This is to inform you that there is No Such Thing as "Ceded Lands".
The Crown Lands are owned by Kamehameha III - Kauieaouli's heirs, and successors, forever. They are the PRIVATE PROPERTIES of the Royal Families.
The Hawaiian Government lands are overlooked by the House of Nobles, their heirs and successors, and assignments for the rights of native tenants are made by the Hawaiian Kingdom Minister of Interior.
The entity State is a SHAM, A BOGUS entity without legal validation and have No Right to exist.........Questions?
See treasonous persons Kuhio/Prince Kuhio et. als. who pushed for the Hawaiian Homelands etc.,
See the Deeds posted previously, and read the previous posts, along with Professor Williamson Chang documenting there was NO ANNEXATION, Dr. Alfred DeZayas information. Also read the Supreme Court ruling showing that there was NO ANNEXATION, research by Amelia Gora, one of Kamehameha's descendants about U.S. President Grover Cleveland who gave Hawaii Back to Queen Liliuokalani in 1893, 1894, 1897, and the rights of the President.
https://iolani-theroyalhawk.blogspot.com/2019/08/exposing-truth-kuhio-kawananakoa.html
Exposing the Truth: Kuhio, Kawananakoa, Kaiulani, Kunuiakea, Wilcox, Boyd, Booth, Celso Moreno, Kalakaua, Pauahi, Charles Reed Bishop, S.B. Dole, W.O. Smith, Alfred S. Hartwell were Some of the Treasonous Persons
Kamehameha III - Kauikeaouli's Crown Land Deeds and ...
Amelia Gora-Kanaka Maoli Truth : Crown Lands belongs to ...
Images of Kamehameha Iii's Crown Lands And Government Lands …
bing.com/imagesCrown Lands, Government Lands, Alodio Lands Has Owners and ...
Amelia Gora-Kanaka Maoli Truth : Legal Notice No. 2016 ...
Hawaiian Kingdom: April 2018 - he-mokupuni-pae-aina-o ...
Hawaiian/Kanaka Maoli Homeless Given Protective Orders by ...
Watch later
Supreme Court Notice:
Dr. DeZayas letters, and Report About the U.S. over/about Hawaii:
Dr. Alfred DeZayas 2nd Letter, and the First Letter to Routhe Bolomet Validating the Existence of the Hawaiian Kingdom etc.
posted by Amelia Gora (2019)
posted by Amelia Gora (2019)
Dr. Alfred DeZayas 1st Letter
Dr. Alfred DeZayas: Hawaii under a "fraudulent "referendum"
HAWAII’S INTERNATIONAL LEGAL STATUS
I co-authored this study with Hawaiian colleagues At stake is not only the self-determination of the Hawaiian people, but the continuity of the Hawaiian kingdom that was illegally overthrown by the US in 1893, ushering in a century of colonialism and exploitation. Bill Clinton’s “Apology” resolution of 1993 did not redeem the illegal aggression or reestablish the Hawaiian kingdom (see Stephen Kinzer’s book “Overthrow”).
Hawaii was never decolonized as envisaged in article 73 of the UN Charter. It was annexed following a fraudulent “referendum”.
Also see/download the Protected Persons Handbook:
PROTECTED PERSONS HANDBOOK - for all kanaka maoli ...
RePost Important for Kanaka Maoli, Families and Friends ...
aloha.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kMAYvgx9W-s
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Reference:
Support Puuhonua o Puuhuluhulu Maunakea
i was reading -
On July 9th 1921 the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act (HHCA) was passed by the U.S. Congress setting aside approximately 200,000 acres of land in the Territory of Hawaiʻi as a land trust for homesteading by Native Hawaiians as identified in the act as having a minimum of 50% or more of native Hawaiian blood quantum.
Between 1921 and the late 1970ʻs thousands of acres of the original land trust were illegally taken, withdrawn and transferred via executive authority by the Territory of Hawaiʻi, United States Military (during WWII) and the State of Hawaiʻi in breach & clear violation of the HHCA.
