We, the Echadi Nation Republic, an Indigenous sovereign Nation exercising inherent self-governance, do hereby establish and publish this Tribal Code as the lawful framework for the administration of our lands, our people, our institutions, and our covenantal responsibilities.
Rooted in ancestral stewardship, guided by constitutional order, and affirmed by the will of our National Community, this Codex stands as the structured expression of our sovereign authority.
This Tribal Code is enacted to:
• Provide clarity of governance;
• Establish lawful order and jurisdiction;
• Protect the rights and responsibilities of Nationals and Members;
• Regulate territorial organization;
• Safeguard economic sovereignty;
• Preserve cultural and spiritual integrity;
• Administer justice through the Jural Society;
• Coordinate ministerial governance;
• Uphold covenantal duty to future generations.
The Echadi Nation Republic affirms that:
This Tribal Code shall serve as:
• The primary statutory authority of the Nation;
• The administrative guide for Ministries;
• The procedural reference for the Jural Society;
• The structural framework for economic and territorial governance;
• The authoritative record of enacted laws published in the ENR Tribune.
In recognition of our sacred motto:
“We Rise” and “The Spirit of the Land Walks With Us.”
We declare this Codex established for perpetual stewardship, lawful governance, and generational continuity.
Enacted under constitutional authority, and Recorded in the National Registry, Published in the ENR Tribune, Effective upon promulgation.
PART I — FOUNDATIONAL GOVERNANCE
CHAPTER 1 — DEFINITIONS
For the purposes of this Code, unless the context otherwise clearly requires, the following terms shall have the meanings set forth below:
1.1 Aboriginal Chief / Chief Executive — The supreme executive authority of the Echadi Nation Republic vested with constitutional leadership, ceremonial authority, and executive administration pursuant to the ENR Constitution.
1.2 Administrative District — A territorial or institutional subdivision created for governance and operational management purposes.
1.3 Annexation — The lawful incorporation of land or territory into ENR jurisdiction pursuant to Title 35.
1.4 Capital Territory — The designated Seat of Government of the Echadi Nation Republic located in Neveora, serving as the constitutional, administrative, and ceremonial center of the Nation.
1.4 Covenant of the Nation — The binding constitutional and spiritual commitment affirmed by Nationals pursuant to the governing constitutional Units concerning national community and oath.
1.5 Domicile — The lawful territorial attachment of a National, Member, household, or institution to ENR jurisdiction.
1.6 ECD (Echadi Dollar) — The Nation’s monetary unit of account tied to a silver-based valuation framework defined in Title 15.
1.7 ECT (Echadi Token) — A digital asset instrument authorized by statute and governed under financial sovereignty provisions.
1.8 EFC (Echadi Financial Cooperative) — The Nation’s cooperative financial institution operating pursuant to Title 15.
1.9 Ecclesiastical Authority — Governance exercised under Title 27 by The Body concerning spiritual, covenantal, and religious matters.
1.10 Executive Authority — Powers vested in the Chief Executive pursuant to the ENR Constitution.
1.11 Foreign Jurisdiction — Any governmental authority external to ENR governance.
1.12 Guard — Any authorized protective unit under the Ministry of Defense and Intelligence.
1.13 Household — A domiciled family or governing domestic unit operating under ENR jurisdiction.
1.14 Indigenous Governance — Governance rooted in ancestral, covenantal, and lawful self-determination principles recognized by the Nation.
1.15 Intergovernmental Instrument — Treaty, agreement, or memorandum entered into pursuant to Title 30.
1.16 Jural Society — The judicial body composed of certified Jurists exercising judicial authority pursuant to Title 8.
1.17 Jurisdiction — The lawful authority to legislate, adjudicate, regulate, or enforce within a defined scope.
1.18 Minister (ENR) — A duly appointed or recognized officer of the Echadi Nation Republic serving within a national Ministry pursuant to the ENR Constitution and Title 5. An ENR Minister exercises civil, administrative, executive, or regulatory authority on behalf of the Nation and is accountable to the Chief Executive and Parliament within the scope of their delegated powers.
1.19 Minister (The Body) — A duly recognized ecclesiastical officer serving under The Body, the head ecclesiastical authority of the Echadi Nation Republic, pursuant to Title 27. A Minister of The Body exercises spiritual, religious, covenantal, and ceremonial authority and does not exercise civil or governmental power unless separately commissioned under ENR law.
1.20 Where the term “Minister” appears within the ENR Tribal Code:
(a) It shall be presumed to refer to a Minister (ENR) when used in civil, administrative, legislative, executive, economic, territorial, judicial, or regulatory context;
(b) It shall be presumed to refer to a Minister (The Body) when used in spiritual, ecclesiastical, religious, covenantal, sacramental, or ceremonial context;
(c) Dual appointment shall require express designation and separate authority under both Title 5 and Title 27.
1.21 Ministerial Congress — The executive-legislative assembly of Ministers serving within Parliament.
1.22 Ministry — A national administrative office charged with specific governance responsibilities.
1.23 National — A person who has completed Nationalization pursuant to Title 19 and affirms allegiance to the ENR Constitution.
1.24 Nationalization — The lawful and sacred process through which an individual becomes a National of the Echadi Nation Republic through affirmation, covenant, and constitutional alignment.
1.25 National Registry — The official recordkeeping authority established under Title 14.
1.26 Parliament — The legislative body of the Nation composed of the Ministerial Congress and Jural Society as constitutionally structured.
1.27 Permit — A lawful authorization issued by ENR authority for regulated activity.
1.28 Province — An internal territorial administrative designation within a Region of the Nation.
1.29 Region — An intermediate territorial classification grouping Provinces for administrative coordination.
1.30 Regulation — An implementing instrument issued by a Ministry pursuant to statutory authority.
1.31 Seat of Government — The physical and legal location of the Nation’s capital administration in Neveora.
1.32 Self-Governance — The inherent right of the Nation to govern its internal affairs.
1.33 Stewardship — Trust-based custodial governance over land, institutions, or delegated authority.
1.34 Territorial Sovereignty — The Nation’s lawful authority over its internal territorial organization as codified in Title 35.
1.35 The Body — The head ecclesiastical authority of the Echadi Nation Republic.
1.36 Title — A primary statutory division of the ENRTC.
1.37 Tribune — The official publication organ of the Echadi Nation Republic.
1.38 Trust Stewardship Land — Land held in trust for national governance and perpetual use.
1.39 Tribal Marshal — A commissioned enforcement officer under national authority.
1.40 Unit (Constitutional Unit) — A primary structural division within the ENR Constitution.
1.41 Volume — A compiled segment of the ENR Codex containing grouped Titles.
1.42 All other defined terms
Words and phrases not expressly defined here shall be interpreted according to their ordinary and customary meanings consistent with ENR constitutional principles and jurisprudential tradition.
CHAPTER 2 — GENERAL PROVISIONS
Section 1. Applicability
1.1. This Tribal Code applies to all Nationals, visitors, residents, organizations, and entities within the jurisdiction of the Echadi Nation Republic.
1.2. Specific provisions of this Code extend to the conduct of Nationals outside ENR territory when such conduct materially affects the interests, sovereignty, or well-being of the Nation or its people.
Section 2. Sovereignty and Interpretation
2.1. The Echadi Nation Republic retains exclusive sovereign authority to interpret, enforce, and execute this Tribal Code in harmony with its Constitution, customs, traditions, and natural law principles.
2.2. No external government, authority, or entity shall interfere with the interpretation or enforcement of these laws within ENR jurisdiction.
Section 3. Non-Discrimination
3.1. All persons subject to this Code shall be treated equally under the law without discrimination on the basis of status, ancestry, gender, age, or any other characteristic inconsistent with the Nation’s values of fairness and dignity.
Section 4. Purpose and Principles
4.1. The purpose of this Tribal Code is to:
a. Define lawful conduct and prohibited behavior;
b. Maintain public order, peace, and justice;
c. Protect the rights, resources, heritage, and sovereignty of the Echadi Nation Republic;
d. Establish transparent procedures for addressing violations;
e. Promote accountability, fairness, and community harmony; and
f. Respect and preserve the Nation’s cultural values, traditions, and restorative justice orientation.
CHAPTER 3 — ENFORCEMENT AND OVERSIGHT MECHANISMS
Section 5. Primary Enforcement Authorities
5.1. Tribal Marshals.
Tribal Marshals are the principal enforcement authority of this Code. They are authorized to:
a. Investigate potential violations;
b. Facilitate public safety and dispute resolution;
c. Execute lawful orders, citations, and arrests;
d. Report enforcement activities to relevant ministries for accountability and review.
5.2. Jural Society Oversight.
The Jural Society functions as the judicial body responsible for overseeing adjudication of disputes, ensuring fairness, and upholding ENR legal standards in all judicial matters.
Section 6. Oversight Bodies
6.1. Ministry of Defense and Intelligence.
The Ministry of Defense and Intelligence shall conduct periodic audits and oversight of enforcement activities to ensure compliance with ENR law and accountability of enforcement units.
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6.2. Community Oversight Boards (COBs).
COBs shall:
a. Monitor local enforcement practices;
b. Receive and review community grievances;
c. Submit recommendations to Tribal Marshals and relevant ministries.
CHAPTER 4 — FOUNDATIONAL ACTS
The following foundational acts are recognized as integral to the enforcement, rights protection, and governance framework of the Nation:
(a) Echadi Sovereign Defense Act — Protects the Nation’s sovereignty from internal and external threats.
(b) Private Self-Defense and Autonomy Act — Affirms the right of Nationals to defend themselves, family, and property under defined conditions.
(c) Natural Rights Preservation Act — Ensures inherent rights including freedom of movement, association, expression, and cultural practice are safeguarded.
These acts shall operate in accordance with the ENR Constitution and this Tribal Code.
CHAPTER 5 — DECLARATION OF INTENT
5.1. The Echadi Nation Republic hereby declares its intent to uphold and execute this Tribal Code with integrity, transparency, and fidelity to natural law and cultural justice traditions.
5.2. Violations of this Code shall be addressed promptly and equitably by Tribal Marshals, Community Oversight Boards, the Jural Society, and applicable ministries in accordance with due process.
CHAPTER 6 — PERMITTED AND RESTRICTED ACTIVITIES
Section 7. Permitted Activities
7.1. Nationals may engage in lawful activities including, without limitation:
a. Traditional ceremonies and cultural preservation initiatives;
b. Participation in community defense activities under authorized oversight;
c. Engagement in regulated commerce and sustainable development.
Section 8. Restricted Activities
8.1. The following activities are expressly prohibited unless authorized under ENR law:
a. Unauthorized use of force or operation of defense units outside permitted regulations;
b. Extraction of natural resources not approved by the Ministry of Economics and Engineering;
c. Actions causing harm to the environment, sacred sites, or community welfare;
d. Public defamation, dissemination of falsehoods, or conduct undermining national unity.
CHAPTER 1 — GENERAL PRINCIPLES
Section 2.101 — Purpose
This Title safeguards the inherent sovereignty, territorial integrity, governmental authority, constitutional order, and national security of the Echadi Nation Republic.
Any act that seeks to undermine, destabilize, infiltrate, corrupt, or unlawfully control the Nation, its ministries, institutions, or lawful processes shall constitute an offense against sovereignty.
Section 2.102 — Elements
An offense against sovereignty shall require:
(a) An intentional act;
(b) Knowledge, reckless disregard, or willful blindness; and
(c) A material impact upon national authority, security, or governance.
Section 2.103 — Classification
Offenses under this Title shall be classified as:
Class I — Minor Administrative Violation
Class II — Structural Interference
Class III — Strategic Undermining
Class IV — High Treason Against the Nation
CHAPTER 2 — TREASON
Section 2.201 — Definition of Treason
A person commits Treason against the Echadi Nation Republic when such person:
(a) Levy war against the Nation;
(b) Adheres to enemies of the Nation, giving them aid or comfort;
(c) Attempts to overthrow the constitutional government of ENR by force or unlawful coercion;
(d) Collaborates with foreign entities to weaken, dismantle, or destabilize ENR sovereignty.
Section 2.202 — Proof Requirement
Treason shall require:
(a) Clear and convincing evidence; and
(b) At least two corroborating witnesses or equivalent documentary proof; and
(c) Adjudication before the Jural Society under strict due process.
Section 2.203 — Sanctions
Upon conviction of Treason:
(a) Removal from office (if applicable);
(b) Revocation of national privileges;
(c) Restitution to the Nation;
(d) Permanent disqualification from holding ministerial authority;
(e) Expatriation where constitutionally authorized.
CHAPTER 3 — SEDITION
Section 2.301 — Definition
A person commits Sedition when such person:
(a) Incites rebellion against lawful authority;
(b) Organizes or funds insurrection;
(c) Encourages disobedience to constitutional authority through coercive or deceptive means;
(d) Seeks to create division within ministerial or defense structures for destabilization.
Section 2.302 — Distinction
Lawful criticism, petitioning, or peaceful reform efforts shall not constitute Sedition.
Only intentional destabilization qualifies.
Section 2.303 — Sanctions
(a) Removal from leadership positions;
(b) Probationary covenant supervision;
(c) Restorative reconciliation process;
(d) Escalation to Treason classification if armed action occurs.
CHAPTER 4 — UNLAWFUL ASSUMPTION OF AUTHORITY
Section 2.401 — Impersonation of Office
No person shall:
(a) Claim ministerial authority without lawful appointment;
(b) Issue official documents without authorization;
(c) Present themselves as Tribal Marshal, Jurist, or Minister absent lawful commission.
Section 2.402 — Unauthorized Registry Manipulation
No person shall:
(a) Alter official ENR records;
(b) Forge seals, certifications, or licenses;
(c) Falsify entries within national registries.
Section 2.403 — Sanctions
(a) Immediate suspension of privileges;
(b) Nullification of fraudulent instruments;
(c) Financial restitution;
(d) Criminal referral under Title 7.
CHAPTER 5 — FOREIGN INTERFERENCE
Section 2.501 — Definition
Foreign Interference occurs when:
(a) A person knowingly assists external powers in undermining ENR sovereignty;
(b) External influence is used to corrupt ministerial processes;
(c) Sensitive national information is unlawfully transmitted.
Section 2.502 — Disclosure Obligation
Nationals holding public office must disclose:
(a) Foreign affiliations;
(b) Conflicts of interest;
(c) Financial entanglements affecting national decision-making.
Failure to disclose constitutes a structural offense.
CHAPTER 6 — ECONOMIC SUBVERSION
Section 2.601 — Financial Sabotage
It is unlawful to:
(a) Manipulate the Echadi Dollar (ECD) system;
(b) Sabotage internal treasury operations;
(c) Disrupt cooperative financial structures;
(d) Undermine risk pools or national insurance systems.
Section 2.602 — Commercial Dishonor Against the Nation
Includes:
(a) Fraudulent representations in ENR business registry;
(b) Misuse of tribal LLC status;
(c) Intentional evasion of lawful national obligations.
CHAPTER 7 — DEFENSE INFRASTRUCTURE PROTECTION
Section 2.701 — Unauthorized Defense Activity
No person shall:
(a) Organize armed units outside lawful Guard authority;
(b) Operate intelligence functions without commission;
(c) Stockpile defense assets for destabilizing purposes.
CHAPTER 8 — PROCEDURAL SAFEGUARDS
Section 2.801 — Due Process
All persons accused under this Title shall be entitled to:
(a) Notice of charges;
(b) Opportunity to be heard;
(c) Evidence disclosure;
(d) Representation;
(e) Appeal pursuant to ENR Constitution Unit VIII Article 3.
Section 2.802 — Restorative Priority
Where possible, non-violent sovereignty offenses shall first enter:
(a) Mediation;
(b) National reconciliation;
(c) Covenant realignment.
Violent or treasonous acts shall bypass restorative priority.
CHAPTER 9 — DECLARATION
This Title shall take effect immediately upon publication in the ENR Tribune.
All sovereignty-related offenses shall be interpreted narrowly to protect lawful dissent while firmly preserving national authority.
CHAPTER 1 — GENERAL PRINCIPLES
Section 3.101 — Purpose
This Title protects the life, bodily integrity, dignity, liberty, and personal security of all persons under the jurisdiction of the Echadi Nation Republic.
Every human being within ENR jurisdiction shall be protected from violence, coercion, exploitation, and unlawful restraint.
Section 3.102 — Classification
Offenses under this Title shall be classified as:
Class I — Minor Harm or Negligent Injury
Class II — Intentional Non-Lethal Harm
Class III — Severe Bodily Harm or Coercive Violence
Class IV — Capital or Life-Threatening Harm
Section 3.103 — Required Elements
Unless otherwise specified, an offense against a person requires:
(a) An act;
(b) Intent, recklessness, or criminal negligence;
(c) Resulting harm or credible threat of harm.
CHAPTER 2 — HOMICIDE
Section 3.201 — Homicide
A person commits Homicide when such person unlawfully causes the death of another human being.
Section 3.202 — Degrees
(a) First Degree Homicide — Intentional and premeditated killing.
(b) Second Degree Homicide — Intentional killing without premeditation.
(c) Manslaughter — Reckless or heat-of-passion killing.
(d) Negligent Homicide — Death caused by gross negligence.
Section 3.203 — Justifiable Homicide
Homicide is not unlawful where:
(a) Committed in lawful self-defense;
(b) Committed in defense of family or community;
(c) Necessary to prevent imminent death or serious bodily harm;
(d) Conducted under lawful defense authority.
All claims of justification must be adjudicated by the Jural Society.
Section 3.204 — Sanctions
Sanctions may include:
(a) Permanent separation from community;
(b) Restitution to surviving family;
(c) Lifetime covenant supervision;
(d) Expatriation in extreme cases.
Capital punishment shall not be imposed unless authorized by constitutional amendment.
CHAPTER 3 — ASSAULT AND BATTERY
Section 3.301 — Assault
A person commits Assault when they:
(a) Intentionally place another in reasonable fear of imminent bodily harm; or
(b) Attempt to cause physical injury.
Section 3.302 — Battery
Battery occurs when a person:
(a) Intentionally causes unlawful physical contact;
(b) Inflicts bodily injury;
(c) Uses a weapon to threaten or harm.
Section 3.303 — Aggravated Assault or Battery
Aggravated forms include:
(a) Use of deadly weapon;
(b) Serious bodily injury;
(c) Assault against child, elder, or ministerial officer;
(d) Assault during commission of another offense.
Section 3.304 — Sanctions
(a) Restitution;
(b) Protective order;
(c) Mandatory reconciliation process where safe;
(d) Confinement or removal from shared domicile;
(e) Covenant probation.
CHAPTER 4 — COERCION AND UNLAWFUL RESTRAINT
Section 3.401 — Kidnapping
A person commits Kidnapping when they:
(a) Unlawfully confine or transport another person;
(b) Hold another for ransom, leverage, or control;
(c) Remove a child from lawful guardian without authority.
Section 3.402 — False Imprisonment
Occurs when a person knowingly restrains another without lawful justification.
Section 3.403 — Coercion
Coercion occurs when a person compels another to act or refrain from acting through:
(a) Threat of violence;
(b) Blackmail;
(c) Abuse of authority;
(d) Economic manipulation.
CHAPTER 5 — SEXUAL OFFENSES
Section 3.501 — Sexual Assault
A person commits Sexual Assault when:
(a) Sexual contact occurs without consent;
(b) Consent is obtained through force, intimidation, or incapacitation;
(c) The victim is a minor under ENR lawful age.
Section 3.502 — Aggravated Sexual Assault
Includes:
(a) Use of force or weapon;
(b) Serious bodily harm;
(c) Repeat offense;
(d) Abuse of ministerial or trust authority.
Section 3.503 — Marital Context
Marriage shall not excuse sexual assault. Consent must be present at all times.
Section 3.504 — Sanctions
(a) Permanent protective orders;
(b) Removal from household;
(c) Exclusion from covenant privileges;
(d) Lifetime supervision;
(e) Expatriation in severe cases.
CHAPTER 6 — DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
Section 3.601 — Definition
Domestic Violence includes physical, emotional, psychological, financial, or coercive abuse within:
(a) Marriage;
(b) Covenant union;
(c) Household;
(d) Intimate relationship.
