Elizabeth Phillips is an old Canadian woman, the last surviving fluent speaker of Upriver Halkomelem.

There are a few people like her in the U.S., including Verdena Parker and Marie Wilcox

*Marie Wilcox died September 25th, 2021https://abcnews.go.com/Lifestyle/wireStory/marie-wilcox-saved-tribes-language-dies-80484687  

Marie Jones, the Last fluent speaker of the Eyak language of Alaska, died in 2008.

Hazel Sampson, the last fluent speaker of the Klallam language of Washington, died in 2014.

Doris McLemore was the last fluent speaker of the Wichita language spoken by Natives in the Oklahoma area, and died in 2016.

Edwin Benson was the last fluent speaker of Mandan, spoken on the Great Plains of North America. He also died in 2016. 

There are quite a few people around the world in that situation. 

Some speak language isolates, languages that have no obvious resemblance to any other known languages

https://languageconservancy.org/language-loss/ 

~

The Indian Citizenship Act of 1924 gave 'U.S. citizenship' to Native Americans.

Convincing Natives to join the army and vote is a sly way to get them to surrender their identity. Native 'reservations' are sterilized plots of land onto which Indigenous Americans were herded. The reservations are forbidden from having a military, forbidden from taking any effective anti U.S. stance, and can be ‘taken away’ from any tribe at the whim of the U.S. government to the extent that Natives believe that the U.S. government has ‘authority’ to do so.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2021/12/31/wampanoag-tribe-interior-department-reservation-land/ 

The current stage of colonizing involves convincing Natives that the U.S. has that authority over Native American ground.

https://www.history.com/news/native-american-voting-rights-citizenship

~

In centuries past, countries would form massive armies to attack each other for plunder.

Then they would force the captured prisoners to join their armies, spread the disease.

This is where Native American tribes are today.

Long since trapped. Forced to pretend surrender.

Pushed to vote for U.S. politicians and join the U.S. army.

Slowly melting into the blob.

~

When a tribe's language goes extinct most of their culture dies too. It becomes a game of pretending to still have a culture as it slowly dies and individuals assimilate into the colonial culture.

~ Below are some of the Native American languages that have been made extinct by the United States ~

 

~Adai https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adai_language 

Louisiana Extinct 19th century

 

~Alsea https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alsea_language 

Oregon Extinct 1942

Last speaker John Albert

 

~Apalachee https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apalachee_language 

Florida Extinct 18th century

 

~Atakapa https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atakapa_language 

Louisiana, Texas Extinct early 20th century

 

~Atsugewi https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atsugewi_language 

California Extinct 1988

Last speaker Medie Webster

 

~Barbareno https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbareño_language 

California Extinct 1965

 Last speaker https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Yee

 

~Biloxi https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biloxi_language 

 Mississippi, Louisiana Extinct 1930s

Last speaker Emma Jackson

 

~Cahto https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cahto_language 

California Extinct 1960s

 

~Calusa https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calusa_language 

Florida Extinct 18th or 19th century

 

~Cayuse https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cayuse_language 

Oregon Extinct 1930s

 

~Chimariko https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chimariko_language 

California Extinct 1950s

Last speaker Martha Zigler

 

~Chitimacha https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chitimacha_language 

Louisiana Extinct 1940

Last speaker Delphine Ducloux

 

~Chiwere https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chiwere_language 

Oklahoma, Missouri, Kansas Extinct 1990s

 

~Eastern Abnaki https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_Abnaki_language 

Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire Extinct 1993

 

~Esselen https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esselen_language 

California Extinct 19th century

 

~Etchamin https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etchemin_language 

Maine Extinct 17th century

 

~Eyak https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eyak_language 

Alaska Extinct 2008

Last speaker https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie_Smith_Jones

 

~Gros Ventre https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gros_Ventre_language 

Montana Extinct 2007

Last speaker Theresa Lamebull

 

~Galice https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galice_language 

