a few years, the legislatures of Maryland, Kentucky, Tennessee, and six northem states

follow Virginia’s example in endorsing coIonization; SO did the national govemmg bodies of the

Presbyterian, Methodist, Baptist, and Episcopal denominations. (Howe, 26 1-262)

Choctaw cession in West Alabana, Creek cession in North Alabama, and Chickasaw cession in West

Alabama were now i叫emented. (Howe’354)

American CoIonizatlOn Society fomed to promote the coIonization of free blacks in Africa. (

Davis, Xiv)

The legislatures of fourteen states endorse Negro coIonization. (Litwack, 24)

The Virginia House of Delegates resoIves (137 to 9) that the govemor corresponds w皿the U.S.

PreSident conceming a suitable territory for the coIonization and removal of free Negroes. (Jordan,

565)力u 1816 cz伽r /he French revolationaIy W所Charles Fenton A勿rcer joined 7bmessee and

Mdryわnd /O〆)rm the American Colonjzation Sbcie砂, and W7zen it had setf)rth海puIpOSe QfNegro

repatriatton, jt enlisted jn海ran応a d短ing融hed bo少q/ governmenl lea虎rs, Which incIuねd

Francis SCott K抄Jbhn Ramあゆh, 7homas.梯rson, Jdmes MZzdison, Jdmes Mbnroe, Charles Fenton

Mみcer, John MdrShall And・e14,.hc応on, Daniel Wあster, Hわry Cl匂, and Abraham Lincoln, all

see巌ng /O remOVe /he American Nおvo (4bo確.ine) /om his natural home, Where he existed力r

ma7ey Centuries przor to colonization.

7hOmaS Je#rson expressed about race relations, a partial inscribed on /he.菊花rson Monument jn

Wdshington, DC states.・ ’Nothing is more certainb′ Written in /he book坊#te /han that these pe(やわ

are to bef,ee. ’’HoweγeI; the sentence whichfollowed and l紗〔炉the mon”ment StateS・● ′鮪,r js it less

Certain /hat /he two races, equalb′〆ee, CamOt live Jn !he same govemmen信’

Presi。訪れた旅7rsOn `卿ealed /0 /he British in 1803 to allow Neg7‘O em申a融Within British co硯ies,

b‡研he British J‘弓伽ed /O allow Negro emjg7‘ants, expreSSing “the AmeriCan Mg7,O Were /00 la少and

Care斤ee. R弓移r Linco拐Neg7.O Policy, Emest Sevier Coj*.

During /hおperiod Presi〔ねnt J#榔On COrre呼タOnded with the Sierra Leone Co7即a砂in 1804 and

SO略ht to sece/re /he consent Qf Jhat countγわreCeive Negro emゆ■antS /.om the脇ited餅ates.

脇g;nia Libra7y

1817 New York adopts a law that frees all remaining slaves in 1827. (Davis, Xiv)

Mississippi is admitted to the Union (Nugent, 225) and immediately disenfranchises Negroes.

(Keyss租「, 354)

James Forten a free Negro businessman and sail maker fought vigorously against coIonizing Negro to

Africa and expressed the Negro had far greater claim to rights in America, he also worked with

Richard Allen to establish the first Convention of CoIor in this year of 1817. The puapose of the

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convention was to assist fugitive Negro in resettling in Canada and also to state their opposition to

colonization to Africa. James Forten also helped establish the American Anti-Slavery Society and

helped sponsor William LIoyd Garrison-s newspaper, 7he Libertarian, Which promoted ^セgro夜hts.

1818 Creek cession in Georgia, Chickasaw cession in Tennessee and Kentucky. (Howe, 354)

Black males Iose the right to vote in Connecticut, (Howe, 497) and Comecticut disenfranchises

Negroes. (Keyssar, 354)

First Seminole War. (Nugent, 122)

Illinois abolishes slavery. (Litwack’3) Illinois disenfranchises Negroes (Keyssar, 3 54)

Georgia prohibits irmlgration of free Negroes' (Famam, 1 99-200)

1819 Anti S]ave Trade Act March 3, 1819; after which bringmg African Slaves to the United States was

made illegal.

Maine admitted to the Union. (Litwack, 3 1)

Alabama admi筒ed to the Union and automatically disenfumchises Negroes (Keyssar, 354)

In the states admitted after 1 8 1 9, eVery State but Maine disenfranchised Negroes. (Howe, 497)

1820 Free Negroes could not exercise certain rights and privileges guaranteed to American citizens and

aliens. (Litwack, 33)

Congress authorizes the citizens of Washington, D.C. to elect “white” only cfty o餓cials and to adopt a

COde goveming free Negroes and slaves. (Litwack, 31)

Under the Anti Slave Trade Act, additiona=aws made transatlantic slavlng a m利Or Crime under

penalty of death in this year 1820 African slave trade was abolished completely and in 1824 and

labeled as plraCy.

South Carolina prohibits immigration of free Negroes. (Famam, 1 99-200)

1821 Missouri admitted to the Union, 0'ugent, 128) and immediately disenfranchises Negroes. (Keyssar,

354)

1822 Black males lose the right to vote in Rhode Island. (Howe, 497)

Mississippi prohibits immigration of free Negroes. (Famam, 1 99-200)

1824 Ohio state legislature passes a resolution proposmg African coIonization linked with gradual

emancipation. The resolution is soon seconded by seven other states and Delaware. (Howe, 265)

Elizabeth Heyrick anonymously publishes the pamphlet h77mediate, nOt Gradual Emanc車)ation (Hinks

and McKivigan, Xl) again depicting the Negro removal from native lands.

1826 Creek cession in Georgia. (Howe, 354)

North Carolina prohibits immigration of free Negroes. (Faman, 1 99-200)

FIorida Te正tory prohibits immigration of free Negroes. (Famam, 199-200)

1827 Gradual emancipation comes to qu end in New York. Slavery al)Olished. (Howe, 174)

Michigan Territory restricts immlgration of free Negroes. (Famam, 220)

1830 170,130 Negroes living in Kentucky, (Brown and Stentiford, 438) and not from African slave trade.

The United States so desperately wanted to remove the Negro that in 1 830 Congress passed and issued

new rules and laws to send Negro Emigrants to Africa whenever and wherever possible. flmest Coリ

ENDIAN REMOVAL ACT May 28, 1 830 broadened the United States agenda of ethnic cleansmg and

genocide and slavery ofthe aboriginal Negro people of America.From early coIonization, The United States began encouraglng and negotiating with the Negro to

emlgrate tO Africa; but year after year the hopes of removmg the Negro from American soil failed. The

Negro was only a valuable asset to southem slavers and plantation owners, Who were commercially

driven to support slavery of the dark aborigine called Negro. Rufas King - U.S Senate proposed

Selling public lands to finance Negro emlgration to Africa.

1831 Temessee prohibits imTigration offree Negroes. (Famam, 199-200)1832 Alabama prohibits immlgration offree Negroes. (Famam, 199-200)

The “Oltro Plan’’of 1832 was actually designed to promote Negro Emancipation, Emigration to

CoIonization, but the slave states r♀jected this plan causlng the first national divide between North and

South states of血e United States. This included the purchase of land in Africa by the state ofVirginia

for the purpose of fomlng the co10ny Of Liberia.

1833 Kentucky legislature passes a law baming slave imports. (Brown and Stentiford, 437)

1834 Temessee disenfranchises Negroes. (Keyssar, 354)

1835 Texas legalizes slavery and declares free Negroes have no rights. (Nugent, 152)

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1836 Arkansas admi請ed to血e Union, (Keyssar, 342) and disenfranchises Negroes. (Keyssar, 354)

1837 Michigan admitted to the Union and disenfranchises Negrces・ qCeyssar, 354)

1840 Texas prohibits immigration offree Negrces.岬amam, 199-200)

1843 Arkansa叩rohibits im平gration of free Negrces岬amam, 199-200)

Missoun prohibits immlgration of free Negrces. Gamam, 1 99-200)

1844 Oregon bans free Negro settlers. OVugent, 175)

Rhode Island passe an anti-miscegenation law. qamam, 216)

1845 FIorida admitted to the Union. (Keyssar, 342)

FIorida disenfranchises Negroes. (Keyssar, 3 54)

Texas admitted to the Union and (Nugent, 1 55) disenfranchises Negroes・ (Keyssar, 354)

1846 Iowa admitted to the Union and disenfranchises Negrces (Keyssar, 354)

Michigan passes an anti-miscegenation law. (Famam, 2 1 6)

1847 Missouri bans all free Negro settlers. (Howe, 157)

1848 Wis∞nSin admitted to the Union and disenfranchises Negroes. (Keyssar, 354)

Illinois prohibits immigration of free Negroes. (Famam, 220)

1849 Oregon Territory prohibits immigration offree Negroes. (Faman, 220)

1850 Califomia admitted to the Union, (Nugent, 21 8) and disenfranchises Negrces. (Keyssar, 354)

Califomia passes an anti-miscegenation law.岬amam, 21 6)

Virginia constitution disenfranchises Negrces. (Keyssar, 354)

Kentucky legislature legalizes slave importation. @rown and Stentiford, 43 7)1851 Indiana prohibits inmi伊ation offree Negrces.岬amam, 220)

工owa Territory prohibits immigration of free Negroes.岬amam, 220)

1860 In 1790 the first federal census reported 697,897 slaves (Table l). Though concen億atec=n血e southem

StateS, eSPeCially in the tobacco production areas of Maryland and Virginia, Slaves were reported in all

血e states except Massachusetts. By 1810, tWO years after the cIose ofthe foreign slave trade, the slave

POPulation had increased to almost l.16 million. Yet after the trans-Atlantic slave trade was bamed in

the United States, in 1 850 DeBow Statistics review for the United States recorded an increase in slave

POPulation of more than l,740,000 pcople, While no foreign slave trade existed in America. ThisClearly represents the kidnappmg of at least two million Negro from within the boundaries of North

America and血e United States. The book “Economics ofAmerican Negro Slavery 1 830-1860” written

by Robert Evans, Jr., Massachuse請S Institute Of TechnoIogy, (DeBow, Statistical review, P. 94.

SuggeSted that in1 850 about 400,000 slaves lived in cities and towus and 2,500,000 slaves of all ages

WOrked in agriculture with l,815,000 in co備On, 350,000 in tobacco, 150,000 in cane sugar, 125,000 in

ri∞, and 60,000 in hemp. 5 Ukich B. Phillips, American Negro Slavery, New York, Appleton-

Century, 1936, P. 391. 188

All those acts were committed in violation of the雄Law of Nations�and after the civil war that ended the

SOuthem United States slavery, the pro∞SS Of misclassification inteusified.

1910 Temessee initiates the Negro reclassification prooess by creating the “One Drop Rule”.

The most damaging of all acts and methods created by the United states defined race by the ’’one-drop

rule’’, Which was instituted by the state govemment of Temessee and was adopted throughout the

∞ntinental United states, defining as “colored” persous with any African or Native American ancestry.

It also expanded the scope of Virginia’s ban on interracial marriage (anti-miscegenation law) by

Crininalizing all mamages between white persous and non-White persons.

1912 As reglStrar, Prmary CustOdian and developer of Negro and Indian classification policy for Virginla,

Wblter Ashbv Plecker d加ected Jhe reclass筋catio7? Of marlγ all Wrginia虎3dians as colo招d on their

birth and marriajZ.e Cert妨cates because he was conv加ced fhat most k!dia棚had A舟ican heritage and

Were #γinfr /0 ’bass’’as hdian /O eVa虎segrefration. Consequently, tWO Or three generations of

Virginia, Teme;see, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Kentueky Ohio, Florida, North and So融

Carolina, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois,

Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Vemont and Louisiana aborigine had their ethnic identity altered and

misclassified on the public record docunents; equating to “Paper Genooide”.