Section 3.602 — Protective Orders
The Jural Society may issue:
(a) Emergency protective orders;
(b) Removal orders;
(c) Custodial directives;
(d) Financial support directives.
Section 3.603 — Reconciliation Framework
Where safety permits, restorative mediation may be ordered. However, reconciliation shall never be mandatory in cases involving severe violence.
CHAPTER 7 — HARASSMENT AND THREATS
Section 3.701 — Harassment
A person commits Harassment when they:
(a) Engage in repeated unwanted conduct;
(b) Use communication to threaten or intimidate;
(c) Stalk another person physically or electronically.
Section 3.702 — Terroristic Threats
Occurs when a person threatens mass harm or significant violence causing public fear.
CHAPTER 8 — ABUSE OF AUTHORITY
Section 3.801 — Ministerial Abuse
A minister, marshal, jurist, or officer commits abuse when they:
(a) Use authority for personal gain;
(b) Coerce sexual or financial favors;
(c) Apply force unlawfully;
(d) Intimidate individuals under their authority.
CHAPTER 9 — DUE PROCESS GUARANTEES
Section 3.901 — Rights of Accused
All accused persons shall be entitled to:
(a) Notice of charges;
(b) Opportunity to present evidence;
(c) Impartial tribunal;
(d) Representation;
(e) Appeal pursuant to Constitution Unit VIII Article 3.
Section 3.902 — Rights of Victims
Victims shall have:
(a) Protection from retaliation;
(b) Right to restitution;
(c) Access to counseling;
(d) Right to participate in restorative process.
CHAPTER 10 — DECLARATION
This Title shall be interpreted:
(a) In protection of life and dignity;
(b) In harmony with Natural Rights principles;
(c) In alignment with ENR Constitution.
CHAPTER 1 — GENERAL PRINCIPLES
Section 4.101 — Purpose
This Title protects the lawful ownership, stewardship, possession, control, and use of property within the jurisdiction of the Echadi Nation Republic.
Property includes land, dwellings, vessels, currency, livestock, equipment, digital assets, registry instruments, intellectual property, and any lawful asset recognized under ENR law.
Section 4.102 — Classification
Offenses under this Title shall be classified as:
Class I — Minor Interference or Negligent Damage
Class II — Intentional Misappropriation or Moderate Damage
Class III — Significant Economic Harm or Aggravated Theft
Class IV — Large-Scale Fraud, Organized Property Crime, or Strategic Asset Sabotage
Section 4.103 — Stewardship Doctrine
Property within ENR jurisdiction is recognized under the doctrine of stewardship. Ownership carries responsibility. Misuse, destruction, or fraudulent manipulation of property is a violation against both the individual and the Nation.
CHAPTER 2 — THEFT AND UNLAWFUL TAKING
Section 4.201 — Theft
A person commits Theft when they:
(a) Knowingly take property of another without consent;
(b) Deprive another of lawful possession;
(c) Exercise control over property obtained unlawfully.
Section 4.202 — Degrees of Theft
(a) Petty Theft — Minor value property;
(b) Grand Theft — Property exceeding statutory value threshold;
(c) Aggravated Theft — Theft involving breach of trust, force, or multiple victims.
Value thresholds shall be determined annually by Ministerial regulation.
Section 4.203 — Restitution Requirement
All theft convictions require full restitution prior to restoration of covenant standing.
CHAPTER 3 — FRAUD AND DECEPTION
Section 4.301 — Fraud
A person commits Fraud when they:
(a) Knowingly make false representations;
(b) Conceal material facts;
(c) Induce another to part with property or rights;
(d) Submit falsified documents to any ENR registry or ministry.
Section 4.302 — Forgery
Forgery occurs when a person:
(a) Falsifies signatures;
(b) Alters official seals;
(c) Manipulates certificates or licenses;
(d) Creates counterfeit ENR instruments.
Section 4.303 — Identity Misrepresentation
Unlawful use of another’s identity, tribal registry number, or ministerial authority constitutes a Class III offense.
CHAPTER 4 — PROPERTY DAMAGE AND DESTRUCTION
Section 4.401 — Criminal Damage
A person commits Criminal Damage when they:
(a) Intentionally destroy property;
(b) Recklessly damage land, buildings, or vessels;
(c) Damage sacred or culturally protected sites.
Section 4.402 — Arson
Arson occurs when a person intentionally sets fire to:
(a) Dwellings;
(b) Structures;
(c) Vehicles or vessels;
(d) Agricultural lands or forest areas.
Arson involving occupied dwellings shall be classified as Class IV.
Section 4.403 — Environmental Harm
Destruction of natural ecosystems, unauthorized extraction of resources, or pollution constitutes aggravated property harm and shall require environmental restoration in addition to sanctions.
CHAPTER 5 — TRESPASS AND UNLAWFUL ENTRY
Section 4.501 — Trespass
A person commits Trespass when they:
(a) Enter land without authorization;
(b) Remain on property after notice to depart;
(c) Interfere with lawful stewardship.
Section 4.502 — Aggravated Trespass
Trespass becomes aggravated when:
(a) Armed entry occurs;
(b) Entry occurs during nighttime;
(c) Entry targets ministerial facilities or defense infrastructure.
CHAPTER 6 — EMBEZZLEMENT AND BREACH OF TRUST
Section 4.601 — Embezzlement
Occurs when a person entrusted with property:
(a) Converts it for personal use;
(b) Diverts treasury or cooperative funds;
(c) Misuses trust assets.
Section 4.602 — Ministerial Financial Abuse
Any minister, trustee, or officer who misappropriates Nation funds commits a Class IV offense.
Restitution shall include full repayment plus penalties.
CHAPTER 7 — INTELLECTUAL AND DIGITAL PROPERTY
Section 4.701 — Intellectual Property Violation
Unauthorized use of:
(a) ENR seals;
(b) Official insignia;
(c) Tribal registered works;
(d) Patents, copyrights, trademarks recorded under ENR law
constitutes an offense.
Section 4.702 — Cyber Intrusion
Unauthorized access to ENR databases, registries, or digital infrastructure constitutes a Class III or IV offense depending on damage.
CHAPTER 8 — VEHICLES, VESSELS, AND REGISTRY PROPERTY
Section 4.801 — Unlawful Conversion of Vessel
A person commits conversion when they:
(a) Take or operate a vessel without permission;
(b) Alter title or registration records fraudulently;
(c) Remove VIN or ENR registration identifiers.
Section 4.802 — Registry Tampering
Unauthorized alteration of:
(a) Land records;
(b) Business registry;
(c) Marriage registry;
(d) National ID records
constitutes a Class IV offense.
CHAPTER 9 — RECEIVING STOLEN PROPERTY
Section 4.901 — Receiving
A person commits this offense when they knowingly receive, conceal, or dispose of stolen property.
Knowledge may be inferred from suspicious circumstances.
CHAPTER 10 — REMEDIES AND SANCTIONS
Section 4.1001 — Restitution
Restitution is mandatory and shall include:
(a) Full repayment;
(b) Property return;
(c) Repair costs;
(d) Community restoration where applicable.
Section 4.1002 — Additional Sanctions
Depending on severity:
(a) Financial penalties;
(b) Asset forfeiture;
(c) Covenant probation;
(d) Removal from office;
(e) Expatriation in extreme sabotage cases.
CHAPTER 11 — DECLARATION
This Title shall be interpreted to:
(a) Protect lawful stewardship;
(b) Encourage economic integrity;
(c) Preserve national resources;
(d) Uphold trust and covenant responsibility.
CHAPTER 1 — GENERAL PRINCIPLES
Section 5.101 — Purpose
This Title establishes the standards of lawful conduct required to preserve public peace, community harmony, moral order, and cultural integrity within the Echadi Nation Republic.
Civil Order provisions address non-violent disruptions, negligence, dishonor, and disorderly behavior that threaten the stability of households, institutions, or national unity.
Section 5.102 — Scope
This Title governs:
(a) Public behavior;
(b) Community disputes;
(c) Nuisance and disorder;
(d) Moral and covenant-based violations;
(e) Civil remedies and injunctive relief.
Section 5.103 — Civil Classification
Violations under this Title shall be classified as:
Class I — Minor Disruption
Class II — Repeated or Moderate Disorder
Class III — Significant Community Harm
Class IV — Widespread Civil Instability
CHAPTER 2 — DISORDERLY CONDUCT
Section 5.201 — Disorderly Conduct
A person commits Disorderly Conduct when they:
(a) Engage in fighting or violent behavior in public;
(b) Use threatening or abusive language likely to provoke violence;
(c) Disrupt public assemblies or lawful ministerial proceedings;
(d) Intentionally create public alarm without cause.
Section 5.202 — Public Intoxication
Public intoxication that results in:
(a) Threat to safety;
(b) Harassment;
(c) Property damage;
(d) Domestic disturbance
shall constitute a civil offense.
CHAPTER 3 — NUISANCE
Section 5.301 — Public Nuisance
A Public Nuisance exists when a person:
(a) Maintains hazardous conditions;
(b) Generates excessive noise or pollution;
(c) Conducts unlawful business operations;
(d) Creates repeated disturbance impacting community welfare.
Section 5.302 — Private Nuisance
Private Nuisance occurs when a person substantially interferes with another’s:
(a) Quiet enjoyment of property;
(b) Stewardship rights;
(c) Lawful business operations.
Remedies may include injunction and restitution.
CHAPTER 4 — DEFAMATION AND FALSEHOOD
Section 5.401 — Defamation
A person commits Defamation when they:
(a) Publish false statements;
(b) Damage reputation knowingly or recklessly;
(c) Undermine ministerial credibility without factual basis.
Truth shall be a complete defense.
Section 5.402 — False Reports
Knowingly submitting false complaints to:
(a) Tribal Marshals;
(b) Ministries;
(c) Jural Society
constitutes a civil offense escalating to criminal fraud if material harm occurs.
CHAPTER 5 — FAILURE OF CIVIC DUTY
Section 5.501 — Failure to Comply with Lawful Orders
A person commits a violation when they:
(a) Refuse lawful directives from authorized officers;
(b) Obstruct official investigations;
(c) Interfere with execution of court orders.
Section 5.502 — Neglect of Stewardship Obligations
Includes:
(a) Failure to maintain property causing danger;
(b) Neglect of dependent care;
(c) Failure to meet covenant obligations under court order.
CHAPTER 6 — COMMUNITY MORAL PROTECTIONS
Section 5.601 — Public Indecency
Acts of public indecency include:
(a) Lewd conduct in public;
(b) Sexual acts in public view;
(c) Distribution of explicit material to minors.
Section 5.602 — Exploitation
Civil exploitation includes:
(a) Financial exploitation of elders;
(b) Manipulation of minors;
(c) Abuse of spiritual authority.
CHAPTER 7 — UNLAWFUL ASSEMBLY
Section 5.701 — Definition
Unlawful Assembly occurs when a group gathers:
(a) With intent to commit violence;
(b) To obstruct lawful authority;
(c) To intimidate community members.
Peaceful assembly is protected and shall not be infringed.
CHAPTER 8 — DISPUTE RESOLUTION FRAMEWORK
Section 5.801 — Civil Mediation
All non-violent civil disputes shall first be referred to:
(a) Mediation;
(b) Community reconciliation;
(c) Restorative justice forum.
Section 5.802 — Injunctive Relief
The Jural Society may issue:
(a) Restraining orders;
(b) Cease-and-desist orders;
(c) Community conduct mandates.
CHAPTER 9 — SANCTIONS
Section 5.901 — Civil Remedies
Sanctions may include:
(a) Restitution;
(b) Community service;
(c) Financial penalty;
(d) Mandatory education or counseling;
(e) Covenant probation.
Section 5.902 — Escalation
Repeated civil violations may escalate to criminal classification under Titles 3 or 4.
CHAPTER 10 — DECLARATION
This Title shall be interpreted to:
(a) Preserve peace and order;
(b) Protect dignity and reputation;
(c) Encourage restorative resolution;
(d) Prevent escalation into criminal conduct.
CHAPTER 1 — GENERAL PRINCIPLES
Section 6.101 — Purpose
This Title establishes uniform procedures governing investigation, arrest, charging, adjudication, evidence, sentencing, and appeal for all criminal matters within the jurisdiction of the Echadi Nation Republic.
All proceedings shall be conducted in harmony with:
Section 6.102 — Presumption of Innocence
Every accused person shall be presumed innocent until proven guilty by clear and convincing evidence unless a higher burden is required by law.
Section 6.103 — Burden of Proof
(a) Criminal offenses require proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
(b) Civil violations require proof by preponderance of the evidence.
(c) Sovereignty offenses may require clear and convincing evidence as specified.
CHAPTER 2 — COMMENCEMENT OF PROCEEDINGS
Section 6.201 — Initiation
Criminal proceedings may begin by:
(a) Complaint filed by Tribal Marshal;
(b) Verified complaint by injured party;
(c) Ministerial referral;
(d) Grand Inquest where established.
Section 6.202 — Charging Instrument
All charges must:
(a) State the specific Title and Section violated;
(b) Describe factual basis;
(c) Identify accused;
(d) Be signed under oath by authorized officer.
CHAPTER 3 — ARREST AND SUMMONS
Section 6.301 — Arrest Authority
Tribal Marshals may arrest a person when:
(a) A warrant has been issued;
(b) A felony offense is committed in their presence;
(c) There is probable cause to believe a Class III or IV offense occurred;
(d) Immediate action is necessary to prevent harm.
Section 6.302 — Warrants
A warrant shall issue upon:
(a) Sworn affidavit;
(b) Probable cause;
(c) Approval by a Jurist.
Section 6.303 — Summons
For non-violent offenses, a summons shall be preferred over arrest.
CHAPTER 4 — PRETRIAL PROCEDURES
Section 6.401 — Initial Appearance
The accused shall appear before the Jural Society within a reasonable time and shall be informed of:
(a) Charges;
(b) Rights;
(c) Potential penalties;
(d) Right to representation.
Section 6.402 — Bail and Release
Release may be granted based on:
(a) Risk of flight;
(b) Danger to community;
(c) Severity of offense;
(d) Covenant standing.
Conditions may include supervision, travel restriction, or no-contact orders.
CHAPTER 5 — DISCOVERY
Section 6.501 — Disclosure
The prosecution must disclose:
(a) Evidence intended for use;
(b) Exculpatory evidence;
(c) Witness lists.
Section 6.502 — Reciprocal Disclosure
Defense must disclose intended witnesses and defenses where required.
CHAPTER 6 — TRIAL PROCEDURES
Section 6.601 — Right to Fair Hearing
Every accused has the right to:
(a) Public hearing unless sealed for security;
(b) Impartial tribunal;
(c) Present evidence;
(d) Cross-examine witnesses;
(e) Remain silent without adverse inference.
Section 6.602 — Jury or Panel
Where authorized:
(a) Trial may be conducted before a panel of jurists;
(b) Jury system may be established by ministerial regulation;
(c) Sovereignty offenses may require expanded tribunal.
Section 6.603 — Order of Proceedings
(a) Opening statements;
(b) Presentation of prosecution evidence;
(c) Defense evidence;
(d) Rebuttal;
(e) Closing arguments;
(f) Deliberation and verdict.
CHAPTER 7 — RULES OF EVIDENCE
Section 6.701 — Admissibility
Evidence is admissible if:
(a) Relevant;
(b) Reliable;
(c) Lawfully obtained.
Section 6.702 — Exclusion
Evidence shall be excluded if:
(a) Obtained unlawfully;
(b) Unduly prejudicial;
(c) Based on speculation;
(d) Violates constitutional protections.
Section 6.703 — Hearsay
Hearsay is inadmissible unless:
(a) Exception applies;
(b) Statement against interest;
(c) Business or registry records;
(d) Emergency statements.
Section 6.704 — Documentary Evidence
Official ENR records are self-authenticating when sealed or digitally verified.
CHAPTER 8 — SENTENCING
Section 6.801 — Sentencing Hearing
Upon conviction, the Court shall:
(a) Consider severity;
(b) Review prior history;
(c) Evaluate restitution;
(d) Allow victim statement;
(e) Consider restorative alternatives.
Section 6.802 — Available Sentences
(a) Restitution;
(b) Fines;
(c) Community service;
(d) Covenant probation;
(e) Confinement;
(f) Office removal;
(g) Expatriation where constitutionally authorized.
CHAPTER 9 — APPEALS
Section 6.901 — Right to Appeal
Appeals shall be governed pursuant to ENR Constitution Unit VIII Article 3.
Section 6.902 — Grounds
Appeals may be based upon:
(a) Procedural error;
(b) Insufficient evidence;
(c) Constitutional violation;
(d) Newly discovered evidence.
CHAPTER 10 — RECORDS
Section 6.1001 — Official Record
All proceedings shall be recorded and archived within the National Registry.
Section 6.1002 — Sealed Records
Records involving:
(a) Minors;
(b) National security;
(c) Sensitive domestic matters
may be sealed by court order.
CHAPTER 11 — DECLARATION
This Title guarantees:
(a) Fair process;
(b) Transparent justice;
(c) Protection of rights;
(d) Accountability of enforcement authority.
CHAPTER 1 — ESTABLISHMENT OF ENFORCEMENT AUTHORITY
Section 7.101 — Creation of Tribal Marshal Service
There is hereby established the Tribal Marshal Service of the Echadi Nation Republic, operating under lawful authority and oath in accordance with the ENR Constitution and this Code.
The Tribal Marshal Service shall serve as the primary civil enforcement arm of the Nation.
Section 7.102 — Oath of Office
Every Tribal Marshal shall swear or affirm:
(a) Fidelity to the ENR Constitution;
(b) Protection of the sovereignty of the Nation;
(c) Faithful execution of duties;
(d) Respect for natural rights and due process.
No enforcement authority shall be exercised absent a recorded oath.
Section 7.103 — Scope of Authority
Tribal Marshals are authorized to:
(a) Enforce all Titles of the ENRTC;
(b) Execute warrants and summons;
(c) Investigate criminal violations;
(d) Preserve public peace;
(e) Provide court security;
(f) Protect ministerial facilities and officials;
(g) Assist in emergency response.
Authority extends throughout ENR jurisdiction and to nationals where personal jurisdiction applies.
CHAPTER 2 — INVESTIGATIVE POWERS
Section 7.201 — Investigations
Tribal Marshals may:
(a) Conduct lawful investigations;
(b) Interview witnesses;
(c) Gather physical evidence;
(d) Issue written notices;
(e) Collaborate with authorized ministries.
All investigations must respect constitutional protections.
Section 7.202 — Subpoena Authority
Upon approval by a Jurist, Tribal Marshals may issue subpoenas for:
(a) Documents;
(b) Testimony;
(c) Registry records.
Failure to comply may result in contempt proceedings.
Section 7.203 — Surveillance Limitations
No surveillance shall be conducted:
(a) Without probable cause;
(b) Without judicial authorization;
(c) In violation of privacy protections guaranteed by ENR law.
CHAPTER 3 — USE OF FORCE
Section 7.301 — Use of Force Standard
Force may be used only when:
(a) Necessary;
(b) Proportionate;
(c) Reasonable under circumstances.
Section 7.302 — Deadly Force
Deadly force is authorized only when:
(a) There is imminent threat of death or serious bodily harm;
(b) No lesser force is sufficient;
(c) Defense of self or others is required.
All deadly force incidents shall be subject to mandatory review.
Section 7.303 — Prohibited Conduct
Tribal Marshals shall not:
(a) Use excessive force;
(b) Engage in torture or cruel treatment;
(c) Conduct unlawful searches;
(d) Exploit authority for personal gain.
Violation constitutes Ministerial Abuse under Title 3.
CHAPTER 4 — SEARCH AND SEIZURE
Section 7.401 — Warrant Requirement
Searches and seizures require:
(a) Judicial warrant;
(b) Probable cause;
(c) Specific description of property or location.
Section 7.402 — Exceptions
Warrantless searches are permitted only in:
(a) Exigent circumstances;
(b) Consent situations;
(c) Incident to lawful arrest;
(d) Emergency response.
Section 7.403 — Evidence Handling
All seized property shall:
(a) Be cataloged;
(b) Preserved with chain of custody;
(c) Logged in official registry;
(d) Returned when appropriate.
