The Official Website of  the Grand Chief of the General Council                                                               Charter of Cooperative Assn. of Lakota, Dakota, Nakota Chiefs  - DEC. 2008   

This is the official web site of
chief Richard Grass
Grand Chief of the General Council of the Great Lakota, Dakota, Nakota Nation
(L.D.N)

LAKOTA, DAKOTA , NAKOTA
National & International Government
A Sovereign Nation International
 Re-Established at Bear Butte - July 14, 1991


Richard Grass
Blood line descendent of  Chief Two Strike, Chief Red Cloud, Chief White Swan, Chief Sitting Bull,
Old Chief Frost, Chief White Bird, Chief Crazy Horse

legal correspondance

Richard Grass, Grand Chief of the National General Council
Dated Dec.              2008

  LAKOTA, DAKOTA, NAKOTA

TRADITIONAL NATIONAL & INTERNATIONAL GOVERNMENT

A Sovereign Nation International Re-Established at Bear Butte July 14,1991

Her Excellency Condoleezza Rice United States Secretary of State Department of State

Washington, DC

U.S.A.

Dear Secretary Rice:

The Leaders and Peoples of the Great Lakota, Dakota and Nakota Nation present our compliments to the United States of America, I haye the honor to-transmit for your information the Charter of The Cooperative Association of Lakota, Dakota, and Nakota Traditional Tribal Griefs. The purpose of this Charter is to better enable the Great Lafcota, Dakota and Nakota Nation to exercise our right to self-determination under international law and practice.

Please accept, Excellency, the assurance of our highest consideration-Richard Grass

Grand Chief of the General Council Dated:

 Richard Grass

Grand Chief of the National
General Council
Dated Dec.              2008

www.RichardGrass. com

email: Richard@RichardGrass.com

 

 

Charter of The Cooperative Association of Lakota, Dakota, and Nakota Chiefs

Statement of Principles

This association is formed of the hereditary traditional chiefs who are the natural leaders of the peoples of the Great Lakota, Dakota, and Nakota Nation. The traditional chiefs are responsible for the management of the domestic affairs of their respective tribes and the Grand Chief is responsible for oversight of all such domestic tribal affairs and also is the chief foreign relations agent in representing all of these peoples internationally. This association also subscribes to the Principles of the Indigenous and Tribal peoples Solidarity Union. The association is founded on this premise and that that there exists an undeniable need to restore internationally-recognized human rights and general well-being of these peoples.

Resolution

Considering that history is replete with the injustice of genocide and social inequity perpetrated upon these peoples by governments and persons foreign to them; and,

Noting that international law encourages self-help and self-determination and that in the Western Sahara decision: "The ICJ left open for groups, whether composed of states, of tribes or of individuals, the claim to be a legal entity distinct from its members. That claim remains open." (c.f ICJ Reports 1975:12,63); and,

Noting further that Section 702 of Restatement of the Law Third: Foreign Relations law of the United States, especially the third paragraph of item b of that Section, may also be applicable in respect to the formation and objectives of this association; and,

Finding that the true and natural leadership for these peoples is the hereditary traditional chiefs who now assert their right to be a legal entity distinct from the members of their respective tribes in order to accomplish the general objectives contained in the Statement of Principles of the association; and,

Therefore Be It Resolved that the association is formed as a quasi-governmental organization of traditional tribal governmental leaders and may be considered an international intergovernmental organization of traditional government heads of state whose labour has furthered this cause; and,

Be It Further Resolved that the association is a representative arm of the traditional governments of the Lakota, Dakota, and Nakota peoples; and,

Be It Further Yet Resolved that in order to accomplish the aforementioned goals and objectives, the association is organized formally pursuant to the following articles:

This association is duly chartered under the sovereign authority of the Grand Chief of the Great Lakota Dakota Nakota Nation exercising the basic right of self-determination.

Cooperative Association of Lakota, Dakota, and Nakota Traditional Tribal Chiefs

Articles of Association

Article One

The legal name of the association shall be: Cooperative Association of Traditional Tribal Chiefs of the Lakota, Dakota, and Nakota Nations

Article Two

The location of the principal office of the association shall be on the homeland of the Great Lakota, Dakota, Nakota Nation in the geographic region commonly known as the Black Hills in the specific geographical area known for the time being as Rapid City, SD, and the address of the association shall be P.O. Box 1134, Rapid City, SD 57709,but may be changed from time to time as deemed appropriate by the association.

