Governor Josh Green, Warden Shannon Cluney & Corey J Reincke [Notice of Violation]
“You Were Notified”: A Public Record of Non-Compliance by Hawaiʻi’s Executive Agents
TL;DR: The Hawaiʻi Kupuna Humanitarian Tribunal (HKHT) has served formal Violation Citations on the Governor’s office, the Hawaiʻi Paroling Authority (HPA), and Hālawa Correctional leadership. These documents put State executives on notice of humanitarian obligations and set deadline dates for corrective action. Below is a plain-language summary of what was served, to whom, and what they’re required to do—based on the citations themselves.
Who’s on notice—and why it matters
Governor Josh Green, M.D. (Office of the Governor) — cited for failure to ensure protection of a Hawaiian Subject (publicly identified only by pseudonym) and to halt confinement without lawful humanitarian safeguards. The Governor’s citation includes a list of required corrective actions and a firm deadline, with filing recorded 15 Dec 2025 at 9:30 PM KKALA‘I.
Corey J. Reincke (Hawaiʻi Paroling Authority) — cited for decisions and actions affecting ongoing confinement and failure to act on humanitarian directives; filed 15 Dec 2025 at 9:32 PM KKALA‘I.
Warden Shannon Cluney (Hālawa Correctional Facility) — cited for maintaining confinement in the face of humanitarian release orders and notice of protected-person status; filings recorded 15 Dec 2025 (two iterations captured in the record).
Each citation functions as: (1) a formal notice to the responsible executive; (2) a preservation demand for records; and (3) an evidence marker of non-response or refusal, suitable for escalation to regional and international bodies.
What the citations require (in plain English)
Across the executive targets above, HKHT’s citations demand concrete corrective actions. The image on page 2 of the Governor’s citation shows the operative list, including (paraphrased):
1] Immediate release or transfer to the lawful OHS authority for humanitarian care.
2] Acknowledgment that the State of Hawaiʻi has no jurisdiction over Hawaiian Subjects for the matters at issue in the citation; compliance with humanitarian directives instead of ignoring them.
3] Cease the ongoing confinement and stop treating this as a “sovereignty movement” or “political campaign” issue rather than a humanitarian/legal one.
Step down from actions that contradict Kingdom and humanitarian law obligations (directive addressed specifically to the Warden).
4] Meet the stated deadline (e.g., Dec. 17, 2025) to correct the violations and confirm in writing.
Why deadlines matter: The timestamps and “Filed” seals demonstrate service and start the accountability clock. The KKALA‘I time notation appears on the face of the documents and is part of the evidentiary trail.
The pattern we’re exposing
Notice is served, but action stalls. The citations show the executives and agencies are notified and given a reasonable, specific timeline to act. When they fail to correct or even acknowledge, that silence becomes part of a non-compliance record.
Humanitarian issues are recast as politics. The “this is not a sovereignty campaign” clause in the corrective-actions list signals that executive agents have been misframing humanitarian obligations as political disputes—contrary to the citations’ directive. (See the Governor citation’s required-action language.)
Facility-level obstruction compounds harm. The Warden-addressed directive to “step down from the seat” of State law where it conflicts with humanitarian duties illustrates operational obstruction—the last mile where people are actually held. Two Cluney filings on the same date underline the seriousness and repetition needed just to register notice.
How we protect the Protected Person—and still name the officials
The blog and public posts use a pseudonym for the person in custody while spelling out the names and titles of the responsible public officials. This balances safety and privacy for the individual with public accountability for executive decision-makers. The citations themselves are structured to do exactly that: they identify which office must act and what must be done by when—without exposing sensitive personal data.
Receipts the public can see
Governor’s Violation Citation (with corrective-actions list and deadline; filed 12/15/2025, 9:30 PM KKALA‘I).
HPA (Corey J. Reincke) Violation Citation (filed 12/15/2025, 9:32 PM KKALA‘I).
Hālawa Warden (Shannon Cluney) Violation Citations (filed 12/15/2025; two docketed iterations).
What we expect from the State—now
Written acknowledgment from each cited executive office.
Immediate humanitarian compliance with the release/transfer directive in the citations.
Full records preservation and production related to confinement, medical access, and parole decisions identified in the citations.
If acknowledgment or compliance is not received by the deadline stated in the citation, that failure will be logged as non-response and included in the next escalation packet to oversight and international mechanisms.
How you can help
Share this post.
If you have first-hand information about State actions after the filing dates shown above, contact the OHS/HKHT channel to add your statement to the record (with safe redaction where needed).
If you experience retaliation for speaking up, report it immediately so it can be preserved alongside these citations.
Bottom line: These are not rumors or social posts; they are filed notices with dates, times, signatures, and explicit instructions to Hawaiʻi’s top executive agents. The public record is clear: you were notified—and the clock is running.