Oregon Extinct 1963

Last speaker Hoxie Simmons

 

~Hanis https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanis_language 

Oregon Extinct 1972

Last speaker Martha Harney Johnson

 

~Karankawa https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karankawa_language 

Texas Extinct 19th century

 

~Karkin https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karkin_language 

California Extinct 1950s

 

~Kathlamet https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kathlamet_language 

Washington, Oregon Extinct 1930s

Last speaker Charles Cultee

 

~Kitsai https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitsai_language 

Oklahoma, Texas Extinct 1940

Last speaker Kai Kai

 

~Clatskanie https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kwalhioqua-Clatskanie_language 

Washington Extinct 1920s?

 

~Klallam https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klallam_language 

Washington Extinct 2014 

Last speaker https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hazel_Sampson

 

~Loup https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loup_language 

Massachusetts, Connecticut Extinct 18th century

 

~Mahican https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahican_language 

New York, Vermont Extinct ~1940

 

~Mandan https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandan_language 

North Dakota Extinct 2016 

Last speaker https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edwin_Benson

 

~Mattole Bear River https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mattole-Bear_River_language 

California Extinct ~1930s

 

~Miluk https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miluk_language 

Oregon Extinct 1939 

Last speaker https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annie_Miner_Peterson

 

~Mohegan Pequot https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohegan-Pequot_language 

Southern New England Extinct 1908 

Last speaker https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fidelia_Fielding

 

~Molala https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molala_language 

Oregon, Washington Extinct 1958

 

~Nanticoke https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanticoke_language 

Delaware, Maryland Extinct 19th century

 

~Narragansett https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narragansett_language 

Rhode Island Extinct 17th century

 

~Natchez https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natchez_language 

Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma Extinct 1957 

Last speaker https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nancy_Raven

 

~Nooksack https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nooksack_language 

Washington Extinct 1988

 

~Kalapuyan https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northern_Kalapuyan_language 

Oregon Extinct 1937

 

~Obispeno https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obispeño_language 

California Extinct 1917 

Last speaker https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosario_Cooper

 

~Ofo https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ofo_language 

Mississippi Extinct early 20th century

 

~Pamlico https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pamlico_language 

North Carolina Extinct 1790s

 

~Pirouette Pueblo https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piro_Pueblo_language 

New Mexico Extinct 18th century

 

~Powhatan https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Powhatan_language 

Virginia, Maryland Extinct 1785 to 1790s

 

~Purismeno https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purisimeño_language 

California Extinct 19th century?

 

~Quiripi https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quiripi_language 

Connecticut, New York Extinct ca 1800

 

~Salinan https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salinan_language 

California Extinct 1958

 

~Shasta https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shasta_language 

California Extinct 1980s or 1990s

 

~Siuslaw https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siuslaw_language 

Oregon Extinct 1970s

 

~Susquehannock https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Susquehannock_language 

Northeast U.S. Extinct 1763

 

~Takelma https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Takelma_language 

Oregon Extinct 1934

 

~Tillamook https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tillamook_language 

Oregon Extinct 1972

 

~Timucua https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timucua_language 

Florida, Georgia Extinct 18th century

 

~Tonkawa https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tonkawa_language 

Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico Extinct ca 1940

 

~Tsetsaut https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsetsaut_language 

Southeast Alaska, British Columbia Extinct 20th century

 

~Tunica https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunica_language 

Louisiana Extinct 1948 

Last speaker https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sesostrie_Youchigant

 

~Tututni https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tututni_language 

Oregon Extinct 1983

 

~Tutelo https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tutelo_language 

Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina Extinct 1982

 

~Twana https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twana_language 

Washington Extinct 1980

 

~Chehalis https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upper_Chehalis_language 

Washington Extinct 2001

 

~Upper Umpqua https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upper_Umpqua_language 

Oregon Extinct ca 1950

 

~Ventureno https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ventureño_language 

California Extinct 20th century

 