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The creators of the Racial血tegrity Act John Powell and Eamest S. Cox believed that血e Racial

Integrity Act was needed as %maintenance of the integrity of the white race to preserve its superior

blood�and also believed in what was ca11ed “the great man concept” which means that if the races

were to intersect that it would lower the rate of great white men in the world.

1924 On March 20, 1924 the Virginia General Assembly passed two laws that had arisen out of

COntemPOrary COnCemS about eugenics and race: SB 219, entitled ’’The Racial Integrity Act’’and “SB

281” ; ’一An ACT to provide for the sexual sterilization of inmates of State institutions in certain cases’’,

henceforth referred to as ’’The Sterilization Act’一; the result ofwhich can only be a credit towards race

discrimination and ethnic cleansmg and genocide.

The Racial Integrity Act required that a racial description of every person be recorded at birth and

divided society into only two classifications: White and co置ored (essentially all other, Which included

numerous dark American indigenous people.). The “Racial Integrity Act’’was designed to erase Dark

Indians from the public record and through constructive fraud forced the Negro into ``pemanent exile

in his own home land�.

In 1967 the law was overtumed by the United States Supreme Court in its ruling on Loving v.招培jnia,

but not before more than twenty other states adopted the same racially suppressive laws.

The Racial Integrity Act called for only two racial categories to be recorded on birth certificates, rather

than the traditional six: ’一white’’and ’一colored’’(which included / includes) Indian and all discemible

mixed race persons.) The effedts were quickly seen.

1930 The U.S. Census for Virginia recorded only 779 Indians and the rest were classified as `Negro”; by

1940, that number had been reduced to 198 because血e rest were labeled Negro. In e紙さCt, this fom of

e血nic cleansmg literally erased 90% of all aboriginal history from recorded history in America; the

aborigine was being erased as a group from o綿cial United States records.

1934 Memorial to Congress was submitted and the Senate response: ’’Therefore be it resoIved by the House

Of Delegates, the Senate concumng, that the General Assembly of Virginia memorialize the Congress

Of the United States to make provisions for the coIonization of persons of African descent, With their

OWn COnSent言n Liberia, Or at any Other place or places on the African continent.’一

1936 Under the “Negro Peace Movement’’, Negroes could receive federal aid if they agreed to emlgrate tO

A餓ca and settle upon lands held in trust for emlgrantS from the United States. Many ofthe applicants

had been reduced to the reliefrolls, and they appealed to the President to use relieffunds to aid them in

taking up holdings in Liberia. President Roosevelt and the State of Virginia lobbied Congress to

appropriate funds to send more than 350,000 Negro to Africa, but congress would not approve the

funding to relocate those Negro who agreed to go.

1967 Racial Integrity Act inter-raCial mamage laws were found to be unconstitutional by the United

States Supreme Court, and in 1975 the Virginia’s Assembly finally repealed the remainder of

the Racial Integrity Act. All classified Virginia Negro if bom before July 1960 - Supreme

Court in 1968 ruled Negro could reclassify and ruled against血e ``Racial Integrity Act.

1968 It is common place in America for most Negro to now be referred to as “Black” in all United States

CenSuS and commercial records. This class綿cation has pemanently entrenched the aborigine into a

SuStained state of underclass totally dependent people in America, Without history, heritage, Culture or

true identity.

1986 Finally言n America, the e鮮brts to remove the Negro from true aboriginal standing and status, the

Aborigine, Who was reclass綿ed as “Negro”, then reclassified as “Black’’is now reclassified as an

immlgrant Called “African American”; a foreigner to the lands and aboriginal rights of his own home

ProVided by nature.

1997 On March 3, 1997, then President of the United States, Wi11iam Je節drson Clinton slgned Executive

Order 13037 encompassmg the “Commission to Study Capital Budgeting”, Where he signed a Unifom

Commercial Code -1餌ng to effectively classif)′ United States citizens as Human Capital for the

PurPOSe Of collateral funding with the血temational Monetary Fund. This action was committed

Without “Prior Notice or Prior Consent” of; by or from the parties including “Petitioners’’.

This Executive Order No. 13037 March 4, 1997 (SPeCifica11y section 2 subsection ( b ) ) is a clear

example of commercial fraud and identity theft, Which furthers the deception against the Negro by

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placing the Negro unknowingly into dire intemational debt, Where the descendants of the aborigine

could now face penalties of debt, Which may mClude removal from natural lands to foreign lands,

peIPetual peonage and even debt under certain draconian foreign laws and jurisdiction as a result of

PerPetual fraud and identity theft.

2008 SMITHSONIAN ENSTITUTE releases ``INDIⅥSABLE” documentary revealing dual timeline

habitation between the Negro and Native American history predating coIonization.

Publishing of %Racial Reorganization and the United States Census 1850-1930�by Hochschild JL,

powell; includes the followlng Statement from United States Census Director on the 15th of October

1936:

“The classification by race or co喜or of individuals, Or eVen entire populations, is not only very di節cult’

but is a very delicate matter to the United States Govemment�- Census Director; and also負The

Census Bureau should be] the greatest statistical laboratory ofthe United States govemment, WOrthy to

rank with the best statistical o純ces maintained by European goverrments.�-Secretary of Commerce

and Labor, 1902. In fact, CenSuS O縦cials and their sxpporters were clearly amoyed by this

Congressional imposition. Porter pointedly noted that `与he persons of negro descent are

餌her classified un虎r the law, aS fo11ows; being outside the govemment.”

Dr. David Imhotep, Who served as President of the Egyptology Society at the Miami Museun of

Science & Planetarium, also received the first Ph.D. concentrating m anCient African history from

Union University in Cincimati, Ohio and was feat町ed in the Jbumal QfBlack Studies, issue volume-

entitled the “African Aqualithic Period”. Based on professional peer-reViewed research, aCCeSSed

privileged information and examination of創es and artifacts at血e Smithsonian Institute, Dr. Imhotep

reveals in his book “The First Americans Were Africans” that;

a) Africans began sailing to the Americas many centuries before European arrival and well

before 5000 B.C, His research shows the first Asians entermg North America around 3000

B.C. where they made contact with indigenous “Black” Americans who ultimately produced

the first `Native Americans”;

b) The infomation made available also reveals more proof ofNegro in America from autopsy

results ofRamses II of 1213 BCE. The autopsy revealed his stomach had residue ofAmerican

Tobacco & South American Coca Leaves. Recently, the Smithsonian Institute provided

additional proof ofNegro existence in America狐nOunClng the find of eleven 12,000 year old

Negroid mummies at the Grand Canyon, Nevada;

C) As late as 1312 A.D., Mali’s Abubakari II’s 2000 wooden ships reached the Americas

exactly as their forefathers had done for tens of thousands of years;

d) In 1607 Captain John Smith himself主eported being captured by Black Indians in Virginia;

e) In 1881, John W. Powell appointed Cyrus Thomas to be the Director of the Eastem Mound

Division of the Smithsonian Institute’s Bureau of EthnoIogy. Cyrus Thomas commented on

�Indian Mounds” in America; he said that, “There was a race of mound builders in America

dis血ct from the Native American. Cyrus Thomas’s map shows l,000,000 Indian Mounds in

N. America, but today’s maps show less than one thousand.

2014 Hundreds of thousands of Aboriginal People were misclassified due to ethnic reclassification fraud

COmm誼ed by the United States through the Department of Commerce through goverrment regulated

and mandated census, Which languished for decades under Virginia’s ethnic cleansing doctrines. In a

1943 1etter, Walter Plecker wrote to all public o縦cials and medical facilities asserting that Virginia

Indians No Longer Exist. The damage done has left more than six generations of American Negro

aborigines with their ethnic identity altered on o飾cial state sanctioned public documents; this equates

to the greatest commercial acts and economic schemes of constructive fraud, identity theft and ethnic

Cleansing of aboriginal Americans; Crimes against humanrty′ P叩etrated by the United states

legislative bodies throughout its entire history,

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CONCLUSION

Through laws, POlicies and statutes,血e actions of the United States and United States Agencies have resulted

in murder, mayhem and racial genocide, divided and disIocated families, destroyed, hidden and denied cu血ne

and history of the descendants of America’s Aboriginal People. The United States and its agencies must now

initiate methods of reclamation begimmg w皿Identitv Reclassification. Under current United States biased

and discrininative policies, and specific to the “Indian Reorganization Act of 1934” methods of recognlZmg

native descendants, misclassification has been covertly and destructively applied. These methods have

forsaken the basic human rights of millions of aboriginal des∞ndants. Methods and prooesses血e sane as and

Sinilar to the paper gencoide inflicted by the “One Drop Rule’’and concemmg “half or more Indian blood”

and “blood quantum” constitute constructive fraud and identity theft. The use of the Department of Interior’s

anthropomorphic techniques to detemine American Aboriginal heritage are tooIs utilized to hide and

misclassifr′ a raCe Of people based on ethnicity and are utilized for the purpose of wealth building to sustain the

SPeCial class of “White’’citizeus in supenOr Standing. Such violations are perpetuated by “You” as “You” are

the first in the chain of United States Department of Commer∞ Violators in the deliberate continued

misclassification, identity」heft and constructive fraud against American Aborigines for financial gain. “Your”

foms, POlicies and methods advocated have taken living Aborigmal People of America and redu∞d them

(“Petitioners”) to the legal construct of `Negro”, al)andoned and left without the means to navigate or

aqiudicate back to a real world of substance, SustenanCe, Spirit and nature.

PETITIONERS? REOUESTS AND DEMANDS

Racial Integration was America,s strictest race law. The recompense血at Petitioners seek pales in comparison

to the e節ects they currently su餓汀, reSulting from the invidious racial discrimination they have been impacted

by for more than 500 years, Which was designed to en∞urage `twhite” supremacy in America.

We’the %Petitioners�’misclassified aborigine descendants classed as高CoIored and Negro�, seek rights

afforded to indigenous people in America. We additionally seek the followlng:

1. To be reclassified in負Your�re∞rds as寝American Aborigine,,;

2. A recormendation from `Your�agency to the United States Goverrment Executive Branch瓜e

necessity for irmediate change to the overall classification process and the fraudulent appropriation of

funding the United States govemment;

3. A cessation of current Department of Cormerce financial activities, Which may mvoIve負Petitioners�

W皿out短Petitioners,,, knowledge or consent and for `You�to provide短Petitioners�a蝕I a∞Ounting

Of transactions made by αYour�agency, Which included待Petitioners�as parties to血ose transactions;

4. A written response to this Notice to clear the record invoIving寝Petitioners,,, cla血s of fraud and

identity theft;

5. A recommendation from “Your” agency to the United States Govemment Executive Branch to

develop an Act, Bi11 or Policy requmng the United States and its subdivisions to provide the proper

mechanisms and open do。rS neceSSary tO aid Petitioners in heritage research and to protect agamSt

discrimination at the Federa=evel while Petitioners engage in those p皿Suits of reclamation; also

PrOVide certain protections for people who may be oppressed or denied certain rights while

estal)1ishing he壷age claims and reclassification; NO雌: Often, triba11y unrecognized∴people are

t山eatened, aneSted,血eir children taken and basic rights ignored simply because they are attempting

to reclassify under their proper cu血ne; and

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6. To void a11 debts and liens incurred by αYour,, 0縦ce through transacting financial instruments’

agreements, dealings and promises to the Intemational Monetary Fund, World Bank and other

agencies made by短You�utilizing securities, bonds, nOteS’financia=nstruments or other exchanges

pertaining to負Petitioners�without `くPetitioners�knowledge or consent.

PRE SUMPTION

l. It is presumed負You�are now aware that負You�are participatmg ln intemational crimes against

humanfty and will be held accountable as a Defendant in future litigation and claims pertaining to the

stipulated matters addressed within this presentment. Is that not correct?

