Legal Breaches Since January 2025: Chronology of Systemic Failure 4/06/2025
- agentorangechild
- Jun 4
- 2 min read
This list documents the national and international laws breached in my case — not just against me, but against all survivors of second-generation TCDD harm.
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INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW
(Rome Statute – International Criminal Court)
Article 7(1)(h) – Persecution: systemic denial of healthcare, recognition, and remedy
Article 7(1)(k) – Inhumane acts: ongoing suffering from government inaction
Article 17 – Failure of domestic remedy: denial, deflection, refusal to investigate
Article 25(3)(d) – Complicity through inaction after formal notice
Article 28 – Command responsibility: senior officials failed to act
Article 77 – Maximum penalties for crimes against humanity (up to life imprisonment)
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HUMAN RIGHTS TREATIES
(Binding under international law)
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)
7. Article 2(3) – Denial of effective remedy
8. Article 26 – Discrimination against disabled and affected civilians
Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC)
9. Article 3 – Best interests of the child
10. Article 6 – Right to life and development
11. Article 24 – Right to the highest standard of health
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD)
12. Article 4 – General obligations to implement
13. Article 5 – Equality and non-discrimination
14. Article 6 – Women and girls with disabilities
15. Article 7 – Children with disabilities
16. Article 25 – Right to health
17. Article 31 – Obligation to collect data on disability
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR)
18. Article 12 – Right to health
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ENVIRONMENTAL & TOXIC HARM LAW
Stockholm Convention (2004) – Failure to regulate TCDD/dioxins, failure to warn public
WHO Toxicological Alerts – Ignored international guidance on dioxins
UN Special Rapporteur on Toxics (2022) – Failure to address toxic harm and denial
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OECD GUIDELINES FOR MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISES
Human Rights – Failure to prevent or remediate harm
Disclosure – Withholding evidence of chemical harm
Environment – Failure to monitor or act on POPs
Consumer Interests – Withholding safety warnings
Science & Technology – Suppression of health data, research
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AUSTRALIAN DOMESTIC LAW
Administrative Law – Defective decision-making (Centrelink, DVA, Health, etc.)
Disability Discrimination Act 1992 – Denial of accommodations and services
Medical Negligence Law – Misdiagnosis, failure to act on visible abnormalities
Privacy Act 1988 – Mishandling sensitive health information
CDDA Scheme Guidelines – Failure to compensate for defective administration
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Every single breach is now on the public record.
“They didn’t just fail to help. They broke the law — again and again — while I was holding the evidence in plain sight. And now the law will hold them.”
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