Thursday, May 12, 2016

Defendant "Negro Slave Trade Corporations et al" Civil Complaint 18 U.S.C. § 1589 (forced labor), 18 U.S.C. § 1590 (trafficking with respect to peonage, slavery, involuntary servitude, or forced labor),

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Pro Se Plaintiff Slave Negro Louis Charles Hamilton II USN # 2712,  “Plaintiffs Slaves et al” Further appearances Affirm, State and fully declare all allegation, contention, disputes, disputation, argument, conflict and disharmony, fully furtherance’s cause of action as follows:

“Chief Defendant(s)” being “Negro Slave Trade Corporations et al”,

“Chief Defendant(s)” being John Wiley & Sons Industry: Publishing, Established: 1807
When Charles Wiley opened a small printing shop in lower Manhattan in the early 19th century, he had no idea that more than 200 years later, his venture would be a global publishing powerhouse.
 In addition to publishing literary giants, authors such as Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Charles Dickens,
Herman Melville and Edgar Allan Poe, the company also printed scientific, technical and medical titles, foreshadowing its future focus

“Chief Defendant(s)” being Dorrance Publishing is America's oldest publishing services company
Established in 1855, Southwestern is an American conglomerate holding company headquartered in Nashville, Tennessee,

“Chief Defendant(s)” being Town Shop
Industry: Women’s lingerie, swimsuits and pajamas
Established: 1888
The women’s clothing store Sam Koch opened more than 125 years ago has undergone several transformations to become the most famous lingerie store in New York City. Now run by the fourth generation, Sam’s great-grandson Danny Koch,

“Chief Defendant(s)” being The Pilgrim Press, North America's oldest surviving publishing,
State Street Allan Forbes, president of the State Street Trust Corp., sitting in his office circa 1944. State Street ( STT -1.19% )  , founded in 1832, is still headquartered in the State Street building in Boston today
“Chief Defendant(s)” being McKesson
Advertisement for Calox Tooth Powder by McKesson & Robbins in New York, 1906. McKesson ( MCK -0.83% )  , at 182 years old, is the oldest pharmaceutical company on this year’s Fortune 500.
“Chief Defendant(s)” being Cameron International

A worker machining hole flange at Cameron Iron Works in Houston, Texas, circa 1948. Cameron International ( CAM 0.00% )  , based in Houston, provides industrial compression systems for oil and gas companies

“Chief Defendant(s)” being Tuttle Farm
Tuttle Farm in New Hampshire is an inspiring case of a withstanding American family business.
Now run by the 11th generation of the family, the farm is the oldest continually operating family farm in the United States.
It all began in the 1630s when John Tuttle arrived in the New World bearing a land grant from King Charles II.
“Chief Defendant(s)” being IBM
A newer company, but one that just celebrated a big birthday is IBM, who hit the 100 year mark last month. International Business Machines - or its predecessor, the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company - was founded on June 16, 1911 by the financier Charles Ranlett Flint.
“Chief Defendant(s)” being Lloyd's

Today, Lloyd's is the world's leading insurance market, housed over the pond in London, England. However, its beginnings lie in the more modest surroundings of a 17th century coffee house.
London was growing in importance as a global trade center, which in turn led to an increasing demand for ship and cargo insurance,

 And in 1688 Edward Lloyd's Coffee House became the place to purchase marine insurance. Lloyd's has grown and expanded over the 300 years to become the world's leading market for specialist insurance in a wide range of areas.

But in America, perhaps Lloyd's most famous moment came as a result of the San Francisco earthquake of 1906. After the earthquake, Lloyd's underwriter, Cuthbert Heath said:
"Pay all of our policy holders in full irrespective of the terms of their policies." This message has since passed into insurance legend,

because the San Francisco disaster cost Lloyd's dearly - more than $50 million - a staggering sum in those days, the equivalent to more than $1 billion in today's terms. Lloyd's faced an enormous bill. But they honored it, and Lloyd's good faith was soon rewarded.
“Chief Defendant(s)” being Consolidated Edison

Con Edison - Con Ed to generations of New Yorkers - started way back in 1823, when its earliest corporate entity,
the New York Gas Light Company, received a state charter to install natural gas lines in lower Manhattan, replacing the whale oil lamps that dated back to the 1760s.

In 1824 New York Gas Light was listed on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), and it holds the record for being the longest listed stock on the NYSE. In the early years of the 20th century the firm expanded into electricity, and in 1936 was renamed the

 Consolidated Edison Company of New York. Today, Consolidated Edison provides electricity to over three million customers in New York City and Westchester County, and provides gas to more than a million.

“Chief Defendant(s)” being

“Colgate” (1806)
Dupont (1802)
Caswell- Massey (1752)
“King Arthur Flour” (1790)
Ames (1774)
“Baker’s Choclate (1765)
“The Hartford Courant” (1764)
“Crane and Co.” (1799)
“Jim Beam” (1795)
“Dixon Ticonderoga” (1795)
“Cigna” (1792)

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