~Wailaki https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wailaki_language 

California Extinct 1960s

 

~Wappo https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wappo_language 

California Extinct 1990

 

~Wichita https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wichita_language 

Oklahoma Extinct 2016 

Last speaker https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doris_McLemore

 

~Wiyot https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wiyot_language 

California Extinct 1962

 

~Wyandot https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wyandot_language 

Oklahoma Extinct 1970s or 1980s

 

~Yana https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yana_language 

California Extinct 1916 

Last speaker https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ishi

 

~Yoncalla https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoncalla_language 

Oregon Extinct 1930s

 

~Yurok https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yurok_language 

California Extinct 2013

 

There are also little studied Native American languages that are "extinct, unclassified", like the Aranama language of Texas https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aranama_language

And countless Native American languages from the early colonial period to the 19th century whose existence, and extinction, was never documented. 

Click here to view a map of vanishing Languages

 ~

While the United States has already extincted the vast majority of the Native American tribal languages that pre existed it, other melting pots in the Americas have been less successful at exterminating Native cultures. This has led to all sorts of melting pot intrigue by the United States, efforts to isolate and weaken areas where indigenous culture and language survive. These efforts include 'drug control' and military projects, etc, always with the long term goal of weakening indigenous influence.

http://www.native-languages.org/most-spoken.htm

 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

When 'melting pot' groups, colonizers, fight against an indigenous rival within 'their' territory, only one can survive. 

~

Some Wikipedia lists.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_last_known_speakers_of_languages

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_endangered_languages

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_extinct_languages

~

 

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_endangered_languages_in_the_United_States

~

The gorge is known primarily for a cave that was the only inland site in Australia to show signs of continuous human occupation for over 46,000 years, including through the last ice age, but was deliberately destroyed by mining company Rio Tinto in May 2020.[2] Prior to its destruction, the cave in Juukan Gorge was a sacred site for the traditional owners of the land, the Puutu Kunti Kurrama and Pinikura (Binigura) peoples. “

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juukan_Gorge 

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2020/oct/12/devastated-indigenous-owners-say-rio-tinto-misled-them-ahead-of-juukan-gorge-blast 

https://www.kitco.com/news/2021-02-25/Aboriginal-Australian-group-encouraged-but-wary-of-South32-s-engagement.html 

~

Imagine if a car thief, as he was selling a car, said "I would like to acknowledge that this car is actually the property of John Smith".

Should the car thief be praised for acknowledging the original owner?

https://www.csmonitor.com/World/Americas/2021/0402/What-are-land-acknowledgments-and-how-do-they-help-Indigenous-peoples 

Land 'ownership' has different meanings in different cultures, but there is no culture where it is rational to say "This is mine because I took it from somebody by force". In many places it is okay to discreetly acknowledge theft as a valid path to ownership, but only if the original owner has less power than the new owner. But when that becomes acceptable, or even codified into local law or tradition, speed bumps appear.

https://www.globalonenessproject.org/library/photo-essays/last-speakers 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Printable images that can be used as forms in appeals of cases involving wrongful convictions are at the bottom of this page.

Of course a person should make every effort, at each step, to find any alternative way to resolve the case, and death penalties should not be used unless all other options have been tried, and only in cases that involve forced incarceration without the wrongfully convicted having any reasonable means of getting a fair hearing.

Here is a video of Ron Paul referring to one type of 'natural law'

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ex6DWRo_geg

In the U.S. it is perfectly legal to wrongfully convict and imprison somebody, as long as it is done in a way that it does not create a record of the conviction being wrong. As long as people within the system which created the wrongful conviction can prevent that wrongful conviction from being identified through courts then, according to local law, there has not been a wrongful conviction, regardless what the facts and truth are.

Natural law, which supersedes local law according to people like Ron Paul, does not permit wrongful convictions and false imprisonment.

Under 'natural law' applied in a political setting, wrongful conviction is a crime that must be fixed.

