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Banyan Tree, not a Banyan Tree, but a Monkeypod tree cut down, and then realized that a lot of, <br />some of the bodies were exhumed, I'm not sure if it was family members or what, but unless you <br />put notice into the paper that states, you know, you need, anybody that might be descendants of <br />the gravesites and stuff like that, please come forward, so they, you know, bodies canoh, not <br />bodies, but the gravesite can be identified or something, okay? And, not only that, I don't know <br />how SHPD can get, become involved without the Big Island Burial Council being involved as <br />well as NAGPRA, and this is an act, this Federal Act, North American Graves Protection and <br />Repatriation Act. All these people gotta be involved. Not only that, I believe jurisdiction is <br />under the State Department of Land and Natural Resources. They have to be also consulted as <br />well as the Aha Moku Council, which is legislated by the State of Hawaii Legislature, and it's I <br />don't know, I forget what act they are under. But, anyway, these people have to be consulted. <br />So, you got a lot of work to do. As far as the hydrology thing also when we had our recent storm <br />the past couple of days, it started filling up. I wish I had more time. <br />CLARKSON: Thank you. Well, thank you. Mr. Vicente? <br />VICENTE: Good morning. My name is Dwight Vicente representing the Hawaiian Kingdom. <br />I've heard false statements made that, I haven't seen any proof that C. Brewer owned the lands. <br />C. Brewer was here under treaty, and the 1875 Treaty, what you call the Reciprocity Treaty, was <br />not signed by King Kalakaua nor was it signed by the U.S. President, so the plantation business, <br />American plantation business being here was illegal. And, there were only leasing the lands. <br />How did they, it turned out lease to own? And, those lands are crown lands. You cannot sell <br />those lands. So, that statement about they owned the land and now Ed Olson owns the land, is <br />fraudulent. There's no document that shows—and there's no document showing that the <br />Kingdom doesn't exist. The Kingdom didn't disappear. It's still here. Iolani Palace still stands. <br />The people are still here. The people's native tenant rights to the land is still here. There's no <br />document that extinguishes any of those rights whether it be the rights of the Crown to those <br />lands and the rights to lease those lands. Ed Olson doesn't own the land. Neither did C. Brewer <br />own the land. There's no treaty right now. The Reciprocity Treaty was illegal, so if you're <br />American, you're an illegal alien here. All the other treaties ended in 1897, so if you come, your <br />descendant or you came from another country, unless you've been naturalized to the Hawaiian <br />Kingdom, you're an illegal alien. And, looking at this Commission, I happen to question your <br />nationality, whether you have jurisdiction over these lands. You gotta remember in 1898, these <br />lands were not ceded to the United States. The leased lands had a contract on them, and they <br />couldn't impair those contracts. The lands that was illegally ceded was the Crown and <br />Government lands that did not possess a valid contract at that time, but under the U.S. <br />Constitution, there is no authority, and the Republic of Hawaii was U.S. citizens who was here <br />illegally. U.S. Minister Stevens committed crimes. Not war crimes, but criminal acts. Same <br />with the other U.S. citizens. They had no right to be here. No right to commit those crimes. It's <br />still a crime today, and this constitutional question is unresolved yet, so you cannot move <br />forward. The Queen's protest of January 17 is unresolved yet. The only court that can deal with <br />it because it deals with U.S. Minister Stevens is the U.S. Supreme Court. His acts was criminal, <br />and the U.S. Supreme Court is the one that has jurisdiction over U.S. Minister Stevens. <br />EXHIBIT A <br />19 <br />