2" It is presumed ``You�, being knowledgeable of facts pertaining to criminal activity, Will immediately

act in controversy with o血ers who are commlttmg SuCh acts in violation of intemationa=aw, and

federal protections, and it is presumed %You,, wi11 initiate the necessary policies to begin correcting the

monumental crime of constructive fraud, COnSPlraCy tO COmmit mass ethnic cleansmg and “Your” acts

Of commi伽ng mass ethnic cleansmg. Is that not correct?

3. It is presumed寝Your�o餓ce is govemed by policies to which αYou�adhere and which are handed

down by the o餌ce of “Secretary of Department of Commerce’’, and it is presumed “You” are

knowledgeable of such policies and are also in possession ofthose written policies and infomation. Is

that not correct?

4. It is presumed “You�wi11 respond to this preseritment with haste and within thirty days of receiving

this ``Notice” and avoid umecessary continued pain and suifering su切ected upon “Petitioners” in their

quest for remedy for violations of their Human Rights. Is that not correct?

INTERNATIONAL CONVENTIONS AND AGREEMENTS FOR YOUR REFERENCE

The acts and policies developed, aPPlied and promoted by “You”言‘Your O飾ce” and agency are liable and

Criminal actions committed by “You”, “Your O飾ce” and agency m Violation of intemational law, United

States Federal law and the Law ofNations; but specifically these listed below:

a) UNIVERSAL DECLARATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS: The United Nations’new Human Rights

Commission set out to draft the document that becane the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Roosevelt, Credited with its inspiration, referred to the Declaration as the intemational Magna Carta for

all mankind. It was adopted by the United Nations on December 10, 1948. In its preamble and in

Article l , the Declaration unequivocally proclaims the inherent rights of all human beings: “Disregard

and contempt for human rights have resulted in barbarous acts which have outraged the conscience of

mankind, and the advent of a world in which human beings shall e互ioy freedom of speech and belief

and freedom from fear and want has been proclaimed as the highest aspiration of the common

PeOPle…All human beings are bom free and equal in dignity and rights.”

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b) Intemational Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, G.A. res. 2200A (XXI), 21

U.N.GAOR Supp. aVo. 16) at 49, U.N. Doc. A/6316 (1966), 993 U.N.T・S. 3, entered;ntojZ)7Ce Jan. 3,

1976∴Article 」.・ l. All peoples have the right of selfLdetemination. By virtue ofthat right they freely

detemine their political status and freely pursue their economic, SOCial and cultural development・

3. The States Parties to the present Covenant, including those having responsibility for the

administration of Non-Self-Govemmg and Trust Territories, Shall promote the realization of the right

of selfdetemination, and shall respect that right, in confomfty with the provisions of the Charter of

the United Nations.

Intemational Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, G.A. res. 2200A (XXI), 21 U.N. GAOR Supp.

0{o. 16) at 52, U.N. Doc. A/6316 (1966), 999 U.N.T.S' 171, entered intojbrce Mar. 23, 1976・ `Article

I l. All peoples have the right of selfdetemination; by virtue of that right they freely detemine their

POlitical status and freely pursue their economlC, SOCial and cultural development.

c) Intemational Convention on the Elimination of A11 Foms of Racial Discrimination, G.A. res. 2106

(XX), Annex, 20 U.N. GAOR Supp. 0[o. 14) at 47, U.N. Doc. A伯014 (1966), 660 U.N.T.S. 195,

entered jntoj2)rCe Jan. 4, 1969. Article I l. In this Convention, the tem一’racial discrimination’’shall

mean any distinction, eXClusion, reS証ction or preference based on race’COlour’descent’Or national or

ethnic origin which has the puapose or e鯖ect of nullifying or impairing the recognition, e巾oyment or

exercise, On an equal footing, Of human rights and fundamental freedoms in the political, eCOnOmlC’

SOCial, Cultural or any other field of public life.

d) Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, 78 U.N.T.S. 277, entered

into〆rce Jan. 12, 1951. 4手錠わJ The Contracting Parties confim that genocjde, Whether committed

in time of peace or in time of war言s a crime under intemational law which they undertake to prevent

and to punish. A融わ2 In the present Convention, genOCide means any of the fo1lowlng aCtS

COmmitted with intent to destroy, m Whole or in part, a national, ethnical, raCial or religious group, aS

SuCh: (a) Killing members of the group; (b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members ofthe

group; (C) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical

destruction in whole or in part; (d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; (e)

Forcibly transfe町ing children of the group to another group. Ar/icle 3 The followlng aCtS Sha11 be

Punishable: (a) Genocide; (b) Conspiracy to commit genocide; (C) Direct and public incitement to

COmmit genocide; (d) Attempt to commit genocide; (e) Complicity in genocide. Artich 4 Persons

COmmitting genocide or any ofthe other acts enumerated in article IⅡ shall be punished, Whether they

are constitutionally responsible rulers, Public o飾cials or pnvate individuals. Andcle 5 The Contracting

Pa巾es undertake to enact, in accordance with their respective Constitutions, the necessary legislation

to glVe e餓rot to the provisions of the present Convention, and, in particular, tO PrOVide effective

Penalties for persons guilty of genocide or any ofthe other acts enumerated in article IⅡ.

Page 14of21

Page 15: NAAIP American Aborigine International Affidavit and Notice Foreign Trade Scanned

COMMITTEE ON THE ELIMENATION OF RACRAL DISCRIMINATION (CERD)

In its αConcluding observations on the combined seventh to ninth periodic reports of United States of

America’’; aCCOrding to the report: “1. The Committee considered the seventh to ninth periodic reports

of the United States of America, Submitted in one document (CERD/C/USA/7-9), at its 2299th and

2300th meetings (CERD/C/SR.2299 and SR.2300), held on 13 and 14 August 2014.” At its 2317th

meeting on August 26, 2014, CERD adopted many concluding observations, including the followmg:

refer Convention on血e Elimination of All Forms Racial Discrimination.’’

F賞NAL

The names listed below are the nanes of Petitioners who are subject to this Notice, and upon your

PrOViding proper documentation and related foms without a励esions for proper classification, below

listed Members, Petitioners and Signatories will review and forward such infomation to your o飾ce for

recording pu叩oses only and not as a means to contract with any agency. This Notice also makes it clear

that the United States has prlOr COnCealed knowledge as to the standing, StatuS and heritage of the Negro,

but continues to operate in violation of United Nations policy, Which impIores public notice be given by

the state to make the indigenous population aware of historical existence and to provide the means to

COrreCt and acknowledge the political and social incorrectness; b山the United States has failed at issumg

SuCh notices and infomations as required by Intemational Law.

In the matters pertaining to this Presentment, We expeCt immediate resolution.

Chihowa Yamako Yohmi

INDIVIDUAL, CLAN, TRIBE, BAND AND NATION

LINEAGE MEMBERS AND SIGNATOR重ES

Melvie Jean TaY†o「

」o「eai DeVante

Hemoc XeIup

E「「oI DeVante

Nlna Feathe「 Townsend

E「lc White

Key面γa Whi章e

E「「oi DeVante

Came「on Diaz

Trecle Diaz

Nadia DeVante

Kevln M. McClinton訓sworth

Kevin McC冊ton, 」r.

Kale6a McClinton

Kyan Ama「i McC"nton

A冊son GaY Hammond-DeVante

GoIa Sagonige AiigaliYVhi XeIup

Devon Moultry

Cieo Henderson

」eon Henderson

VIctor Henderson

BettY Hende「sonしittie

」°「i MekeIa BaIdwin

NikkI Andrea DeVante

Anaami Elan DeVante

Bani Asmanl Cha「an DeVante

Sawan Kabir DeVante

ArYah Gu「bani Moksha DeVante

Ma「kし°We

」e「emyしOWe

31. 」e「emY○○we

32. Cameron Lowe

33. 」ohnnYGoInS,S「.

34. Patifa両」ohnson

35. Tyrone Coleman

36. 」ohnnYG〇両,」「.

37. Myah Lowe

38. EIzana HamiIton

39. Mikaylonしowe

40. MvkaieしOWe

41. MikyiahしOWe

42. Kenneth WarrenしOWe

43, Kenneth War「enしOWe

44. Kaydonしowe

45 PaulaしOWe

46. Ch「iStOPhe「 Hi=

47. EddIeしOWe=

48. Ophellaしowe

49. RosalYn F「eeman

50. Thelma Sunshine F「eeman

S宣. Ma直ineこ」ackson

52. Theron Holidav

53. Terr川OiidaY

54. Plta Hearns

55. ;ha「onCa面ga[

与6. Ga「γCa…gan

57. Cia「ence EdwardTayior

58. M∂riaDTayIor

S9. AshleyM.Taylo「

60. ClarenceETayIorli

61. Phy冊sTaylor

62. PorcheTayior

63. EricTaylor

64. 」acqueiynTaylo「

6与. 」e冊eY丁aYIo「

66. 」e…iferTayior

67. 丁ia丁aγIo「

68. EmmittDa「VITayio「

69. 」ermaineTaylor

70. EmmittTayior

71. NicholeTaylor

72. DeloresAnitaTaylor

73. Anita A=en

74. T「esmond A=en

7S. BrandonA=enTaylor

76, ErnestTavior

77. ErnestTayior

78, Deborah Eunice 」owe

79. MeIanie LaT「ease Lo測e

80. MichaelRushing

81. Kelvin Burchett Taylo「

82. Chan面ng」almaulTaγlor

83. Pe「CyしOWe

84. TommyTe「ryParsonしOWe

85. Mo高c8pa「§On

86, Keith Lowe

87. Rico Peete

88. AmyしOuisePeete

89. StephenPeete

90. Zさ面YahReneaPeete

Page 15 of21

1. Joshua 」e「「e= Rose

之. 丁「面母Rose

3. 8obbyRose

4. Vanessa Dixon

5. Eve「ett丁urne「

6. Katle DIXOn

7. Maxwe= D, Djxon

8. 」ean Dixon

9  Ka{ie CoIe

OO. 」eff「eγ Shaw Taylor

Oし. SusieA個丁己γIo「

02. Melvie DeniceT∂ylor

O3. AndyTaγIo「

04. Nicho)as T∂YIor

O5. 」avねnTaγlor

O6. DantaeTaγIo「

07. TerezTaYlor

O8. Far「en Co川ns

O9. BにhopCo帖s

lO. B「IaC°=活s

ll. KImberIeyCo川ns

12. CYmOneBanks

13 K「YStalBa塙s

14 Damar「iond Ivo「y

15. 」8h「ia」one;

16. 」∂h「ius」ones

17. Oante○○ian Co=ins

18. K「istieCo=ins

19. Wiliie ReneeTayIor

20. EvanTayio「

Page 16: NAAIP American Aborigine International Affidavit and Notice Foreign Trade Scanned

121. Evan Co「dellTaylor

122. CassandraTaylor

123. Ma「lanaTaYIor

124. AntonY βaさbY

125. Antony Bagby,Jr.

126.丁amほCh而tian

127i KaylaTaylo「

128. Nivah Christian

129. NevaehGIover

130. Heath」amaITaYio「

131. Ga「e競」0neS

132, TrlSta Coi冊S

133. SerenityHar「ison

134. AIvshaCo帖s

135. NICkeyTavl°「

136. MarecusTaylor

137. Rod丁aYI°「

138. Danie=eTaylor

139. BettinaW冊am§

14O. Pa「isDaneliGunn

141.しOndon Summer Granber「γ

142.しata「潤HarthW=IIamS

143. Tarjuen HarthWi用ams

144. Qu川taza W冊ams

145. 」atarlW冊ams

146. AlexiusW冊ams

147. Ch「応的打切u∂n B「own

148, Cha「IeneW冊ams

149. Meiody Maxiしyon

150. Aisha Meche=e Lyon

151. Ahmard Abraham Stephen, 」r

152. Mγlan MuhammedしYOn

lS3. F「ank“n Dougla§W剛ams

154. VashundaOnek∂ WI=iams

l与5. 」atarIAntoineWi=iams

156. Brod「ick W冊ams-Webb

Ver【co Antawn W用はms

F「ankiin Douglas W冊ams,」r

」alen MarqulS W冊ams

Ma「keγSha Suneice 8「°Oks

Cada「rius Shuntre層Cox

162. MadisonWiiiiams

163. Mason W冊ams

164. K’maya w細ams

165. B「eyden Wl用ams

166. Ca「IyW潮ams

167. Chloe’Mo「shaeW=ilamS

168. Aaron W輔ams

169 しeneiIA.Wiliiams

170. Ka「onAW川ほmS

17l. E「lkaD.W冊ams

172. MorganW冊ams

173. Kenyion W冊ams

174. TiOnnaWi=iams

宣フ与 丁odoji多」awiiIia巾s

176. Kevon W川iamS

177. Kava「Iγha Wl=lamS

78.丁akiYaW踊るms

79. Parthenia G=more-Wl=lamS

80. Roxie Parthenia Yo…g-G=mo「e

8L 」aneYoung

82. PeteYoung

83. Hen「YSiaYden

184. Parthenia G=more-Wi=iamS

185. 師zabethGilmore

Grady GjImo「e

Freddie GiImore

Peggy Gilmore

Albert Giino「e・Thomas, 」r.