You cannot just ignore it and say it is not a problem because the local authority refuses to let it be addressed.

So which law should take precedent? The law which existed, and exists, everywhere? Or the law that was created by a group of people to create political stability and to make sure that they retain power?

In many countries those who are wrongfully convicted have no realistic means to appeal.

In the United States fewer than 1% of those wrongfully convicted will ever be exonerated. Even with strong proof of innocence, and adequate financial resources, a person's chance of eventual exoneration rises only to perhaps 30% or less. Of the ten thousand plus wrongfully convicted in U.S. prisons perhaps 5% or 10% could easily find concrete proof of innocence if they had resources. But even if they get that proof they have little chance of going free.

An example in the news recently is Melissa Lucio. About a year ago a foreign film maker made a documentary demonstrating that Ms Lucio had been wrongfully convicted of a murder that never occurred.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CydsV7ykL6A

She was days from execution by the state when her case was reviewed and the execution postponed. Now, a year later, there is no indication that she will be free, despite overwhelming evidence of her not being guilty, of a crime that never happened, and of gross misconduct by authorities.

Should people who have more proof of innocence than she has, but no foreign film maker on their side simply stay in prison?

~

What makes a wrongful conviction a death penalty case?

There are many wrongful convictions that are the result of simple sloppiness, or whose penalties are trivial. If a person is fined $20 for littering when they did not litter that would be a case to pursue through the jurisdiction that issued the fine.

When an innocent person is falsely imprisoned, and the basis for that imprisonment is what most people would consider misconduct that they would not want applied to themselves, and many people would use lethal force to avoid that misconduct being used against them, then a case may be escalated to death penalty status if certain conditions are met.

1) The person seeking to apply the death penalty must know to a high degree of certainty that a wrongful conviction has occurred, and that certainty must be communicated publicly without any meaningful refutation. If a hundred people are aware of the information you present, and none of those people has disputed the basic substance of your position, then it may be a case that should be escalated.

2) That person must have made significant efforts to fix the wrongful conviction by making those responsible for it, aware of it. You cannot apply the death penalty without first giving ample opportunity to the offenders to fix their mistakes.

3) The case should have been discussed publicly in a way that those responsible for the misconduct are aware of the discussion, and those responsible must decline to discuss the case or otherwise impede the truth.

4) There must be no easy resolution of the case through peaceful channels. If you live in a jurisdiction that aggressively prevents exonerations then the death penalty is generally a valid path as long as all other conditions are met.

5) There should never be an assumption of guilt. If it is not clear whether a person knowingly participated in a wrongful conviction, first the facts must be made plain to the offender, he or she must know that they were involved in a wrongful conviction, or the offender must willfully avoid learning the truth.

6) Although death penalties can be applied as a punitive measure, generally it is wrong to be strictly punitive. Any death penalty should be administered in such a way as to discourage misconduct by others. So a private death penalty with no publicity and no warning to the offender may be proper as a punitive measure, it does nothing to reduce future misconduct by others and thus has less validity.

7) 

~

What enables official misconduct is simply the lack of accountability.

A complex cottage industry of 'Conviction Integrity Units' has sprung up, designed to lure in potential exonerees and prevent them from getting a fair hearing.

The main motive is financial. Hundreds of millions of dollars have been awarded by courts to exonerees, and this has led to bankruptcies among local governments, and even refusal to pay by at least one city.

"man exonerated on murder charge after 21 years wins $6M lawsuit but city refuses to pay"

https://www.foxnews.com/us/nc-man-exonerated-on-murder-charge-wins-6m-lawsuit-but-city-refuses-to-pay

 

Should a person who is demonstrably not guilty simply stay in prison until they die?

Or should there be some avenue available to them?

Targeting officials should never be considered an option unless there is no option.

In many places there is no other option.

Scroll to the bottom of the page for forms.

~

FAQS

 

Are there places where this sort of appeal is inappropriate?

