Iain Clifford v Crown Inc ECHM & ICC Merits, Probabilities Other Court Options Including the Disrupter Documentary on Netflix


Iain Clifford v Crown Inc

ECHM & ICC

Merits, Probabilities

Other Court Options

Including the Disrupter Documentary on Netflix


 

1. Merits of My Submission to the European Court of Human Rights

  1. I have submitted an Article 34 application to the European Court of Human Rights asserting violations of Articles 3, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 13, 17, and 18 of the Convention, and Protocol 1 Article 1. My case rests on:
  1. Article 3 – Inhuman or Degrading Treatment as I am forced into constructive exile, reputational warfare, psychological distress, and threat of incarceration under a void order and constructive exile in North Cyprus.
  1. Article 5 – Right to Liberty and Security due to unlawful attempted incarceration under a defective judgment and lack of lawful service and denial of remedy.
  1. Article 6 – Denial of fair trial due to fictitious prosecutor, refusal of attorney-in-fact, dismissal of unrebutted affidavits and legal notices.
  1. Article 9 – Violation of religious freedom as I am a peaceful ecclesiastical envoy of the Republic of Old Souls, a lawful 508(c)(1)(A) ministry.
  1. Articles 10 and 11 – Suppression of expression and association through the issuance of a Civil Restraint Order to silence lawful rebuttals and evidence.
  1. Articles 8, 13, Protocol 1 Article 1 – Arbitrary interference with privacy, property, and liberty, through the freezing of accounts without evidentiary basis and denial of rebuttal to claims of asset dissipation.
  1. Articles 14 and 17 – Discrimination, based on my lawful standing as a whistleblower, minister, and spiritual envoy.
  1. Article 18 – Abuse of Rights – Entrapment strategy using Order 34/2023 to silence dissent and eliminate lawful remedy.
  1. These violations are extensively supported by the Affidavit of Facts and Legal Argument, the Addendum to the ECHR Application, and the Critique of the Sentencing Judgment.

2. Merits of My Submission to the International Criminal Court

  1. My submission under Article 15 of the Rome Statute alleges Article 7(1)(h), (Article 7(1)(e)), (Article 7(1)(k)):
  1. Article 7(1)(k) – Persecution of a group, specifically whistleblowers, spiritual envoys, and members of the Republic of Old Souls.
  1. Article 7(1)(e) – Unlawful imprisonment (Article 7(1)(e)) as a result of fictitious proceedings under a fraudulent Civil Restraint Order and a fabricated sentencing claim.
  1. Article 7(1)(k) – Inhumane acts, including reputational sabotage, denial of legal remedy, and forced silence.
  1. Entrapment by Design – Order 34/2023 as a constructive trust fraud and a tool of entrapment, the Crown’s use of a fictitious prosecutor and the absence of any complainant.
    1. Targeting of a Protected GroupMATRIXFREEDOM members and Republic of Old Souls nationals are peaceful ecclesiastical envoys.
    2. Crown targeting constitutes group persecution under ICC standards.
  1. Denial of Representation and Remedy
    1. Removal of your attorney-in-fact and suppression of judicial review.
    2. Use Prosecutor v. Gbagbo precedent to show judicial persecution.
  2. International Impact
    1. Highlight the transnational nature of the persecution, affecting U.S. nationals and global members.
    2. This strengthens the case for universal jurisdiction and international criminal scrutiny.
  3. The conduct described is systematic and politically motivated, targeting me for my 20-year exposure of financial corruption, my lawful use of trust and equity, and my rejection of unlawful jurisdiction.
  1. The ICC filing is further strengthened by:
  1. Exhibit F referencing relevant provisions of the ICCPR, ECHR, and Vienna Convention.
  2. Declaration of Peaceful Mission and Covenant of the 508(c)(1)(A) Ministry, which establish my protected status.

3. Review Against Prior ECHR and ICC Decisions

  1. ECHR Precedents:
  1. Mamatkulov and Askarov v. Turkey (2005) — upholding Article 6 violations where states failed to allow fair hearing or address torture and inhumane treatment.
  2. Steel and Morris v. United Kingdom (2005) — affirmed that denial of legal aid in complex matters violated right to fair trial (similar to barring my attorney-in-fact).
  3. Kudeshkina v. Russia (2009) — confirmed that targeting individuals who expose state corruption can breach freedom of expression and fair trial.

4. ICC Precedents:

  1. Prosecutor v. Jean-Pierre Bemba — recognized systematic political persecution, even absent physical violence, where institutional abuse of legal mechanisms was proven.
  2. Prosecutor v. Laurent Gbagbo — considered persecution by judiciary and administrative actors as grounds for prosecution under Rome Statute Articles 7(1)(h) and 7(1)(k).
  1. These precedents strongly support the legal foundations of my case.

5. Probability Evaluation

ForumLegal StandingEvidentiary StrengthPrecedent AlignmentPolitical Interference RiskProbability of Acceptance
ECHRStrong under Art. 6, 9, 10Robust affidavits, rebuttals, documentary evidenceHighMedium80-90%
ICCStrong under Rome Statute Art. 7Factual evidence, witness support, repeated targetingModerateHigh60-70%

Most likely aspects to be upheld:

  1. At ECHR: Violation of Article 6 (fair trial), Article 9 (religious status), and Article 13 (denial of effective remedy).
  2. At ICC: Persecution under Article 7(1)(h), possibly also unlawful imprisonment.

6. If Rejected: Alternative Remedies and Venues

  1. If my cases are rejected:
  1. United Nations Human Rights Committee (ICCPR mechanism):
  1. Petition under First Optional Protocol to the ICCPR.
  2. Arguments can mirror ECHR submission.
  3. Often used when ECHR fails or delays justice.
  1. Inter-American Commission on Human Rights:
  1. Though UK is not a member, a strategic advisory opinion can be requested for international pressure.
  1. African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR):
  1. Used in transnational legal scholarship to highlight human rights persecution by former colonial powers.
  1. Class action filings jurisdictions with strong human rights frameworks:
  2. Ireland
  1. Common law jurisdiction with robust protections for religious freedom and whistleblowers.
  1. Potential to file under constitutional rights, EU Charter of Fundamental Rights, and international law.
  1. Class action could include:
  1. Members of MATRIXFREEDOM and Nationals of Republic of Old Souls.
  2. Victims of reputational sabotage or financial restraint.
  1. Belgium
  1. Civil law jurisdiction with active universal jurisdiction provisions.
  1. Criminal complaint for:
  2. Crimes against humanity (Rome Statute Article 7).
  3. Judicial persecution and institutional collusion.
  4. Belgium has previously accepted cases involving foreign state actors.
  1. South Africa
  1. Has a strong constitutional court and history of transitional justice.
  2. Class action could be framed as:
  1. Systemic abuse by former colonial institutions.
  2. Violation of spiritual sovereignty and ecclesiastical rights.

8. People’s Tribunals and International Media Courts:

    1. Platforms like the Permanent Peoples’ Tribunal or Russell Tribunal may accept cases exposing systemic state violence and persecution.

9. Universal Jurisdiction Filings:

    1. File criminal complaints in countries that recognize universal jurisdiction (e.g., Spain, Germany) targeting named Crown actors for persecution and obstruction of justice.

10. Continued exposure through documentary and public record:

    1. The Disrupter” documentary the whole 20 year story or a shortened “Entrapment by Design” documentary from the arrest in June 2023 onwards, ultimately a Netflix documentary.
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