Fred Douglas Wi臨ms, Jr.

訓a Mae Johnson-W冊ams

A. T. Glimore

Ben用e Charles Wiiiiams

De「「ick Ca5tOn

Dane Caston

Donthrese Henderson

CoIteこW「Ight

Demarco W「励t

Kashira Pettigrew

A直eisha Wjnston

201. B「∂ndonCa「te「

202. C「γStalW捕るms

203. DannyHarris,Jr.

204. 」oeBoiton

20与, Ca「ios Eason

206. Arl∂ndres PrlnCe Simpson

207. Ha「「YP○○ie

208.各vaしa章oya P○○Ie

209. Cynthia RobillSOn

210. Booke「T. Poole

211. 」ohn Edwa「d Pooie

212. W冊e Edward Pooie

213. Bes§ie丁inion

214. S∂kima Eb∂nS@lIh EI Bey

之15. F「anci5Sava=

216. SaaShaiemI.M.BeY

217. TiffanY Chando川que Barton-Tr†Ce

218. Zi°n Sah'Ra Gales

219, 」ah’しia Beauty Seegars

220. RodneYJo「「ad Porte「

221. Natasha Currγ Porter

222. TγriqAhmad Porter

223. DionderTyreil Cu「ry

224. Raheem Akba「McM用0∩

225. F「antoISe Annma「ie

226. Prosper McMi=on

227. Farah Noel McMliion

228 StevenVincent McMIIIon

229. MIChe=eAnd「ea McMl=on

230. 」asmine BrIonna McM川on

231. J8qUanVincent McM=Ion

232. 」∂YdenSteven McM川0∩

233. Tajau…a Denise Washington

234. RontaWashingtOn

235. 」ajaunna MonquieMcMi=on

236. Antonlo Bema「dWi=is

237. Autumm MarieW冊s

238. A「iana Symorle WiiIIS

239. AntonioW冊i

240.丁e「「Yしaw「ence Be∩§°∩

241. KimberleY Benson

24之.丁a「aniece Ha「「iS

243. Frenchie Har「ls

244. 」aniCe Marle French-C「avens

245. She=eyDe川SeC「avens

246. 」ames Winfield用French

247. Sarahi SalmaS Winfield

248. Leslie Karen Winfieid

249. Andretta Elalne Cravens

250. ShangeOutlaw

251. Pat「ieiaAnn Cravens

252. しeCa「ra Deche=e Robi∩son

253.しeCo「len Deaund「e Fo「d

254. CarlosAndre Ford

255, AniyaJane=e RoblnS。n

256. EmeryLYnelle Nolen

257. Brionna」eaniseW冊ams

258. 」’Mia Patrice Nolen

259. Elyssa Lachelie Nolen

260. Ma「lSSa」an=le NoIen

261. 」e「emyah Du「e= Nolen

262. 」aleah MarleCieveland

263. Henry DeWavne Cravens

264.京enee Fo「dCraven;

265. Zacha「y Cravens

266. Asia Chanee Cravens

267. RICha「d Bernar「 Cravens

268. Giorla McPherson C「avens

269. Quinn Bernar「Cravens

270. MariahC「avens

271. KyiahA. Cravens

272. Keesha Nicoie Cravens

273.尺Yan8asei

274. Kie「a Base1

27与. 」oshuaC「avens

276. Shiriey Cravens

277. Regina C「avens

278. ∴Roberta Hemandez

279. MigueI Hemandez

280. F「edaW=son

281. LaKenya Bennett

282. To「「is Fred F「ench

283. Janice各「ench

284. GregorYTYrOne French

285, Omega RisieyFrench

286. AiyseGIama French

287.しisa Ma「ie Walker.Dumas

288. AlecDumas

289. Shannon Dumas

290. AIies Dumas

291. ShaYDuma5

292. MliesDumas

293. Gr∂ntDumas

294. Steph∂nie E蘭ne French

295. Aiexande「Dewayne Duma§

296. Ocie LeeW冊amsF「ench

297. Bonnie Ma「ie Baker

298. G「ego「γ Charles Baker

299. 」effreγ Dewayne French

300. Chandra Janetta Giimo「e

301. T「yson MalikWatson

3O2. 」oe HendriX French

303. W順eJaγ F「ench

304. She=a He「「°n F「ench

305. Mo用ca 「「ench

306. Torrez (T.」.〉 F「ench

307. Juanita打ench Davis

308.丁Ia Sc○ggInS

309. RICkγS. Wi=iams

310. AubreYDawnW冊ams

311, Rγann 」ynn Wiiliams

312.しa「「YGeneW冊ams

313. MaiaYaW冊ams

314. Travson lsaiahW冊ams

315. Christophe「W冊ams

316.しawsonW冊ams

317. Anlta」 Prince

318.丁は「raしajua正ones

319. 」ordan Marce= Brown

320. T「avis Kennedy

321. HavenSe「enityKennedy

322, KallSVernita Kennedγ

323. Keith Kennedγ

324 DanaKennedY

325. ShannonTy「One KennedY

326. 」ustin Blake Kennedy

327. Sha… Kennedv

328. Annieしois Eze=

329. 」8meSEzeli

330. HaroidWaike「

331. 「「ankしOuiS Waike「

332. 」oan Cha「ioくくe Rank爪

333. Ch「iStianWalke「

334 Autumn Mariah Waike「

335. Madeleine CaroIWaiker

336. TerrYVanessa Kennedy

337. 」eremy Steven Waiker

338. RalphCharles Hammond

339. Sarah St「iCker McCanless Young

340. Sa「ah Rebecca Ha調mond

341. Shawn Lawrence Glibert

342. Kalanl Go「don.Giibert

343. RaIph CharIe§ Hammond,」r.

344. Madalvn VICtOria Hammond

345. DavidW潮am Rogers

346. 」esふca Ann Roge「s

347. B「Iamaしeigh Rogers

348. Cha「iotte AnnaIeigh Roge「s

349 Tobias Denman Roge「S

3与0. B「Uce Hammond

351. KatrirほFai「iight Rogers

352. Gwen GolightIY Hammond

353. Gwene= Hammond Marett

354. Vershe= Hammond Libow

355. しeeHammond

356. Paul ChrISaWn

357. TγIer ChrISaWn

358. Luke Ch「Isawn

359. Ca「abeth Ch「isawn

36O. Po「te「」ennlngS

361, Ch「lStOPher JennlngS

362. Catherine E. FIoyd-」ennlngS

363・郎zabet=ennin8S

364. W冊am」ennlngs

365. Michae=e…lngS

366. ∨融Y」ennIngS

367. VictorほJemings

368. B「ad」ennings

369.しuke」e∩両ngs

37〇・ Ra甲Jenn-n6S

371. Pat」enh周鯵

37之. Dennis」ennmgS

373.しaYia」enningS

374. RoYしeeKent

Page 16 of21

375. Ter「anceしashun Kent

376. Pea州e Mae Kent

377 JamesH.Waller

378. GaYD.丁aYie「

379.しatisha Rodge「

380. DaphneR.Kent

381i MeIanieN.Kent

382. Seteria Mi=er

383.しat「涌a D.しYOn5

384. SherrIe Backer

38与.丁∂範nyRodge「

386. Deangleo Kent

387. PastγParri§h

388. Da「ron Easiey

389. SeanCiaY

390. Howre Rodger

39l. TonY」ones

392. 」udYKent

393. Dar「yl Kent

394. RusseII Kent

395. TommieTaγlor

396. AnthonyTaYIor

397. MikeWa「e

398, Tonl Glich「est

399. TommySし冊van

400. 」anICeAiien

401. Se8nSmIth

402. Kim京od8e「

403. Kind「a Peacock

404 80nnie Kent

405. AIice Robinson

406. Chet KibbIe

407. Ch「is Mason

408. Cia「issa Davi§

409. CodYMathlS

410. AIana MathlS

411. JackIe Mathis

412. Tommie Mathis

413. Cha「lesHodges

414, Avatara Qtub

415. 」amesTucker=

416 JanlenTucke「

417. DanieiG「eene

418 StacyしIttie

419. StanienkinS

420.丁akia各a「is

42L !velena丁ucke「

422. Gio「ねTucker

423.しindaTucker

424, W冊eAnde「son

425. CYnthia Anderson

426. John丁ucke「

427. HalbertTucker

428. YvonneTucker

429. Roiand Cumbee

430. ReginaTucker

431. Cu「〔isA=en

432. DanaWi=lam

433 」anaWi=iam

434 Yv°寄れe Kent

43与.丁imW°od

436. Ter「yCo=ins

437. TammySalage

438. Shameka Kent

439, Ro」ena Parke「

440. Rhonda 8acke「s

441. PauiWavne

442. Ma「shallSanders

443. Benjamin Hardy

444.しydIa Goddess B∂「be「

445. Star Payne

446. Sto「m PaYne

447.さる直h PaYne

448. CharityBarber

449. SoIadin副

450. AnthonyHendrix

451. Ba「bara Hend「IX

452・ RobertDave叩O「tClay

4与3. Anth°nγ且a「Is

454. Anna Ma「le AIston-」one§

455. Kevin」ones

4与6. S∂m」ones

457, V葛YianJone§

458. Sara Jesimey Kruzan

459. James B「e∂kfieid

46O. Ge「aIdine BreakfIeld

461. Ma「te Breakfleld

Page 17: NAAIP American Aborigine International Affidavit and Notice Foreign Trade Scanned

462. Ma"kGreenfieId

463. BreggieGiikey

464. Ro面eceG順ev

465.帥que臆Rjcha手dson

466. Marce=us Richa「dson

467. Dewayne TarceI) Richardson

468.しasonYa Richardson

469. Islah Riche「dson

470. Brittany Richardson

471. AiiceColeman

472. WandaW細ams

473. G「enekaW冊ams

474. TerryDian[G「een

475. TaγlorMonet Done§

476. Tie「ani Kγndal Glies

477.丁e叩Waγne6「een

478. NevaehYvonneG「een

479. Ter子YWayneGreen用

480. Endya Monique Green

481. 1mani Monique Hobson

482. 」oneya Deona Hobson

483. Essence Charity Green

484. IkeaSkiG「een

485. Evelvn Richardson

486. Wi"iam Richa「dson

487. Anthony Richa「dson

488. Anthony RICha「dson

489. 」ustm Rich台「dson

490. C∂「OIYnSidneY

49宣. Rashae HaYSie億

492. 」0nae HaγSlett

493. Chasrty Hayslett

494. 」ohnnYC. Da高s

495. 」ohnnγC. Davis,」r.