Yes, any place where the death penalty is illegal of course a person should not use it.

There are many forms of sanctioned death penalty though. A place where people are sentenced to 'life without parole' is a defacto death penalty region. Likewise any area that sentences people to life or indeterminate sentences that typically end in death behind bars, and provides no reasonable possibility for a wrongfully convicted person without extensive resources to get a fair hearing.

 

What is the difference between an objective crime and a partisan crime?

Objective crimes are not acceptable to any side. For example the people who participate in wrongful convictions do not support themselves being wrongfully convicted. They are committing a crime that they only justify when they do it to others.

Partisan crimes are more like sports games where there are two equivalent sides. Using the death penalty for partisan issues leads to broader decay.

Here is a woman who was opposed to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and targeted another partisan with the death penalty.

https://www.cnn.com/2023/04/03/europe/russia-blogger-explosion-suspect-arrested-intl/index.html 

Russia has framed its invasion as defensive, a result of Nato encroaching, and many experts support that view based on actions by Nato.

So her effort, while admirable from a logistical and tactical perspective, was more partisan than objective. She framed her actions as "anti war", but she probably would not support "anti war" bombings in the other direction. That's completely separate though from the right of partisan's to defend themselves. The whole basis of modern war involves powerful clever people creating partisans then letting those partisans kill each other to some end which benefits those who engineered the war.

In this case though it does make more sense that somebody duped her into carrying a bomb that she was incapable of building herself.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2023/04/04/darya-trepova-bombed-putin-propagandist-fake-audition/ 

 

How does a person know if they are qualified to administer a death penalty?

A few general guidelines

1) Any person under 30 years old or so should not act alone in a death penalty case.

2) A person who knows less about a specific case should not administer a death penalty towards anybody who knows more. In other words until you have as much relevant information about the case as the guilty parties you cannot carry out a death sentence. After you have sufficient information to show a wrongful conviction is likely, that information has to be made publicly visible before any targeting, and it has to be reasonably certain that all targets are aware of the information before the death penalty phase begins. If there is 'new' information that was not available to those responsible for a wrongful conviction then those individuals are not subject to a death penalty, but anybody who prevents resolution of the case based on the new information would be.

3)

 

Is there some math that applies to the number of people who can be found guilty in one case? For example, a certain limit to the number of guilty who can be sentenced for one wrongful conviction?

The only limit would be based on logistics, but degree of guilt has to be taken into account. You cannot sentence a person to death for trivial connections to a conviction, but if there are dozens of people, or more, who actively participated, and who refuse to act in any way to correct the wrongful conviction, then each of those people should be targeted individually until the situation is resolved. The goal at each step is to correct the wrongful conviction though, not to administer more sentences. At any point, if there appears to be a possibility of correct resolution then administration of death penalties stops. Of course collateral victims are not acceptable and if a person is not capable of administering a sentence without collateral deaths then they should focus on paperwork.

 

Are there any 'official' legal bases for administration of a death penalty in a wrongful conviction?

Any colonized or melting pot region has a preceding legal system or value system which justifies the use of the death penalty in certain broad categories of offense.

So if you are in a place where one population was replaced by another, and the conqueror implemented a new 'official' legal system to avoid accountability for their offenses then a person can easily revert to the prior superseding legal values.

For example North America had a value system for more than 10,000 years which allowed for the death penalty in cases where one individual or group abducted an innocent person and harmed or imprisoned that person under false pretenses.

So while the 'mainstream official' North American legal system authorizes keeping innocent people as prisoners, preceding legal systems, and common law, including 'the law of the land' authorizes the use of the death penalty to prevent or remedy such offenses against innocent people.

 

Should a person try to work 'within the system' to solve wrongful convictions?

Anybody is free to do as they like in that regard. Working 'within the system' to change a system that profits from criminal misconduct never works though unless pressure is applied such that the price is higher than the profit for offenders.