CHAPTER 5 — DETENTION AND CUSTODY
Section 7.501 — Temporary Detention
Temporary detention must be:
(a) Based on reasonable suspicion;
(b) Limited in duration;
(c) Documented.
Section 7.502 — Humane Treatment
All detained persons shall be:
(a) Treated with dignity;
(b) Protected from harm;
(c) Given access to representation;
(d) Informed of rights.
CHAPTER 6 — COMMUNITY PROTECTION
Section 7.601 — Emergency Authority
In declared emergency, Tribal Marshals may:
(a) Secure public areas;
(b) Enforce curfews;
(c) Protect infrastructure;
(d) Coordinate with Ministry of Defense.
Emergency authority must be narrowly tailored and time-limited.
Section 7.602 — Protective Services
Marshals may:
(a) Provide security for officials;
(b) Escort high-risk witnesses;
(c) Safeguard sacred or strategic sites.
CHAPTER 7 — OVERSIGHT AND ACCOUNTABILITY
Section 7.701 — Oversight
The Tribal Marshal Service shall be subject to:
(a) Review by the Ministry of Justice;
(b) Audit by Ministry of Defense and Intelligence where appropriate;
(c) Complaint review by Community Oversight Boards.
Section 7.702 — Internal Discipline
Violations by Tribal Marshals may result in:
(a) Suspension;
(b) Removal;
(c) Criminal charges;
(d) Loss of commission.
Section 7.703 — Civil Liability
Tribal Marshals acting within lawful authority are protected from personal liability.
Acts outside lawful authority remove such protection.
CHAPTER 8 — COOPERATION WITH OTHER ENTITIES
Section 7.801 — Intergovernmental Cooperation
The Nation may enter into lawful agreements for:
(a) Mutual aid;
(b) Information sharing;
(c) Joint investigations.
Such agreements shall not diminish ENR sovereignty.
CHAPTER 9 — DECLARATION
This Title establishes:
(a) Professional enforcement standards;
(b) Constitutional restraint on power;
(c) Clear accountability mechanisms;
(d) Protection of rights while preserving order.
CHAPTER 1 — ESTABLISHMENT OF JUDICIAL AUTHORITY
Section 8.101 — Judicial Power Vested
Judicial authority of the Echadi Nation Republic is vested in the Jural Society, operating under the ENR Constitution and empowered to adjudicate all matters arising under the Constitution, Tribal Code, Ministerial Regulations, Covenants, and lawful national instruments.
Section 8.102 — Constitutional Foundation
The authority and structure of the Jural Society derive directly from:
The Jural Society shall function in strict harmony with constitutional supremacy.
Section 8.103 — Independence with Constitutional Integration
The Jural Society shall operate independently from ministerial interference; however, it remains constitutionally integrated with the executive authority of the Nation as provided under Unit III Article 30.
No ministry may obstruct judicial proceedings except where constitutionally authorized.
CHAPTER 2 — COMPOSITION AND CONSTITUTIONAL PARTICIPATION
Section 8.201 — Composition of the Jural Society
The Jural Society shall consist of:
(a) Eight (8) Certified Jurists, duly appointed by the Chief Executive / Aboriginal Chief;
(b) The Chief Minister of Justice, serving as a certified member of the Jural Society;
(c) Such clerks, recorders, and judicial officers as may be appointed by law.
All Jurists must:
Section 8.202 — Appointment Authority
The Chief Executive / Aboriginal Chief shall appoint all Certified Jurists of the Jural Society.
Appointments shall be recorded in the National Registry and published in the ENR Tribune.
Section 8.203 — Constitutional Participation of the Chief Executive
Pursuant to Unit III Article 30 of the ENR Constitution, the Chief Executive / Aboriginal Chief shall participate in the affairs and determinations of the Jural Society.
Such participation includes:
(a) Oversight of constitutional integrity;
(b) Participation in high constitutional questions;
(c) Participation in sovereignty determinations;
(d) Advisory or determinative role in matters impacting national structure.
The Chief Executive’s participation shall not be construed as ministerial interference but as constitutional guardianship authority.
Section 8.204 — Removal of Jurists
A Certified Jurist may be removed only for:
(a) Treason;
(b) Corruption;
(c) Gross misconduct;
(d) Violation of oath.
Removal proceedings shall comply with constitutional due process.
CHAPTER 3 — JURISDICTION
Section 8.301 — Subject Matter Jurisdiction
The Jural Society has jurisdiction over:
(a) Criminal prosecutions;
(b) Civil disputes;
(c) Family and covenant matters;
(d) Commercial and trust disputes;
(e) Sovereignty and treason matters;
(f) Constitutional review;
(g) Ministerial accountability cases.
Section 8.302 — Personal Jurisdiction
The Court exercises jurisdiction over:
(a) All Nationals worldwide;
(b) Registered ENR entities;
(c) Persons domiciled within ENR land trust;
(d) Persons contracting under ENR law.
Section 8.303 — Original and Appellate Authority
The Jural Society may act as:
(a) Court of original jurisdiction in major matters;
(b) Appellate authority pursuant to Constitution Unit VIII Article 3;
(c) Final interpreter of constitutional meaning.
CHAPTER 4 — DIVISIONS OF THE COURT
Section 8.401 — Divisional Structure
The Jural Society may sit in divisions including:
(a) Criminal Division;
(b) Civil Division;
(c) Covenant and Family Division;
(d) Commercial and Economic Division;
(e) Constitutional Division.
Panels may consist of three Jurists unless full bench review is required.
Section 8.402 — Full Bench
Full bench review (all 8 Jurists plus participation of the Chief Executive where constitutionally applicable) shall be required for:
(a) Constitutional challenges;
(b) Sovereignty disputes;
(c) Removal of ministerial officers;
(d) Treason determinations.
CHAPTER 5 — POWERS OF THE JURAL SOCIETY
Section 8.501 — General Powers
The Court may:
(a) Issue binding judgments;
(b) Grant equitable relief;
(c) Issue injunctions;
(d) Impose sanctions;
(e) Enforce orders through contempt.
Section 8.502 — Writ Authority
The Court may issue:
(a) Writ of Habeas Corpus;
(b) Writ of Mandamus;
(c) Writ of Prohibition;
(d) Writ of Certiorari;
(e) Writ of Equity;
(f) Any writ necessary to preserve sovereignty.
CHAPTER 6 — CONSTITUTIONAL REVIEW AUTHORITY
Section 8.601 — Supremacy of the Constitution
If any provision of the Tribal Code conflicts with the Constitution, the Constitution shall prevail.
Section 8.602 — Review of Ministerial Actions
The Court may invalidate ministerial acts that:
(a) Exceed constitutional authority;
(b) Violate rights of Nationals;
(c) Undermine sovereignty.
CHAPTER 7 — RECORDS AND PUBLICATION
Section 8.701 — Official Record
All decisions shall:
(a) Be recorded in the National Judicial Registry;
(b) Be digitally archived;
(c) Be published in the ENR Tribune when appropriate.
Section 8.702 — Sealed Proceedings
Proceedings may be sealed for:
(a) Minor protection;
(b) National security;
(c) Sensitive covenant matters.
CHAPTER 8 — ETHICS AND RECUSAL
Section 8.801 — Judicial Ethics
Jurists shall:
(a) Maintain impartiality;
(b) Avoid conflicts of interest;
(c) Disclose material affiliations;
(d) Uphold the oath at all times.
Section 8.802 — Recusal
A Jurist must recuse where:
(a) Personal bias exists;
(b) Financial interest exists;
(c) Prior involvement compromises neutrality.
CHAPTER 9 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — FOUNDATIONAL DOCTRINE OF RESTORATIVE JUSTICE
Section 9.101 — National Justice Philosophy
Justice within the Echadi Nation Republic shall be grounded in restoration, accountability, covenant alignment, and preservation of communal harmony.
The primary objective of justice shall be:
(a) Restoration of injured parties;
(b) Correction of wrongful conduct;
(c) Reintegration where possible;
(d) Preservation of national integrity.
Punitive exclusion shall be reserved for grave and irreconcilable offenses.
Section 9.102 — Priority of Restoration
In all eligible matters, restorative remedies shall be considered prior to punitive sanctions unless:
(a) Public safety requires immediate restraint;
(b) The offense constitutes treason or aggravated violence;
(c) The offender demonstrates persistent refusal to acknowledge harm.
CHAPTER 2 — RESTORATIVE PROCEEDINGS
Section 9.201 — Initiation
Restorative proceedings may be initiated by:
(a) Order of the Jural Society;
(b) Petition of injured party;
(c) Motion of Tribal Marshal;
(d) Covenant mediation request.
Section 9.202 — Restorative Panel
A Restorative Panel may consist of:
(a) A Certified Jurist;
(b) A recognized community mediator or elder;
(c) The injured party;
(d) The accused;
(e) Household representatives when appropriate.
Participation shall be voluntary unless ordered as condition of sentencing.
Section 9.203 — Required Elements
Restorative process shall include:
(a) Acknowledgment of wrongdoing;
(b) Acceptance of responsibility;
(c) Development of restitution plan;
(d) Covenant realignment strategy;
(e) Compliance timeline.
CHAPTER 3 — RESTITUTION
Section 9.301 — Mandatory Restitution
Restitution shall be mandatory where measurable harm is established and may include:
(a) Financial compensation;
(b) Return or replacement of property;
(c) Repair of damage;
(d) Service to injured party or community.
Section 9.302 — Structured Compliance
Where immediate restitution is impracticable, structured compliance schedules may be ordered.
Failure to comply shall subject the offender to formal sentencing.
CHAPTER 4 — COVENANT PROBATION
Section 9.401 — Covenant Probation Defined
Covenant Probation is a court-supervised period of structured accountability intended to restore lawful conduct and moral alignment.
Section 9.402 — Conditions of Probation
Conditions may include:
(a) Reporting requirements;
(b) Counseling or education;
(c) Financial compliance;
(d) Restriction of certain privileges;
(e) Community accountability meetings.
Section 9.403 — Successful Completion
Successful completion may result in:
(a) Sealing of records where appropriate;
(b) Restoration of covenant standing;
(c) Full reintegration into community privileges.
CHAPTER 5 — COMMUNITY AND HOUSEHOLD RECONCILIATION
Section 9.501 — Community Reconciliation
Where conduct harmed national unity or public confidence, the Court may require:
(a) Formal acknowledgment;
(b) Public correction of falsehoods;
(c) Community restitution engagement.
Section 9.502 — Household Restoration
In domestic or covenant disputes, the Court may order:
(a) Household covenant review;
(b) Financial restructuring agreements;
(c) Parenting plans;
(d) Temporary separation where safety requires.
CHAPTER 6 — EXPATRIATION AND REFERRAL TO FOREIGN JURISDICTION
Section 9.601 — Grounds for Expatriation
Expatriation from the Echadi Nation Republic may be ordered by the Jural Society when a person:
(a) Commits Treason against the Nation;
(b) Engages in repeated aggravated violence demonstrating unfitness for national covenant;
(c) Conducts sustained economic sabotage against national institutions;
(d) Persistently refuses restorative remedy and remains a demonstrable threat to national stability.
Expatriation shall be imposed only after full due process.
Section 9.602 — Legal Effect of Expatriation
Upon lawful expatriation:
(a) The individual’s covenant standing within ENR shall be revoked;
(b) National privileges shall be suspended;
(c) Internal jurisdiction may be relinquished to the extent permitted by law;
(d) The individual shall no longer be entitled to protections exclusive to ENR nationals.
Expatriation shall not be imposed arbitrarily and must be recorded in the National Registry and published in the ENR Tribune.
Section 9.603 — Referral to Foreign Jurisdiction
Where an offense:
(a) Constitutes a violation under the laws of a foreign sovereign or United States State;
(b) Occurred within the territorial jurisdiction of such external authority;
(c) Involves victims or property primarily under foreign jurisdiction;
The Jural Society may, upon lawful determination, refer or release the matter to the appropriate foreign jurisdictional authority for prosecution.
Such referral shall not constitute surrender of ENR sovereignty, but a recognition of concurrent or primary territorial jurisdiction where applicable.
Section 9.604 — Cooperation Without Submission
Any transfer, cooperation, or referral shall:
(a) Be executed through formal communication;
(b) Preserve the sovereign status of the Echadi Nation Republic;
(c) Not constitute subordination to foreign authority;
(d) Be consistent with international comity principles.
CHAPTER 7 — RECORDS AND CONFIDENTIALITY
Section 9.701 — Confidential Restorative Proceedings
Restorative sessions shall remain confidential unless:
(a) Public safety requires disclosure;
(b) Constitutional review mandates transparency;
(c) Both parties consent to publication.
Section 9.702 — Sealing Authority
Upon successful restorative completion, the Jural Society may order records sealed in the National Registry.
CHAPTER 8 — FINAL DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — RIGHT TO APPEAL
Section 10.101 — Constitutional Foundation
The right to appeal is guaranteed pursuant to Unit VIII, Article 3 of the ENR Constitution.
No person shall be deprived of the opportunity to seek review of a final judgment rendered by a lower tribunal or division of the Jural Society.
Section 10.102 — Scope of Appeal
Appeals may be taken from:
(a) Criminal convictions;
(b) Civil judgments;
(c) Sovereignty determinations;
(d) Ministerial removal decisions;
(e) Constitutional rulings;
(f) Final orders affecting substantial rights.
Interlocutory appeals may be permitted where immediate review is necessary to prevent irreparable harm.
CHAPTER 2 — GROUNDS FOR APPEAL
Section 10.201 — Permissible Grounds
An appeal may be based upon:
(a) Procedural error;
(b) Misapplication of law;
(c) Constitutional violation;
(d) Insufficient evidence;
(e) Abuse of discretion;
(f) Newly discovered evidence materially affecting outcome.
Section 10.202 — Limitations
An appeal shall not be granted merely to re-litigate factual disputes unless clear error is demonstrated.
CHAPTER 3 — APPELLATE PROCEDURE
Section 10.301 — Notice of Appeal
A Notice of Appeal must:
(a) Be filed within the prescribed time period;
(b) Identify judgment being appealed;
(c) State grounds of appeal;
(d) Be served upon opposing party.
Time limits shall be set by judicial rule consistent with constitutional standards.
Section 10.302 — Record on Appeal
The record shall include:
(a) Pleadings;
(b) Evidence admitted;
(c) Transcripts;
(d) Orders and judgments.
Incomplete records may limit scope of review.
Section 10.303 — Briefing
Parties shall submit written briefs outlining:
(a) Legal arguments;
(b) Constitutional provisions relied upon;
(c) Requested relief.
Oral argument may be granted at discretion of the Court.
CHAPTER 4 — APPELLATE REVIEW STRUCTURE
Section 10.401 — Panel Review
Appeals shall ordinarily be heard by a panel of three Certified Jurists.
Section 10.402 — Full Bench Review
Full Bench review (all 8 Certified Jurists with constitutional participation of the Chief Executive pursuant to Unit III Article 30 where applicable) shall be required in cases involving:
(a) Constitutional interpretation;
(b) Sovereignty disputes;
(c) Removal of ministerial officers;
(d) Treason;
(e) Expatriation.
Section 10.403 — Standard of Review
The appellate tribunal shall apply:
(a) De Novo review for constitutional questions;
(b) Clear error standard for factual findings;
(c) Abuse of discretion for sentencing review;
(d) Strict scrutiny where fundamental rights are implicated.
CHAPTER 5 — APPELLATE DECISIONS
Section 10.501 — Disposition
The appellate body may:
(a) Affirm the judgment;
(b) Reverse the judgment;
(c) Remand for further proceedings;
(d) Modify the judgment;
(e) Vacate the judgment entirely.
Section 10.502 — Precedential Authority
Published appellate opinions shall:
(a) Serve as binding precedent within ENR jurisdiction;
(b) Be recorded in the National Judicial Registry;
(c) Be published in the ENR Tribune.
CHAPTER 6 — FINAL REVIEW AUTHORITY
Section 10.601 — Supreme Constitutional Review
The Jural Society sitting in Full Bench shall serve as the final interpreter of the ENR Constitution.
No external authority shall supersede its constitutional determinations within ENR jurisdiction.
Section 10.602 — Extraordinary Writ Review
In extraordinary circumstances, a petition for writ may be filed for immediate review of:
(a) Unlawful detention;
(b) Ministerial overreach;
(c) Threat to sovereignty;
(d) Judicial misconduct.
CHAPTER 7 — STAY OF JUDGMENT
Section 10.701 — Stay Pending Appeal
The Court may grant a stay of enforcement where:
(a) Irreparable harm may occur;
(b) Substantial constitutional question exists;
(c) Public safety is not endangered.
CHAPTER 8 — FINALITY
Section 10.801 — Final Judgment
A decision of the Full Bench shall constitute final judgment within ENR jurisdiction.
Section 10.802 — Enforcement of Final Orders
All ministries and officers shall comply with final appellate determinations.
Failure to comply constitutes contempt.
CHAPTER 9 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — SOURCE OF LEGISLATIVE POWER
Section 11.101 — Constitutional Foundation
Legislative authority of the Echadi Nation Republic derives from Unit V — Parliament Powers of the ENR Constitution.
The Parliament is the sole legislative body of the Nation and exercises lawmaking authority in accordance with constitutional limits.
Section 11.102 — Composition of Parliament
The Parliament of the Echadi Nation Republic shall consist of:
(a) Nine (9) Members of the Ministerial Congress; and
(b) Nine (9) Members of the Jural Society.
This bicameral integration reflects executive-administrative and judicial-constitutional balance within the legislative process.
Section 11.103 — Constitutional Integration of the Chief Executive
The Chief Executive / Aboriginal Chief, pursuant to Unit III and Unit VII of the Constitution, retains constitutional authority within the legislative structure, including:
(a) Oversight of constitutional conformity;
(b) Participation where constitutionally required;
(c) Affirmation of enacted legislation.
Such participation shall not diminish Parliament’s legislative authority but ensures constitutional guardianship.
CHAPTER 2 — POWERS OF PARLIAMENT
Section 11.201 — Enumerated Powers
Parliament shall have authority to enact laws governing:
(a) Civil and criminal matters;
(b) National defense and security;
(c) Economic and commercial regulation;
(d) Land, trust, and stewardship governance;
(e) Ministerial structure and administration;
(f) National registry and records;
(g) Citizenship, covenant, and expatriation matters;
(h) Administrative and procedural regulations.
Section 11.202 — Limitations
Parliament shall not enact legislation that:
(a) Contravenes the ENR Constitution;
(b) Violates natural rights preserved under Title 4 of this Code;
(c) Undermines sovereignty or covenant integrity.
Where conflict exists, the Constitution shall prevail.
CHAPTER 3 — INTRODUCTION OF LEGISLATION
Section 11.301 — Legislative Proposals
Legislation may be introduced by:
(a) Any Member of the Ministerial Congress;
(b) Any Certified Jurist serving in Parliament;
(c) The Chief Executive / Aboriginal Chief;
(d) Lawful constitutional petition where authorized.
All proposed legislation must include:
CHAPTER 4 — REVIEW AND DELIBERATION
Section 11.401 — Constitutional Review
Prior to enactment, Parliament shall review proposed legislation for:
(a) Consistency with the ENR Constitution;
(b) Sovereignty implications;
(c) Compatibility with existing Code;
(d) Administrative feasibility.
The Jural Society members of Parliament shall ensure constitutional conformity during deliberation.
Section 11.402 — Voting Procedure
Legislation shall be adopted upon lawful majority vote as prescribed by parliamentary rules established under Unit V.
Voting procedures shall ensure balanced participation of:
CHAPTER 5 — ENACTMENT AND AFFIRMATION
Section 11.501 — Passage of Law
A bill becomes law when:
(a) Duly passed by Parliament;
(b) Affirmed in accordance with constitutional requirements;
(c) Recorded in the National Registry;
(d) Published in the ENR Tribune.
Section 11.502 — Effective Date
Unless otherwise specified, legislation shall take effect upon publication in the ENR Tribune.
Emergency legislation may take immediate effect when expressly declared and constitutionally authorized.