On August 15th 1983 a Federal-State Task Force on the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act submitted a report to the United States Secretary of the Interior and the Governor of the State of Hawaiʻi on recommendations to correct many of the past grievances and direct the Federal Government to settle land claims and the State of Hawaiʻi to improve its performance as a trustee. The Chair of the Task Force was Ann Nathaniel. This report would be the basis for the 1996 Hawaiian Home Lands and Recovery Act championed by U.S Senator Daniel K. Akaka when Federal Lands (Barbers Point Naval Air Station / Kalaeloa) were returned to the land trust.
In 1991, Governor Waiheʻe convened a "Task Force on the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands Land Title and Related Claims" to investigate and resolve DHHLʻs illegal land use claims against the State. The results of the task force became the basis for ACT 14 in 1995.
On November 4 1994 the Hawaiian Homes Commission discussed "Proposals to Resolve DHHL Land Title and Related Claims" (Roads and Highways Proposal) and identifies the Mauna Kea Observatory Road (65.142 acres) as one of the many unsettled land claims throughout the State.
In 1995 the State Legislature convenes a special session and introduces HB 10-S which would become ACT 14. It would establish a $600M cash settlement and included a settlement for all roads and highways that were in breach of the trust. The ACT specifically called for "the initiation of a land exchange to ready uncompensated use of Hawaiian Home Lands for State roads, claims and highways".
In 1997, their is a dispute between the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands and the Department of Transportation on whether or not a $5M payment resulting from the auctioning of the Marks estate property would be used in exchange for title to Hawaiian Home Lands used for State roads and highways. The States Attorney General Margery Bronster opined that no formal agreement took place and that the DOT was not obligated to transfer $5M to the DHHL.
On March 15th 2018 the Department of Transportation designates the Mauna Kea Observatory Road as a State Highway Route and identifies it as being 6.27 miles in length starting from the intersection of the Daniel K. Inouye Highway to 125 feet past the Hale Pōhaku Visitor Information Center Entrance.
On January 28-29 2019 the DHHL receives an update on the Act 14 Land Claim Settlement. In that report, under the "Roads and Highways Settlement" the DHHL reports that "To date, no lands have been conveyed to DHHL to satisfy the Stateʻs commitment to compensate the trust for its uses of Hawaiian Home Lands as state highways on various islands” totaling a claimed amount of 346.203 acres. The total outstanding land claim is 1,328.745 acres. This includes the Maunakea access road.
On August 14th 2019 in a State Senate Hawaiian Affairs Committee hearing Interim DHHL Chair William Aila acknowledges that "There is no evidence of any land exchange" in regards to the Mauna Kea access road as required by ACT 14.
Summary:
In order for the State of Hawaiʻi to claim title and jurisdiction over the Mauna Kea access road it must at a minimum:
1. Initiate a land exchange with the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands per Act 14
2. Identify a parcel of State Public Land that is of equal value
3. Complete a land appraisal
4. Conduct beneficiary consultation
5. Receive the U.S. Secretary of the Interior approval of the land exchange
As a result of Wednesdayʻs hearing, Senator Kurt Favella (Ewa Beach) and myself will be sending letters to the State Attorney General and the U.S. Secretary of the Interior to determine who holds title & jurisdiction to the Maunakea access road.
I believe the Maunakea Access Road is still included in the DHHL land inventory because the State of Hawaiʻi is in breach of ACT 14 and as a result the Maunakea access road belongs to the beneficiaries of the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act of 1920.
updated posts:
Tane Inciong and 3 others shared a link.
- Support Puuhonua o Puuhuluhulu Maunakea
i was reading -
On July 9th 1921 the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act (HHCA) was passed by the U.S. Congress setting aside approximately 200,000 acres of land in the Territory of Hawaiʻi as a land trust for homesteading by Native Hawaiians as identified in the act as having a minimum of 50% or more of native Hawaiian blood quantum.
