Governor gets Citation by OHS Agency [Kingdom of Hawaii]

HAWAII KUPUNA COUNCIL
Jan 09, 2026By HAWAII KUPUNA COUNCIL

When Notice Is Ignored: Documented Violations by the Governor’s Office of Hawaiʻi

By the Office of Hawaiian Security (OHS) and the Hawaiʻi Kupuna Humanitarian Tribunal (HKHT)

For more than a year, the Office of Hawaiian Security (OHS) and the Hawaiʻi Kupuna Humanitarian Tribunal (HKHT) have issued formal notices, citations, and government records to the executive branch of the State of Hawaiʻi. These documents address matters of land alienation, unlawful authority, continued confinement of Hawaiian Subjects, and violations of humanitarian and Kingdom law.

The central issue is no longer whether notice was given.
The issue is what happens after notice is acknowledged and ignored.

This blog documents that record.

A Governor on Notice

The Governor of the State of Hawaiʻi, Josh Green, has been formally served with multiple OHS government notices and violation citations. These are not informal letters or political statements. They are administrative and evidentiary records, notarized, dated, and preserved.

Among them are:

Official Notice to Cease Sale, Leasing, or Transfer of Hawaiian Kingdom Lands, served on the Governor and placing him on notice that the State lacks lawful authority to sell or negotiate lands belonging to the Hawaiian Kingdom .

Government Official Notice – Violations Cited, detailing continued actions taken by State agents after notice, including land transactions and administrative acts asserted to be outside lawful authority .

Property Claim and Jurisdictional Notice to the Governor, asserting claims over identified lands and challenging the Governor’s authority to authorize conveyances or development .

Violation Citation Issued to Governor Josh Green, documenting specific incidents of continued action after notice and setting out required corrective actions with deadlines .

Each document contains explicit language stating that:

The Governor and his office are informed and notified,

The actions described are documented and recorded, and

Continued conduct after notice is preserved as part of an ongoing violation record.

Land Sales After Notice

One of the most serious issues raised in these records concerns the sale, leasing, and marketing of lands claimed as Hawaiian Kingdom lands.

According to the official notices:

There is no treaty, agreement, or lawful instrument authorizing the State of Hawaiʻi to sell or lease Hawaiian Kingdom lands.

The Governor and State agents are asserted to have no jurisdiction or authority to approve or facilitate such transactions.

Continued land sales or negotiations after notice are documented as knowing continuation, not accidental error .

These claims are not framed as historical debate. They are framed as present-day administrative violations, occurring “after notice,” which is a legally significant threshold in both humanitarian and administrative law.

Unlawful Confinement and Executive Silence

The violation citations also document cases involving the continued detention and transfer of Hawaiian Subjects, despite formal directives asserting that the State lacks jurisdiction over them.

In one cited incident, a Hawaiian Subject was transferred between islands and detained at Halawa Correctional Facility after OHS notice was issued, triggering:

Required corrective actions,

A response deadline,

And distribution of the citation directly to the Governor’s office .

The record shows no documented corrective action by the Governor’s office within the stated deadlines.

Silence in this context is not neutral. In administrative and humanitarian review, failure to act after notice is itself a recordable event.

From Engagement to Documentation

Initially, OHS communications sought engagement, correction, and de-escalation. That phase has passed.

The current posture is documentation.

Each unanswered notice, each uncorrected violation, and each continued land or custodial action is:

Timestamped,

Logged,

Preserved for review by oversight bodies and international mechanisms.

As stated in the notices themselves, these records are generated “for administrative and evidentiary record” and do not expire with political terms of office .

Why This Matters

This blog is not written to persuade. It is written to document.

Governors come and go.
Administrations change.
But records endure.

When future reviewers ask:

Who knew?

When were they informed?

What was done after notice?

The answer, in this case, is already preserved.

Closing

The Governor’s office has been served.
The violations have been cited.
Deadlines have passed.

What remains is not debate, but record.

And records have a way of resurfacing—often long after silence was assumed to be enough.

This blog relies exclusively on official OHS and HKHT records and notices. It makes no claim about intent. It documents actions, notices, and non-responses as preserved in the administrative record.