Article Three

(a)  The purposes of association shall be to lawfully deal with common problems
from which these peoples and other indigenous peoples suffer by such ways and means,
including, but not necessarily limited to, making and implementing policies based upon
traditional tribal principles to alleviate social problems and bring about natural social
cooperation and natural order among these people, and to create, design, develop, and
implement tribal cooperative economic systems and projects to improve the conditions of
work, and to create, design, develop, and implement educational systems and programs
based on traditional tribal principles for advancement of the cultures of these peoples;

(b) To conduct functions to foster cooperation with other indigenous peoples and
with non-indigenous peoples and generally advance the such a spirit of cooperation
internationally;

(c) To raise and administer funds for the purposes, goals and objectives stated
above and for other not-for-profit purposes.

Article Four

The association shall be empowered to do anything necessary and proper in furtherance of its principles, purposes, goals and objectives, including — but not necessarily limited to: exercising authority of self-governance and developing policies to guide its internal and external affairs and protect its common interests; conducting research, exploration, and examination of problems which these peoples face or might face; dissemination of research findings and information and statistics pertaining to such problems through any suitable manner or media; analysis of such problems and development of solutions to them; and to hold such property and utilize such resources as respectively necessary and reasonable to further the stated purposes.

Article Five

Governance of the association shall be autonomous and self-governing as consistent with the principle of local and setf-determination in the formalization of a general council, which shall at any given time, consist of not less then five members and shall normally consist of seven hereditary chiefs, one of who shall be the Grand Chief as a representative of the General Council. The basic function of the general council is to make and administer policy and form tribunals.

Article Six

Dues and assessments may be requested of association members for administration of the association and for the stated purposes and exercise of powers of the association and for administration of cooperative programs and projects.

Article Seven

These articles may be amended with consensus of the membership, and this formal association may also be dissolved as a socio-economic arm of the Great Lakota, Dakota, Nakota Nation by consensus of the General Council membership.

Date:                                                                 Grand Chief of the General Council

 

 

 

Association Internal Policies (By-Laws)

Section 1: Membership

(a)  The criteria for consideration as associate member in the association is that the
prospective member shall be required to understand the principles and general purposes of
the association and have a genuine interest in furthering them. This does not preclude the
member from being considered active if the member does indeed exercise general liberties
of activism guaranteed to all members.

(b)  The criteria for consideration and treatment as an active member is that one
should first meet the associate member criteria and also should be an indigenous Lakota,
Dakota, or Nakota person who holds a position in government of the association.

Section l(a): Dues:

Dues shall be voluntary and any significant material contribution or unpaid labor might suffice for payment of dues depending on its relative value.

Section l(b): Assessments:

Assessments may be made for R&D project and educational expenses for members and others who have agreed to be assessed for such expenses.

Section 2: General Council:

(a)  The basic criteria for qualification for administrative positions) for the general
council is that the prospective council members) shall have active status and demonstrate
true interest in the internal workings of the association.

(b)  The criteria for qualification is that the prospective general council member
shall possess hereditary chiefly status and have wisdom of experience in traditional
indigenous and tribal governmental systems.

(c)  The criteria for qualification as Grand Chief of the general council is that the
member shall possess the hereditary status of Grand Chief and also demonstrate
understanding of conducting external affairs of the association.

Section 3: Authority of Governance:

(a)   A certain reason for the existence of the association is to lessen the burdens of
external government by increasing self-reliance of the association as a group. Thus the
association exercises authority of self-government by virtue of such reasoning and laws
which uphold it.

(b)  The association may organize and form subordinate organizations and semi-
autonomous entities such as an association trust or land bank or similar entity to hold title
to property and resources upon which association members depend for their sustenance
and that are necessary for cooperative operations.

(c)   The association may charter subordinate or semi-autonomous cooperatives for
various forms of economic production which shall be primarily agricultural production and
to produce hems derived directly from their agricultural production for tribal economic
subsistence and possibly for testing any possible market potential for trade and commerce,
at least one-half of which shall be among the members of the association, and, no more
than one-half of which shall be with others. And after payment of expenses and liabilities
of such cooperatives, any net revenues payable to cooperative members shall be limited to
8. percent, and pan of net revenues remaining thereafter (1) shall be used in furtherance of
purposes of the association (2) and part used in cooperative operations (3) and part kept
in cooperative association reserve funds.

(c) (1) The association general council may select or appoint managers for such chartered subordinate or semi-autonomous cooperatives, and such managers shall not be afforded membership status, but shall be entitled to the general benefits and protections of the association.

Section 4: Allocation and Disbursement of Funds:

(a)   Besides as already provided for in the articles of association, funds of the
association shall be allocated as expenses, which may include, but not necessarily limited
to: funding of cooperative housing, food, healthcare, education, cost of living allowances,
communications, transportation, rights protection, and other related necessities. Allocation
of funds shall require consensus of the general council and may be subject to referendum,
but general disclosure of specific financial data shall be expressly prohibited.