496. Eb°nγ R°与e Be=

497  Mirla BeIi

498. DarrenBe=

499. Ga「「ianW訓s

与00. Erique」e「maine Rreha「dson

501. Jasmine Tia「a Richa「dson

502. Deja Monae Davis

503. Antonio Ma「quette DavIS

504. MarcusMarquan Wlison

5O5. KeiseyAndrea’wiIson

与06. 」oshua 「Ife「

与07. ○○hnaGreen

508. RegirraldSmith

SO9, DionneSmith

与10. 」one((Sco請

う11. 」ason Smith

512. KennethJordan

513. 」a「OdSmith

514. Cana」o「dan

515. SummerSmlth

516. MiiesSmith

与17.丁iannaSmith

518. Aml「Scott

519. AmarisScott

5之O.しau「enSmith

521. BenjaminSmith

522. RodneyW順ams

523. 1banAbduiAdams

524. Charies Per「y Westbrook

525. Renika Boyiand

526. Kend「ick 」oeari Hubbard

527. Ke=v Benford

与28. Ad「ianSuga「s

S29. Brianna Richardson

530. DanYelleWa「d

531. Dashaunna Ward

532. Catund「a Ple「Ce

533. TiemyPugh

534. LittIeton Price

535. MichaeI ChrlStOPher PrlCe

536. Katherine Carte「 P「ice

537. Wjiiie」ames Price

538. Gerald P「lCe

与39. A面h°nVP「ice

540. JefferY P「ice

う4l. 」aNi5 P「I⊂e

542.戸io「a P「lce-戸a「me「

与43. Sha「on戸a「me「

544 AI♭eIてFarnne「

54与. VincentFarmer

与46. pameia Fa「me「

547. Thressa Farme「

548. Dclris P「lCe-Bowen

549.∴George Bowen

S50. Gretta Bowen

551. E厄lnBowen

552. Ma「joriePrice-Pitts

与与3.丁onYPI償S

うら4.丁°nYa P敗S

与与与.了im°thYp皿s

5与6. T「aceyPitts

うら7.丁「icほPitts

558. Myrtis Vi「g面a P「ice-Waiker

559. FrederlCk Price

560.しashawn lsom

561. Alfonzo Isom

与62. EbonYWaIke「

563. Vivian lIean PrlCe-King

与64. Ma屈5Sje Ch「ist活e P「ice

S65. ShermanGordan

与66. 」oYCe KennedY

567. Glenn Mu「dock

与68. Gienn Mu「dock,」「.

569. Deon Murdock

570. TommY Ma「tln

571. Trina Me∂de

572. Seven Martin

573. OmarHakim

574. MichaeI Dougias

575. Kevin Douglas

576. WesleyMcKi…ey

577. AnthonY ′Teeno’’FIowe「s

578. Anthony Wende= Gentlγ

579. Shunta Gentry

580, Vero川ca Nichoie FIowe「S

581. AramisGent「y

582. RobertしeeYoung

583. 」immyしeeYoung

584. Ked「icA=en

与8与. 」ames Hu什man

586. Shamu§ Darling

587. Khepe「a Verona Brooks

与88. Cかれ丁年Yl○○

589. CIa「issa DavIs

590. Brenda Rutledge

与91. PercY」agge「S

592.引d「ed Meadows

与93. RodneyWiiIiams

594. RodneyW冊ams,」r.

595. NlamahW用iams

与96.丁ommY」°「dan

597. EddieW冊ams

598, MaryWj=iams

与99, Cu「tiS 」ee○○nes

600. Henok-BenYisra引

601.巨benHen°k

602. Seymond Raggs

6O3. AnthonyHayes

604. Charlotte Baker

605. Ke「w画しOCkett

606. Ma「Y」°Ckeくく

607.しatoshaW踊る調s

608. Ma而OB「i既s

6O9. Lawrence King

610. PatMar[ln

611. Robe「tGooden

612. Ph冊pHudson

613. MichaeI Clayton

614 Michaei ⊂iayton,J「.

615. MicariusCIayton

616. Ma「IahClayton

617. Pat「ICiさAnnSmith

618. KortneYSmlth

619. F「ed「ick RovWhaium

620. A「kee ClaYtOn

6之1. JoeiCa直e「

622. 」oel Carter,」「.

623. Frederick Hii1

624. Rh°ndaしau「ie Hi=

625. 」erryMe「Cer

626. RaIph Me「Ce「

627. Che「yl Mercer

628. Ke…eth Ave「y Walker

629. CeclilaWaIker

630. AIphonsoWaiker

631, 」°elWaike「

2. KevinWalke「

3.丁ishWaike「

4. WendyWashington

5. CharIes WashlngtOn

636. Tori Washington

637. Came「On Washington

638.日°Wa「d Bond

639. Ca「o凪ashford

640. Micheile」ahari Adji「i

641. Omari Miles

642 しeroγGreen

643.しekeitha SimmOnS

644. L=lianSimmons

645. LucasSimmons

646. LeeSlmmons

647. Thayia Mareen Du∩son

648. Eric Kyle Dunson

649. ian KYIe Dunson

650. ErlCa Dunson

651. JessieW冊am50n

652. G°idわしaceY

6与3. De両seしろceY

654. 」amesE.しaceY

655. Iohnn Bu=ock

6与6. Ka「en Mobiey

657.しa「「YDYe

6S8. BiadieDYe

659, CynthIa Dγe

660. )sslahJe「Ome Bey

661. Wi=lem Muhammad Bev

662.各veIYn丁h°爪aS

663.∴B「enda LIovd

664. Richard Buntvn

66与. Aa「onHahn

666. MaryHolmes

667. Tamryn Hoimes

668. Joe Gent「γ,」「.

669. Hen「yGentry

670. 」e「「iGent「γ

671. Ma「lonGentiY

672.しatash∂ Ma「ia Gentry

673. She「ylGent「y

674. Ma「Yしuc紺eGentry

675. Armeta Newsom

676. Byr0n Newsom

677. HoraceNewsom

678. Kylan FIowers

679.しaiIa Fiowers

68O. Monyette FIowers

681. 」avle「 BaiIev

682. JavIe「Bailey,」「.

683. WaiterB都IeY

684. TaurusBaiiey

68与. MarzieThomas

686. RandvWade

687. Raymondし. Watson

688. Sha「onA.Watson

689. 」ohnS.Wa書son ’’

690. Sadie βa「ros

691. MatthewA.Watson

69之. PameIaWats°∩

693. MonlqueWatson

694. Demet「fus Watson

695. O=viaWatson

696.各「icaWats°n

697. Der「Ick Watson

698. McKen乙ie Watson

699. AmI「Wat§°∩

7OO. Larona Pasqua1

701.しa「on Pa§qu3i

70Z. AIden Pasquai

703. Andrea 」.Watson

704. DeandraWatson

70S. Diondre Watson

706. B∂ileyWatson

707. 」ay」uanAWatson

708. 」aY」uan Watson-Guiilen

709. Aiice Watson-Guiiien

710. Nytasha Watson

711. Ma郎sonW8tSOn

712. MasonWatiOn

713. しave「aWatson

714. 」amlelWatson

71与. ∴B「aeden Wats°n

716. しeon Watson

717. GIenn Cardozo,Sr.

7軍8・馴enn C貧「d9押IJ「・

719. Aiien Cardozo

72O. AliCy「us Bey

721. Rosema「γ Wimberly

722i Sara BeyGreen

Page 17 of21

723. AntonlaWimberIy

724. Yas肌BeY

725. NatskiwusBey

726. Marvin Wimberly

727. And「ew WimberIy

728. Na章ian Wjmbe「iy

729. Amexia Wimberly

730i NallaWimberly

731. TamlraBey

732. AvIanaBey

733. Emia8eY

734. Keshawn BeY

73与. Ha5San βevG「een

736. Sha調a「8eγG「een

737 NatiaBeYG「een

738. Shamia BeyG「een

739. Ro…ieWimberiy

740. SlnWlmberlγ

741, JohnAthan B. Hunter

742. BishopSaIiS;hwade

743.帥OYRobe「son

744, Ch「isteen Roberson

745. Ca「Iisaしanette Roberson

746. Ebony Deshay Thomas

747. Cierra Royetta Robe「son

748 KenyaShaneII Roberson

749. 」akese」ama「 Robe子らon

7与0. GIo「ia」ean Robe「son

751. DormelWiIson

752, Zeima Lee Me「riii

753. LeroYHubbert

754. Le「OyColman

755. Christeen Hubbert

7与6. Zy嶋aW厭ed

757. jalしicia Roberson

758. Sond「a MIche=e Malone

7与9. SusleA Howe=

760. Charley Claud Howeli

761. Katie Mae Howe= McAIpin

762. MinnIe Mae Howe=McK活ney

763. Bessie Lee Howe= Parke「

764. Wi"ie Mae FuItonSeldon

765. 」e「ome Nathanieiしoinei Fulton

766. Te「「ance Morris Robert§On

767. Shawanda McKinneY

768. Patricia McKinnev

769. 」acquellne McKlnney

770. Shi「IeY McKinneY

771. Sondra McCooi-Hopson

772. Che巾M仁C○○I

773. Sharon R°dge「s

774,しuches McKi肌eY, J「.

775, Andrew McKlnneyHoweI1

776. 」∂調eS McK涌neYHowe=

777. MaぐMcC○○I

778. 」osephine HowelI

779. Andrew Howe=

780. Wi=iam RossHowe=

781. Rosie Frankiln Howe=

782. Sande「sSさvage,丸

783. Sande「sSmith

784. Maurice Savage

78与. Mau「ice ;avage, 」「

786. Elizabeth Tucke「

787. しOretta Blue

788. Barbara Rayford

789. Clさ「ence Savage

790. Angeia Savage

791. Yve億e戸「ank=n

792. Tyier Franklin

793. DorothYHarpe「

794. HenryHarper,Sr.

795. Yvette Frankiin

796.丁YIe「Frankiin

797. Hen「γ日a「pe「,S「.

798. Anarnia DavIs.魅unt

799. Reuben Wγatt DavIs

800. Christophe「 Benjamh Davis

801. Angeleka Lynn Davis

802. Joseph Thomas Dav)s

8O3. 」ohnpauI David Davis

804 RIchIeJeanett McCombs

80雷● 削Cha「d仙術南的eY節

806.引eYeSY. Reeves

807. BettY A. Reeves-W冊ams-Rohadfox

808. RIchard E. Reeves

809. ErskineA. Reeves

Page 18: NAAIP American Aborigine International Affidavit and Notice Foreign Trade Scanned

