Saturday, August 16, 2014

Update: Nominations for Tribunal in answer to What's Next? Arrest The Pretenders In The Hague; Form A Tribunal; Utilize the Treaty of 1850.....Part III

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Cases to be Adjudicated/Heard before the Tribunal for the Week of August 11 - August 15, 2014:

The following shows the CONTENTS of the book PIRATES OF THE PACIFIC: CHARLES REED BISHOP AND FRIENDS
Dedication Introduction Drawing PIRATES OF THE PACIFIC

Aldrich, William Arthur
Alexander, William DeWitt
Alexander, Samuel Thomas
Allen, Elisha Hunt
 Allen, William F 2
Andrews, Lorrin
Armstrong, Richard
Armstrong, Samuel C. 3
Armstrong, William N.
Ashford, Clarence Wilder
 Ashford, Marguerite Kamehaokalani
 Atherton, Joseph Ballard
Austin, Jonathan
Baldwin, Henry Perrine
Belknap, George 5
Bishop, Charles Reed
6 Bishop, Eben Faxon
9 Bishop, Sereno E.
Bolte, C. Bond,
Edward P. Bowen,
William Boyd. E.S. 10
 Boyd, J. H.
Boyd, R. N.
Brewer, Charles
Brewer II, Charles 11
 Brown, Charles Augustus 12
 Brown, George 13
 Brown, Godfrey
 Brown, Jacob Foster
  Brown, M. Bush,
 Gavien Fred Bush,
John Edward 14
Camara, Jr., J.M.
Campbell, James
Carlisle, John Griffith
Carter, Charles L.
Carter, George Robert
Carter, Henry Alpheus Pierce 16
 Cartwright, Bruce
Castle, Samuel Northrup 17
 Castle, William R.
Chamberlain, Levi
Cleghorn, Archibald Scott 18
 Coffman, De Witt
Cooke, Amos Starr
Cooke, Charles 19
Cooper, Henry Ernest
Cummins, John A.
Cummings, W. H.
Damon, Edward
 Damon, Samuel Mills
Davies, Theophilus Harris 20
 Day, Francis R.
Dayton, David
Delameter, N.B.
Dillingham, Benjamin Franklin
 Dillingham, Walter 21
 Dimond, Henry
Dodge, F. S.
Dole, Sanford Ballard
 Dominis, John O. 22
 Dowsett, James Isaac
Emmeluth, John
Fisher, Joseph Henry 23
Forbes, Anderson Oliver
Frear, Walter Francis
Gibson, Walter Murray
Gilman, Gorham D. 24
Glade, H. F.
Godkin, Edwin L.
Green, William Lowthan
Gresham, Walter Quintin 25
 Gulick, Charles T.
Hackfeld, Heinrich
Hall, Edwin Oscar
Hall, W. W.
Harris, Charles Coffin 26
Hartwell, Alfred Stedman
Hassinger, J.A.
Herrick, C. f.
Hobbs, L. G.
Hoes, R. R. Hoffman
 Holt, Robert
 Hooper, William Northey
Iaukea, Curtis Piehu 27
Ihihi, I.
Irwin, William
Jones, G. W. C.
Jones, Peter Cushman
Judd, Albert Francis 28
Judd, Bernice
 Judd, Charles Hastings
Judd, Gerrit Parmele 29
 Kaai, Simon K.
Kaia, Maria
 Kalanianaole/Kuhio/Prince Kuhio/Kuhio Kalanianaole 30
Kalu, D
Kaluna, William
Kamakaia, Samuel K
Kanakanui, S. M. 31
 Kauanui
Keohokalole, Morris K.
 King, James A.
Kinney, William A.
 Ku, Sam Kulike 32
 Laird Lawrence,
 Robert Lee,
William Little Liwai,
 J. Low,
 Frederick Ferdinand Lucas,
 Albert Ludlow,
N. Lyons,
 C. S. McCandless,
 J. A. 33
McChesney, F. W.
 McGrew, John S.
MacCarthur, Charles
 L. Macy,
George Mahaulu,
 S. Marsden,
Joseph 34 Meheula,
 H. Moore,
 E. K. Moreno,
 Celso Morgan,
 James F. Mott Smith,
 John Nakuina,
 Moses K. Neumann,
 Paul Notley,
 Charles 35
Oleson, William B.
   Olney, Richard
 Oxnard, Henry T.
 Parker, Samuel
Peterson, A. P. 36
Pratt, J. W.

