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UNTOC Submission

Subject: Formal Notification Under UNTOC – Transnational Organized Crime Involving Second-Generation Chemical Harm, Treaty Breaches, and Systemic Obstruction


Dear United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime,


I am formally notifying you of a case that falls within the scope of the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime (UNTOC). This case involves coordinated actions by state and corporate actors across multiple countries, resulting in:


  • Crimes against children and civilians involving chemical exposure (TCDD – Agent Orange)

  • Systematic denial of redress, support, and legal standing

  • Retaliation, obstruction, and medical fraud

  • Cross-border treaty breaches and suppression of compensation

  • Financial, legal, and administrative harm facilitated by public institutions



I am a civilian survivor — the daughter of an Australian Vietnam War veteran — born during the exact post-deployment window tied to confirmed dioxin exposure. Despite 17 documented medical conditions, visible birth defects, structural abnormalities, and years of evidence, I have been denied support at every level.


I have now submitted a formal Article 15 complaint to the International Criminal Court under the Rome Statute and submitted to the OECD National Contact Point system for treaty and corporate breaches.


I have also compiled a full public record of UN warnings issued to Australia between 2011–2021, naming second-generation toxic harm and violations of children’s rights under:


  • The Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC)

  • The Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD)

  • The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)

  • The Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants

  • And now UNTOC through state-corporate collusion and systemic denial



Despite every warning and legal framework, governments have chosen silence. This silence now constitutes complicity.


I am requesting formal recognition of this case under UNTOC mechanisms — and coordination with relevant parties, including treaty bodies, criminal accountability frameworks, and international oversight.


This case directly engages multiple articles of the United Nations Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime including but not limited to:


  • Article 5 – Participation in an organized criminal group

  • Article 8 – Corruption

  • Article 10 – Liability of legal persons

  • Article 24 – Protection of victims and witnesses

  • Article 26 – Measures to enhance cooperation with authorities

  • Articles 27 to 30 – Mutual legal assistance and cross-border enforcement



This is no longer a matter of policy failure. This is a criminal enterprise of denial, documented and reinforced by the very institutions tasked with preventing harm.


This website serves as a live public archive of documented state-corporate crimes, medical evidence, treaty violations, and suppression of redress constituting an evidentiary timeline of ongoing chemical war crimes against children:


Could you please provide me with a reference number for my complaint submitted under the United Nations Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime (UNTOC)



I am prepared to provide additional evidence upon request.



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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