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THE STATE OF ALASKA AND ITS LACK
OF SOVEREIGN JURISDICTION IN CASE 3DI-S89- CR.AND 3DI-S89-
CR.AND 3DI-S89- CR. We Pat Aloysius,Tomas Tinker and Raymond
Conquest Plaintiffs hereby bring a charge of genocidal harassment,criminal
confiscation of private property and acts of terrorism against the agents of
the State of Alaska acting in their capacity as Public Safety Officers Fish and
Game Agents and as various officials or agents of the Dept of Law and Officers
and members of the Court of the State of Alaska operating in conspiracy and
outside of their jurisdiction and without Tribal consent and in violation of
Aleknagik Tribal Resolution 89-04 and Aleknagik Tribal Resolution 89-05. Plaintiffs ask the Tribal Court of
Aleknagik to demand of the State of Alaska the return of all properties
confiscated by the officers and/or
agents of the State of Alaska in actions pertaining to 3DI-S89-243 CR. and
3DI-S89-244 CR. and in all those matters pertaining to all the actions of the
past, present or future that comprise the record in its entirety back to the
alleged offense or offenses in or about the year 1989. Plaintiffs further seek monetary
compensation in the amount of ten million dollars ($10,000,000.00) for actual
and punitive damages derived from loss of productive time and from stress and
embarrassment created by the actions of the defendants. Plaintiffs
Pat Aloysius,Tomas Tinker and Raymond Conquest contend that neither the
State of ALaska nor the United States of America have sovereign jurisdiction in
the matters concerning Subsistence/Commercial Regulations within the sovereign
Yupik Jurisdiction as defined in Aleknagik Traditional Council Resolution 89-04
and Resolution 86‑05 and further contends that any authority assumed by
the United States Government , or its legislative creature, the State of
Alaska, is erroneously derived from the Treaty of Cession (15 Stat. 539) 1867
and from military occupation in the defense of the territory of Alaska from
Japanese attack in 1941. Plaintiffs contend that the defense from
Japanese attack terminated with the cessation of warfare hostilities between
the United States of America and Japan and that this occurred with the signing
of the Japanese surrender Papers aboard the battleship U.S.S. Missouri on Sept.
1945. Senate
Document 152 of the 81st Congress,Second Session, "Russian Administration of Alaska and the status of the
Alaskan Natives" (1950), responded to
questions of jurisdiction arising after the end of World WarII during which the
United States built the Alaskan highway and installed thousands of troops on
new military bases which was purported to be for the defense of Alaska. Plaintiffs further contend that the United
States has not fulfilled its obligations under the Treaty of Cession of 1867,
and has exerted authority and made claims to sovereignty and title which have
not been perfected according to its own laws and declared principles. The United States and its legislative
creature, the State of Alaska, has constructively manipulated and semantically
avoided principles of law dating back to the 1500's in Papal Bulls, Spanish
Laws and Federal Indian Law, as well as the constitution of the United States,
which prohibit taking property which is held under Indigenous Title. In doing
so, it has illegally and improperly instituted laws and statutes which were and
are enforced under the direct administration of the United States government in
its quest to fulfill the final vestiges of "Manifest Destiny" and
colonial empire building in the Pacific Rim which was a conspiracy between the
Prince of Wales,WIlliam Seward, Simon Camerou and ultimately carried out in the
Treaty of Cession during which $200.000 was paid to various congressmen to
insure ratification of a document which they did not see during or before their
vote. Plaintiffs further contend that in 1867, the
indigenous tribes enjoyed all the attributes of governmental accoutrements
while exercising complete and total jurisdiction over all lands, water resources
and tribal members, while the Russians numbered less than 500 persons not
including Creoles.(Kostilivtzov Memorandum) Included in Senate Document 152 at pages 34‑36.
