Corey A. Askew v. Paul Bailey, Sheriff, Berrien County, Michigan
1. Are the Self-determination Clauses of the United Nations treaties and customary rules of international law to which the United States is a party up on the Courts to enforce as the supreme Law of the Land?
2. Are petitioner's acts of self-determination and expatriation exercises of a legitimate natural and inherent right under the law of Nations?
3. Are the Supremacy Clause and Loyalty Clause of the Constitution of the United States being obstructed in violation of the law of Nations by infringing upon petitioner's human right of exercising Self-determination, expatriation, as an indigenous individual nation duty in an indigenous jurisprudence, and directly participating in the self-government of an indigenous Nation?
4. Does the United States provide de facto recognition of the political existence of indigenous Nation-states established under international law by ratifying and/or accession to treaties or customary rules of international law which provide for Self-determination?
5. Does the United States have an international obligation and responsibility to promote and respect the express acts of the inhabitants who are seeking to attain a full measure of Self-determination in non-self-governing territories under the International Trusteeship System or self-determination to exercise self as the trust administrators of the Trusteeship System of the United Nations Charter?
Are the self-determination clauses in the United Nations treaties and customary rules of international law to which the United States are a party binding upon the United States to enforce as the supreme law of the land?