810. Thurston Marshal Reeves

811. Ch「is E. Reeves-Wallace

812. BridgetA. Reeves

813. 」osephVmCent Reeves

814 RichardA. Reeves iii

81与 酬oitScott Reeves

816. A「活etteし.尺eeves

817. E「icke R. Reeves

818. Reta I「IS HoIIday-Reeves-Coe

819 しeva lmara McCombs

820. Kemeth Flamigan McCombs

821. Keegan Flan印gan McCombs

82之. ima「a」anae Coe

823. lndeaしOuise McCombs

824. Maxine E. Bailey

825, Maxwe= Baiしey

826.しγdiaS. McComb5-Ha「rlngtOn

827. Marvin Ha「rington

828. K「istopher Mau「ice Harrington

829. Da「「ion PatrICk Ha「…gtOn

830. Aa=vah HarringtOn

831.しeonides R. Har「lngtOn

832. TYrOn Dixon

833. E用ottMatthewDixon

834. SydneyMaya DIXOn

835. Christophe「 Washington

836. しa’MonICa DlXOn

837.丁附anYD寂on

838. Doiores Dixon

839. ClariSSa Diane DlXOn

840. Ronald K. DIXOn

841. Ga=Dixon

842. StさcYDixon

843. Mandei Dixon

844. Ashton Le’Ambe「 DIXOn

845. Josh Robinson

846. DestinyDixon

847. Cassandra Dixon

848. Kevln C. DIXOn

849. 」∂netDixon

850. !miiyDixon

851. Ga「YDIXOn

852. BIilyDixon

8与3. G「egDixon

8与4. 8Y「°n Dixon

8S5. StephanieDixon

856. Aub「eyDIXOn

8与7. M8「CUS巨. Dixon

8与8. Ba「b∂「a D了xon

8S9.しa「「yDixon

860. KathYD教XOn

861. Valanda Dixon

862. Carolyn KayDiXOn

863. Ge「ald Looney

864. Keith D用a「d

865. Berna「d DllIa「d

866.∴Ke「けD用∂「d

867. Angie DilIa「d

868. 」oe Ea「i D=iard

869  Deio「es D冊a「d

870. Mild「ed D紺a「d

871. Be「恢∂ HiCks

872. Shane=e Hamilton

873.丁ommγ RjdieY

874. Bi「dieJohnson

875. VICkie Dixon

876. Ma「tha 「o「d

877. Paullne MaryFord

878. MartinThaddeus Ford

879. OIga MaryFo「d

880. Marvei Marie Fo「d

881.師zabethSte=y

88之. F「ancisSte=Y

883. Ma「YしOulSe CarmiChaeI

884. Rita Ma「y Barksdaie

88S. Cosmas」oseph Casti=e

886. Adam」oseph Cast川e

887. 」oseph Cas周Ie

888. CIeveland Cast用e

889,しeonard 」oseph Castl=e

890. Heien MaryDejan

891.郎zabeth Ma「yChavez

892. ∴」ennife「 P○○.e「 Cast川e

893. Arnold Cast用e

894. 」erome Ma「quise Cas細e

895. Sharonしeah Castl=e

896. Donye」oaquln Castl=e

897. 」udeSte=Y

898 」ulieA=en

899. Net「a Ba「ksdaIe

90O. ChrlStyAtkmS

901. Rod Barksdaie

902. Rosaiind Ba「ksdale-Henry

903. Karen MitcheIi

904. RacheIG「aves

90与. DほneEnsieY

906. PrestonSte=y

907. TerrYCastiiie

908. 」ackie M○○n

909. HenrYDejan

910. Remington Cas捕e

911. Martha Louise Cast間e

912. J〇七肘鉄e時

913. BenjamInCas帥e

914. Martin Cast用e

915. MichaeIt∂St用e

916. PiereWashington Ford

917. Caml=e Byrd

918. Washington Ford

919. EdSte=y

920. Dolores LlVaS

921 NettieCo冊∩5

922. Ronald StaceyHo=oway,Sr.

923. Ronald StaceY Ho=oway, Jr.

924. Eugene 」. Crawford Stewa「t

92与. Doi°「eSA冊

926. RomenaA用

927. Ma「cus」erome Baldwin

928. Naeem Baldwin

929. Tatyana A. Baldwin

930. MIChae=e「ome Baidwin用

931. MichaeI」erome Baidwin,」r.

932. Edwa「dSequOVah Beeler

933. MiaWaiela Rosa Beele「

934. Samad Beeler

935 Sama「aTsalagl BeeIer

936. Sand「aしeticia BeeJer

937. SamuelW.Beeler用

938. SamueiW. BeelerlV

939. Samuel W. Beeler,」r.

940. MeI《ssa Be「「γ

941. AnissaApriiYnn Be「ry

942 GiadvsCo「aBe「甲

943. CIoriceA. Blnn

944. KI「kB川∩

94与. KYlenS.巳Inn

946. MaYa8inn

947. MIChaelT.Blnn

948. Ambe「 Boyd

949. Maxwe=T. Boynton

950 MIChaeI Boynton

951. ToniM.BoYntOn

952.しInda A. Boynton

953. 」ackCa「SOnA. Boynton "

954. Blanche E. Brown

955. 1vy Darcel Brown-Lynn

956. Deesha」enae Bu「ns

957. 」aiAnd「ew Malik Burns

958. DanIe=∂meSCarro=

959. KimberlyA. Car「o=

960. Co「a R. ChandIe「

961. Robin Eiaine Chandler

962. CaroIvn Mae Church

963. AudreyCooper

964. HeatherCooper

965. AngeiicaCrlPPen

966. CherlZa「C「lPPen

967. 」oshua K. C「ippen

968. Ch「istian Daviia

969. Dawn Davila

970. しO「en之O Dav=a

971. Shirley Lee Davis

972. Aroz H. Defreese

973. DanieI Defreese

974. Nadia Defreese

975. Sumando「F. Defreeze

976. AdeIiaYvonne Dennis

977. Ramona Ma「ie Dunkley

978. Aiexander Carl Est「e=a

979 kYIe 〔dwh巳sl「e=8

980. Edwin Carlos Estre帰,」r.

981. BeverlYAnne Friend

982. Da印elE.Friend

983. 各「ik」.F「Iend

984. CaroI Momingstar Ga「dner

98与. 」°hn DevidGa「dne「

986 Ke=vA.Garrett

987. Veronica G∂「「ett

988. Cuyler Iarper

989. 」aden Harper

990. Latece Harper

991. MicheieA. Harper

992. He「manita Vaierie Ha「「is

993. Bonnieしee HIgginbotham

994. Valerie刷1

995. RobertW.H出川

996. RobertW. Hi=,Jr.

997, RobertW. HI=, Sr.

998. Rhonda L. Hoffman

999. Aki耳eル鵬y

lOOO. Andre’ph冊p Ho=oway

lOOl. Casey C, Hoilowav

lOO2. Clarence W冊am Ho=oway

lOO3. Dakota Ho=and Ho=oway

lOO4 ErIka Ly… Ho=oway

lOO5. Garcla P. Ho=oway

lOO6. 」arrett工Hoiiowav

lOO7. 」e冊eYし. Ho=oway

lOO8. Mayaしouise Ho=oway

lOO9. SterIlng MIChaei D. Ho=owav

lOlO. Stephen W潮am Ho=owaY

IOll. Tayio「I用§e Ho=owav

lO12. The「esa Ann Horan

lO13. Denise R. 」enkin5

1014. Fi°「enCe MaY」enk血s

lO15. 」acque冊e A. 」enkins

IO16. Tiara D. 」enkins

lO17. Herman L. Jenkins, 」r.

1018. KathYJo Kane

lO19. Chantay A. Kelier

lO20.王手iei C. Ke=e「

lO21. C"fford Dar Khabbaz

lO22. Regln∂ lnez Lee

lO23. Maul-1ce Warrenしee 」「

1024. Amyしeonh∂rdt

lO25.しeynaしeonha「dt

lO26. B「l∂n Robe「tsしOgan

lO27. 」avenしYnn

lO28. Kam「°nしY…

1029. Kathv Mさnn

lO30. 」im∂n Ma直i∩eZ

lO31. Charles McG冊ck

lO32. Thomas P. McG冊ck

lO33. Amir Arthur Moore

lO34. Monifa Nicole Moore

lO3与. Oma「i Quent活M°0「e

lO36. BemiCe R. Mo「lZZO

lO37. Tara Mo「IZZO

宣O38. Asa R. Mo「「is

IO39. KayIa E. Morris

lO40. Kelthし. Mo「ris

lO41. Janice Annette Mozee

lO42. Charles Eurgen Nunn

lO43. Grant P. Nunn =

1044. G「antP. Nunn =1

1045. 」acob DavId Nunn

lO46. Talia Lee B O’Re甲y

lO47. 」ane=郎se ReeveY

lO48. She「nett Reevey

lO49. Arleen Richards

lO50. Donna M. RIChards

lOSl. Eric Richards

lO52. Eva RIChards

lOS3. Wesley Richards

IO54. Che「γ=vy Roberts

lOSS.し冊an Annette Roberts

lO56. Edwin A. Robe「ts Sr.

1057.戸eiiCIa R°Ckk0

10与8 AIexander Michael Rose

lO与9.しau「aしYnn R°Se

lO60 Rγiee EIiz∂beth Rose

lO61. ZacharY DanieI Rose

lO62. 」azmine A. Rouse

lO63. Pamel∂S. Rouse

lO64. RacheiA Rouse

lO6与. Christopher A. Rouse

l°6e. Cha「Ie5 A. R°u5e用

宣067. DonaIdし. SaiS

lO68. DYian Sass

lO69. 」さmes」. S3iS

lO70. Kenneth Sass

Page 18of21

1071 Tammy Lee Satte「

1072. Nora Ann Schreck

lO73. AmY Segai

lO74. Cynthiaしu SegaI

lO75 Geo「ge F「∂nk SegaI

lO76. D∂Wn Shauge「

1077. 」ance Shauge「

lO78.丁onY Shauge「

lO79.丁°nY Shauge「

lO80. AIγSSa Sim°nS

lO81. Har°id K.Smith

lO82. Kha= A. Smith

lO83. Robe「t W. Spradley

lO84. 」oseph Sp「adleY, 」r.

1085 Connie Stockiand

lO86. Dak°くるk St°CkIand

lO87. DestIny Stockiand

lO88. Dustγ Stockiさnd

lO89. Michae=oseph StockIand

lO90. Christopher A. Stout

lO91. Sh∂「On Renee S川d8Y

lO92. Vi「g面a ElaineTanner

lO93. Ke=eigh Ann T「acy

lO94. Shannon Marle T「acy

lO95. 」oanne T「acy-CriSante

lO96 Kaitlyn irlSh TrambIe

lO97. Kaleb Rashad T「ambie

lO98. Somme「 Monique Tramble

lO99. 」o Am Eiizabeth Wame「

llOO. Devon WeiSman

llOl. Melissa D.W紺はms

llO2. Tahlia Wi=iams

llO3. Tlanna W冊ams

llO4. David E. Winston

llO5.しaurln A. Wo=an

llO6. Richard And「ews

llO7. RIChard And「ews, 」r.

1108. Daniel Andrews

llO9. Steven Andrews

lllO. Roxanne Andrews

lnl Phv=§SAndrews

ll12. Maria A A「mwood-」ohnson

ll13. PariS Edwa「d A「mwood

ll14. Mark Edwa「d Armwood

ll15. John Edward A「mwood, 」r.

1116 Mark Edwa「d Armwood

ll17. Ma「k Edwa「d A「mwood, 」「.

1118. 」ohn Edwa「d Armwood, 」r.

1119.帥Ca D. SpinneトA「mwood

l120. 」ohn Edward Armwood =1

1121. Starrla N. Armwood

l1之2. P8「はらdwa手d Ar調w○○d

l123. Pa「lS」’quay Armwood

l124. E母ah Jaden Armwood

l125. Mayon Pa「ls Armwood

l126. 」udah Caleb Armwood

l127. Samue圧zra Armwood

l128. 」oshua Noah A「mwood

l129. Ma「k Edward Armwood, 」「.

1130 Mark Edward Armwood

l131. Kenneth Armwood

l132. Edna 」. A「mwood

l133. Patricia Armwood-Frazier

l134, Mary Armwood

l135.しave「n Aiston

l136. Diasha AIston

l137, Torl Ande「son

l138. Ste=a Andrews-Brown

l139. Sha「netta Hunter Wi=iams

l140. Annette Armwood-Bates

l141. Raven D間°n

l142. London Dl冊on

l143. DeIone Davis

l144. NavyTyshone Burt

l14与. Nathaniel Burt

l146. Sand「a B輪xten

l147・ 」0「「a活e M・ B甲an

n48. 」au「a」. B母an

l149. Regin∂ M. B「Yan

l150. Fa柚A. B「Yan

l15L Ma「k E. B「Yan

l152. MiChael J. B「yan

l暮鵜・ J°SePh ii β「Yen

l154. Pa「is E. Bry∂n, 」「.

1155. 」oseph E. Bryan

l156. Patricia Orano Bryan

l1与7. Pa「is亡. B「y∂n

Page 19: NAAIP American Aborigine International Affidavit and Notice Foreign Trade Scanned

11与8. 」os血a M. B「yan

l159. Ma「a B「Yan

l160. Mic∂h M B「Van

l161. MellSia B「yるn

l162. Joseph E B「yan,」r.

