Thomas G. Landreth v. United States, et al.
DueProcess FourthAmendment Securities Patent Privacy
Whether 25 U.S.C. @ 1302 preserves the sovereign immunity claimed by the Quinault Indian Tribe/Nation
QUESTIONS PRESENTED Petitioner Landreth owns privately owned property within the Olympic National Park abutting navigable Lake Quinault in Grays Harbor County in the State of Washington. Landreth’s privately owned property has 75 feet of shore land which fluctuates with the rise and fall of the lake. During summer : months the shore land has shore land below the ordinary high water mark and in the winter months the shore land is eliminated and the water level consumes about 20 to 30 feet of deeded property above the ordinary high water mark which makes the land unusable during the winter or high water season. The Quinault Indian Tribe/Nation claims to be the owner of the soil and water up to the ordinary high water mark contained within the lake. With the claim of ownership, the self governing Quinault Indian Tribe closed the lake to all non-Quinault Indian people on April 15, 2013 for any and all recreational . purposes. The closure was enforced with armed and unarmed Quinault Indian police to ensure non-Quinault Indian people entered or used the lake under tribal law. , The closure of the lake deprived Landreth’s rights and is a taking of civil/real property rights and is a taking of accreted shore land. (in rem) The questions presented are: ; 1. Whether 25 U.S.C. @ 1302 preserves the sovereign immunity claimed by the Quinault Indian Tribe/Nation when citizens have or seek redress for grievances of depredations committed by the Quinault Indian Tribe. , 2. Whether Article 8 of the 1856 Treaty of Olympia preserves the sovereign immunity claimed by the Quinault Indian Tribe when the treaty provides the administrative process for redress of grievances to be : proven before the agent and is a part of the Supreme Law of the Land. 3. Whether the President of the Quinault Indian Tribe/Nation declaration in a 2016 interview with the Smithsonian Institute that the 1856 Treaty of Olympia is as valid today as it was in 1856 is a waiver of the 12 year limitation on Quiet Title Actions. 4. Whether a non-response to a Citizens request for redress of grievances . is a default of the duties of the agent in Article 8 of the Treaty of Olympia and allows for court actions to achieve redress. it Ol 5. Whether the adoption of the 1787 Northwest Ordinance into the Constitution of the United States prohibits the ownership of navigable water to non-citizen Indian Tribes during the Territorial period or after the State hood of Washington. 6. Whether 3 Presidential Proclamations approved by the Congress of the United States supersedes, modifies or changes the 1873 Executive Order issued by President Grant enlarging the original 1862 Quinault Indian Reservation boundary. 7. Whether the Judges in the 1945 Court of Claims has the authority to change the boundary of the Quinault Indian Reservation from the ordinary low water to the ordinary high water mark of accreted private property within the boundary of the Olympic National Park. 8. Whether all Judges in the United States are bound by the text contained in the 1856 Treaty of Olympia. 9. Whether any new State can be erected or established in Washington State. 10. Whether the 1866/1872 Congressional Mining Act severed all navigable water from being considered disposable land. 11. Whether the Constitution of the United States or the Congress of the United States has adopted/enacted a law giving the Quinault Indian Tribe sovereign immunity for depredations against the Citizens. ‘ iv .