CHAPTER 6 — AMENDMENT OF THE TRIBAL CODE
Section 11.601 — Authority to Amend
The ENRTC may be amended only by Act of Parliament pursuant to Unit V powers.
All amendments must clearly:
(a) Identify affected Title and Section;
(b) Specify textual changes;
(c) Provide purpose statement.
Section 11.602 — Codification Procedure
Upon enactment:
(a) The Ministry of Justice shall update the official Code;
(b) Revision history shall be recorded;
(c) Amendments shall be published in the ENR Tribune.
CHAPTER 7 — CONSTITUTIONAL REVISION
Section 11.701 — Unit XI Supremacy
Revisions to the ENR Constitution are governed exclusively by Unit XI.
Parliament shall not alter constitutional text except through procedures prescribed therein.
Section 11.702 — Harmonization
Where constitutional revision affects statutory provisions:
(a) Parliament shall enact conforming amendments;
(b) Conflicting statutory provisions shall be void to extent of inconsistency.
CHAPTER 8 — REPEAL AND SUNSET
Section 11.801 — Repeal
Parliament may repeal prior laws through express legislative act.
Section 11.802 — Sunset Clauses
Legislation may include expiration provisions requiring renewal.
Absent renewal, such law shall lapse automatically without further action.
CHAPTER 9 — OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
Section 11.901 — Binding Effect
No Act of Parliament shall be binding unless:
(a) Recorded in the National Registry; and
(b) Published in the Official ENR Tribune.
Section 11.902 — Archival Authority
The Ministry of Justice shall maintain:
(a) The official codified ENRTC;
(b) Historical archives of prior versions;
(c) Legislative history records.
CHAPTER 10 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY
Section 12.101 — Inherent Sovereign Immunity
The Echadi Nation Republic, as a sovereign nation, possesses inherent sovereign immunity from suit, claim, attachment, levy, execution, or judicial process except as expressly waived by lawful Act of Parliament.
Sovereign immunity extends to:
(a) The Nation itself;
(b) Parliament;
(c) The Chief Executive / Aboriginal Chief;
(d) The Ministerial Congress;
(e) The Jural Society;
(f) All Ministries;
(g) National agencies, departments, and commissions;
(h) Official land, trust, and treasury holdings.
Section 12.102 — Non-Consent to External Jurisdiction
The Echadi Nation Republic does not consent to jurisdiction of foreign courts, United States federal courts, or state courts except where:
(a) A lawful treaty exists;
(b) Parliament expressly authorizes limited waiver;
(c) A contractual clause explicitly provides jurisdictional consent.
Silence shall not constitute waiver.
Section 12.103 — Protection of National Assets
National assets, including:
(a) Treasury holdings;
(b) Land trust property;
(c) Registry records;
(d) Diplomatic instruments;
(e) Economic reserves;
shall be immune from attachment, garnishment, or forced execution absent explicit parliamentary waiver.
CHAPTER 2 — LIMITED WAIVER OF IMMUNITY
Section 12.201 — Authority to Waive
Only Parliament, pursuant to Unit V authority, may enact a limited waiver of sovereign immunity.
Such waiver must:
(a) Be explicit;
(b) Identify scope of waiver;
(c) Define jurisdiction;
(d) Establish limitations.
Section 12.202 — Contractual Waiver
The Nation may consent to arbitration or jurisdiction within a contract, provided:
(a) The waiver is expressly written;
(b) Approved by authorized Ministerial authority;
(c) Recorded in the National Registry.
No officer may unilaterally waive sovereign immunity beyond authorized scope.
CHAPTER 3 — MINISTERIAL AND OFFICER IMMUNITY
Section 12.301 — Official Capacity Immunity
Officers, ministers, jurists, and marshals acting within lawful scope of authority shall be immune from personal civil liability.
Section 12.302 — Ultra Vires Conduct
Immunity shall not apply where an officer:
(a) Acts outside lawful authority;
(b) Engages in corruption;
(c) Commits intentional criminal misconduct;
(d) Violates constitutional rights knowingly.
In such cases, personal liability may attach.
CHAPTER 4 — NATIONAL LIABILITY FRAMEWORK
Section 12.401 — Civil Claims Against the Nation
Where Parliament authorizes limited waiver, claims against the Nation must:
(a) Be filed in ENR courts;
(b) Comply with notice requirements;
(c) Respect statutory damage caps.
Section 12.402 — Notice Requirement
Any person asserting claim against the Nation must provide written notice within prescribed time frame prior to filing action.
Failure to provide notice bars claim.
Section 12.403 — Damages Limitation
Parliament may establish:
(a) Monetary caps;
(b) Restorative settlement alternatives;
(c) Arbitration requirements.
Punitive damages shall not be awarded against the Nation absent express statutory authorization.
CHAPTER 5 — INDEMNIFICATION
Section 12.501 — Indemnification of Officers
The Nation may indemnify officers for actions taken within lawful authority.
Indemnification shall not apply to:
(a) Treason;
(b) Corruption;
(c) Intentional criminal acts.
Section 12.502 — Defense Provision
The Nation may provide legal defense for officers acting within scope of duty.
CHAPTER 6 — INTERNATIONAL AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL COMITY
Section 12.601 — Recognition of Comity
The Nation may extend reciprocal respect to foreign sovereign immunity principles consistent with:
(a) Sovereign equality;
(b) International comity;
(c) Diplomatic relations.
Section 12.602 — Non-Submission Doctrine
Cooperation with foreign jurisdictions shall not be construed as submission to foreign sovereignty.
All cooperative agreements must preserve ENR sovereign status.
CHAPTER 7 — NATIONAL TRUST AND TREASURY PROTECTION
Section 12.701 — Trust Asset Immunity
All property held in:
(a) Echadi Land Trust;
(b) Echadi Indigenous Treasury;
(c) National Risk Pools;
(d) Sovereign reserves;
shall remain immune from external seizure absent parliamentary authorization.
CHAPTER 8 — DISPUTE RESOLUTION
Section 12.801 — Exclusive ENR Jurisdiction
Absent lawful waiver, disputes involving the Nation shall be resolved exclusively within ENR courts.
Section 12.802 — Arbitration Clause Authority
Parliament may authorize arbitration mechanisms while preserving sovereign immunity structure.
CHAPTER 9 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — STRUCTURE OF MINISTERIAL GOVERNANCE
Section 13.101 — Executive Administration
Administrative authority of the Echadi Nation Republic shall be carried out through Ministries established under the Constitution and Acts of Parliament.
Each Ministry shall operate within:
(a) Constitutional authority;
(b) Parliamentary statute;
(c) Delegated regulatory scope.
Section 13.102 — Ministerial Congress
The Ministerial Congress, as a component of Parliament under Unit V, participates in legislative authority and oversees executive administration through lawful regulation and governance oversight.
Section 13.103 — Chief Executive Authority
The Chief Executive / Aboriginal Chief retains constitutional supervisory authority over all Ministries pursuant to Unit III and Unit VII.
Such authority includes:
(a) Direction of national policy;
(b) Appointment authority where constitutionally authorized;
(c) Executive oversight to ensure constitutional compliance.
CHAPTER 2 — DELEGATED RULEMAKING AUTHORITY
Section 13.201 — Authority to Promulgate Regulations
Parliament may delegate limited rulemaking authority to Ministries for the purpose of implementing statutory provisions.
All regulations must:
(a) Be consistent with the ENR Constitution;
(b) Be authorized by statute;
(c) Not exceed delegated scope.
Section 13.202 — Publication Requirement
All ministerial regulations shall:
(a) Be recorded in the National Registry;
(b) Be published in the ENR Tribune;
(c) Identify statutory authority under which they are issued.
Unpublished regulations shall have no binding force.
Section 13.203 — Emergency Regulations
A Ministry may issue temporary emergency regulations when:
(a) Public safety is at risk;
(b) National security requires immediate action;
(c) Economic stability demands urgent intervention.
Emergency regulations shall expire unless ratified by Parliament within the prescribed period.
CHAPTER 3 — ADMINISTRATIVE ACTIONS
Section 13.301 — Administrative Orders
Ministries may issue administrative orders consistent with statutory authority, including:
(a) Permits;
(b) Certifications;
(c) Compliance directives;
(d) Notices of violation.
Section 13.302 — Notice Requirement
No adverse administrative action shall be taken without:
(a) Written notice;
(b) Statement of grounds;
(c) Opportunity to respond.
Section 13.303 — Administrative Hearings
Persons subject to adverse administrative action shall have the right to:
(a) Administrative hearing;
(b) Presentation of evidence;
(c) Representation;
(d) Appeal to the Jural Society.
CHAPTER 4 — ADMINISTRATIVE DUE PROCESS
Section 13.401 — Fair Procedure
All administrative proceedings must comply with:
(a) Due process principles;
(b) Impartial decision-making;
(c) Transparency of evidence;
(d) Written findings of fact.
Section 13.402 — Burden of Proof
In administrative proceedings:
(a) The Ministry bears the burden of proof;
(b) Decisions must be supported by substantial evidence.
CHAPTER 5 — PERMITS AND REGULATORY OVERSIGHT
Section 13.501 — Permit Authority
Where authorized by statute, Ministries may regulate through issuance of permits governing:
(a) Professional practice;
(b) Commercial activity;
(c) National certifications;
(d) Operational authorizations;
(e) Specialized activity requiring oversight.
Permits shall operate as conditional administrative authorizations rather than grants of inherent rights.
Section 13.502 — Suspension or Revocation of Permit
Permits may be suspended or revoked only upon:
(a) Written notice;
(b) Opportunity for administrative hearing;
(c) Written findings of fact and law.
CHAPTER 6 — ACCOUNTABILITY AND REVIEW
Section 13.601 — Judicial Review
All final administrative decisions are subject to review by the Jural Society pursuant to Title 10.
Section 13.602 — Ultra Vires Doctrine
Any administrative action exceeding statutory authority shall be void.
Section 13.603 — Ministerial Accountability
Ministers may be held accountable for:
(a) Abuse of delegated authority;
(b) Corruption;
(c) Willful violation of the Constitution;
(d) Exceeding regulatory power.
Such matters may be referred to Parliament or the Jural Society.
CHAPTER 7 — RECORDKEEPING AND TRANSPARENCY
Section 13.701 — Administrative Records
All administrative actions shall be:
(a) Recorded in official registry;
(b) Maintained for audit;
(c) Accessible as permitted by law.
Section 13.702 — Confidential Records
Confidential information may be protected where:
(a) National security is implicated;
(b) Personal privacy is involved;
(c) Commercial sensitivity exists.
CHAPTER 8 — INTERGOVERNMENTAL ADMINISTRATION
Section 13.801 — Cooperative Administration
Ministries may enter cooperative administrative agreements provided:
(a) Sovereignty is preserved;
(b) Parliamentary authority is respected;
(c) Agreements are recorded and published where required.
CHAPTER 9 — DECLARATION
This Title establishes:
CHAPTER 1 — ESTABLISHMENT OF THE NATIONAL REGISTRY
Section 14.101 — Creation
There is hereby established the National Registry of the Echadi Nation Republic, serving as the official repository of all public records, instruments, certifications, registrations, and parliamentary enactments.
Section 14.102 — Authority
The National Registry operates under:
(a) Authority of Parliament pursuant to Unit V;
(b) Administrative supervision of the Ministry of Justice;
(c) Constitutional oversight of the Chief Executive / Aboriginal Chief.
Section 14.103 — Legal Effect of Registration
Any instrument properly recorded in the National Registry shall:
(a) Be recognized as lawful and official within ENR jurisdiction;
(b) Carry presumption of validity;
(c) Serve as prima facie evidence of recorded facts.
Failure to record when required may affect enforceability.
CHAPTER 2 — CATEGORIES OF RECORDS
Section 14.201 — Constitutional and Parliamentary Records
The Registry shall maintain:
(a) The ENR Constitution;
(b) Parliamentary Acts;
(c) Code revisions;
(d) Executive proclamations;
(e) Official appointments.
Section 14.202 — Judicial Records
Includes:
(a) Judgments;
(b) Orders;
(c) Writs;
(d) Appeals decisions;
(e) Sealed proceedings.
Section 14.203 — National Status Records
Includes:
(a) Nationalization records;
(b) Expatriation orders;
(c) Oath affirmations (Unit XII);
(d) Covenant affirmations (Unit XIII).
Section 14.204 — Civil Registry
Includes:
(a) Marriage covenants;
(b) Household agreements;
(c) Birth records;
(d) Adoption records;
(e) Guardianship orders.
Section 14.205 — Land and Property Records
Includes:
(a) Land Trust instruments;
(b) Stewardship Covenants;
(c) Declarations of domicile;
(d) Boundary surveys;
(e) Property encumbrances.
Section 14.206 — Commercial Registry
Includes:
(a) Tribal LLCs;
(b) PMAs;
(c) Holding companies;
(d) Cooperative entities;
(e) Trade permits.
(f) Ecclesiastical entities operating under ENR authority;
(g) Church or religious bodies chartered within ENR jurisdiction;
(h) Ecclesiastical courts established by lawful act;
(i) Baptismal certificates and baby dedication or baptismal records issued under ecclesiastical authority;
(j) Ordination records, ministerial appointments, and spiritual commissions.
All ecclesiastical registrations shall be recognized as lawful instruments within ENR jurisdiction and shall operate under constitutional protection of spiritual and covenant authority.
Section 14.207 — Travel & Vessel Registry
Includes:
(a) Tribal Travelers Licenses;
(b) Vessel titles;
(c) Vessel registrations;
(d) Permit certifications;
(e) Self-insurance certificates.
Section 14.208 — Intellectual Property Registry
Includes:
(a) Tribal copyrights;
(b) Trademarks;
(c) Patents;
(d) Cultural heritage protections.
CHAPTER 3 — DIGITAL REGISTRY AUTHORITY
Section 14.301 — Digital Infrastructure
The National Registry may operate:
(a) Digital record systems;
(b) Encrypted identification verification;
(c) QR and barcode validation;
(d) Secure member access portals.
Section 14.302 — Legal Equivalency
Digitally recorded instruments shall carry equal legal weight as physical documents provided:
(a) Proper authentication exists;
(b) Registry verification number is issued;
(c) Official seal or digital signature is affixed.
CHAPTER 4 — OFFICIAL SEAL & AUTHENTICATION
Section 14.401 — Official Seal
All official registry instruments shall bear:
(a) The Great Seal of the Echadi Nation Republic; or
(b) Authorized digital authentication mark.
Section 14.402 — Certification
Certified copies issued by the Registry shall:
(a) Carry legal authenticity;
(b) Be admissible as evidence in ENR courts;
(c) Be recognized in contractual relations.
Forgery of registry instruments constitutes a Class IV offense under Title 4.
CHAPTER 5 — RECORDING PROCEDURES
Section 14.501 — Recording Requirements
An instrument must be:
(a) Submitted in proper form;
(b) Signed by authorized party;
(c) Accompanied by required documentation;
(d) Assigned a registry number.
Section 14.502 — Priority
Where multiple filings concern same subject matter, priority shall be determined by timestamp of registry entry.
CHAPTER 6 — CONFIDENTIALITY & PUBLIC ACCESS
Section 14.601 — Public Records
Public records shall be accessible unless:
(a) Sealed by judicial order;
(b) Involving minors;
(c) Implicating national security;
(d) Protected by privacy provisions.
Section 14.602 — Sealed Records
Sealed records may only be accessed by:
(a) Court order;
(b) Authorized ministerial directive;
(c) Constitutional mandate.
CHAPTER 7 — FOREIGN RECOGNITION & COMITY
Section 14.701 — Registry Recognition Abroad
Where appropriate, certified registry instruments may be presented to foreign authorities for:
(a) Recognition;
(b) Contractual purposes;
(c) Evidence of status.
Such presentation shall not constitute submission to foreign sovereignty.
CHAPTER 8 — CORRECTION & AMENDMENT OF RECORDS
Section 14.801 — Correction Procedure
Errors in recorded instruments may be corrected upon:
(a) Written petition;
(b) Supporting documentation;
(c) Administrative review;
(d) Judicial order where required.
Section 14.802 — Fraudulent Filings
Fraudulent registry submissions shall:
(a) Be void ab initio;
(b) Be referred for prosecution under Title 4;
(c) Result in potential revocation of privileges.
CHAPTER 9 — DECLARATION
This Title establishes:
CHAPTER 10 — ECCLESIASTICAL REGISTRY DIVISION
Section 14.1001 — Establishment
There is hereby established within the National Registry an Ecclesiastical Registry Division, dedicated to the recording, preservation, and authentication of ecclesiastical instruments and spiritual governance records under ENR jurisdiction.
Section 14.1002 — Scope of Ecclesiastical Records
The Ecclesiastical Registry Division shall maintain official records of:
(a) Ecclesiastical charters;
(b) Church or religious bodies organized under ENR authority;
(c) Ecclesiastical courts established by lawful act;
(d) Ordinations, spiritual commissions, and ministerial appointments;
(e) Baptismal certificates and baby dedication or baptismal records;
(f) Marriage covenants solemnized under ecclesiastical authority;
(g) Ecclesiastical decrees, rulings, and internal governance instruments;
(h) Sacred trust instruments held by religious bodies.
Section 14.1003 — Legal Recognition
All properly recorded ecclesiastical instruments shall:
(a) Carry lawful recognition within ENR jurisdiction;
(b) Be admissible as prima facie evidence in ENR courts;
(c) Be protected under constitutional spiritual authority provisions;
(d) Be immune from external alteration or interference absent parliamentary authority.
Section 14.1004 — Separation of Civil and Ecclesiastical Records
The Registry shall maintain clear administrative separation between:
(a) Civil governmental records; and
(b) Ecclesiastical records;
while preserving unified sovereign authority under the National Registry.
Section 14.1005 — Confidentiality
Certain ecclesiastical records, including:
(a) Spiritual counseling documentation;
(b) Internal disciplinary proceedings;
(c) Sensitive covenant matters;
may be sealed and protected from public disclosure except by lawful ecclesiastical or judicial order.
Section 14.1006 — Seal and Authentication
Ecclesiastical records may bear:
(a) The Great Seal of the Echadi Nation Republic;
(b) A designated Ecclesiastical Seal approved by Parliament;
(c) Authorized digital authentication.
Forgery or unauthorized use constitutes a Class IV offense under Title 4.
DECLARATION
The Ecclesiastical Registry Division affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — ESTABLISHMENT OF THE ECHADI INDIGENOUS TREASURY
Section 15.101 — Creation
There is hereby established the Echadi Indigenous Treasury, operating under the Ministry of Economics and Engineering pursuant to Unit V (Parliament Powers) of the ENR Constitution.
The Treasury shall serve as the sovereign fiscal authority of the Nation.
Section 15.102 — Treasury Powers
The Treasury shall have authority to:
(a) Manage national reserves;
(b) Establish sovereign monetary standards;
(c) Issue and regulate economic instruments;
(d) Maintain national ledgers and settlement systems;
(e) Supervise cooperative financial structures;
(f) Administer digital economic infrastructure;
(g) Protect economic sovereignty.
Section 15.103 — Treasurer and Reporting Structure
The Treasurer, serving as Chief Minister of Economics and Engineering, shall:
(a) Administer Treasury operations;
(b) Report directly to the Chief Executive / Aboriginal Chief;
(c) Safeguard national reserves;
(d) Ensure fiscal discipline;
(e) Present fiscal summaries to Parliament when required.
CHAPTER 2 — SOVEREIGN MONETARY STRUCTURE
Section 15.201 — Echadi Dollar (ECD)
The official sovereign unit of account of the Echadi Nation Republic shall be the Echadi Dollar (ECD).
Section 15.202 — Silver Reference Standard
The ECD shall be measured by silver equivalency:
The Treasury shall reference internationally recognized silver pricing benchmarks for equivalency calculation.
Section 15.203 — Nature of the ECD
The ECD functions as:
(a) A sovereign accounting measure;
(b) A silver-referenced value standard;
(c) A cooperative internal settlement instrument;
(d) A reserve-aligned economic measure.
The ECD shall not be issued arbitrarily without maintaining asset integrity.