As long as leaders of a political entity have to choose between bankruptcy and criminal misconduct they will choose the latter.

Freeing most of the people who are probably not guilty, and compensating, via judgement, those who are provably not guilty would cost many tens of billions of dollars even at a compensation level lower than today's norm.

More importantly there is no will by anybody within the system to correct nor to reform. Politeness is often paid to the issue by officials, but there has never been any effort beyond politeness.

At some point, if death penalties are administered consistently, reform would become probable.

 

What are common causes of wrongful convictions?

The most common cause of wrongful conviction in a stable society is probably the mentality discussed on the 'Dollhouse' page.

Although creating dogmatic control rules is often associated with a 'princess' mentality, as discussed on that page, men usually become the leading edge of that process as the society decays.

So initially, looking backward, a person can identify the distinctly feminine tendency to create dogmatic laws that are not based on any principles, i.e., law meant to create female security, eventually a larger and larger group of men fall into that tendency until they become a sort of enforcer class.

These dogmatic tendencies make the underlying society decays as they broaden and go full circle.

https://eji.org/news/82-year-old-alabama-woman-arrested-for-77-unpaid-trash-bill/ 

Note the woman who is victimized in that case is victimized not for her guilt, but for her lack of awareness of the process, a situation analogous to a society beginning to consume its children, its vulnerable, to maintain the status of those with authority.

 

Are appeals allowed, appropriate or available in a death penalty case?

Yes, the first opportunity is in making sure the offender is aware that they have been suspected of an offense that may be dealt with using a death penalty. If that person has been made aware of their offense but has refused to respond or fix the harm i.e., the wrongful conviction, then they should be encouraged, again and again, to reconsider. Administering penalties individually, over time, increases the chance of awareness by others, after the first implementation.

Once the process has started, no matter how much effort has been made, there is always the possibility of a mistake. So even after administration of a death penalty, care should be taken to ensure that if a mistake was made, it will become visible. For this reason at least one person, in any group of offenders, has to be left as a witness to their own actions and the actions of those who have already been sentenced. If a mistake was made then their testimony can be used to determine how and why any death penalties were inappropriately administered.

 

~

This is a simple initial set of forms which can be used if a local authority refuses to address a specific wrongful conviction. This should only be done after all reasonable avenues have been exhausted.

 Form 1, the first image below, should be used only after those involved in the misconduct have refused all attempts to discuss the conviction.

If the offending authorities are willing to discuss the case publicly, in a non coercive way, then there is no need to go this route.

Form 2, the second image below, should be used only after there has been no response to many attempts to discuss the case, and only after form 1 has been sent.

The purpose of form 2 is simply to give the offending authorities additional chances to address the issue.

Form 3, the third image below, should only be used after substantial efforts have been exhausted and the previous two forms have been used.

The purpose of form 3 is to stress that falsely imprisoning a person for years is a serious offense, and if there is no other remedy found, and after there is overwhelming evidence that authorities engaged in this misconduct, then a death penalty may be applied after further study of the case.

Form 4, the fourth image below, can only be used after the first penalty phase has been completed.

The purpose of form 4 is to inform the second offender involved in the case that one of their colleagues involved in the misconduct has been adjudicated guilty, sentenced, and the sentence has been carried out.

The second form would then be sent some time later to this second person, but again only after they had been given ample opportunity to address the issue, and only if there were no realistic alternatives to resolve the case.

This series of forms 1,2,3 then forms 4,2,3 etc can be adapted to other circumstances as appropriate.

Of course a person should make every effort, at each step, to find any alternative way to resolve the case, and death penalties should not be used unless all other options have been tried, and only in cases that involve forced incarceration without the wrongfully convicted having any means to get a fair hearing.