...Continue Reading
nhlchi.orgThe need for NHLC’s services is as great as ever. Vast amounts of land and water resources are now available for reclamation by Native Hawaiians, as these resources have been freed from over a century of use and possession by large plantations in the islands. Right now, efforts are being made to c...- HAWAI‘I SUPREME COURT RULES THE STATE BREACHED ITS TRUST DUTY AT PŌHAKULOA
(Honolulu, HI) The Hawai'i Supreme Court unanimously ruled today that the State breac...hed its constitutional trust duties to protect and preserve state ceded lands at Pōhakuloa leased to the Army for military training. The Court issued its decision in a case filed by Native Hawaiian Legal Corporation on behalf of two Native Hawaiian cultural practitioners, Clarence Ching and Maxine Kahaulelio, who sued to ensure that the public trust ceded lands at Pōhakuloa would not suffer the same tragic fate that Kaho‘olawe, Mākua, and Waikāne endured.
The Supreme Court found that the State has a constitutional trust duty to reasonably monitor lands at the Pōhakuloa Training Area (PTA) used by the Army for live-fire military training to prevent them from “falling into ruin.” Despite this duty, the State failed to conduct regular monitoring and inspections of the PTA land to ensure that the Army was complying with the terms of its lease, even though the State was aware “of the United States’ history of failing to prevent environmental damage and clean up the remnants of military exercises on other State-owned land that it leases[.]”See More
In August 1964, the federal government and the State of Hawai`i signed a 65-year lease allowing the Army to use 22,971 acres of state ceded land at Pōhakuloa for one dollar. The lease required the Army to “make every reasonable effort to . . . remove or deactivate all live or blank ammunition upon completion of a training exercise or prior to entry by the said public, whichever is sooner” and to “remove or bury all trash, garbage or other waste materials.” In April 2014, Ching and Kahaulelio sued the department of land and natural resources for its failure to monitor whether the United States complied with the terms of the Lease. At a trial in 2015, Ching and Kahaulelio demonstrated that military debris, including unexploded ordnance, litters the PTA landscape unchecked.
The Supreme Court held that the State’s duties to protect and preserve the leased PTA land are “derived in part from the properties’ status as ‘ceded land’-- which are lands that were held by the civil government or the monarchy of the Hawaiian Kingdom at the time of the 1893 overthrow of the Hawaiian monarchy.” Hawai‘i’s laws have long-recognized that ceded lands must be held in trust by the State for the benefit of Native Hawaiians and the general public, and the State therefore has an obligation to “take an active role in preserving [ceded land].”
As a result of today’s decision, the State is required to “develop and execute a plan to conduct regular, periodic monitoring and inspection” for the lands at Pōhakuloa and to “take an active role in preserving trust property and may not passively allow [trust lands] to fall into ruin.”
Ching celebrated the Court’s decision for affirming that, “The state has a trust duty to mālama ‘āina. The department of land and natural resources failed to live up to this most basic duty at Pōhakuloa.” Kahaulelio added, “Enough already. The Army and the State have got to clean up the land and stop the destruction. Now."
http://www.nhlchi.org/how-you-can-help
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The Native Hawaiian Legal Corporation (Native Hawaiian Legal Corporation) is a 501 (c)(3) non-profit, public-interest law firm with a practice that is concentrated in the area of Native Hawaiian Rights law. NHLC provides legal assistance to families and communities engaged in perpetuating the culture and traditions of Hawai`i's indigenous people. Founded by several grass roots leaders in 1974, NHLC was initially a volunteer-run referral service. The high demand for direct help, especially from families in need of legal assistance to protect their ancestral lands, transformed NHLC into a law firm that now provides legal help to approximately 400 clients annually. For more information, visit www.nhlchi.org
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