App.IA, are portions of Russian laws and decrees relating to Alaska and printed
in the "Complete Collection of Laws of the Russian Empire." These
decrees and laws in no way legitimize, nor do they seem to suggest legitimacy
of claim sovereignty or dominion over any lands , waters, resources or persons
other than which they occupied and possessed. A translation of the Kostlivitszov
Memorandum to the Secretary of State Seward on pages 53‑57 of Senate
Document 152 leaves no doubt as to what was transferred in the Treaty of
Cession of 1867. (Motion 6/30/89 attached.) (App.A, p. 53‑57. Russia did not sell what it did not own, and
Russia owned very little in terms of acreage. The transfer of ownership was a
ceremony attended by very few and the land which by right belonged to neither
was transferred with little notice but much fanfare. As members of the Yupik Tribal Community of
Aleknagik we bring these complaints to the Aleknagik Traditional Tribal Council
in, their judicial capacity, so that they may assert their jurisdiction based
on Aleknagik Tribal Resolution 89-04 and Aleknagik Tribal Resolution 89-05 and
we rely on their knowledge and wisdom gained from their collective indigenous
heritage; namely that they are Yupik and that all other entities that claim
jurisdiction are merely quasi legal instruments of the United States Federal
Governments' occupation and that the Sovereign/Suzerain jurisdiction of the
Yupik Traditional Council of Aleknagik predate these "occupation
generated" quasi legal governmental entities since before
"Western" recorded history and are therefore the only governmental
entity that has judicial competency to hear and judge our complaints. Plaintiffs further contend that in the
absence of tribal consent, that neither the State nor the Federal governments
have judicial competency and plenary powers to regulate subsistence/commercial
activities within the sovereign/suzerain jurisdiction of the Yupik Tribal
Communities and we hereby seek the protection of the Aleknagik Tribal Court to
protect us and the other members of its tribe, or its agents, from criminal
harassment or interference into their human rights by third party limited
liability agents as declared and identified in their Charter and Resolutions. Plaintiffs further contend that the
sovereignty, indigenous title and rights of the Yupik remains intact and are
held in trust within the oral history of the Elders to be used by the
Traditional Council of Elders in the time of need. At no time have the Yupik
Peoples surrendered or otherwise extinguished their sovereignty through
discovery, terra nullius, treaty, conquest, assimilation, waste lands or idle
lands,or by any other means or device,either covert or overt, written or oral. Plaintiffs further contend that there does
exist a body of law which purports to have jurisdiction over "Indians"
and "Alaskan Natives". We hereby state, that there are in fact, no
Alaska Natives except as may exist in legal construction. The semantic
exclusion and confusion of people derived from these definitions' perpetrated
and promoted by the federal government, and are subtle forms of dehumanization and contribute to the crime of
genocide. For if a group is deprived of its language and forced to adopt the
dominate or occupying forces language, it ceases to exist if its definition as
a political group is eliminated from the language. DEATH BY SEMANTICS. The semantics and concomitant distortions
of the law have been utilized to create a jurisdictional assertion which is
based upon the false foundation: that the Treaty of cession of 1867 was or is a
transfer or sale of the rightful God given indigenous title and sovereign
jurisdictional rights by the Tsar of Russia to the United States of America. In
legal reality, the Treaty of Cession is just as it says it is: A TRANSFER OF
RUSSIAN POSSESSIONS. Plaintiffs further contend that there is
gross error in decisions of the Federal Courts which combine to create a
political reality based on legal premise which is incomplete in its
consideration based on the backdrop and background against which legal assumptions
are made. These political assumptions have allowed and at times encouraged the
enactment of numerous laws, regulations and agreements which purport to
jurisdictionally control "Indians" and "Alaska Natives."