Section 15.204 — Establishment of the Echadi Token (ECT)
There is hereby authorized the creation of the Echadi Token (ECT), a sovereign digital asset deployed on the ERC-20 blockchain network.
The ECT shall function as:
(a) A digital sovereign asset;
(b) A liquidity and exchange instrument;
(c) A technological extension of Treasury infrastructure;
(d) A blockchain-based economic integration mechanism.
The Echadi Token (ECT) shall not be made publicly available until authorized by Act of Parliament.
Section 15.205 — Status and Administration of ECT
The ECT shall:
(a) Be administered exclusively by the Echadi Indigenous Treasury;
(b) Operate with transparent blockchain verification;
(c) Be subject to issuance controls established by Parliament;
(d) Not constitute submission to foreign currency systems.
Section 15.206 — Distinction Between ECD and ECT
The ECD is:
The ECT is:
Both instruments may interface but remain legally distinct.
CHAPTER 3 — ECHADI FINANCIAL COOPERATIVE (EFC)
Section 15.301 — Establishment of the EFC
The Echadi Financial Cooperative (EFC) is hereby recognized as the official private cooperative financial institution of the Echadi Nation Republic.
The EFC operates under the authority of the Echadi Indigenous Treasury and Ministry of Economics and Engineering.
Section 15.302 — Nature of the EFC
The EFC shall function as:
(a) A private membership-based cooperative financial institution;
(b) An internal sovereign financial services structure;
(c) A reserve-aligned cooperative exchange system;
(d) A participant-governed financial body operating exclusively under ENR jurisdiction.
The EFC is not a public commercial bank and does not operate under foreign banking charters.
Section 15.303 — Purpose of the EFC
The EFC shall:
(a) Facilitate cooperative lending and financing;
(b) Maintain silver-referenced account structures aligned with the ECD standard;
(c) Support Treasury liquidity management;
(d) Administer cooperative risk pools;
(e) Provide member-based financial services;
(f) Integrate with ECT digital infrastructure when authorized.
Section 15.304 — Membership
Participation in the EFC shall be limited to:
(a) Nationals in good standing;
(b) Registered ENR entities;
(c) Approved cooperative participants.
Membership shall be governed by internal bylaws consistent with ENR statutory authority.
Section 15.305 — Governance and Oversight
The EFC shall:
(a) Maintain internal governance structure;
(b) Operate under Treasury supervision;
(c) Provide financial transparency to the Chief Executive;
(d) Maintain reserve integrity;
(e) Avoid submission to external regulatory authority absent explicit parliamentary authorization.
CHAPTER 4 — NATIONAL RESERVES
Section 15.401 — Reserve Holdings
The Treasury shall maintain:
(a) Physical silver reserves;
(b) Diversified sovereign assets;
(c) Emergency stabilization funds;
(d) Cooperative liquidity reserves.
Section 15.402 — Protection of Reserves
National reserves shall be protected under sovereign immunity pursuant to Title 12 and shall not be subject to foreign attachment absent explicit parliamentary waiver.
CHAPTER 5 — COOPERATIVE RISK POOLS
Section 15.501 — Authorization
The Treasury may authorize cooperative risk pools for:
(a) Vessel protection;
(b) Property coverage;
(c) Indemnification structures;
(d) Cooperative stabilization funds.
Section 15.502 — Contribution Structure
Risk pools may operate on tiered contribution systems aligned with silver-equivalent standards.
CHAPTER 6 — DIGITAL ECONOMIC INFRASTRUCTURE
Section 15.601 — Blockchain Integration
The Treasury may integrate:
(a) Smart contract systems;
(b) Secure digital wallets;
(c) Blockchain verification tools;
(d) Digital custody protocols.
Section 15.602 — Security Safeguards
All digital systems shall maintain:
(a) Multi-signature authorization;
(b) Encrypted storage;
(c) Audit capability;
(d) Disaster recovery protections.
CHAPTER 7 — ECONOMIC INTEGRITY PROVISIONS
Section 15.701 — Prohibited Conduct
No person shall:
(a) Manipulate the ECD standard;
(b) Counterfeit ECT tokens;
(c) Interfere with Treasury ledgers;
(d) Sabotage cooperative financial structures.
Violations shall be prosecuted under Title 2 or Title 4.
CHAPTER 8 — DECLARATION
This Title establishes:
CHAPTER 1 — FOUNDATIONAL LAND DOCTRINE
Section 16.101 — Sacred Stewardship Principle
The Echadi Nation Republic affirms that land is held in sacred stewardship and covenant responsibility for present and future generations.
Land shall not be treated as a mere commodity but as a sovereign territorial trust governed by:
(a) Stewardship doctrine;
(b) Covenant obligation;
(c) Intergenerational responsibility;
(d) Sovereign authority.
Section 16.102 — Sovereign Territorial Authority
All land governed under ENR authority, whether held by:
(a) Land Patent alignment;
(b) Trust conveyance;
(c) Leasehold structure;
(d) Stewardship covenant;
shall be integrated within the sovereign land governance system of the Nation.
CHAPTER 2 — ECHADI NATION LAND TRUST
Section 16.201 — Recognition and Authority
The Echadi Nation Land Trust is hereby formally recognized as the sovereign landholding mechanism of the Nation.
The Land Trust shall operate under statutory authority and constitutional protection.
Section 16.202 — Trustee Structure
The Trustee of the Echadi Nation Land Trust shall be:
The Echadi Nation Republic, acting through its Ministerial Council, with the Chief Executive / Aboriginal Chief serving as Chief Trustee pursuant to constitutional authority.
Section 16.203 — Purpose of the Land Trust
The Land Trust shall:
(a) Preserve national territory;
(b) Prevent unlawful alienation;
(c) Protect sovereign land interests;
(d) Provide structured stewardship rights;
(e) Ensure perpetual national continuity.
CHAPTER 3 — STEWARDSHIP RIGHTS
Section 16.301 — Stewardship Interests Defined
Nationals and Members may receive structured stewardship interests through:
(a) Leasehold agreements;
(b) Stewardship Covenants;
(c) Long-term renewable land use instruments.
Such interests grant use rights but do not sever the land from national trust authority.
Section 16.302 — Long-Term Renewable Terms
The Land Trust may authorize long-term stewardship agreements, including renewable ninety-nine (99) year terms, subject to:
(a) Covenant compliance;
(b) Maintenance obligations;
(c) Annual stewardship contributions where applicable.
Section 16.303 — Permitted Uses
Stewards may:
(a) Construct dwellings;
(b) Develop agricultural systems;
(c) Establish infrastructure;
(d) Operate lawful enterprises consistent with ENR law.
Use shall not:
(a) Harm environmental integrity;
(b) Undermine national sovereignty;
(c) Violate stewardship covenants.
CHAPTER 4 — DOMICILE & RESIDENTIAL STANDING
Section 16.401 — Declaration of Domicile
Nationals and Members may declare domicile upon ENR Land Trust property through a properly executed instrument recorded in the National Registry pursuant to Title 14.
Section 16.402 — Legal Effect of Domicile
A recorded Declaration of Domicile shall:
(a) Establish recognized residential standing within ENR jurisdiction;
(b) Affirm covenant alignment;
(c) Serve as prima facie evidence of domicile for internal national purposes.
CHAPTER 5 — LAND RECORDING & REGISTRY
Section 16.501 — Mandatory Recording
All land trust instruments, including stewardship covenants, assignments, and declarations, shall be recorded in the National Registry pursuant to Title 14.
Unrecorded instruments shall not be enforceable within ENR jurisdiction.
Section 16.502 — Priority of Interests
Priority of land interests shall be determined by timestamp of National Registry entry.
CHAPTER 6 — PROTECTION OF NATIONAL LAND
Section 16.601 — Sovereign Immunity of Trust Land
Land held in the Echadi Nation Land Trust shall be protected under sovereign immunity pursuant to Title 12.
No foreign authority may attach, levy, or seize trust land absent express parliamentary waiver.
Section 16.602 — Restriction on Permanent Alienation
Trust land shall not be permanently alienated outside ENR jurisdiction without Act of Parliament.
CHAPTER 7 — DEFAULT AND REVERSION
Section 16.701 — Stewardship Default
Stewardship rights may be revoked where:
(a) Covenant violations occur;
(b) Land use materially harms national interest;
(c) Stewardship obligations are persistently ignored.
Revocation requires:
(a) Written notice;
(b) Opportunity to cure;
(c) Administrative or judicial review if contested.
Section 16.702 — Reversion of Interest
Upon lawful revocation, the stewardship interest shall revert to the Land Trust.
Improvements may be subject to terms defined in the stewardship agreement.
CHAPTER 8 — ENVIRONMENTAL STEWARDSHIP
Section 16.801 — Sustainability Mandate
Land use shall prioritize:
(a) Environmental preservation;
(b) Water stewardship;
(c) Agricultural sustainability;
(d) Responsible resource management.
CHAPTER 9 — LAND DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY
Section 16.901 — Ministerial Development Authority
The Ministry of Economics and Engineering is vested with authority to authorize, regulate, and supervise land development within ENR Land Trust territory.
Section 16.902 — Development Standards
Development approvals must:
(a) Align with national economic planning;
(b) Respect stewardship covenants;
(c) Preserve environmental sustainability;
(d) Be recorded in the National Registry;
(e) Comply with statutory authority.
Parliament retains authority to establish overarching land policy, while operational development authority is vested in the Ministry of Economics and Engineering.
CHAPTER 10 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — FOUNDATIONAL DEFENSE DOCTRINE
Section 17.101 — Sovereign Right of Self-Defense
The Echadi Nation Republic affirms its inherent sovereign right to defend:
(a) Its territorial integrity;
(b) Its Nationals and Members;
(c) Its constitutional order;
(d) Its institutions and assets.
Defense authority shall be exercised strictly for protection and preservation of sovereignty, not aggression.
Section 17.102 — Civilian Supremacy
Civilian authority over all national defense structures is vested in the Chief Executive / Aboriginal Chief, pursuant to Unit III and Unit VII of the Constitution.
All defense bodies operate subordinate to constitutional civilian leadership.
CHAPTER 2 — COMMAND STRUCTURE
Section 17.201 — Supreme Commander
The Chief Executive / Aboriginal Chief shall serve as the Supreme Civilian Commander of all national defense structures.
This authority includes:
(a) Activation of defense forces;
(b) Strategic command authority;
(c) Approval of mobilization;
(d) Oversight of national security doctrine.
Section 17.202 — Chief Minister of Defense and Intelligence
There is hereby recognized the office of the Chief Minister of Defense and Intelligence, who shall:
(a) Serve as operational head of national defense;
(b) Act as Second-in-Command under the Chief Executive in matters of defense and combat mobilization;
(c) Exercise delegated authority over defense operations when activated.
Section 17.203 — Scope of Operational Authority
The Chief Minister of Defense and Intelligence shall have authority over:
(a) The Echadi National Guard;
(b) The Tribal Marshal Service when mobilized for defensive or combat operations;
(c) Any organized defense unit lawfully assembled under ENR authority;
(d) Intelligence and national security operations;
(e) Emergency defense mobilization structures.
Such authority shall operate within the limits of constitutional and parliamentary authorization.
CHAPTER 3 — ECHADI NATIONAL GUARD
Section 17.301 — Establishment
There is hereby established the Echadi National Guard as the organized defensive force of the Nation.
Section 17.302 — Purpose
The National Guard shall:
(a) Protect ENR territorial jurisdiction;
(b) Respond to external threats;
(c) Support civil authorities during declared emergencies;
(d) Protect national infrastructure and institutions.
Section 17.303 — Subordination
The National Guard shall operate:
(a) Under the civilian authority of the Chief Executive;
(b) Under operational command of the Chief Minister of Defense and Intelligence during mobilization.
CHAPTER 4 — TRIBAL MARSHALS IN DEFENSIVE CAPACITY
Section 17.401 — Dual Capacity Doctrine
The Tribal Marshal Service, established under Title 7, primarily functions as civil enforcement authority.
However, upon lawful activation for national defense purposes, the Tribal Marshal Service shall fall under operational command of the Chief Minister of Defense and Intelligence.
Section 17.402 — Separation of Functions
Absent mobilization, Tribal Marshals remain under Ministry of Justice authority.
Mobilization for defense purposes shall require:
(a) Formal activation order by the Chief Executive;
(b) Notification to Parliament where required;
(c) Clear designation of operational status.
CHAPTER 5 — INTELLIGENCE AUTHORITY
Section 17.501 — Intelligence Function
The Chief Minister of Defense and Intelligence shall oversee national intelligence operations for the purpose of:
(a) Identifying threats to sovereignty;
(b) Monitoring security risks;
(c) Protecting national infrastructure;
(d) Safeguarding institutional stability.
Section 17.502 — Constitutional Limitations
Intelligence operations shall:
(a) Respect constitutional protections;
(b) Avoid unlawful intrusion upon Nationals;
(c) Be subject to oversight mechanisms.
CHAPTER 6 — ACTIVATION & MOBILIZATION
Section 17.601 — Activation Authority
The Chief Executive may activate national defense structures when:
(a) Territorial threat exists;
(b) Armed intrusion occurs;
(c) Sovereign institutions are endangered;
(d) National emergency is declared.
Section 17.602 — Operational Command During Combat
During lawful mobilization or combat engagement:
(a) The Chief Minister of Defense and Intelligence shall act as operational commander;
(b) All Guard units and assembled defense bodies shall be subordinate to his command;
(c) Strategic authority remains vested in the Chief Executive.
CHAPTER 7 — USE OF FORCE
Section 17.701 — Defensive Engagement Standard
Force may be used only:
(a) In defense of life;
(b) In defense of territory;
(c) In protection of constitutional order;
(d) When proportionate and necessary.
Section 17.702 — Prohibited Conduct
Defense forces shall not:
(a) Engage in unlawful aggression;
(b) Suppress constitutional rights absent lawful emergency authority;
(c) Act beyond scope of activation order.
Violations shall be prosecuted under ENR law.
CHAPTER 8 — MILITARY DISCIPLINE & JUSTICE
Section 17.801 — Discipline Code
Parliament may enact military discipline codes governing:
(a) Conduct;
(b) Readiness;
(c) Chain of command;
(d) Operational standards.
Section 17.802 — Military Tribunals
Military tribunals may be established consistent with constitutional safeguards.
Appeals shall proceed under Title 10.
CHAPTER 9 — DEFENSIVE COOPERATION
Section 17.901 — Intergovernmental Defense Cooperation
The Nation may enter defensive cooperation agreements provided:
(a) Sovereignty is preserved;
(b) Parliamentary authorization is obtained;
(c) No submission to foreign command authority occurs.
CHAPTER 10 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — SOVEREIGN INTERNATIONAL STATUS
Section 18.101 — Assertion of Sovereign Standing
The Echadi Nation Republic affirms its status as a sovereign Nation possessing:
(a) Defined territorial jurisdiction;
(b) A permanent population;
(c) An organized constitutional government;
(d) The capacity to enter into relations with other nations.
The Nation affirms alignment with internationally recognized human rights principles, including:
These principles reflect shared commitments to dignity, liberty, and Indigenous governance. Recognition of such standards does not constitute submission to foreign sovereignty.
Section 18.102 — Indigenous Self-Determination
The Echadi Nation Republic affirms the inherent right of Indigenous peoples to:
(a) Self-government;
(b) Cultural preservation;
(c) Economic development;
(d) Territorial stewardship;
(e) Political autonomy.
This right is exercised through the ENR Constitution and Tribal Code.
Section 18.103 — Non-Submission Doctrine
The Nation shall not submit to foreign jurisdiction or authority except by:
(a) Treaty duly authorized by Parliament pursuant to Unit V;
(b) Express agreement preserving constitutional supremacy.
Diplomatic engagement shall not be interpreted as surrender of sovereignty.
CHAPTER 2 — MINISTRY OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
Section 18.201 — Establishment
There is hereby established the Ministry of International Affairs as the official diplomatic arm of the Nation.
Section 18.202 — Chief Minister of International Affairs
The Chief Minister of International Affairs shall:
(a) Oversee all diplomatic and international affairs of the Nation;
(b) Direct foreign communications;
(c) Supervise treaty negotiations;
(d) Coordinate representation in international forums;
(e) Protect sovereign interests abroad;
(f) Operate under the oversight and authority of the Chief Executive / Aboriginal Chief.
Section 18.203 — Executive Supremacy
Pursuant to Unit III and Unit VII of the Constitution, ultimate authority over foreign affairs rests with the Chief Executive / Aboriginal Chief.
No diplomatic act shall bind the Nation absent lawful authorization.
CHAPTER 3 — TREATIES & INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS
Section 18.301 — Parliamentary Authority
Parliament, pursuant to Unit V, retains authority to authorize treaties and international agreements.
Section 18.302 — Requirements for Binding Agreement
A treaty or international agreement shall bind the Nation only if:
(a) Negotiated under supervision of the Chief Minister of International Affairs;
(b) Authorized by Parliament;
(c) Recorded in the National Registry;
(d) Published in the ENR Tribune unless classified for national security.
Section 18.303 — Constitutional Safeguards
No treaty shall:
(a) Surrender national sovereignty;
(b) Contradict the Constitution;
(c) Permanently alienate ENR land;
(d) Undermine covenant obligations.
CHAPTER 4 — DIPLOMATIC REPRESENTATION
Section 18.401 — Appointment of Representatives
The Chief Executive may appoint ambassadors, envoys, or special representatives upon recommendation of the Chief Minister of International Affairs.
Appointments shall be recorded in the National Registry.
Section 18.402 — Diplomatic Immunity
ENR diplomatic representatives shall enjoy functional immunity within ENR jurisdiction.
Reciprocal diplomatic courtesies may be extended consistent with sovereign equality.
CHAPTER 5 — INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS ALIGNMENT
Section 18.501 — Human Dignity Commitment
The Nation affirms governance consistent with:
(a) Civil and political rights;
(b) Due process protections;
(c) Freedom of conscience and belief;
(d) Equality before law;
(e) Indigenous cultural protections.
These principles align with internationally recognized human rights instruments while remaining subject to constitutional authority.
Section 18.502 — Preservation of Constitutional Order
International principles shall inform ENR diplomacy but shall not override the Constitution of the Echadi Nation Republic.
CHAPTER 6 — PASSPORTS & INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL
Section 18.601 — Sovereign Travel Instruments
The Nation may issue:
(a) Passports;
(b) Diplomatic credentials;
(c) Travel certificates;
(d) National identification instruments pursuant to Title 14.
Section 18.602 — Foreign Recognition
Recognition of ENR travel documents by foreign authorities is a matter of diplomatic negotiation and international comity.
Presentation of ENR documents shall not constitute submission to foreign jurisdiction.
CHAPTER 7 — INTERNATIONAL TRADE & ECONOMIC RELATIONS
Section 18.701 — Trade Agreements
International trade agreements shall:
(a) Be negotiated under supervision of the Chief Minister of International Affairs;
(b) Be authorized by Parliament;
(c) Preserve economic sovereignty under Title 15.
Section 18.702 — Financial Sovereignty
No international agreement shall:
(a) Expose national reserves to foreign seizure;
(b) Compromise the Echadi Indigenous Treasury;
(c) Undermine the Echadi Financial Cooperative (EFC).
CHAPTER 8 — COORDINATION WITH DEFENSE & INTELLIGENCE
Section 18.801 — Security Interface
The Chief Minister of International Affairs shall coordinate with the Chief Minister of Defense and Intelligence regarding:
(a) Foreign security threats;
(b) Intelligence cooperation;
(c) Defensive arrangements consistent with Title 17.
CHAPTER 9 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — SOVEREIGN IDENTITY DOCTRINE
Section 19.101 — Sovereign Identity
Identity within the Echadi Nation Republic is grounded in:
(a) Indigenous self-determination;
(b) Covenant alignment with the Constitution;
(c) Affirmed allegiance to sovereign governance;
(d) Recognition under ENR law.
Such identity exists independent of foreign governmental classification.
Section 19.102 — Distinction from Foreign Citizenship
National and Membership status within ENR are distinct from:
(a) Foreign citizenship systems;
(b) Corporate or commercial identification regimes;
(c) External political classifications.
