TO:

U.S. Representative Val Hoyle

 

SUBJECT:

Formal Request to Repeal "not self-executing" Declaration

appended to U.S. Senate's ICCPR ratification

 

DATE:

November 7, 2024 A.D.

 

 

Greetings Rep. Hoyle:

 

Pertinent documentation was transmitted on the "X" social media platform

to the High Commissioner for Human Rights, UN Human Rights Committee,

on November 4, 2024 A.D.

 

That thread of related messages is also archived in the

Supreme Law Library on the Internet here:

 

https://supremelaw.org/cc/un/letter.2024-11-04/notice.of.intent.htm

 

Despite timely and reasonable efforts to obtain relief,

the Undersigned was again barred from voting in the General Election

held on November 5, 2024, because of "class discrimination"

in Oregon's voter eligibility statute.

 

As such, the State of Oregon is liable for violating Article 25

in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights:

 

https://supremelaw.org/ref/treaty/covenant.htm#A25

 

The U.S. House of Representatives and the UN High Commissioner

for Human Rights are both presumed to understand the legal meaning

of "ex relatione".

 

Consequently, this Formal Request does originate

from the "United States" (U.S. Federal Government).

It does not originate from an "individual" as that term

is defined in the First Optional Protocol to the ICCPR.

 

Kindly proceed with all deliberate speed by sponsoring

House legislation repealing the "not self-executing" Declaration

as appended to the U.S. Senate's ICCPR ratification.

 

An electronic copy of that Declaration is archived

in the Supreme Law Library on the Internet here:

 

https://supremelaw.org/ref/treaty/reservations.htm#declarations

 

 

Thank you for your professional consideration.

 

 

Sincerely yours,

/s/ Paul Andrew Mitchell, B.A., M.S.,

Oregon State Citizen, Damaged Party,

Private Attorney General, Civil RICO:  18 U.S.C. 1964;

Agent of the United States as Qui Tam Relator (4X),

Federal Civil False Claims Act:  31 U.S.C. 3729 et seq.

 

All Rights Reserved ( cf. UCC 1-308 https://www.law.cornell.edu/ucc/1/1-308 )