 

 


 


 


 

~

The 1985 murder of Kiki Camarena is unusual for a few reasons

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5vhhUOaBM_E

a) There are at least three Mexican police officers who have gone on the record as witnesses. Very few murders have such solid witnesses.

b) There is audio of the murderer, an employee of the CIA, as he is asking questions while torturing Camarena.

c) The U.S. Justice Department knew who the person behind the murder was, at least as early as 1989, but declined to prosecute because he was employed by the CIA.

d) The U.S. Justice Department carefully managed the cartel members it prosecuted so that neither they nor their associates would implicate the CIA publicly, which some did anyway.

The purpose of this page is not to advocate for the arrest of a person who is probably in his 80s, but there are questions that should be answered.

1) Why was he never arrested?

Felix Rodriguez is a Cuban of European descent who has helped implement a U.S. policy of indigenous repression for decades.

If there were ever a public investigation of his activities it would risk exposing dozens of major anti indigenous programs run through various government agencies, from 'counter terror' operations in Central America to 'gun walking' to building up cartels and using them to destabilize indigenous areas, as well as many less visible operations.

https://www.theblaze.com/tag/high-ranking-mexican-drug-cartel-member-makes-explosive-allegation-fast-and-furious-is-not-what-you-think-it-is 

https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:GbWqMvk2qzEJ:https://www.gunowners.org/oped081012/&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us 

https://theintercept.com/2017/11/26/honduras-election-pacheco-security-minister-is-running-drugs-according-to-court-testimony/ 

2) Is the U.S. fighting Latin American drug cartels, or running them?

A public investigation, run properly, would also show that the powerful drug cartels destabilizing Latin America were built by various agencies of the U.S. government, and the U.S. still has control over them to this day.

Overwhelming evidence shows that cartel employees in Mexico who arranged the abduction were working for Felix Rodriguez and company, not vice versa.

Beyond that broad fact there are many small details, suggested as asides in the video, which point to a much broader, and more malicious, conspiracy by people acting under authority of the U.S. government to sabotage indigenous interests across Latin America.

Notice the subdued references to the DFS including that they served as informal bodyguards for Camarena.

3) Was 'Iran Contra' the motive for short term drug dealing by CIA, or was it one of many covers for long term illegal/unethical financial projects, including drug dealing, around the world?

The public has been led to believe that a group of fairly respectable diplomatic/military types acquiesced to using cocaine selling as a way to fund support for the Contras in Nicaragua, and to pay for weapons to prolong the Iran/Iraq war, but there are some big problems with that.

The various 'public faces' of the cocaine smuggling which are used as possible figures Rodriguez was 'protecting', as well as the dollar values of the money needed for those causes, do not add up.

The people involved visibly in strictly the 'Contra' aspect, people like Oliver North etc, are not types with the tendencies, nor access to the connections needed for that project, and would not have solicited that access unless they were walked into it. And that amount of money, i.e., the visible cash used in Iran/Contra, could easily have been raised from other sources, and frequently is raised from alternative sources for comparable projects. In other words the CIA does have funding sources for covert projects. That organization does not rely on drugs for funding at an administrative level.

4) Are the same transnational individuals which have run the cartels suddenly working in the interests of their countries?

In the case of Iran/Contra, which was the specific context for Camarena's torture/murder, there was one transnational group which consisted of individuals pretending to be working in the interests of Israel and the United States.

That same group has individuals from many countries, but those two countries served as basis of that cover, at that time, so they were used.

Today the United States is being sabotaged in an offensive way by that same group, and Israel likewise, with populations in those two countries imagining that such individuals are defending their interests or acting for some greater good, which is not the case.

 

In Progress

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WUNohVdNuYk

Note that at the time of those hearings it was already known to higher level people at the CIA, DEA, the Justice Department and perhaps other agencies that Kiki Camarena's abduction, torture and murder were arranged by CIA agents. According to many highly credible witnesses, CIA agents used the Mexican DFS and cartels to do certain types of jobs for them under guise of 'U.S. National Security'.

6 years after the hearings in the above video, Porter Goss, who is chairing the hearing, became director of the CIA.