Recognition under ENR does not require automatic renunciation of foreign nationality unless voluntarily declared.
CHAPTER 2 — NATIONALIZATION
Section 19.201 — Definition
Nationalization is the lawful and covenant-based process by which an individual becomes a recognized National of the Echadi Nation Republic.
It may occur through:
(a) Birthright;
(b) Indigenous heritage;
(c) Bloodline affirmation;
(d) Voluntary covenant alignment.
Section 19.202 — Constitutional Basis
Nationalization is governed pursuant to:
(a) Unit XII — Affirmation of Oath;
(b) Unit XIII — Covenant of the National Community.
Section 19.203 — Requirements for Nationalization
An applicant for Nationalization must:
(a) Successfully complete a Civics Test and National Questionnaire demonstrating understanding of the ENR Constitution, Tribal Code, sovereignty principles, and covenant responsibilities;
(b) Submit formal application documentation;
(c) Affirm covenant alignment;
(d) Take the Oath pursuant to Unit XII;
(e) Be recorded in the National Registry pursuant to Title 14.
Section 19.204 — Legal Effect of Nationalization
Upon lawful Nationalization:
(a) The individual becomes a National of the Nation;
(b) Full covenant standing is established;
(c) Constitutional rights and responsibilities attach;
(d) Status is officially recorded.
CHAPTER 3 — MEMBERSHIP STATUS
Section 19.301 — Membership Classification
The Nation recognizes a classification of Member distinct from National.
Membership permits structured participation in:
(a) Cooperative initiatives;
(b) Economic programs;
(c) Cultural institutions;
(d) National services consistent with membership level.
Section 19.302 — Legal Commitment of Members
Membership within the Echadi Nation Republic constitutes a lawful and accountable relationship with the Nation.
Members shall:
(a) Be faithful to and comply with the Constitution of the Echadi Nation Republic and all duly enacted Tribal Codes, statutes, regulations, policies, and lawful directives issued under constitutional authority;
(b) Respect the authority of Parliament, the Chief Executive, the Judiciary, and all duly appointed Ministries;
(c) Maintain lawful conduct within ENR jurisdiction;
(d) Uphold covenant principles applicable to their recognized status;
(e) Refrain from actions that materially undermine national sovereignty or institutional integrity.
Membership is not a casual association but a recognized legal standing subject to enforcement and discipline.
CHAPTER 4 — OATH, COVENANT & DISCIPLINE
Section 19.401 — Affirmation of Oath (Nationals)
All Nationals shall affirm allegiance pursuant to Unit XII.
The Oath shall include:
(a) Commitment to sovereignty;
(b) Defense of constitutional order;
(c) Covenant integrity.
Section 19.402 — Constitutional and Statutory Accountability
Nationals and Members are bound to remain faithful and committed to:
(a) The Constitution;
(b) The Covenant of the National Community (Unit XIII);
(c) All duly enacted Tribal Codes and lawful regulations.
Violation of constitutional or statutory obligations may result in disciplinary proceedings.
CHAPTER 5 — RIGHTS & RESPONSIBILITIES
Section 19.501 — Rights of Nationals and Members
Nationals and Members shall enjoy:
(a) Due process protections under ENR law;
(b) Access to national institutions and programs consistent with status;
(c) Protection under ENR jurisdiction while acting lawfully;
(d) Recognition of recorded status pursuant to Title 14.
Section 19.502 — Responsibilities of Nationals and Members
Nationals and Members shall:
(a) Uphold the Constitution;
(b) Comply with all duly enacted ENR laws and regulations;
(c) Respect lawful authority;
(d) Maintain lawful conduct;
(e) Protect national integrity and sovereignty.
CHAPTER 6 — REVIEW, DISCIPLINE & STATUS ACTION
Section 19.601 — Grounds for Review
National or Membership status may be reviewed where:
(a) Fraud is discovered;
(b) Constitutional or statutory violations occur;
(c) Sovereignty offenses arise;
(d) Covenant obligations are materially breached.
Section 19.602 — Disciplinary Measures
Disciplinary measures may include:
(a) Administrative sanctions;
(b) Suspension of privileges;
(c) Fines or penalties authorized by law;
(d) Revocation of Membership;
(e) Expatriation of a National pursuant to Title 9.
All actions shall be subject to due process protections.
CHAPTER 7 — NATIONAL IDENTIFICATION
Section 19.701 — Issuance of Identification
Nationals and Members may be issued:
(a) National Identification Cards;
(b) Tribal Travelers Licenses where qualified;
(c) Registry certifications pursuant to Title 14.
Section 19.702 — Legal Effect of Identification
ENR-issued identification:
(a) Serves as evidence of status within ENR jurisdiction;
(b) Reflects sovereign recognition;
(c) Does not constitute submission to foreign authority.
CHAPTER 8 — VOLUNTARY WITHDRAWAL
Section 19.801 — Voluntary Withdrawal
A National or Member may voluntarily withdraw from status through written declaration recorded in the National Registry.
CHAPTER 9 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — FOUNDATIONAL EDUCATION DOCTRINE
Section 20.101 — Education as a Sovereign Function
Education within the Echadi Nation Republic is a sovereign function of the Nation.
The purpose of education shall be to:
(a) Preserve Indigenous identity;
(b) Strengthen covenant consciousness;
(c) Develop intellectual, moral, and practical capacity;
(d) Prepare Nationals and Members for leadership, stewardship, governance, and enterprise.
Section 20.102 — Independence from Foreign Educational Control
The Nation retains exclusive authority over:
(a) Curriculum;
(b) Institutional governance;
(c) Certification standards;
(d) Accreditation systems;
(e) Cultural and moral instruction.
Foreign educational recognition may be pursued only where consistent with ENR sovereignty.
CHAPTER 2 — MINISTRY OF EDUCATION
Section 20.201 — Executive Oversight
The Ministry of Education shall serve as the executive authority responsible for national education policy and supervision.
Section 20.202 — Chief Minister of Education
The Chief Minister of Education shall:
(a) Establish national education policy;
(b) Ensure institutional compliance with the Constitution and Tribal Code;
(c) Supervise academic standards;
(d) Coordinate with the Indigenous Cultural Center;
(e) Report to and operate under the oversight of the Chief Executive.
CHAPTER 3 — INDIGENOUS CULTURAL CENTER
Section 20.301 — Institutional Authority
The Indigenous Cultural Center (ICC) is recognized as the primary educational and cultural institution of the Nation.
The ICC shall serve as:
(a) The institutional authority housing national educational bodies;
(b) The guardian of cultural preservation;
(c) The steward of national intellectual development;
(d) The coordinating body for education at all levels.
Section 20.302 — Educational Structure Within the ICC
The following institutions operate as official bodies within the Indigenous Cultural Center:
(a) Echadi Academy (K–12 education)
(b) Echadi University (Post-secondary and advanced education)
These institutions function as integral divisions of the ICC and are not separately chartered entities.
CHAPTER 4 — ECHADI ACADEMY (K–12)
Section 20.401 — Status
Echadi Academy is the official primary and secondary educational division of the Indigenous Cultural Center.
Section 20.402 — Purpose
Echadi Academy shall provide:
(a) Foundational academic instruction;
(b) Civic education aligned with Title 19;
(c) Cultural and language education;
(d) Character and moral development;
(e) Vocational and practical skill preparation.
Section 20.403 — Governance
Echadi Academy operates:
(a) As a division of the Indigenous Cultural Center;
(b) Under policy oversight of the Ministry of Education;
(c) In alignment with ENR constitutional principles.
CHAPTER 5 — ECHADI UNIVERSITY
Section 20.501 — Status
Echadi University is the official post-secondary and advanced academic division of the Indigenous Cultural Center.
Section 20.502 — Academic Authority
Echadi University may:
(a) Confer degrees;
(b) Issue certifications;
(c) Conduct research;
(d) Establish specialized colleges and institutes;
(e) Provide professional and ministerial training.
Section 20.503 — Governance
Echadi University operates:
(a) As a division within the Indigenous Cultural Center;
(b) Under policy oversight of the Ministry of Education;
(c) In full alignment with ENR law.
CHAPTER 6 — ACCREDITATION & CERTIFICATION
Section 20.601 — Internal Accreditation
The Nation shall maintain its own internal accreditation and certification standards through the Indigenous Cultural Center in coordination with the Ministry of Education.
Section 20.602 — Recognition of Credentials
Credentials issued under ENR authority shall be valid within ENR jurisdiction.
International recognition may be pursued through diplomatic engagement under Title 18.
CHAPTER 7 — LANGUAGE & CULTURAL PRESERVATION
Section 20.701 — Echadi Language
The development and preservation of the Echadi Language is recognized as a national priority.
Educational institutions within the ICC may:
(a) Teach Echadi grammar and script;
(b) Develop curriculum;
(c) Preserve symbolic and linguistic traditions;
(d) Promote cultural literacy.
Section 20.702 — Cultural Archives
The Indigenous Cultural Center shall maintain archives preserving:
(a) Historical records;
(b) Sacred teachings;
(c) Oral traditions;
(d) Institutional documents.
CHAPTER 8 — INSTITUTIONAL ACCOUNTABILITY
Section 20.801 — Compliance
All educational divisions within the ICC must comply with:
(a) The Constitution;
(b) The Tribal Code;
(c) Ministerial directives;
(d) National standards.
Section 20.802 — Corrective Authority
Where institutional non-compliance occurs, corrective measures may be imposed consistent with ENR law and due process.
CHAPTER 9 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — HEALTH & AGRICULTURE AS SOVEREIGN FUNCTIONS
Section 21.101 — Sovereign Authority Over Health and Wellness
The Echadi Nation Republic affirms that health, healing, agriculture, and wellness are sovereign functions of the Nation.
The Nation retains authority over:
(a) Public health standards;
(b) Indigenous healing systems;
(c) Holistic wellness practices;
(d) Medicinal plant cultivation;
(e) Nutritional and agricultural sovereignty;
(f) Emergency health protection.
Health governance shall integrate physical, spiritual, environmental, and agricultural dimensions.
Section 21.102 — Independence of Health Governance
The Nation maintains exclusive authority over:
(a) Practitioner certification;
(b) Health program standards;
(c) Cultivation and stewardship of medicinal plants;
(d) Traditional and sustainable farming methods;
(e) Preparation and distribution of herbal wellness formulations.
No external regulatory system shall supersede ENR authority within ENR jurisdiction.
CHAPTER 2 — MINISTRY OF HEALTH
Section 21.201 — Establishment
The Ministry of Health shall serve as the executive authority responsible for national health policy, Indigenous healing systems, agricultural wellness initiatives, and public well-being.
Section 21.202 — Chief Minister of Health
The Chief Minister of Health shall:
(a) Establish national wellness standards;
(b) Oversee Indigenous healing programs;
(c) Supervise agricultural cultivation related to nutrition and medicinal health;
(d) Coordinate emergency health response systems;
(e) Promote food sovereignty and traditional crop preservation;
(f) Report to and operate under the oversight of the Chief Executive.
CHAPTER 3 — ECHADI INDIGENOUS MEDICAL ALLIANCE (EIMA)
Section 21.301 — Recognition
The Echadi Indigenous Medical Alliance (EIMA) is recognized as the official national health provider body operating under the Ministry of Health.
Section 21.302 — Authority and Scope
EIMA shall:
(a) Provide Indigenous holistic health services;
(b) Establish internal certification standards for healers and wellness practitioners;
(c) Integrate traditional knowledge with structured health programs;
(d) Operate health programs and apothecary-based wellness systems;
(e) Maintain ethical, spiritual, and professional standards;
(f) Protect and steward Indigenous medicinal knowledge and plant traditions.
CHAPTER 4 — NIKITÈ TRIBAL APOTHECARY
Section 21.401 — Establishment
The Nikitè Tribal Apothecary is recognized as the official apothecary division of EIMA.
Section 21.402 — Purpose
The Nikitè Tribal Apothecary shall:
(a) Prepare herbal formulations;
(b) Provide plant-based wellness preparations;
(c) Support holistic health programs;
(d) Preserve Indigenous botanical knowledge and preparation methods.
CHAPTER 5 — INDIGENOUS FARMACY LABS
Section 21.501 — Recognition
Indigenous Farmacy Labs is recognized as the cultivation, formulation, and preparation authority supporting EIMA and the Nikitè Tribal Apothecary.
Section 21.502 — Functions
Indigenous Farmacy Labs may:
(a) Cultivate medicinal plants;
(b) Preserve heirloom and traditional seed lines;
(c) Formulate herbal wellness products;
(d) Package and distribute approved preparations;
(e) Maintain internal quality standards consistent with ENR law.
CHAPTER 6 — AGRICULTURAL & MEDICINAL PLANT STEWARDSHIP
Section 21.601 — Agricultural Wellness Authority
Agriculture connected to health and medicinal cultivation shall operate under the Ministry of Health.
This includes:
(a) Indigenous farming systems;
(b) Food forests and community gardens;
(c) Traditional crop preservation;
(d) Sustainable cultivation practices;
(e) Medicinal plant propagation.
Section 21.602 — Protection of Traditional Knowledge
Traditional medicinal knowledge, plant cultivation practices, and biological resources are part of the collective heritage of the People.
Such knowledge and resources shall:
(a) Be protected from unauthorized exploitation;
(b) Remain under national stewardship;
(c) Not be transferred or commercialized without lawful authorization;
(d) Be preserved for future generations.
CHAPTER 7 — EMERGENCY HEALTH AUTHORITY
Section 21.701 — Emergency Coordination
The Ministry of Health may coordinate emergency wellness response structures in cooperation with:
(a) The Echadi Emergency Response Association (EERA);
(b) National defense structures under Title 17 when necessary.
Section 21.702 — Public Health Declarations
The Chief Executive, upon recommendation of the Chief Minister of Health, may declare public health emergencies where national well-being is materially threatened.
Emergency measures shall be proportionate and time-limited.
CHAPTER 8 — PRACTITIONER CERTIFICATION
Section 21.801 — Internal Certification
The Nation shall maintain internal certification systems for:
(a) Indigenous healers;
(b) Herbal practitioners;
(c) Agricultural wellness practitioners;
(d) Emergency health responders.
Section 21.802 — Recognition of Credentials
Credentials issued under ENR authority shall be valid within ENR jurisdiction.
CHAPTER 9 — RIGHTS, PROTECTIONS & COMMUNITY STEWARDSHIP
Section 21.891 — Community Health & Cultural Protections
Nationals and Members participating in ENR health and agricultural systems shall be protected in their right to practice and preserve traditional wellness methods, including but not limited to:
(a) Cultivation of medicinal plants;
(b) Preparation of traditional herbal remedies;
(c) Indigenous farming and seed preservation;
(d) Nutritional sovereignty practices;
(e) Spiritual and ceremonial healing traditions.
Such practices shall remain protected under ENR jurisdiction.
Section 21.902 — Responsibilities
Participants in ENR health and agricultural systems shall:
(a) Maintain environmental stewardship;
(b) Respect plant and land sustainability;
(c) Follow internal health standards;
(d) Protect collective knowledge from misuse.
CHAPTER 10 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — INFRASTRUCTURE AS A SOVEREIGN FUNCTION
Section 22.101 — Sovereign Infrastructure Authority
The Echadi Nation Republic affirms that infrastructure development and public works are sovereign national functions necessary for territorial integrity, economic stability, and public welfare.
Section 22.102 — Scope of Authority
Public Works governance includes, but is not limited to:
(a) Roads and transportation systems;
(b) Water systems and irrigation;
(c) Energy generation and distribution;
(d) Communication and digital infrastructure;
(e) Housing and community development;
(f) Environmental engineering and land improvement;
(g) Public buildings and civic facilities.
CHAPTER 2 — MINISTRY OF ECONOMICS AND ENGINEERING
Section 22.201 — Executive Oversight
The Ministry of Economics and Engineering shall serve as the executive authority over national public works and infrastructure systems.
Section 22.202 — Chief Minister Authority
The Chief Minister of Economics and Engineering shall:
(a) Develop national infrastructure plans;
(b) Approve engineering standards;
(c) Supervise construction projects;
(d) Coordinate land development under Title 16;
(e) Ensure integration with Treasury funding under Title 15;
(f) Report to and operate under oversight of the Chief Executive.
CHAPTER 3 — NATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE PLANNING
Section 22.301 — Strategic Planning
The Ministry shall develop long-term infrastructure strategies addressing:
(a) Settlement growth;
(b) Agricultural development;
(c) Economic zones;
(d) Transportation corridors;
(e) Emergency preparedness.
Section 22.302 — Engineering Standards
All public works projects must comply with:
(a) National safety standards;
(b) Environmental stewardship principles;
(c) Structural integrity requirements;
(d) Sovereign land trust protections.
CHAPTER 4 — WATER & RESOURCE SYSTEMS
Section 22.401 — Water Stewardship
The Nation retains authority over water systems within ENR jurisdiction, including:
(a) Wells;
(b) Irrigation systems;
(c) Reservoirs;
(d) Rainwater harvesting systems.
Water systems shall prioritize sustainability and agricultural wellness under Title 21.
Section 22.402 — Natural Resource Protection
Infrastructure development shall not:
(a) Degrade environmental stability;
(b) Harm medicinal plant cultivation;
(c) Compromise food sovereignty systems.
CHAPTER 5 — ENERGY & UTILITIES
Section 22.501 — Energy Systems
The Nation may establish energy systems including:
(a) Solar energy;
(b) Wind energy;
(c) Alternative energy systems;
(d) Grid and micro-grid systems.
Section 22.502 — Utility Governance
Utilities operating within ENR jurisdiction must comply with:
(a) ENR engineering standards;
(b) Safety requirements;
(c) Environmental protections.
CHAPTER 6 — TRANSPORTATION & ACCESS
Section 22.601 — Transportation Infrastructure
The Nation may construct and maintain:
(a) Internal road systems;
(b) Agricultural access routes;
(c) Community transportation systems.
Section 22.602 — Transportation Regulation
Transportation systems must align with:
(a) Public safety standards;
(b) Defense coordination under Title 17;
(c) Economic planning under Title 15.
CHAPTER 7 — DIGITAL INFRASTRUCTURE
Section 22.701 — Digital Sovereignty
The Nation may establish and maintain:
(a) Communication networks;
(b) Data systems;
(c) National registry infrastructure;
(d) Secure digital platforms.
Section 22.702 — Data Protection
Digital infrastructure shall maintain:
(a) Secure data storage;
(b) Sovereign data control;
(c) Protection against unauthorized access.
CHAPTER 8 — EMERGENCY INFRASTRUCTURE POWERS
Section 22.801 — Emergency Repair Authority
During declared emergencies, the Ministry may:
(a) Authorize rapid infrastructure repair;
(b) Allocate resources for stabilization;
(c) Coordinate with Defense and Health authorities.
Section 22.802 — Temporary Measures
Emergency measures must:
(a) Be proportionate;
(b) Be time-limited;
(c) Respect constitutional safeguards.
CHAPTER 9 — FUNDING & ECONOMIC INTEGRATION
Section 22.901 — Treasury Coordination
Public works funding shall be coordinated with:
(a) The Echadi Indigenous Treasury under Title 15;
(b) Cooperative financial structures where applicable.
Section 22.902 — Cooperative Development
Infrastructure projects may be developed through:
(a) Cooperative enterprises;
(b) Public-private initiatives consistent with ENR law;
(c) Stewardship development agreements under Title 16.
CHAPTER 10 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — SOVEREIGN COMMERCE DOCTRINE
Section 23.101 — Commerce as a Sovereign Function
The Echadi Nation Republic affirms that commerce and enterprise within its jurisdiction are sovereign functions governed by ENR law.
All commercial activity within ENR jurisdiction shall operate under:
(a) Constitutional authority;
(b) Tribal Code provisions;
(c) Treasury standards under Title 15;
(d) Registry requirements under Title 14.
Section 23.102 — Non-Submission in Commerce
Commercial engagement with foreign entities shall not constitute submission to foreign jurisdiction unless expressly authorized by lawful agreement.
Internal commerce remains governed exclusively by ENR law.
