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NAB Formal Notice

Subject: Formal Notice – NAB Now Notified of ICC and OECD Legal Proceedings


To the Legal and Compliance teams at National Australia Bank (NAB),


This is formal notice that NAB is now officially notified of ongoing international legal action involving:


  • A case submitted to the International Criminal Court (ICC) under Article 15 of the Rome Statute,

  • Escalation through the OECD National Contact Point (NCP) system for breaches of international human rights, environmental, and consumer obligations,

  • Widespread evidence of second-generation harm from TCDD (Agent Orange) exposure, systemic government denial, and cross-border treaty violations.



This case involves multiple government departments, international treaties, and financial institutions. Evidence is published and maintained at:



Your institution is now formally placed on notice. Escalation of this matter will proceed on Thursday at 10am to the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organised Crime 




VIOLATIONS UNDER UNTOC (United Nations Convention against Transnational Organised Crime)



1. Participation in an organized criminal group


  • Coordinated actions by government and corporate actors across borders to deny redress and suppress evidence of harm.



2. Obstruction of justice


  • Ignoring formal legal notices, tampering with records, gaslighting, and issuing retaliatory responses (e.g. psychiatric referrals, denial of medical facts).



3. Abuse of public office and authority


  • Legal departments, doctors, and institutions using their positions to cover up war crimes and silence victims.



4. Corporate complicity in systemic harm


  • Banks, manufacturers, and departments continuing business relationships despite knowing their financing supports ongoing human rights violations.



5. Cross-border conspiracy and concealment


  • Coordinated silence or denial by multiple countries despite decades of UN warnings, science, and public record.





VIOLATIONS UNDER THE ROME STATUTE (International Criminal Court)



1. Crimes Against Humanity (Article 7)


  • Systematic denial of care and redress for chemically exposed civilians and their children.

  • Ongoing policies causing suffering, disability, and death in a civilian population — including second-generation war victims.



2. Persecution (Article 7(1)(h))


  • Targeted discrimination based on birth (as a child of a Vietnam veteran), disability, and medical history linked to TCDD exposure.



3. Inhumane Acts (Article 7(1)(k))


  • Withholding diagnoses, medical support, and social services, knowing it will cause severe suffering.



4. Other inhumane treatment through policy or omission


  • Government institutions failing to implement international obligations (e.g. Stockholm Convention, WHO dioxin alerts) and ignoring known risks.





VIOLATIONS UNDER THE OECD GUIDELINES FOR MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISES



1. Human Rights (Chapter IV)


  • Failing to avoid causing or contributing to adverse human rights impacts — including through silence, finance, or deflection.



2. Disclosure (Chapter III)


  • Failing to disclose known risks, evidence, or past harm related to TCDD exposure and affected populations.



3. Environment (Chapter VI)


  • Failing to support adequate environmental and health protections for dioxin-exposed populations — even after notification.



4. Consumer Interests (Chapter VIII)


  • Denying victims their right to transparent, accessible redress — including medical clarity and compensation.



5. Science and Technology (Chapter IX)


  • Ignoring toxicological guidance, medical evidence, and WHO alerts in decision-making that directly affects civilian health.





Other Relevant International Law Breaches



  • Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants: failure to identify, monitor, and address TCDD exposure in second-generation victims.

  • Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties: selective implementation and intentional breaches of ratified obligations.

  • UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC): denial of care, visibility, and justice for children affected by war-time chemicals.




Please treat this as a live legal matter with international implications.



Warm Agent Orange Burns regards,



Danielle Stevens




We will always be a child of a Vietnam Veteran






A formal complaint has been lodged with the International Criminal Court for Crimes against Humanity. The final submission was the 1st of July 2025.



Australia ratified International treaties but failed to implement them into domestic laws.


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