In his junior year at Yale, Goss was recruited by the Central Intelligence Agency. He spent much of the 1960s—roughly from 1960 until 1971—working for the Directorate of Operations, the clandestine services of the CIA. There he first worked in Latin America and the Caribbean and later in Europe.

...

In August 2001, Goss, ... visited Islamabad, Pakistan. Meetings were held with President Pervez Musharraf and with Pakistan's military and intelligence officials including the head of Pakistan's Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) General Mahmud Ahmed, as well as with the Afghan ambassador to Pakistan, Abdul Salam Zaeef. On the morning of September 11, 2001, Goss and Graham were having breakfast with General Ahmad. Ahmad's network had ties to Osama bin Laden and directly funded, supported, and trained the Taliban.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porter_Goss 

Note too with regard to that video, and the issue of the CIA pushing crack cocaine in black communities, Felix Rodriguez, along with several of his associates, were 'Miami Cubans' known for going out of their way to prove that they were more 'anti black' than any of their white colleagues might be. Rodriguez was known for using his 'official authority' to further personal aims and he certainly would have done harm to black areas if he could. It's very unlikely that it was simple coincidence that this cocaine went to urban blacks, as crack, more than to other groups.

Also worth noting that by the mid 1980s there were many independent cocaine transporters i.e., not working for government agencies, and part of the 'government enforcement' of trafficking laws was probably focused on competitive business aspects. There are hints of that in the 'Last Narco' episodes.

~

TLDR

The 'cocaine onion', of which Camarena's murder was a part, had many layers.

Layer 1 / actual basic facts / a) The main long term strategic goal of the United States is to secure European control over what is called "U.S. territory", and the largest part of that effort involves pre empting any perception of indigenous sovereignty anywhere in the new world. b) Top U.S. 'strategists' including GBush used individuals like Felix Rodriguez to implement that policy so they could have 'arms length' protection. c) Cocaine trafficking was one part of a long term ongoing aspect of that policy. d) The 'Contra' effort was never seen as a viable military project. It's only use was in the fact that it provided cover for a few years for a small part of the drug operation. e) People like Ollie North were useful only for their stupidity, their patriotism. Useful idiots whose predictability and shallowness caused them to be carefully promoted to where they would be needed.

Layer 2 / what simpler people saw / Hostages in Lebanese territory provided a context in which arms could properly be sent to Iran, with most people understanding implicitly that the real goal of that project was to prolong the Iran/Iraq war in a way that would be as profitable as possible. Cocaine smuggling was a 'conspiracy theory', and all of the people involved were acting on patriotic motives.

Layer 3 / the child's view / People who are hired to work in jobs like those involved in this issue are hired for their ability to know things others can't know, and to act on their best motives so they should be trusted, their actions not examined.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYlNGa55M1Y 

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL-MUhgAHJakuPDXtxAOZPK1jvFgVYbnk0

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ENC9IPwhyr4&list=PL-MUhgAHJakuPDXtxAOZPK1jvFgVYbnk0&index=1 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0b6So_J6R74&list=PL-MUhgAHJakuPDXtxAOZPK1jvFgVYbnk0&index=2

 

 

 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Negroponte 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1) Triple tap

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ofG83XMt4I0 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ttMOJ-oSSbQ 

 

2)  Developmental maps

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mPPJ96QFfX4 

Most people old enough to use a computer are old enough to recognize that the cops in that video are caught up in leaving the values they grew up with and joining a different set of 'gangster' values.

Developmental maps can be made for any aspect of personality, and clarify how large segments of a population become derailed. In this case notice how many commentors on that video are 'becoming powerful gangsters' by simply leaving their own values to join, by proxy, the gangster police mentality.

 

In Progress

I am tired of fighting. Our chiefs are killed. Looking Glass is dead. Toohulhulsote is dead. The old men are all dead. 

It is the young men who say yes or no. He who led the young men is dead.

... ... ...

~Chief Joseph Nez Perce