1163. Regina M. B「Yan

l164. She「ee M. B「Yan

l165. Quiama E. B「yan

l166. Faith BrYan Peace

l167. Amber Brγan

l168 AIana Peace

l169. And「ea Peace

l170. AmlYa Peace

l171, Michae=. Brγan

l172. Lo「raine B「yan Parra

l173. Karen B「Van Antonia

l174. MiChele B「γan

l175. Amanda Brγan Martinez

l176. Samuei Bwan

l177. Mich∂ei J. B「Yan, 」「.

1178. NoeI B「Yan

u79. Pa「is且. 8「Yan川

1180. MarleTaγio「 B「Van

l181. Dominique Bryan

l182. Cha「ies M. C○○k

l183. Siddiga Amatu=ah Rahmon

l184. 」o「「a†ne C○○k

l185. Catherine V. Cook

l186. Charlene Cook.Banks

l187. Siddiga Amatu=ah Rahmon

l188 Yasin Amata「 Rahman

l189. 」annah Abdul Rahman

l190. Muhammad Abdul Rahman

l191. Quaisee「ah Abdui Rahman

l192. Lugman AbduI Rahman

l193. 」ibreel Abdul Rahman

l194. Lo「「aine Cook_ Hodges

l19S. Chukwudi Hodges

l196. Kuml Hodges

l197. Cheikh Hodges

l198. Cathe「ine V. Cook

l199. Jennah乱C°°k

1200. Av8nnah C〇°k

1201. Yamana Monbe「as∂i

1202. Cha「iene C○○k-Banks

1203. BIake Banks

1204. 」oseph BaskinS

1205. Clinte「a Ande「son

1206. 」oede= Baskins

1207. Lu「enia Baskins

1208. G「eg Baskins

1209. Kent Baskins

1210. G「eg Bask活s

1211. G「ego「γ Bask血, 」「.

1212. Christlna Baskins

1213. Kent Ba§kinS

1214.しY… Ba水ins

1215. April BasklnS

1216. Andrew Baskins

1217. Linda Tavior

1218. MarceIina Taγior Banister

1219. Stacγ TaγIo「 BanlSter

1220. Robe「〔 B「own

1221. B「e B「own

1222. Angeio B「own

1223. Bobbi Rose B「OWn

1224.しOnl C「awfo「d

1225. Refugia Ross-Crawford

1226. DoiIIe Glass-Crawford

1227. Diane Crawford

1228. DenlSe C「awfo「d

1229. DoIlie 」. Crawfo「d-Salte「s

1230. Kathe「個e Stewa「d Guthe「ie Alford

1231. Dennis Crawfo「d

1232. Robin Denise Crawford

1233. Robina AiγCe Crawfo「d

1234. Le「OY R. C「awfo「d

1235. Nicloe Crawford・Laudensledge「

1236. Do用e J. C「awfo「d Salte「s

1237. Ph潮pし. 5tewa「d

1238. Katherine Steward-Guth「le-Alford

1239. Wayne David AIford

lZ午0i Shc「「Y Ann印e cut〇両C

1241. 」oseph G. Crawford-Stewa「d

1242. Alexa Dominica Stewa「d

1243. Brittney 」oy Steward

1244. Joseph G. Stewa「d, J「.

1245. Pameia C「Omartle

1246. B「enda P「ingle Davis

1247 Malo「yPringIe

1248. Keith Prin8le

1249. De「ek Dent

1250. Bl= Evans

1251. M用ie Sanchez-Evans

12与2. Yu§ef 「a「d

1253. iYonah [a「d

1之与4. Isaiah韓「d

1255. Pat「ICia Armwood Frazle「

12S6. 」udith Frazier

12与7. Ashant圧「a乙ie「

1258. Da川ei A「mwood

1259. OthenieI Armwood

1260. Han面ah Armwood

1261. Rachaei A「爪w°Od

1262. Naomi Armwood

1263. Kim Fisher

1264. Edward Fletcher

1265. Rosita C Ross-Fletcher

1266. Owen Fletcher

1267. 」oseph Fietcher

1268. Ben」amIn Fletche「

1269. B「anice Fletcher-Moore

1270. Pheonix Moore

1271. SvdneY Moo「e

1272. Virginia Elizabeth FowIkes

I之73. Ca「oi A. Fowikes

1274. Deborah Fowlkes

1275. 」oseph Fowlke§

1276. Cu「tis Fowlkes

1277.しydia戸ow肱es

1278. Joseph Fowikes

1279. Miehael Rayvon Fowikes

1280. Andrea Bower・Gosi・Green

1281. Donei Goss用

1282. Deja Goss

1283. Dashawn G°SS

1284. Dorothy G「een, 」r.

1285. Ma「cus Lucas G「een

1286. SacaJaWea Qy訓a Kutzehe「a Howa「d

1287. Norma HarrlS

1288. Azziz Watkins

1289. Ve「o印Ca H割i

1290. Bi「die Houston

1291. Sa「ah Hol申amison

1292. 」ames-」ohnson

1293. Annie」ohnson」°neS

1294. O「a 」°neS

129与. Robe「t Folks

1296, TommyVaughn

1297. Melvin Vaughn

1298. Walter Vaughn

1299. Ma「y L. Vaughn

1300. ShirleyVaughn

13Ol. Eiaine Vaughn

1302.しave「n Vaughn

1303. 」essie 」ackson

1304 D8Vid 」ackson

1305. Kareemah K. Yusef

1306. Pat「蘭a K活es

1307. Diya M. Wadud

1308. Hajah Wadud

1309. Kamiei S. Wadud

1310. Ka「eemah K. Wadud

1311. Sha「tasha「Ta「lqah Wadud

1312. Nahla G.Wadud

1313. Pat「lCia Kines

1314. Derek AbduI Kabeer Wadud- Kines

1315. AIvin R. Kines

1316. G°「ge King

1317. Clinton Daie Lockhart

1318. 」osephlneしOCkhart

1319. Norma Mackey

132O. Theresa Ross.Mustafa

1321. O「a L. Mustafa

1322. 」arret Mustafa

1323. Raiph Miles

1324. RonaId Mlies

1325. Ph用Ne=

1326. C訓ie M Peart

1327.的wa「d Pean

1328, ViVlan Blgelow Peart

1329. Lisa Nicole Peart

1330. M合「C Pe∂h

1331. Veronica H. Peart

133之. Ma「cE. Pea直

1333. Aa屈yah Z. Peart

1334. Maisha Peart

1335. Keimal CoIon

1336. Ashantl CoIon

1337. AYan胴h BoYkins

1338. Quama「i Bovkin;

1339. 」effreyJamほon Peart

1340. Mark Carter Pierce

1341 」ohnJ. Powe=

1342. Ca「=oseph Ross

1343. Harold Ross

1344. Ca「=. Ross

1345. FIorence Ga「ner

1346. Ca「=oseph Ro§S

1347.し°ng Wa順e「

1348.日o「ence Ga「neトRos5

1349. Ha「oid R°SS

1350. Ca「=上Ross

1351. Refugla VeIencia-Ross

13与2. Ca「i」. Ro5S

1353. Mary L. Vaughn-Ross

1354. Corinda A. Ross

13う与. R°Sita C. Ross

13与6. Da「iuS工Ross

1357. Cec用a M. Ro§S

13与8. Ma「ia Ross

1359. 」orge MigueI G訓egos

1360. Mia己Ga=egos

1361. Raven Ross

1362.し=∂na C. Cont「eas

1363. Yesina E. Contreas

1364. Antonio I Moran

1365. 1sabe=a E. Moran

1366. Ambe「 Ross

1367 」aYdon巨. Ross

1368i Reagan E・」・ R°SS

1369. Sophie Maria OIivie「i

1370. Da「間S 」. R°SS, 」「.

1371 Alanna E. Ross

1372. D∂Vid」. Ross

1373.各sme「eida β. R°SS

1374. Came「en Ros§

1375.丁「acev R°SS

1376. Be=a Sadmlne

1377. D訓ie Ross

1378. Sierra Deleon

1379. AIvino Ross, S「.

1380. AIvinO R°S§. 」「.

1381. AIvencia R°SS

1382. C○○inda A. Ross

1383. Johnathan C. Ross

1384. AIice Neal Anderson.RoblnSOn

1385, Cheste「 RobinSOn

1386. Ke=y 」unn Robinson

1387. KasevAlice Robinson

1388. He「bert Aian Robinson

1389. AIvino R°SS

1390. Mildred Davis-Ross

宣391. 」o「etta Ross

1392. Ca「i工Ross

1393. Maggie Ross

1394. ConnIe C. Ross

1395. Amiana Hope W輔ams

1396. Beulah MaeSumle「

1397. Edwa「d A. Swepson, 」r.

1398. Damika S. Bodley-Swepson

1399. 1d「is A. Swepson

1400. Kem°ni D. Swepson

1401. 」udaea 」, Swepson

1402 ShanavIa E. Swepson

1403. Dorlau「a Shonfeyah Sm訓wood

1404. 」oseph G. Steward, Sr.

1405. 」eannie Smith-Stewa「d

1406, Alexa D. Steward

1407. B「ittney Stewa「d

1408. 」oseph G. Stewa「d, 」「.

1409. Xavier §teward

1410. 」ae Splnner-Jean-SlmOn

1411. Veima SpinneトKing

1412, Wiiilam SpmneらJ「.

1413. NiaSpinner

141午i両用uうら中nnc「

1415. Jasiah Spinne「

1416. 」e「emIah Spinne「

1417. Simoen Spinne「

1418. Evans Spinner

Page 19 of21

1419. Klyah Spinne「

1420.しee Spi…e「

1421」ordan Spinner

1422. Danieiie §pinner

1423. 」asmine Spinne「

1424. Linda Taylor

1425. Stacy L. Taylor Bar¥lSte「

1426. Victorio Lance TayIor

1427. Marceiina TaγIor-BanlSter

1428. Aa「on Foste「

1429. Ma「ceIina Taylor Scott

1430 Dvkorra Muhamad

1431. DIamond Watts

1432. Kah訓eeb Muhammad

1433. DlamOnd Watts

1434. Kaha=eeb Muhammad

143S. ElaI∩e Taylo「 Nahakla

1436. Chariene Tayio「

1437. Terrance Taylor

1438. Montel Taylor

1439. 」effrey Lonzo Usher, 」r.

1440. PhY用§ And「ew-C°X-Veie乙

1441. RaYmOnd Childs

1442. RIChard Cox

1443. ViCtO「 Veiez

1444. Raymond Chlids

144S. RaIf C刷ds

1446. Ch∂rlette Chiids

1447. C「YStaトCox-VeIez

1448. Talitha West - A「mwood

1449. Kevon Fieids

1450. KeiiCe Fieids

1451. Mayon Pa「IS A「mwood

1452. 」udah Caieb Armwood

1453. Samuel Ezra Armwood

14S4. 」oshua Noah Armwood

1455. Brlan White

1456. MiaWhlte

1457. Frederoea M. Watson

1458. 〔nise Warren

1459. ChriStina M. War「en

1460. 」ohnしee DaviS

1461. Demekisa Sldamo DavIS

1462. 」ayesh Davis

1463. Maiini DaviS

1464. Ger=dine Davis

1465. Be「nlCe Smith

1466. RiChard W「ight

1467. LaVe「n Scarbou「gh

1468. CorneIia Wi=iam§

1469. Thelma Crowe=

1470. Sylvia W「ight

1471. Maurice Wright

1472. Vlrginia Stewart

1473. Sheila W「ight

1474, Miehael c「owe=

1475. David Crowei1

1476. Che「yl Crowe=

1477. VernadIne WrIght

1478 Danie=e Stewart

1479. 」ulia Stewart

1480. Ca「ey C「owe=

1481. Shahn Ho旧day

1482. Kahn Ho胴ay

1483. Ronaid Weils

1484. DarIene DaviS

1485. Donald Wiids

1486. Clarnece Welis

1487. Co「iellし. Alexander, 」r.

1488. Jesseしee Alexande「, 」「.

1489. Ga汁fiana RutIedge

149O. Co「ieliしAIexander, Sr.

