Hon.
Douglas M. Harpool
United
States District Judge
c/o Clerk of Court,
USDC/WDMO/Southern Division
222
N. John Q. Hammons Parkway, Room 1400
Springfield
65806-2515
Missouri,
USA
Dear
Judge Harpool,
I am
writing with sincere concern for the plight of political prisoner
Paul
Andrew Mitchell, B.A., M.S., now detained at USMCFP in
Springfield,
Missouri, under highly suspicious circumstances.
On
good authority we are now told that the Federal District Court
in Cheyenne, Wyoming, never
perfected jurisdiction in personam,
chiefly because of missing -and-
defective credentials e.g. Oaths of
Office
for Nancy D. Freudenthal
and Stephan Harris, among several others.
Consequently,
it appears your Court now has jurisdiction in personam,
by virtue of U.S. ex rel. Mitchell v. Freudenthal
et al., as mailed to
your Clerk of Court on October 9,
2014, from the USMCFP Mail Room.
See,
for example, 31 U.S.C.
3730(h) (relief from retaliatory actions).
We
are also extremely interested to learn recently that Paul now intends
to challenge the "not
self-executing" Declaration
in the U.S. Senate's
ratification of the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights ("ICCPR")
for violating the Petition
Clause in the First
Amendment (read "the Right
conservative of all other
rights"). On the Internet, please see:
http://www.supremelaw.org/ref/treaty/
A favorable
ruling by your Court on that challenge has the real potential
to open flood gates of valuable
and beneficial human rights litigation --
not only in America, but in
other States Party to that important Treaty.
America
needs and deserves a private right of action to enforce the ICCPR
i.e. effective judicial remedies
for violations of our Fundamental Rights
notwithstanding that the violations were
committed by persons acting
in some official capacity.
Such
a wise precedent may also begin to reverse the steady decline
we observe in the reputation of
the Federal Judiciary across the board.
Please
reply with the correct Docket number, so that we may file
correspondence in support of the REMEDIES
REQUESTED by Paul's
INITIAL APPLICATION FOR WRITS e.g. Amicus Curiae Briefs,
"Qui
Tam" Joinders, etc.
Thank
you for your time and attention, Judge Harpool.
p.s.
We do not need any repeats of Dr. Sell's ordeal!
See Washington
v. Harper, 494 U.S. 210 (1990).
Sincerely yours,