Plaintiffs disagree and charge that the
United States of America has allowed the Administration (Executive Branch) to
construe the constitution in such a way as to assume that Congress has plenary
powers over "Indians when in fact their is no statement or wording which
directly or indirectly assumes or purports to assume any plenary powers,
sovereignty or jurisdiction over"Indians." The regulation of
commerce, or the internal regulation of commerce,does not concomitantly carry
with it the unilateral right or authority to assume or limit the sovereignty of
Indian Tribes which is inherent, derived and exercised consistent with the
spiritual and religious integrations combined with the physical to create a
body of laws and controls which has automatically been enunciated through
actions which are incumbent on certain leaders and enacted under authority of
tribal law which insured the survival of the people through efficient
management, regulation and allocation of resources which are now termed
traditional and customary uses of substances resources and are intrinsic to
both the spiritual and physical health and well being in the maintenance and
support of the perpetual free access to the necessaries of life. This is why we
bring our complaint to the Aleknagik Tribal Court. Plaintiffs further charge that since the
United States has not perfected its claims to the title in the area defined in
the Treaty of Cession of 1867; and that since the United States' claim to have
extinguished aboriginal title are based on tenuous legal concepts, invalid points
of law and misinterpretation of precedent through distortions of dicta used as
conclusions of law, that the State of Alaska is acting in a genocidal manner to
extinguish indigenous rights and titles. Plaintiffs further contend that the Treaty
of Cession of 1867 was not a transfer of anything not owned or possessed by
Russia, and Russia only had rights on some 240 acres more or less. The State of
Alaska does not legitimately exist or have legal jurisdictional authority over
any lands, resources or rights which are under the continuing protection of the
elders who hold the history and plenary powers intrinsic to their government
exercised by them in the time of need. Congress does not have plenary powers
over the indigenous tribes of Alaska. Congress has not properly attended to
putting into place constitutional authority to legislation and administrative
fiats which amount to apartheid in fact and practice. Plaintiffs further contend that neither the
State of Alaska, if it exists, nor the United States Congress has the right to
infringe upon the sovereignty of the indigenous Yupik Tribes and/or people of
Alaska. Plaintiffs hereby state, according to the
Aleknagik Tribal Charter,that; Basic, sacred fundamental human rights are not
negotiable and contend that indigenous title is valid and that Yupik
sovereignty remains intact and that Yupik jurisdictional authority is intact
and that the accoutrements of Yupik government are presently restructured to
accommodate judicial powers in order to protect its tribal members from any and
all third party interference into their tribal rights of human sovereignty. Plaintiffs therefore contend that the only
court of competent jurisdiction for this matter rests in the Tribal Courts of
Yupik Tribal Community of aleknagik under their direct sovereignty and Suzerain
trust responsibility. Plaintiffs further contend that the United
States of America has a Suzerain responsibility to assume, through
international treaties, the security protection and enhancement of Tribal
Sovereignty and self governance of indigenous tribes in Alaska. Plaintiffs charge the United States and its
instruments, agents, assignees, or contractors with conspiracy to deprive the
Yupik people of their basic rights and to misappropriate Yupik lands, resources
and water under the guise of law and protection. Plaintiffs further charge that these laws,
regulations and management regimes are contrary to and inconsistent with the
Genocide Act which was enacted into law on November 4, 198 (P.L. 100‑606)
by the United States and therefore
mandates that all laws contrary to it be repealed or voided, including
all laws and regulations inconsistent with it. Plaintiffs further request that the State
of Alaska and United States Federal authorities ,agents and contractors receive
remedial instruction and training to educate these third parties of the rights
and powers of Sovereign Traditional Tribal Governments and the rights and tiles
of the tribal members under the jurisdiction of the tribe. Plaintiffs now enter into the record of
this court the findings of THE INTERAGENCY ARCTIC RESEARCH COMMITTEE that was
monitored by the National Science Foundation and included in the UNITED STATES
ARCTIIC RESEARCH PLAN dated July 1987 on Law in the Arctic: LAW To
shape laws appropriate for application in the Arctic, we need to understand
Traditional Law,the written or unwritten rules that have governed Native
communities in the Arctic for centuries and that individuals and villages still
follow. Lack of information about and understanding of traditional law-ways
and "bush justice" have led to enactment of new laws ill-suited to
application in villages with predominantly Native populations. Consequently,
some laws passed at State and Federal levels have been difficult to implement,
and compliance with them have been low. Problems have surfaced most notably in
areas of criminal law, domestic or family law(marriage,custody,adoption) and
wildlife law. In the area of adoption, Congress recognized the existence of de
facto unwritten indigenous rules in Native communities and attempted to allow
these rules to operate through the Indian Child Welfare Act. However, in other
fields of law, such as wildlife management, lawmakers have failed to recognize
the existence of traditional rules, authority patterns, and methods of conflict
resolution and decision-making. Thus. State and Federal wildlife statutes and
regulations that are largely incompatible with existing hunting practices are
totally ignored. The failure of criminal law to recognize existing social rules
and norms has resulted in a disproportionally high number of Alaska Natives
serving time in prison. Lack of Native language interpreters and other gaps in
the delivery of legal services further contribute to problems stemming from
lack of knowledge of the traditional social and cultural laws that govern
northern Native communities. A
plethora of local political and economic organizations (frequently six to eight
governmental or quasi-governmental entities delivering services or regulating
activities in a community with only a few hundred residents) results in
overlapping and duplicative jurisdictions, excessive cost of providing
government service, confusion for the average citizen, and a drain on local
talent (State of Alaska 1986). Research is needed to determine how to reduce
political fragmentation and avoid passing laws which further splinter the
community. Furthermore there are serious concerns about local autonomy over
such critical ares as alcohol control, education and fish and game management.