 Preston, Edward

 Procter, John Robert
 Ralston, William C.
 Reeder, F. W.
 Rice, William Hyde
Robertson, George
 Rosa, Geo 37
 Rose, Geo C.
Rowell, William E.
Schurz, Carl Shipman,
William Silva,
 Manuel Enos Simpson,
 W. E Smith,
William Owen 38
Soper, J. H.
Spalding, Z.S.
 Spreckels, Claus
Stelker, M. Stevens,
 John Leavitt
Swinburne, W.T. 39
   Thrum, Thomas G.
 Thurston, Lorrin Andrews
Tracy, B. F.
Vida, C. E.
Waity, Henry E.
Wall, W. E. 40
Ward, Curtis Perry
Waterhouse, John Thomas
White, Jno C.
Whiting, William Austin
Widemann, H.A.
Wilcox, Albert S.
Wilcox, Charles
Wilcox, George N.
Wilder, William C. 41
Wilder, Jr., W. O.
Willis, C. J.
Wundenburg, F. W.
Wyllie, Robert C.
Young, Alexander 42
Young, Lucien
Ziegler, C. W.
 United States Presidents Family(ies)/Close Friends in Hawaii · Franklin Pierce – 14th President –Term: 1853 – 1857 43 · Abraham Lincoln – 16th President – Term: 1861-1865 ·Grover Cleveland – 22nd & 24th President – Terms: 1885-1889 and 1893-1897 · Theodore Roosevelt – 26th President – Terms: 1901-1905 and 1905-1909 · Franklin D. Roosevelt – 32nd President – Terms: 1933-1941; and 1941-1945; · John F. Kennedy – 35th President – Term: 1961-1963 Santa Claus from Hawaii 45 · Original Owner of MACY’S: Roland H. Macy’s relatives in Hawaii · General Electric Credit Corporation · Mutual Shares Corporation ·Michael A. Price · Goldman & Sachs, limited partnership with Sidney J. Weinberg · Ed Finkelstein · Mark Handler · Art Reiner · Bobby Friedman · Hal Kahn · Sidney J. Weinberg ·Dan I. Hale · Kamehameha Schools/KSBE/Bishop Estates aka’s · George Macy · Internal Revenue Service of the United States government · George Macy, Jr. · LIBERTY HOUSE ·MACY’S Commentary Overview of the PIRATES OF THE PACIFIC -Americans -Bankers -Genealogy Frauds -Judges -Lawyers -Missionary or Missionary descendant -Planters or Plantation employees -Pacific Cable Company/cable interests -Suspected Spy (includes Masons, etc.) -Unidentified ---Totals ---Grand Totals -----Civil War Generals in Hawaii or Family in Hawaii Summary Notes References About the Author Other Books Available

Additional Cases for:

Bernice Pauahi Bishop Estates Trustees


Judges of the Hawaiian Kingdom - Treasonous Judges


Judges of the Provisional Government, etc.

Governors Selected by the Presidents of the U.S.

Governors Voted in by the People

Trustees of All the Trusts, etc.