(b)       Disbursement of funds shall be made by the Grand Chief of the General
Council under its general oversight authority and also may be subject to referendum, but
general disclosure of specific financial data shall be expressly prohibited.

Section 5: Record Keeping;

(a)   The association shall keep confidential written record of its revenues, fund
allocations and disbursement thereof by an accounting method that is deemed appropriate
by the general council.

(b)   The association shall keep record of general and special meetings by any
efficient manner.

Section 6: Meetings:

Meetings shall be conducted in the customary traditional manner of the indigenous persons involved with the association.

General meetings of the general association membership association may occur annually upon adequate notice, provided that there is reasonable cause to hold such meeting in the year it may occur.

Special meetings of the association membership may occur from time to time upon adequate notice for specific purposes when called for by one-fifth of the general council-Meetings of the general council shall be generally regarded as closed but may be subject to disclosure by referendum by the peoples who they represent.

Section 7: Referendum on Acts of the General Council:

Acts of the general council, including, but not necessarily limited to, policy-making and implementation of policy, and administration of policy, and tribunal decisions and the enforcement such decisions and policy may be subject to referendum only for apparent violations of humanitarian law.

Section 8: Amendments:

These policies may be amended by proposal and adoption of amendments by consensus of the general council.

Section 9. Dissolution:

Notwithstanding that the association shall continue to exist in regardless of whether or not it is formalized in writing, the dissolution of the formalized written aspect of the association as an socio-economic arm of the Great Lakota, Dakota, Nakota Nation may occur if proposed and adopted by consensus of the General Council mentioned above. Section 10: Registered Agent:

The association may change its registered agent through any reasonable manner.

These policies ha_ been adopted as duly recorded in the minutes at a duty

organized meeting of the first general membership of the association on the 21st day of December, 2008

RESOLUTION

Whereas;  We are The Lakota, Dakota, Nakota Nations and The Traditional National Government, since time immemorial. We are Descendants of The Seven Council Fires, which are The Seven Bands, Sihasapa, Hunkpapa, Miniconjou, Itazipco, Sicangu, Oglala, Oohennunpa and Allies, The Cheyenne Nation and The Arapaho Nation International.

We have come to realize We are not Corporations. In order to have Effective Representation, Domestically and Internationally, such as a Trading Network for our Economic arid Social Structure. We Must look for other Alternatives to have Effect, and to Promote as a Model for All Indigeneous Peoples, similar to a Union and Solidarity Traditional Governments, in that sense, an Interna­tional Association to begin with.

Whereas;  We have been without Effective Representation far too long as Nations of Peoples, even for Our Jurisdiction and Plenary Powers.

So Be It Resolved;  We, as Hen and Women of the Direct Line of Descendants of The Lakota, Dakota, Nakota Nation, and The Seven Council Fires, as Hereditary Lineage of The National Traditional Government.

Do Hereby Endorse and Support the International Cooperative Association of The Lakota, Dakota, Wakota Nations Traditional Chiefs, Charter, and Statement of Principles, for Our Effective Representation, Our Jurisdiction for Our People, Our Allodial Title to Our Land and Resources, and to start Excercising Our Plenary Powers to these Effects, as Treaty Signers and Non-Treaty Signers.

So Be It Resolved.

1

 

“7. Mato Watapke, Charging Bear, the first son of Used As Their Shield, is better known to white history as ‘John Grass’ John Grass of Sioux wars and treaty fame.  To the Sioux he was known as the Sovereign who “with the Pipe held before him”, led his people along the compulsory new road white men had made with their sharp guns and cannon.

As a youth and young warrior he knew the wonder of this shining land even as he realized the blight that threatened it.  At the age of fourteen he had been taken by his father and grandfather to the Laramie Treaty of 1851 and there witnessed at first hand “the pattern of the white bother’s behavior”.  In 1864 he watched his people struck by General Sully as they peacefully hunted buffalo and he vowed he would find a way to “the stand between them and white soldiers”.  This book is an effort to show his struggle.  He was a sovereign from 1873 until his death in 1918 at the age of eighty-one."

the book  -
John Grass,
American Indian Patriot

written by Angela A. Boleyn

How the book came to be

Introduction with the books' Acknowledgements and Legend
Table of Contents

Forward - A Premise to History - The Sihasapa Story

PLEASE
HELP PUBLISH
Online Support Site

Bands of the L.D.N. Nation and sub-divisions South Dakota

1.       Cheyenne River Band P.O.Box 590   Eagle Butte, SD 57625
Tel. 605-964-4155      Fax. 605-964-4151

2.                                     Crow Creek Band   P.O.Box 50   Fort Thompson, SD 57339
Tel. 605-245-2221      Fax. 605-245-2470