Problem of State /Federal/Tribal relations are not unique to the Arctic, but
laws and court decisions that govern intergovernmental relations on Indian
reservations have not been generally applied in the Arctic where few such
reservations exist (State of Alaska,1986). Numerous laws including ANCSA and
ANILCA fail to resolve legal questions over jurisdiction among Federal, State,
and TRibal Governments in Alaska. Law and
legal processes must be made more sensitive to Arctic
residents. There is widespread unfamiliarity with existing laws,legal procedures, and the legal system
in rural villages. Proposed laws and regulations as well as existing ones need
to be presented in clear and understandable ways to village residents and, in
some cases, need to be translated into Native languages. More fundamentally,
laws need to be developed in cooperation with village residents. Laws made
without consultation with and the cooperation of village residents are unlikely
to be followed. Laws without compliance undermines the total legal system,
leading to disrespect and disregard for law. This is particularly evident in
low rates of compliance with hunting and fishing regulations (Kotzebue Fish and
Game Advisory Committee, 1986). Arctic
conflicts, particularly over natural resources, often involve high stakes for
the parties concerned, give rise to sharply incompatible preferences regarding
outcome , and cannot be resolved through the application of simple and widely
accepted settlement procedures. Protracted litigation over offshore hydrocarbon
development as well as mineral extraction and timber management, for example,
has been costly and repetitive, often without resolving the underlying
controversies. Similarly legislatures have produced statutes that are
internally inconsistent or too general to provide solutions to specific
conflicts, leading to the need for further legislation or litigation (Young and
Osherenko, 1984). Thus, there is a need to study alternative methods of
conflict resolution appropriate for dealing Arctic conflicts. All
Arctic-rim nations face similar problems. Policy makers could benefit from the
comparative legal studies addressing how different nations deal with common
problems such as transboundary pollution. Native land claims,Native
self-determination, and renewable and non-renewable resource development, and
management. There is little comparative work in progress dealing with laws
applied to the Arctic. Additionally,
many Arctic issues cannot be addressed without cooperation among neighboring
Arctic nations, especially issues regarding the extraction and shipment of
natural resources, wildlife management (particularly marine mammals, migratory
birds and caribou), Arctic haze, oil spills or other transboundary pollution
problems. more research is needed to achieve comparable laws as well as
international agreements regarding these international and transnational issues. There
is no law school in the Arctic and little likelihood of establishing one. Likewise there are no law journals produced
in the Arctic. In the United States, Duke University provides a law journal
with cooperation with the Alaska Bar Association, but this publication, the Duke-Alaska
Law Review, has seldom addressed the larger legal problems facing the
Arctic. As much legal scholarship within the walls of law schools and in pages
of law journals, the lack of a law school or law journal in Alaska has left
large gaps,in important legal research. Plaintiffs charge that the documented
failure of administrative, legislative, and judicial functions of the State of
Alaska and the United States of America under jurisdiction based on occupation,
has resulted in genocide of significant proportions. This charge is based on
the definition of Genocide within the Act of the Congress of the United States
known as Public Law 100-606 signed into law on December 4, 1988 which we
include along with this complaint. Plaintiffs finally assert that they recognize
the Aleknagik Traditional Tribal court as the only court of competent sovereign
jurisdiction and include United States Senate Document 152 of the 81st Congress
2nd Session which includes the official translation of the "Kostlivitszov
Memorandum" on pages 53-57 that leaves no doubt of the validity of the
Yupik Sovereign Jurisdiction. |