Evidence Against the Bishop Estates Trustees:
March 12, 2000
Bishop Estate’s first trustees
played key role in overthrow
By Bob Dye, Honolulu Advertiser
They were American annexationists, these first five trustees of the estate of Bernice Pauahi Bishop.
Within three years of their appointment, they helped strip King Kalakaua of his power. When, upon his death in 1891, Pauahi’s hanai sister Lili‘uokalani succeeded to the throne, they joined with others to depose her, establish a provisional government and a so-called republic.
The annexationists realized their ultimate political goal four years later when the Hawaiian Islands became a U.S. territory. Their political agenda had a profound effect on Bishop Estate and the Kamehameha Schools.
Princess Bernice Pauahi Bishop was the last of the Kamehameha dynastic line. Upon Pauahi’s death, in the 11th year of Kalakaua’s reign, the royal lands of the Kamehamehas — one-ninth of all land in Hawaii — passed to the control of five esteemed haoles — the trustees.
None had a drop of Hawaiian blood.
Those lands became a base of wealth for two great estates — those of Bishop and Damon.
The trustees were:
Charles Reed Bishop, president, founder of Bishop Bank (now First Hawaiian Bank) and Pauahi’s husband. Born in Glenn Falls, N.Y., in 1822, he came to Hawaii in 1846 and accepted a clerkship in the U.S. Consulate. He became the Collector General of Customs in 1849, and a year later, he married the princess. She was 18 and he was 26. Her missionary teachers at the Royal School — Amos Starr and Juliette Montague Cooke — encouraged the courtship.
“I’m decidedly in favor of annexation, not only because I’m an American, proud of the ‘stars and stripes’ and expect to gain something by such a move, but because I’m an Hawaiian too, and believe that while such a change might bring its evils, it would be the best thing for the great majority of the population both native and foreign,” he wrote in 1853.
In 1873, as Lunalilo’s minister of foreign affairs, he urged the cession of Pearl Harbor to the United States for a naval base. In addition to being a trustee of the Punahou School, he headed the public board of education. He served as president of the Legislative Assembly, and was a member of the House of Nobles.
The Rev. Charles McEwen Hyde, vice-president. Hyde was born in New York City on June 8, 1832. His father, an attorney, was treasurer and general agent of the American Bible Society, and his uncle William was a board member of American Board of Commissioners of Foreign Missions.
A graduate of Princeton Theological Seminary and the holder of a doctor of divinity degree from Williams College, Hyde came to Hawaii in 1877 to be secretary of the Hawaiian Evangelical Association. He reorganized a Honolulu theological school as the North Pacific Missionary Institute, and served as principal. He was named a trustee ofPunahou School in 1877.
Supporters called Hyde a “typical American, combining all the energy and persistency of the New Englander with the refinement and culture of the Christian Gentleman.”
Charles Montague Cooke, secretary. A son of missionary parents and teachers of Princess Pauahi, Amos Starrand Juliette Montague Cooke, he was born in Honolulu on May 16,1849.
He began his business career with Castle & Cooke, a firm founded by his father.
At the time of his appointment, he was a partner in Lewers & Cooke. He married missionary daughter Anna Charlotte Rice in 1874. They had six children. He became a trustee of Punahou School in 1880. He was a charter member of the Hawaii Society of the Sons of the American Revolution.
Samuel Mills Damon, treasurer of the board. A son of missionary parents, the Rev. Samuel Chenery Damon and Julia Mills Damon, he was born in Honolulu on March 3, 1845. A partner of Charles Reed Bishop in the Bishop Bank after Sept. 1, 1881, he inherited from Bernice Pauahi Bishop the ahupua‘a of Moanalua. That bequest contained about 7,000 acres, and stretched from the Koolau Range to Keehi Lagoon. He coordinated her funeral.
Earlier he had coordinated the funeral of Princess Ruth. He married missionary daughter Harriet Melinda Baldwin. Her brother, Henry P. Baldwin, was a founder of Alexander & Baldwin. At the time of appointment Damon was a member of Kalakaua’s privy council. With Charles R. Bishop, he was an executor of Princess Pauahi’s will.
William Owen Smith, trustee. A son of missionary parents, Dr. James William and Melicent Knapp Smith, he was born at Koloa, Kauai, in 1848. He became the sheriff of Kauai in 1870, and of Maui in 1872. In 1875, he was admitted to the practice of law. The following year he married Irish-born Abbey Hobron, the daughter of Capt. T.H. Hobron, founder of the 3,000 acre Grove Ranch on Maui. They had five children. He was named a trustee ofPunahou School and an editor of Planters’ Monthly in 1882.
When appointed to the Bishop Estate board, he was a trustee of Lunalilo Estate. A member of the Hawaiian legislature, he was politically allied with Sanford Ballard Dole, a childhood friend. Smith, who had extensive trust experience, resigned as trustee on Oct. 20, 1886, and was replaced a day later by Joseph Oliver Carter, another trust expert.
Schooling Hawaiians
The trustees met at least once a month in the board room of Bishop & Co., but usually more often than that. Hyde’s biographer reported that trustee commissions “hovered”‘ about $1,000 a year during the first years.
But apparently individual commissions varied. Cooke returned every penny he received from his trusteeship in the first five years — a total of $989.79 — and pledged all future commissions to establish a library at the school.