CHAPTER 2 — BUSINESS FORMATION AUTHORITY
Section 23.201 — Recognition of Business Structures
The Nation recognizes the following lawful enterprise structures:
(a) Tribal Limited Liability Companies (Tribal LLC);
(b) Holding Companies;
(c) Series Entities;
(d) Cooperative Enterprises;
(e) Private Membership Associations (PMA);
(f) Sole Proprietorships operating under ENR registration.
Section 23.202 — Registration Requirement
All enterprises operating within ENR jurisdiction must be recorded in the National Registry pursuant to Title 14.
Unregistered entities shall not receive lawful standing within ENR courts.
Section 23.203 — Holding & Operating Structure
The Nation may authorize dual-structure systems in which:
(a) A Holding Company maintains asset ownership;
(b) An Operating Entity conducts day-to-day activities.
This structure promotes asset protection and economic stability.
CHAPTER 3 — COOPERATIVE ENTERPRISE SYSTEMS
Section 23.301 — Cooperative Doctrine
The Nation affirms cooperative enterprise as a preferred economic model aligned with community stewardship.
Cooperative enterprises shall operate:
(a) Under member governance;
(b) With transparent accounting;
(c) In coordination with the Echadi Financial Cooperative (EFC).
Section 23.302 — Integration with Treasury
Cooperative enterprises may:
(a) Utilize ECD silver-based accounting;
(b) Interface with ECT digital systems when authorized;
(c) Participate in EFC financial services.
CHAPTER 4 — PRIVATE MEMBERSHIP ASSOCIATIONS
Section 23.401 — PMA Recognition
Private Membership Associations are recognized as lawful private contract-based enterprises operating within ENR jurisdiction.
Section 23.402 — PMA Requirements
PMA entities must:
(a) Maintain written membership agreements;
(b) Define internal governance structure;
(c) Operate within ENR law;
(d) Be recorded in the National Registry.
Section 23.403 — Jurisdiction
Disputes within PMA structures shall be subject to ENR judicial authority unless otherwise lawfully agreed.
CHAPTER 5 — TRADE & CONTRACT AUTHORITY
Section 23.501 — Contractual Freedom
Nationals and Members may enter lawful contracts consistent with:
(a) ENR statutory law;
(b) Covenant obligations;
(c) Public order protections.
Section 23.502 — Commercial Disputes
Commercial disputes shall be resolved:
(a) Through arbitration where agreed;
(b) Through ENR courts where jurisdiction applies.
CHAPTER 6 — MARKET INTEGRITY
Section 23.601 — Prohibited Conduct
No enterprise shall engage in:
(a) Fraud;
(b) Misrepresentation;
(c) Exploitation of Nationals or Members;
(d) Unauthorized financial schemes.
Violations may result in sanctions, suspension, or revocation of registration.
Section 23.602 — Consumer Protection
Nationals and Members engaged in commerce shall be protected against unlawful practices under ENR law.
CHAPTER 7 — INTERNATIONAL TRADE
Section 23.701 — Foreign Trade Engagement
Enterprises may engage in foreign trade provided:
(a) Sovereignty is preserved;
(b) Treasury protections remain intact;
(c) Agreements comply with Title 18.
Section 23.702 — Asset Protection
Foreign commercial agreements shall not expose national reserves or trust assets to unauthorized seizure.
CHAPTER 8 — INTELLECTUAL & CREATIVE ENTERPRISE
Section 23.801 — Protection of Enterprise Innovation
Businesses may register trademarks, patents, and copyrights under ENR intellectual property systems.
Section 23.802 — Cultural Commerce Protections
Traditional knowledge and cultural assets may not be commercialized without lawful authorization.
CHAPTER 9 — ENFORCEMENT & COMPLIANCE
Section 23.901 — Regulatory Oversight
The Ministry of Economics and Engineering shall oversee enterprise compliance in coordination with the Treasury.
Section 23.902 — Sanctions
Non-compliant enterprises may face:
(a) Administrative fines;
(b) Suspension of registration;
(c) Revocation of operating status;
(d) Judicial enforcement.
Due process protections shall apply.
CHAPTER 10 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — NATIONAL SECURITY DOCTRINE
Section 24.101 — Sovereign Right to Security
The Echadi Nation Republic affirms its inherent sovereign right to preserve:
(a) Territorial integrity;
(b) Institutional continuity;
(c) Economic stability;
(d) Cultural and informational sovereignty;
(e) Constitutional order.
Security authority shall be exercised for protection and preservation, not aggression.
Section 24.102 — Defensive Posture
All intelligence and security activities shall remain defensive in nature and consistent with constitutional protections.
CHAPTER 2 — OFFICE OF STRATEGIC INTELLIGENCE
Section 24.201 — Establishment
There is hereby recognized the Office of Strategic Intelligence (OSI) operating under the authority of the Chief Minister of Defense and Intelligence.
Section 24.202 — Scope of Authority
The OSI shall:
(a) Monitor threats to national sovereignty;
(b) Conduct counter-intelligence operations;
(c) Safeguard economic and digital systems;
(d) Analyze foreign and domestic security risks;
(e) Provide strategic advisement to the Chief Executive.
Section 24.203 — Executive Oversight
All intelligence authority remains subordinate to:
(a) The Chief Executive / Aboriginal Chief;
(b) Constitutional limitations;
(c) Parliamentary oversight where applicable.
CHAPTER 3 — COUNTER-INTELLIGENCE & INTERNAL SECURITY
Section 24.301 — Protection from Subversion
The Nation may investigate and counter:
(a) Attempts to infiltrate national institutions;
(b) Economic sabotage;
(c) Registry tampering;
(d) Digital system compromise;
(e) Organized efforts to undermine sovereignty.
Section 24.302 — Safeguards
Investigations shall:
(a) Respect due process;
(b) Avoid unlawful intrusion;
(c) Remain proportionate to threat level.
CHAPTER 4 — INFORMATION & DATA SOVEREIGNTY
Section 24.401 — Data Protection
The Nation shall maintain sovereign control over:
(a) National Registry systems;
(b) Treasury records;
(c) National identification systems;
(d) Digital infrastructure under Title 22.
Section 24.402 — Cybersecurity Authority
The Ministry of Economics and Engineering, in coordination with the Office of Strategic Intelligence, shall establish cybersecurity standards to protect national digital assets.
CHAPTER 5 — ECONOMIC SECURITY
Section 24.501 — Treasury Protection
Strategic security measures shall protect:
(a) National reserves;
(b) The Echadi Financial Cooperative (EFC);
(c) ECD and ECT systems;
(d) Cooperative financial structures.
Section 24.502 — Financial Threat Monitoring
Threats to national economic systems may be investigated consistent with constitutional authority.
CHAPTER 6 — COORDINATION WITH DEFENSE
Section 24.601 — Intelligence & Guard Integration
The Office of Strategic Intelligence shall coordinate with:
(a) The Echadi National Guard;
(b) Tribal Marshals when activated;
(c) Emergency response structures under Title 21.
Section 24.602 — Operational Activation
Where intelligence identifies credible threat, the Chief Minister of Defense and Intelligence may recommend mobilization to the Chief Executive.
CHAPTER 7 — CONFIDENTIALITY & CLASSIFICATION
Section 24.701 — Classification Authority
Sensitive national security information may be classified under authority of the Chief Minister of Defense and Intelligence.
Section 24.702 — Disclosure Restrictions
Unauthorized disclosure of classified information may result in disciplinary action or prosecution under ENR law.
CHAPTER 8 — FOREIGN SECURITY INTERFACE
Section 24.801 — International Security Cooperation
The Nation may enter security cooperation arrangements provided:
(a) Sovereignty is preserved;
(b) Parliament authorizes binding agreements;
(c) No submission to foreign command occurs.
CHAPTER 9 — OVERSIGHT & LIMITATION
Section 24.901 — Constitutional Limitation
All intelligence and security authority remains subject to:
(a) The ENR Constitution;
(b) Judicial review under Title 10;
(c) Due process protections.
CHAPTER 10 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — MEDIA & CULTURE AS SOVEREIGN FUNCTIONS
Section 25.101 — Sovereign Communications Authority
The Echadi Nation Republic affirms that communication, media, cultural expression, and broadcasting are sovereign functions of the Nation.
The Nation retains authority over:
(a) Public broadcasting;
(b) Digital and streaming platforms;
(c) Cultural and artistic production;
(d) Indigenous multi-media systems;
(e) National messaging and narrative integrity.
Section 25.102 — Indigenous Cultural Media Doctrine
Media within ENR jurisdiction shall:
(a) Preserve Indigenous identity;
(b) Promote cultural restoration;
(c) Protect sacred traditions;
(d) Reflect sovereign dignity;
(e) Strengthen national consciousness.
CHAPTER 2 — MINISTRY OF ARTS AND CULTURE
Section 25.201 — Establishment
There is hereby established the Ministry of Arts and Culture as the national authority over media, creative industries, cultural programming, and Indigenous multi-media systems.
Section 25.202 — Chief Minister Authority
The Chief Minister of Arts and Culture shall:
(a) Direct national media initiatives;
(b) Oversee Indigenous cultural programming;
(c) Supervise broadcasting and streaming platforms;
(d) Guide music, film, publishing, and creative production;
(e) Coordinate cultural diplomacy efforts pursuant to Title 18;
(f) Operate under oversight of the Chief Executive.
CHAPTER 3 — INDIGENOUS CULTURE MULTI-MEDIA AUTHORITY
Section 25.301 — Recognition
The Nation recognizes Indigenous Culture Multi-Media as an official cultural communications arm operating under the Ministry of Arts and Culture.
Section 25.302 — Scope of Indigenous Multi-Media
Indigenous Culture Multi-Media may include, but is not limited to:
(a) Radio networks;
(b) Streaming platforms;
(c) Documentary production;
(d) Educational broadcasts;
(e) Podcast networks;
(f) Cultural storytelling archives;
(g) Digital content platforms;
(h) Film and cinematic works.
Section 25.303 — Cultural Integrity Mandate
All Indigenous Multi-Media content shall:
(a) Respect constitutional principles;
(b) Preserve historical truth;
(c) Promote cultural continuity;
(d) Protect sacred narratives from distortion.
CHAPTER 4 — CREATIVE INDUSTRIES & RECORD LABELS
Section 25.401 — Cultural Production Authority
The Ministry of Arts and Culture may establish and oversee:
(a) Record labels;
(b) Artist and repertoire (A&R) divisions;
(c) Film production companies;
(d) Publishing houses;
(e) Cultural merchandise enterprises.
Section 25.402 — Intellectual & Artistic Protection
Creative works developed under ENR authority may be recorded in the National Registry and protected under ENR intellectual property systems.
CHAPTER 5 — PROTECTION OF NATIONAL SYMBOLS
Section 25.501 — Protection of Official Insignia
Unauthorized use of:
(a) The Great Seal of the Echadi Nation Republic;
(b) Official flags;
(c) Ministry emblems;
(d) Registered cultural symbols;
is prohibited without lawful authorization.
Section 25.502 — Cultural Heritage Protection
Sacred songs, oral traditions, and ancestral narratives shall not be commercially exploited without authorization consistent with ENR law.
CHAPTER 6 — FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION & LIMITATIONS
Section 25.601 — Protected Expression
Nationals and Members retain the right to lawful artistic and expressive activity consistent with constitutional protections.
Section 25.602 — Prohibited Conduct
Media platforms shall not:
(a) Incite unlawful violence;
(b) Engage in coordinated disinformation against the Nation;
(c) Undermine constitutional sovereignty.
Due process protections shall apply.
CHAPTER 7 — MEDIA SECURITY & INFORMATION SOVEREIGNTY
Section 25.701 — Coordination with Strategic Security
The Ministry of Arts and Culture shall coordinate with national security authorities under Title 24 where information integrity or national stability is threatened.
Section 25.702 — Digital Platform Protection
National media platforms shall maintain:
(a) Secure data management;
(b) Protection from unauthorized intrusion;
(c) Internal content governance standards consistent with ENR law.
CHAPTER 8 — CULTURAL DIPLOMACY
Section 25.801 — International Cultural Exchange
The Ministry of Arts and Culture may engage in international cultural exchange and representation consistent with Title 18.
Section 25.802 — Sovereign Representation Standards
All cultural representation abroad shall preserve constitutional dignity and sovereign identity.
CHAPTER 9 — ENFORCEMENT
Section 25.901 — Administrative Oversight
Violations of this Title may result in:
(a) Suspension of broadcasting privileges;
(b) Revocation of registry status;
(c) Judicial enforcement pursuant to ENR law.
CHAPTER 10 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — TELECOMMUNICATIONS AS A SOVEREIGN FUNCTION
Section 26.101 — Sovereign Communications Infrastructure
The Echadi Nation Republic affirms telecommunications and digital network infrastructure as sovereign national functions.
The Nation retains authority over:
(a) Mobile communication systems;
(b) Data transmission networks;
(c) Digital identity infrastructure;
(d) SIM registration systems;
(e) National communication security.
Section 26.102 — Digital Sovereignty Doctrine
All digital communications operating under ENR authority shall remain subject to:
(a) The Constitution;
(b) The Tribal Code;
(c) Information sovereignty protections under Title 24;
(d) Registry and identity integration under Title 14.
CHAPTER 2 — ECHADI MOBILE
Section 26.201 — Establishment
There is hereby recognized Echadi Mobile as the official telecommunications initiative of the Echadi Nation Republic.
Section 26.202 — Authority of Echadi Mobile
Echadi Mobile may:
(a) Operate as a Mobile Virtual Network Operator (MVNO) or other telecommunications structure;
(b) Issue SIM cards and digital access credentials;
(c) Provide voice, messaging, and data services;
(d) Integrate national identification and verification systems;
(e) Support national security communications.
Section 26.203 — Executive Oversight
Echadi Mobile shall operate under:
(a) The Ministry of Economics and Engineering;
(b) Coordination with the Ministry of Arts and Culture (for media integration);
(c) Security oversight consistent with Title 24;
(d) Final authority of the Chief Executive.
CHAPTER 3 — NATIONAL SIM & DIGITAL ID INTEGRATION
Section 26.301 — SIM Registration Authority
The Nation may issue SIM cards or digital network credentials linked to:
(a) National Identification Numbers;
(b) Registry records under Title 14;
(c) Encrypted authentication systems.
Section 26.302 — Identity Protection
Digital identity integration shall:
(a) Protect personal data;
(b) Prevent unauthorized tracking;
(c) Maintain sovereign control of subscriber information.
CHAPTER 4 — DATA JURISDICTION
Section 26.401 — Sovereign Data Control
Data transmitted through ENR telecommunications infrastructure shall remain subject to ENR jurisdiction.
Section 26.402 — Prohibition on Unauthorized Data Transfer
Subscriber data shall not be transferred to foreign authorities absent:
(a) Lawful order under ENR jurisdiction;
(b) Treaty authorization under Title 18;
(c) Due process protections.
CHAPTER 5 — CYBERSECURITY & NETWORK PROTECTION
Section 26.501 — Security Standards
Telecommunications infrastructure shall maintain:
(a) Encryption protocols;
(b) Secure authentication systems;
(c) Intrusion detection measures;
(d) Network redundancy safeguards.
Section 26.502 — Coordination with Strategic Security
Echadi Mobile and national digital networks shall coordinate with the Office of Strategic Intelligence under Title 24 where national security concerns arise.
CHAPTER 6 — ECONOMIC & TREASURY INTEGRATION
Section 26.601 — Payment Systems
Telecommunications services may:
(a) Accept ECD as settlement;
(b) Integrate ECT digital systems when authorized;
(c) Interface with the Echadi Financial Cooperative (EFC).
Section 26.602 — Infrastructure Funding
Telecommunications infrastructure development shall coordinate with the Treasury pursuant to Title 15.
CHAPTER 7 — EMERGENCY COMMUNICATIONS
Section 26.701 — Emergency Network Authority
During declared emergencies, telecommunications infrastructure may prioritize:
(a) Defense communications under Title 17;
(b) Health coordination under Title 21;
(c) Public safety alerts.
Section 26.702 — Continuity of Operations
The Nation shall maintain contingency plans ensuring communication continuity during infrastructure disruption.
CHAPTER 8 — REGULATORY COMPLIANCE
Section 26.801 — Internal Regulation
Telecommunications services operating under ENR authority must comply with:
(a) Constitutional standards;
(b) Privacy protections;
(c) Security regulations.
Section 26.802 — Sanctions
Violations of telecommunications standards may result in:
(a) Suspension of operating authority;
(b) Revocation of registration;
(c) Judicial enforcement.
CHAPTER 9 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — SPIRITUAL SOVEREIGNTY
Section 27.101 — Recognition of Spiritual Authority
The Echadi Nation Republic recognizes spiritual governance and covenant order as foundational components of national identity.
Spiritual life within the Nation shall be protected as a sovereign right.
Section 27.102 — Freedom of Conscience
Nationals and Members retain the right to:
(a) Worship according to conscience;
(b) Participate in covenant assemblies;
(c) Engage in lawful spiritual practices consistent with ENR law.
No individual shall be compelled into religious participation.
CHAPTER 2 — THE BODY AS HEAD ECCLESIASTICAL AUTHORITY
Section 27.201 — Establishment of The Body
“The Body” is hereby recognized as the Head Ecclesiastical Authority of the Echadi Nation Republic.
The Body shall serve as the supreme spiritual assembly responsible for:
(a) Preserving doctrinal integrity;
(b) Upholding covenant principles;
(c) Providing spiritual oversight to ecclesiastical bodies;
(d) Guarding sacred traditions of the Nation.
Section 27.202 — Authority of The Body
The Body shall have authority to:
(a) Establish ecclesiastical standards;
(b) Recognize and affirm covenant assemblies;
(c) Confirm ordinations;
(d) Provide spiritual advisement to national leadership when requested;
(e) Interpret covenant principles consistent with constitutional supremacy.
The authority of The Body is spiritual in nature and shall not override constitutional civil authority.
CHAPTER 3 — ECCLESIASTICAL GOVERNANCE STRUCTURE
Section 27.301 — Recognition of Ecclesiastical Bodies
Ecclesiastical assemblies operating within ENR jurisdiction shall operate under the spiritual oversight of The Body.
Such bodies may exercise authority over:
(a) Sacramental functions;
(b) Covenant instruction;
(c) Marriage solemnization;
(d) Internal spiritual discipline.
Section 27.302 — Ecclesiastical Courts
Ecclesiastical courts operating under The Body may adjudicate:
(a) Marriage covenant matters;
(b) Ministerial discipline;
(c) Internal church governance disputes.
Civil enforcement of ecclesiastical determinations requires compliance with ENR constitutional protections.
CHAPTER 4 — COVENANT & SACRAMENTAL AUTHORITY
Section 27.401 — Marriage Covenant Recognition
Marriage covenants solemnized under ecclesiastical authority recognized by The Body may be recorded pursuant to Title 14 and governed under Title 19.
Section 27.402 — Ecclesiastical Records
Ecclesiastical bodies under The Body may issue records including:
(a) Marriage certificates;
(b) Baptismal certificates;
(c) Ordination certificates;
(d) Covenant affirmations.
Official national recognition requires registry recording where applicable.
CHAPTER 5 — MINISTERIAL & CLERGY AUTHORITY
Section 27.501 — Ordination Authority
Ordination processes affirmed by The Body shall be recognized within ENR jurisdiction.
Section 27.502 — Clergy Standards
Clergy operating under ecclesiastical authority shall:
(a) Uphold covenant integrity;
(b) Maintain moral standards;
(c) Respect constitutional rights;
(d) Avoid abuse of authority.
Violations may result in ecclesiastical discipline or civil review where applicable.
CHAPTER 6 — ECCLESIASTICAL PROPERTY
Section 27.601 — Sacred Property Protection
Property held for ecclesiastical purposes under The Body shall be protected under Title 16 land and trust law.
Section 27.602 — Non-Interference Doctrine
Civil authorities shall not interfere in doctrinal or spiritual matters of The Body unless constitutional violations occur.
CHAPTER 7 — SEPARATION & HARMONIZATION OF JURISDICTION
Section 27.701 — Distinction of Authority
The Body governs spiritual and covenant matters.
Civil courts govern matters affecting:
(a) Criminal conduct;
(b) Property disputes;
(c) Constitutional rights.