1491. BessI Y Aiexander

1492. 」aedon Ma「kus U=oa-Aiexander

1493. Trenton Bu=ock

1494. 」ohn W. BuiIock

1495. Ha「「v Buiiock

1496. Trenton 」. Bu=ock

1497・丁「0γ W. Bu=ock

1498. Amberし. Builock

1499. Kose Moja

1500. Ter「ance D. Bu=ock

ふ501. ci捕Wc5t

1502. Dre West

lSO3. Caroi Thomas

1504. Cari Thomas

150S. Charkia Thomas

Page 20: NAAIP American Aborigine International Affidavit and Notice Foreign Trade Scanned

1与06. Ma「ie Evans

1507, Tanlka Evans

1508. Calvln Evans

1509. DeAnd「ea Evans-Springe「

1510. Kevinとvan§

1511. Ronald Evans

1与12. Ri章a R.且van5

1513.丁anYa Reid

1514. Roshawnda Humph「eY

1515. R∂Yna「d Humphrey

1516. Monyea Crawford

1517. 」°anna C「awf°「d

1518 Nichalos C「awford

1519. Lemue圧u=e「

1520. NadねC「awford

lS21. Nejia Crawford

1522. Shawn Harvev

1523. She「「Y HaNeY

1与24. Ve「a Ha「veγ

1与Z与. 」uIius各vans

1526. Minnie Evans

1527.帥an ChrlStOPhe「 Poole

1528・ Virginia Per「y

lS29. Klng Huddleston

1530, B「enda Huddleston

1531. 」ewe= Huddleston

1532. Sha「on HuddIeston

1533. Keisha Huddieston

1534. Tracv Huddleston

1535. Nicholas Huddleston

1与36. O義之ie 」ee

1与37. She‖a Mimms

1538. Charles Dodd

lS39. Sonya Dodd

1540. 」oann B「OWn

1541. BettY MaiI°W

1与42. 」oe Gent「γ

1S43. Charles Gent「Y

l与44. Meivin Gentry

1545. Corlnie Gent「y

1546. Peggy Gentry

1547. DarIene Gent「Y

1548. Coiene Gent「γ

1549. Delo「is GentrY

1うら0. Hen「γ Gent「γ

1551. CiaY GentrY

1与与2. Be=nda Gent「V

1与53. Steve Gent「Y

1554 Howell Gentry

1うう与. B「i8n P○○Ie, S「.

15S6. Damon Poole

1557. HaroId Pooie

1558. Vernon PooIe

1559. Brian Pooie, 」r.

1560. 」ade Poole

1561. Brolnta Pooie

1562. Denay PooIe

1563. 」avon PooIe

手車三二∴ニミ

1564. Emp「ise P○○ie

1与65. Damon P○○Ie, 」「.

1566 Stephanle Monitll'e Martlne-McKlnley

1567. Ronald Kelth McKinIey

1568. Dexter Samuei McKinIey

1569. Russe=しeon Stocka「d, Sr.

1S70. Theresa Yvonne Stockard GraY

1571. Clyde Elness G「ay, 」「.

1572. Amanda Gab「iel G「ay

1573. Ryan Christopher GraY

1574. Ciai「e胡zabeth G「ay

1575. Robert Dawson Stockard, 」r.

1576. B「enda Stockard Brown

1577. Dannγ Frank Brown, Jr.

1578. Kristen LaSheI B「OWn

1579. W冊am 」ame§ Stockard

1580, BessIe Ann Francis §tocka「d

1581. 」ean Vashtie Stockardしeslev

1582. Sha「on Aileen Stocka「d Martin

1583. Sonja Miche=e Ma「tin Pooie

1584. Simone Elvse MartiIトNewbe「「γ

1585. Maiachi Vaughn PooIe

1586, Vincent lsaiah Poole

l与87. 」anice Lym Stocka「d Dargan

1588. 」amesThomas Dar8an

1589. PauI Andrew Dargan

1590. Russe= Leon Stockard, 」r,

1591. Desmond Mosi Tucker Stockard

1592. Daren Blake Stockard

1593. Alice Yvonne Teague EasleY Reid

1594 T「ena Yvette !asleγ Phillips A「mstrong

1595.しaCheka Yvette Phiilips

1596. Trena Yvette Ph冊ps

1597. RaIph 」ames Ki「by Armst「Ong

lS98. Ca「iyn Sha「ee A「mstrong

1599. Angela Denise Reid Brooks

1600. Doyle lsrael Fe「guson 」r

1601. DonnaしY… Ferguson Dean

1602. CarlaしasheIi Dean Ogene

1603. Hiiiiard Dean用

1604. A=en Aibert Black用

16O5. A=en Albert Bほck lV

1606. Arlita Black-Swanson

1607. Alberta Laveme Black

1608. Reginald Shlpman

1609. RodneY各眺

1610. Harold Beane

1611. Renata Beane

1612. Albert Bu「「oughs

1613. Ronaid Knight

1614. 」e「「γ King

161う らYivia Mai°ne

1616. Terre= Samuels

1617. Gladys L. Malone

1618. 」ohn W.MaIone

1619. La「me Maione

1620. Aa「Onし. Malone

1621. Gladvs L. Maione

1622. 」ohn W. Maione

1623.しa「ine Maione

1624. Aa「onし. Maione

1625. Ve「nette Brown

1626. KenYa MaIone

1627. Maliγa Goodwln

1628. Keviarrla Malone

1629. Shand「a Maione

1630. Malise Maione

1631.しarrY BlakeIy

1632. Vernette Brow

1633. Dorothy M∂Ckey

1634. Ced「ic Alexande「

1635. Bessle Carter

1636. Ha「「γ Pickens

1637. Mark Pickens

1638. KalYa Pickens

1639. 」avan Ha「Pe「

1640.しis亀Ha「per

1641. Amit Anuslk

1642. Nekhebt Akeba

1643. Tina Eimore- Wrlght

1644. GregorY Louis W「ight

1645. Patrick Ryan Ke時

1646. SandY」e「「y Elmore

1647. Phy=is Hutchinson

1648. Albert Hutchinson

1649. Kimberlγ Hutchinson

1650. Anita Hutchinson

1651. Sab「lna Hutchinson

1652.しuAnn Wright-Mays

16与3. C回stopher Wrlght

1654. Verdaし0ng-Thomas

1655.しarrYThomas

1656. Christopher Janison

16与7. Do「lS CIark

16与8. Sha「on 「oste「

1659. Wanda Tuggle

1660. Pamela 」amison

1661. Gienda 」amison

1662, Renee 8i「dsong

1663. Rit∂ Wicks

1664. NleCeY PankY

1665. Ma「cus Foste「

1666. Kaian戸oste「

1667. Nita戸oste「

1668.電子ic Fo§te「

1669. 」8meS F°S(e「

1670. Da面eIa戸oste「

1671. Sha「es F°気e「

1672. Kie「neY戸oste「

1673. Dwan Br○○ks

1674. China 8「○○ks

167与. Quinton 8「○○ks

1676.丁aviOUS B「○○ks

1677. Wl=le Johnson

1678 KenYa ○○hnson

1679. Niquita B「idgewate「

1680. C回stophe「 」amison

1681. Keon 」amlSOn

1682. Dashown Dye

1683. Shaquan 」amiSOn

1684. The「sa Sp「inger

168与. Ket「iana 」amison

1686. Ramira Harwe=

1687. 」eremlah 」amison

1688. lsaiah M冊er

1689. Je「emiah 」amison

1690. Ge「ik○ ○amison

1691. Ch「IStal 」amlSOn

1692. Christopher Jenkins

1693. K「istchin jenkins

1694. Chrjs 」enk活s

169与. A=en 」enk冊S

1696, Quinda「riuosThomas

1697. Reさ「a 」8m)Son

1698. Bridgett Panky

1699. 」ad Pankγ

1700. Dotsherita Bi「dsong

1701. Ced「lC Bi「dsong

170之. Nashae Bi「dsong

1703. Toya Blrdsong

宣704. Meka Wi仁ks

1705. Ladarious Wicks

1706. Thirstin WICks

1707. T「avl§ Freeman

1708. Chem用e F「eeman

1709. Demet「ius McCo「mick

1710 Tammy McCo「mick

1711. Kevin 」ohnson

1712. Sammet「ius 」ohnson

1713. KentY「a 」enk冊s

1714. Tanlah Brldgewate「

1715. 」aleen Patterson

1716. Dana 」enkins

1717, B「iana 」enkins

1718. Shantia 」enkins

1719. 」oseph Menjjva「

1720. Christophe「 Bames

1721. Tajih Yasir Phelps

1722. Che「Yi 8a「nes

1723. Tamara Phelps

1724. Rudoiph K. 」ohnson, 」r.

1725. HarrγHa"

1726. M己「Y Ha=

1727. Fa「「ah Ha=

1728. 」ames Smith

1729. Satch

園豊国

窃IIS SEAしHOしDS AND CONCしUDES A ,O.AしO叩2。.剛ONERS.

PETITIONERS AND NAAIP RESERVE THE RIGHT TO ADD ADDITIONAL SUPPORTING INFORMATION

AND NAMES TO THIS INTERNATIONAL AFFIDAVIT and NOTICE OF CONSTRUCTIVE FRAUD,

IDENTITY THEFT, UNLAWFUL CONVERSION, ECONOMIC DECEPTION and ETHNIC CLEANSING

AGAINST AMERICAN ABORIGINE PEOPLE AND DEMAND FOR IDENTITY CORRECTION.

Page 20 of21

Page 21: NAAIP American Aborigine International Affidavit and Notice Foreign Trade Scanned

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION PROVIDED TO YOU UPON REQUEST

PLEASE SEND CORRESPONDENCE AS PRESCRIBED BELOW:

Hemoc Xelup, NAAIP Nation飼

P.O. Box 1598 Murphy, North Carolina 28906

Cc as ATTACHMENT:

l. Inspector General, U.S Deparment ofCommerce Todd Zinser

2. Intemational Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde

3. ChinaFinanceMinisterLouJiwei

4. U.S. Congresswoman Maxine Waters

5. Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren

6. Secretary General ofthe UnitedNatlOnS Ban Ki-mOOn

7 Intemational Human Rights Commission ChiefAmbassador Dr. Muhammad Shahid Amm Khan

8. Chief White House Advisor Valerie Jarrett

NOTICE

Us初g 。�Ot。ry On this do`ument doe5 nOt COnSt;tute amy adhe5ion, nOr does /r oIfer cmy oboriginoI sきcmding / s請tus ;n

Cmy mOmer. 7Tle PurPOSe /br notory /s ver研cotion ond ;dent研Cation onIy 。nd to #ct estobIishmenf qfinterncJ書ionoI

5wom 4f朽dcIVit cmd not/br entrαn`e ;nto anyわreign jurisdiction.

State ofNorth Carolina /

County of Cherokee /ss.:

:hemoc-Xelup:⑥declares to be the age ofmqjority, One CaPable of making this Notice and Intemational Affidavit, and that

this Notice and Intemational A綿davit is made with clean hands in good faith, With Explicit Reservation of RIghts,

acknowledged, eXeCuted, and certified that this Notice and Intemational Affidavit is true and correct pursuant to Law,

except as to matters stated to be on infomation and belief and as to those, believes those to be true, this Twenty-Sixth Day

ofthe Twelfth Month, A.D. Two-thousand Fourteen.

Notary Public My Co孟mission Expire s

Page 21 of 21