3.                                     Flandreau Santee Band P.O.Box 283 Flandreau, SD 57028
Tel. 605-997-3891       Fax. 605-947-3878

4.                                     Lower Brule Band P.O.Box 187 Lower Brule, SD 57548
Tel. 605-473-5561       Fax. 605-473-5606

5.                                     Oglala Band P.O.Box H468 Pine Ridge, SD 57770
Tel. 605-867-5821      Fax 605-867-5582

6.                                     Rosebud Band P.O.Box 430 Rosebud, SD 57570
Tel. 605-747-2381       Fax. 605-747-2243

7.                                     Sisseton Wahpeton Band Rt 2 Agency Village   Sisseton, SD 57202
Tel. 605-698-3911        Fax. 605-698-3708

8.                                     YanktonBand   P.O.Box 248 Marty, SD 57367
Tel. 605-384-3804        Fax. 605-384-5687

North Dakota

9.                                     Devil's Lake Band Community Center, Fort Totten, ND 58335
Tel. 701-768-4221                  Fax. 605-766-4126

10.                             Standing Rock Band    P.O.Box F   Fort Yates, ND 58538
Tel. 701-854-7231                  Fax. 701-854-7299

Montana

11.       Fort Peck Band P.O. 1027 Poplar, MT 59255
Tel. 406-768-5155                  Fax. 406-768-5478

Minnesota

12  .   Lower Sioux Band      RR-1 Box 308 Marton MN 56270
Tel 507-697-6185      Fax.507-697-6110

13.      Upper Sioux Band   P.O.Box 147    Granite Falls, MN 56241
Tel. 612-564-2360
Fax. 612-564-3264

14    .   Mdewakanton Dakota Shakopee Sioux Band 2330 Sioux Trail NW Prior Lake,
MN, 55372

Tel. 952-445-8900              Fax. 952-445-8906

15.       Prairie Island Band 1158 Island Blvd. Welch, MN 55089
Tel. 612-388-2555             Fax. 612-388-1576

L.D.N.National Governments

Solidarity Union With Other Nations and Allies

The Arapaho Nation     P.O. 217 Fort Washakie, WY 82514 Tel. 307-332-3532 Fax. 307-332-3055

Northern Cheyenne     P.O. Box 128 Lame Deer MT 59043 Tel. 406-477-8284 Fax. 406-477-6210

Crow Nation  P.O.Box 159   Crow Agency, MT 59022 Tel. 406-638-2601  Fax. 406-638-7283

~

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Now is the Time for the whole truth to be known about our culture and traditional
way of life

Traditional and contemporary Member Bands: 
Brule
Hunkpapa
Itzzipo 
Minneconjou 
Oglala
Oonenumpa 
Santee
 
Sicangu
Sihasapa 
Yankton

Reclaiming the Black Hills

  the book  -
John Grass,
American Indian Patriot

written by Angela A. Boleyn

How the book came to be

Introduction with the books' Acknowledgements and Legend
Table of Contents

Forward - A Premise to History
The Sihasapa Story
Prologue

PLEASE HELP

GRASS Dynasty of Chiefs

LEGAL DOCUMENTS
Following are some examples of a few of the many legal documents and correspondence continually being made known and generated by Richard Grass personally and through the tribes' International Attorney on behalf of restoration and reparations


1995 Ft. Yates Tribunal
1996 Example of U.S. Appeals

Alloidal Title Statement

Canadian Appeal

Charter of Cooperative Assn. of Lakota, Dakota, Nakota Chiefs

Genocide Statement

Member Bands
International Court & Tribunals

Unrepresented Peoples Org.

ARTICLES OF INTEREST;  

If you are in a hurry, and unfamiliar with this subject matter, here are some brief ARTICLES OF INTEREST;   A broken treaty haunts the Black Hills
article from the Argus Reader 6/27/01

Spirit of the Lakota
article from FEMA  July 6, 1999

Also, please check out "Support" page

TREATies still in force
The Keeping of Sacred Words
 

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ARTICLES OF INTEREST;   A broken treaty haunts the Black Hills
article from the Argus Reader 6/27/01

Spirit of the Lakota
article from FEMA  July 6, 1999

 Questions or problems regarding this site?  Please contact Webmaster
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 The relatives of Chief Richard Charging Bear Grass who continue his work, and who carry forward the legacy and dynasty of Grass Chiefs, request and desire that none of Richard Grass' photos, nor any of the copy written materials, correspondence, records or photos at this, his official website be used, dissimulated, nor duplicated for any other purpose.

 This site first published on the full moon 7-8-9