The Rev. Hyde recommended a site for the Boys’ School, and enunciated “the objective, aims, method, time, and extent of the school.” Called The Prospectus of the Kamehameha Schools, the report was unanimously adopted. After Princess Pauahi’s will called for the establishment of a school to educate Hawaiian children, the document became the principal guideline for the development and management of the schools.
Hyde became the “lead trustee” for the schools and advocated appointing the Rev. William Brewster Oleson as principal. Oleson began his duties on July 1, 1886, and soon traveled to the United States to visit similar schools and recruit faculty.
Planning an overthrow
Calling King Kalakaua “a bully and a coward,” Hyde advocated his overthrow.
He wrote to the Rev. Judson Smith, head of the American Board of Commissioners of Foreign Missions, on Nov. 20, 1886: “I have learned facts about the King’s measures and objects, which convince me that with the cunning of the savage and the tirelessness of revengeful animosity, he is seeking the overthrow of Christian institutions and the utter demoralization of society. His aim is to restore heathenism with its absolute power of the chief and licentious orgies of wasteful indulgence ... we should have a revolution.
A Jan. 13, 1887, correspondence from Hyde to Smith states: “By the Constitution, he is not responsible to anybody for anything he chooses to do. He can steal, murder, defraud. He cannot be called to account. But if twelve of the leading men of this community should agree upon a line of policy that they believe the King ought to pursue, and publicly demands, he would have to succumb. That is my idea in reply to your question what means there are of checking this irresistible rush to disgrace and ruin.
“But there are no such twelve men to be found in this community … But if circumstances should put me in a position in which I should have to defend the interests of Christ’s Kingdom, as against the King, I should have neither fear nor hesitancy in doing so.”
Months earlier, the king had confided to an aide that he feared he might be overthrown. Members of his staff spent the night guarding him for several weeks after as he slept in the palace.
It was confirmed later that a secret organization, called the Hawaiian League, had been formed about the first of the year, consisting of some of the most powerful businessmen and their pastors. All were white, male and mostly Protestant.
Hyde refused to join the Hawaiian League, “objecting to the secret, underhand plottings involved in such a style of procedure.” But his co-trustee Cooke was among the first to sign up. Kamehameha School principal Oleson was on its executive committee and vice principal Henry S. Townsend, was a member.
Members pledged to keep the League secret and to “protect the white community” of the kingdom “against any arbitrary or oppressive action of the government.”
The League held its first meeting at the home of Sanford B. Dole. By June 30, 1887, it had 405 members. Meetings usually took place in the evening, and in different parts of the city, to frustrate police efforts to gather information on them.
Seizing control
The revolution was bloodless.
Kalakaua was stripped of power and the government fell into the hands of the Hawaiian League. On July 5, 1887, the Honolulu Rifles were ordered out in full uniform. Their cartridge belts were full. Charles Bishop’s nephew, Eben Faxon Bishop, was one of the officers as a first lieutenant of Company B. In addition, League members armed themselves.
At the palace a New York Herald correspondent asked King Kalakaua:
“What means have you of self-defense?”
“I have my bodyguard of sixty men, who are passably well armed and drilled,” he replied, “an Austrian battery of six field pieces, two brass cannon with sweeping fire, good bolts to outside doors and good hearts within. Then, too, there are two companies of native volunteers called the Queen’s and King’s Own, composed mainly of old retainers.”
“But outside, as I understand it, there are three hundred men, over a thousand rifles and ammunition enough for a siege.”
“Yes,” replied the king, nervously wetting his lips, “but they have not got in yet.”
Hyde told a different story. He wrote that Kalakaua had “ordered his military to assemble at the palace Friday night, but only 20 assembled out of 200. When he asked them how many would fight for him, only 2 said they would.”
Hyde also wrote: “The backbone of the whole movement is the money furnished by some of our capitalists, while the brains came largely from the ‘missionary ring’ and the muscle from the sturdy mechanics, carpenters, and masons and machinists who have no great regard for royalty but do believe in right and justice.”
A man credited with financing the revolution was Trustee Damon, the banker. In July 1889, the “reform” cabinet named him minister of finance. Kalakaua died in 1893 and was succeeded by Queen Lili‘uokalani.
-Bob Dye is a Kailua historian and writer.
*******************
  
INNOCENT ____________  GUILTY ________________
-Bob Dye is a Kailua historian and writer.
http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/2000/Mar/12/opinion6.html - This is part of the evidence to be presented to the Tribunal of the Hawaiian Kingdom, then to the U.S./U.S.A. invoking Article I and Article XIV of the 1850 Treaty of the Hawaiian Kingdom and the U.S./U.S.A.
Tribunal Instructions and Fulfilling the Requirements of the Treaty of 1850 with the Hawaiian Kingdom and the U.S./U.S.A.:






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