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Article 15 Rome Statute

I didn’t need a lawyer — because under Article 15 of the Rome Statute, I have the legal right to self-represent in cases involving crimes against humanity. And that’s exactly what I’ve done — exposing systemic complicity, naming every treaty breach, and forcing global institutions to choose between justice and silence.


Make good choices 😁



International criminal law doesn’t just stop at the corporate name. It pierces the veil.

If Banks are found complicit, the consequences can extend to individuals inside the institution, including:

• Chief Compliance Officers

• Legal Counsel who reviewed and dismissed the matter

• Executives with decision-making authority

• Risk & Governance personnel who failed to escalate


Under Article 25 of the Rome Statute, individuals can be held criminally liable if they:

• Aided, abetted, or otherwise assisted in the commission of a crime;

• Knew about the acts and failed to intervene or report;

• Used their position of authority to prevent action or conceal harm.


This includes failure to act when there was a duty to do so, especially in relation to:

• Crimes against humanity

• Chemical exposure of children

• State-enabled systemic harm

In short:

The people inside the bank — not just the brand — can be investigated, prosecuted, and sanctioned.

Because complicity is personal when the harm is this serious.


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