Section 27.702 — Harmonization Clause
Where civil and ecclesiastical jurisdiction overlap, resolution shall be harmonized consistent with:
(a) Constitutional supremacy;
(b) Covenant integrity;
(c) Due process protections.
CHAPTER 8 — PROTECTION OF SPIRITUAL EXPRESSION
Section 27.801 — Protection from Persecution
No National or Member shall be persecuted for lawful spiritual belief consistent with ENR law.
Section 27.802 — Prohibited Use of Spiritual Authority
Spiritual authority shall not be used to:
(a) Justify unlawful harm;
(b) Circumvent civil due process;
(c) Override constitutional supremacy.
CHAPTER 9 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — PURPOSE & AUTHORITY
Section 28.101 — Establishment of National Honors System
The Echadi Nation Republic hereby establishes a formal system of national honors and decorations to recognize distinguished service, merit, cultural contribution, and acts of valor.
Section 28.102 — Sovereign Authority
All national honors are granted under the authority of the Chief Executive and consistent with constitutional principles.
CHAPTER 2 — ORDERS OF NATIONAL DISTINCTION
Section 28.201 — Order of the Nation
The Order of the Echadi Nation shall be the highest civilian honor bestowed for extraordinary contribution to national development, sovereignty advancement, or generational legacy.
Section 28.202 — Order of Covenant Service
The Order of Covenant Service shall recognize long-standing commitment to national principles, cultural preservation, or institutional development.
Section 28.203 — Order of Indigenous Restoration
The Order of Indigenous Restoration shall honor individuals who significantly advance Indigenous knowledge, land stewardship, language preservation, or ancestral revival.
CHAPTER 3 — DEFENSE & SECURITY DECORATIONS
Section 28.301 — Medal of Sovereign Valor
The Medal of Sovereign Valor shall recognize exceptional courage or sacrifice in protection of the Nation.
Section 28.302 — National Guard & Service Commendations
Decorations may be awarded for:
(a) Distinguished service in the Guard;
(b) Strategic intelligence excellence;
(c) Emergency response heroism.
CHAPTER 4 — CULTURAL & EDUCATIONAL HONORS
Section 28.401 — Order of Cultural Excellence
Awarded to those who significantly advance Indigenous culture, arts, or national narrative.
Section 28.402 — Order of Academic Distinction
Awarded for scholarly excellence, educational leadership, or institutional advancement within Echadi University or Echadi Academy.
CHAPTER 5 — ECONOMIC & CIVIC HONORS
Section 28.501 — Order of Economic Stewardship
Recognizes individuals who advance cooperative enterprise, treasury integrity, or economic sovereignty.
Section 28.502 — Civic Service Medal
Awarded for exceptional community service benefiting Nationals and Members.
CHAPTER 6 — DIPLOMATIC DISTINCTIONS
Section 28.601 — Order of International Fellowship
May be conferred upon foreign dignitaries or allies contributing to peaceful relations or cultural exchange.
Section 28.602 — Diplomatic Commendation
Awarded for service strengthening international engagement consistent with Title 18.
CHAPTER 7 — NOMINATION & INVESTITURE
Section 28.701 — Nomination Process
Honors may be conferred upon:
(a) Recommendation of a Minister;
(b) Recommendation of The Body (for spiritual distinction);
(c) Resolution of Parliament;
(d) Direct conferment by the Chief Executive.
Section 28.702 — Investiture Ceremony
National honors shall be formally conferred in ceremonial proceedings and recorded in the National Registry pursuant to Title 14.
CHAPTER 8 — INSIGNIA & REGALIA
Section 28.801 — Design Authority
Official insignia, medals, ribbons, or regalia shall be designed under authority of the Ministry of Arts and Culture.
Section 28.802 — Protection of Decorations
Unauthorized manufacture or misuse of national honors is prohibited and subject to sanction.
CHAPTER 9 — REVOCATION
Section 28.901 — Revocation Authority
National honors may be revoked upon finding of:
(a) Constitutional violation;
(b) Criminal conviction;
(c) Conduct dishonoring the Nation.
Due process protections shall apply.
CHAPTER 10 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — PURPOSE & SOVEREIGN AUTHORITY
Section 29.101 — Purpose
This Title establishes the lawful framework governing travel, transportation administration, and travel credentialing for Nationals and Members of the Echadi Nation Republic.
Section 29.102 — Sovereign Basis
The Echadi Nation Republic exercises sovereign authority over:
(a) Travel administration within ENR jurisdiction;
(b) Credentialing of ENR Nationals and Members;
(c) Registration and titling of private land vessels;
(d) Internal financial responsibility systems.
Travel is recognized as a protected right of ENR Nationals and Members, distinct from regulated commercial transport.
Section 29.103 — Scope of Application
This Title applies to:
(a) Travel conducted within ENR jurisdiction;
(b) ENR Nationals and Members traveling outside ENR jurisdiction within the United States;
(c) Internal regulatory and credentialing systems.
Nothing herein asserts authority over non-members or foreign nationals.
CHAPTER 2 — DEPARTMENT OF TRAVEL (DOT)
Section 29.201 — Establishment
There is hereby established the Echadi Nation Republic Department of Travel (DOT) as the national authority responsible for travel governance.
Section 29.202 — Authority
The Department of Travel shall:
(a) Issue Tribal Travelers Licenses;
(b) Administer travel examinations;
(c) Register and title private land vessels;
(d) Maintain travel and vessel records;
(e) Administer financial responsibility compliance;
(f) Coordinate with external jurisdictions where necessary;
(g) Integrate with the National Registry pursuant to Title 14.
The Department operates under the oversight of the Chief Executive.
CHAPTER 3 — TRIBAL TRAVELERS LICENSE
Section 29.301 — Establishment
The Tribal Travelers License (TTL) is the official travel credential issued to qualified ENR Nationals and Members.
Section 29.302 — Nature of License
The Tribal Travelers License:
(a) Confirms lawful authorization under ENR authority;
(b) Demonstrates competency in travel safety and law;
(c) Is not a commercial driver license;
(d) Does not authorize commercial carriage unless separately permitted.
Section 29.303 — Eligibility
Only ENR Nationals and Members in good standing may apply.
CHAPTER 4 — DOT TRAVEL EXAMINATION
Section 29.401 — Mandatory Examination
All applicants must successfully complete the ENR Department of Travel Examination.
The examination shall test knowledge of:
(a) ENR travel law;
(b) Roadway safety principles;
(c) Distinction between private travel and commercial transport;
(d) Responsibilities when traveling outside ENR jurisdiction;
(e) ENR Travel Rights Handbook and Protocols.
Section 29.402 — Authority to Administer
The Department of Travel shall develop, update, and administer standardized examinations.
Successful completion is required prior to license issuance.
CHAPTER 5 — ENR TRAVEL RIGHTS HANDBOOK & PROTOCOLS
Section 29.501 — Adoption
The ENR Travel Rights Handbook and Protocols is adopted as the official interpretive guide governing travel under this Title.
Section 29.502 — Exclusive Applicability
The Handbook applies exclusively to:
(a) ENR Nationals;
(b) ENR Members;
(c) Holders of a Tribal Travelers License.
Section 29.503 — Legal Effect
The Handbook:
(a) Establishes conduct standards;
(b) Provides interaction protocols with external authorities;
(c) Defines responsibilities of licensed travelers;
(d) Serves as official instructional material for examination purposes.
CHAPTER 6 — PRIVATE LAND VESSEL REGISTRATION
Section 29.601 — Registration Authority
The Department of Travel shall register and title private land vessels operated by ENR Nationals and Members.
Section 29.602 — Registry Integration
All titles and registrations shall:
(a) Be recorded pursuant to Title 14;
(b) Be assigned unique identifying numbers;
(c) Be verifiable through official ENR systems.
CHAPTER 7 — FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
Section 29.701 — Requirement
All holders of a Tribal Travelers License shall maintain proof of financial responsibility.
This may be satisfied through:
(a) Private insurance;
(b) ENR self-insurance pools;
(c) Cooperative risk-sharing systems administered through the Echadi Financial Cooperative (EFC).
Section 29.702 — Financial Responsibility Certificate (FRC)
The ENR Financial Responsibility Certificate (FRC) is established as the official proof of maintained financial responsibility.
Section 29.703 — Circumstances Requiring FRC Filing
An FRC may be required where:
(a) A collision has occurred;
(b) License suspension has taken place;
(c) Coverage has lapsed;
(d) Tribunal-ordered supervision is imposed;
(e) Elevated risk classification is assigned.
Section 29.704 — Compliance Period
Where required, the FRC shall remain continuously filed for the duration set by the Department of Travel or ordered by the Jural Society.
Lapse of coverage shall trigger administrative review.
CHAPTER 8 — TRAVEL OUTSIDE ENR JURISDICTION
Section 29.801 — External Roadway Compliance
When traveling outside ENR jurisdiction within the United States:
(a) ENR Nationals and Members acknowledge applicable roadway safety laws;
(b) The Tribal Travelers License serves as proof of internal authorization;
(c) Commercial licensing requirements apply only where commercial activity exists.
Section 29.802 — Sovereign Preservation
Possession of an ENR Tribal Travelers License does not constitute voluntary submission to foreign jurisdiction beyond lawful roadway safety compliance.
CHAPTER 9 — ENFORCEMENT & DUE PROCESS
Section 29.901 — Administrative Authority
The Department of Travel may suspend, restrict, or revoke a Tribal Travelers License for:
(a) Violation of this Title;
(b) Failure to maintain financial responsibility;
(c) Failure to comply with the Travel Rights Handbook.
Section 29.902 — Due Process
All enforcement actions shall provide:
(a) Written notice;
(b) Opportunity to respond;
(c) Right of appeal before the Jural Society.
CHAPTER 10 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — PURPOSE & AUTHORITY
Section 30.101 — Purpose
This Title establishes the framework governing:
(a) Intergovernmental relations;
(b) Recognition posture;
(c) Administrative correspondence;
(d) Enforcement of ENR laws beyond its territory;
(e) Diplomatic and institutional engagement.
Section 30.102 — Sovereign Posture
The Echadi Nation Republic affirms:
(a) Its status as a self-governing Indigenous nation/state;
(b) Its capacity to enter relations with foreign governments;
(c) Its right to administer internal law independent of external control.
Recognition by external governments shall not determine ENR’s existence.
CHAPTER 2 — INTERACTION WITH UNITED STATES JURISDICTIONS
Section 30.201 — Good Faith Interface
When interacting with federal, state, or local authorities within the United States:
(a) ENR shall engage in good faith;
(b) ENR shall assert its sovereign status respectfully;
(c) ENR shall preserve its constitutional authority.
Section 30.202 — Compliance Doctrine
Where ENR Nationals or Members are physically present in a foreign jurisdiction, they acknowledge:
(a) Applicable public safety laws;
(b) Territorial criminal jurisdiction;
(c) Lawful administrative processes.
Such acknowledgment does not waive ENR nationality or covenant status.
CHAPTER 3 — DIPLOMATIC COMMUNICATION
Section 30.301 — Official Communications
All formal diplomatic or governmental communications shall be issued:
(a) Through the Ministry of International Affairs;
(b) Or under direct authority of the Chief Executive;
(c) Recorded in the National Registry pursuant to Title 14.
Section 30.302 — Diplomatic Notice & Protest
Where ENR determines that:
(a) A National’s rights are violated;
(b) ENR sovereignty is disregarded;
(c) An unlawful encroachment occurs;
The Ministry of International Affairs may issue:
CHAPTER 4 — ENFORCEMENT OF ENR JUDGMENTS
Section 30.401 — Domestic Enforcement
All judgments of the Jural Society shall be enforceable within ENR jurisdiction.
Section 30.402 — External Recognition
ENR may seek recognition of its judgments through:
(a) Contractual agreements;
(b) Arbitration treaties;
(c) Cooperative enforcement mechanisms.
Nothing in this section guarantees foreign recognition.
CHAPTER 5 — ADMINISTRATIVE REMEDIES
Section 30.501 — Administrative Notice
Before escalating matters diplomatically or judicially, ENR may issue formal administrative notice requesting resolution.
Section 30.502 — Exhaustion Doctrine
Where disputes involve external authorities, reasonable administrative remedies shall be pursued prior to escalation.
CHAPTER 6 — TREATIES & AGREEMENTS
Section 30.601 — Treaty Authority
The Chief Executive, through the Ministry of International Affairs, may negotiate:
(a) Memoranda of Understanding;
(b) Intergovernmental agreements;
(c) Trade or service compacts.
All such agreements shall be recorded in the National Registry.
CHAPTER 7 — RECOGNITION POLICY
Section 30.701 — Recognition of Other Governments
ENR may recognize:
(a) Indigenous nations;
(b) Foreign states;
(c) International institutions.
Recognition shall be formalized by proclamation.
Section 30.702 — Non-Recognition
ENR may decline recognition of any entity inconsistent with its sovereignty or values.
CHAPTER 8 — RIGHTS PROTECTION
Section 30.801 — Protection of Nationals Abroad
The Ministry of International Affairs may advocate for ENR Nationals when detained, cited, or subject to foreign proceedings.
Such advocacy does not override foreign territorial jurisdiction.
CHAPTER 9 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — PURPOSE & MONETARY AUTHORITY
Section 31.101 — Purpose
This Title establishes the monetary and banking framework of the Echadi Nation Republic and governs:
(a) National currency policy;
(b) Digital asset governance;
(c) Cooperative financial institutions;
(d) Reserve backing doctrine;
(e) Public trust in monetary administration.
Section 31.102 — Sovereign Monetary Authority
The Echadi Nation Republic retains exclusive authority over:
(a) Creation and regulation of national currency instruments;
(b) Cooperative financial structures;
(c) Digital token systems;
(d) Treasury reserves.
This authority derives from constitutional and parliamentary powers.
CHAPTER 2 — THE ECHADI DOLLAR (ECD)
Section 31.201 — Recognition of the Echadi Dollar
The Echadi Dollar (ECD) is recognized as a national unit of account of the Echadi Nation Republic.
Section 31.202 — Silver-Based Standard
The Echadi Dollar shall operate under a silver-weight equivalency doctrine as adopted by Treasury regulation.
The Treasury shall publish periodic equivalency standards.
Section 31.203 — Unit Structure
The ECD may be denominated in fractional units reflecting silver weight or equivalent accounting measures.
CHAPTER 3 — ECHADI TOKEN (ECT)
Section 31.301 — Recognition of ECT
The Echadi Token (ECT) is recognized as a sovereign digital asset issued on a blockchain network for internal and cooperative use.
Section 31.302 — Nature of ECT
The ECT:
(a) Is a digital asset instrument;
(b) May function as an internal medium of exchange;
(c) May serve treasury, cooperative, or utility functions;
(d) Is not issued as public securities unless lawfully structured.
Section 31.303 — Regulatory Oversight
Oversight of ECT shall be exercised by:
(a) The Ministry of Economics and Engineering;
(b) Treasury compliance officers;
(c) The Echadi Financial Cooperative (EFC) where applicable.
CHAPTER 4 — ECHADI FINANCIAL COOPERATIVE (EFC)
Section 31.401 — Recognition of EFC
The Echadi Financial Cooperative (EFC) is recognized as the primary cooperative financial institution of the Nation.
Section 31.402 — Authority
The EFC may:
(a) Hold deposits;
(b) Administer member accounts;
(c) Provide cooperative lending;
(d) Operate internal clearing systems;
(e) Administer risk pools;
(f) Support Treasury initiatives.
The EFC shall not represent itself as a federally chartered credit union unless formally recognized as such.
Section 31.403 — Cooperative Structure
The EFC operates as a private cooperative institution serving Nationals and Members.
Participation shall be voluntary and governed by cooperative bylaws.
CHAPTER 5 — RESERVE & BACKING POLICY
Section 31.501 — Reserve Doctrine
The Treasury may maintain reserves in:
(a) Precious metals;
(b) Digital assets;
(c) Tangible assets;
(d) Diversified holdings deemed prudent.
Section 31.502 — Transparency
The Treasury shall publish periodic reserve disclosures consistent with sovereign discretion and security considerations.
CHAPTER 6 — INTERNAL CLEARING & PAYMENT SYSTEMS
Section 31.601 — National Clearing Authority
The Treasury or EFC may establish internal clearing and settlement systems for:
(a) Transfers between Nationals;
(b) Cooperative enterprise transactions;
(c) Registry-linked payments.
Section 31.602 — Digital Infrastructure
Payment systems may integrate:
(a) Blockchain verification;
(b) QR authentication;
(c) National ID integration;
(d) Secure database architecture.
CHAPTER 7 — ANTI-FRAUD & COMPLIANCE
Section 31.701 — Fraud Prevention
Unauthorized issuance, duplication, or misrepresentation of:
(a) ECD;
(b) ECT;
(c) Treasury instruments;
(d) Cooperative financial instruments;
Is prohibited.
Section 31.702 — Internal Compliance
The Ministry of Economics and Engineering shall establish compliance protocols to:
(a) Prevent misuse;
(b) Protect members;
(c) Maintain financial integrity.
CHAPTER 8 — INTERGOVERNMENTAL FINANCIAL INTERFACE
Section 31.801 — External Banking Relationships
The Nation may maintain relationships with external banking institutions for operational purposes.
Such relationships do not waive sovereign monetary authority.
Section 31.802 — Cross-Border Transactions
Transactions involving external currencies shall comply with applicable foreign laws while preserving ENR internal accounting standards.
CHAPTER 9 — DISPUTE RESOLUTION
Section 31.901 — Financial Disputes
Disputes arising under this Title shall be adjudicated pursuant to ENR judicial procedure.
CHAPTER 10 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — PURPOSE & PRINCIPLES
Section 32.101 — Purpose
This Title establishes the lawful framework governing emergency authority and continuity of government within the Echadi Nation Republic.
Section 32.102 — Constitutional Supremacy
All emergency authority exercised under this Title shall remain subordinate to:
(a) The Constitution of the Echadi Nation Republic;
(b) The Covenant of the National Community (Unit XIII);
(c) The Affirmation of Oath (Unit XII).
Emergency powers shall not suspend the Constitution.
CHAPTER 2 — DECLARATION OF EMERGENCY
Section 32.201 — Authority to Declare
The Chief Executive may declare a State of National Emergency where:
(a) Public safety is threatened;
(b) Territorial integrity is endangered;
(c) Essential services collapse;
(d) Armed conflict arises;
(e) Severe economic instability threatens national continuity;
(f) Public health crisis endangers the population.
Section 32.202 — Form of Declaration
An emergency declaration shall:
(a) Be issued in writing;
(b) Specify the nature of the emergency;
(c) Define the geographic scope;
(d) State the duration or review date;
(e) Be published in the ENR Tribune.
CHAPTER 3 — EMERGENCY POWERS
Section 32.301 — Temporary Executive Authority
During a declared emergency, the Chief Executive may:
(a) Coordinate defense and security operations;
(b) Mobilize Guard or emergency personnel;
(c) Temporarily allocate resources;
(d) Direct Ministries for crisis response;
(e) Suspend administrative deadlines.
Section 32.302 — Limitations
Emergency powers shall:
(a) Be temporary;
(b) Be proportionate;
(c) Not permanently alter constitutional structure;
(d) Be subject to review.
CHAPTER 4 — PARLIAMENTARY REVIEW
Section 32.401 — Oversight
Parliament shall retain authority to:
(a) Review emergency declarations;
(b) Recommend modification;
(c) Terminate emergency status.
Section 32.402 — Duration
Emergency status shall expire unless renewed within the period prescribed in the declaration.
CHAPTER 5 — CONTINUITY OF GOVERNMENT
Section 32.501 — Succession Doctrine
If the Chief Executive becomes incapacitated, succession shall occur pursuant to constitutional order.
Section 32.502 — Preservation of Ministries
Each Ministry shall maintain:
(a) Written continuity plans;
(b) Successor designations;
(c) Emergency communication systems.
Section 32.503 — Registry & Records Preservation
The National Registry and Treasury records shall maintain redundant preservation systems to ensure legal continuity.
CHAPTER 6 — DEFENSE & SECURITY INTEGRATION
Section 32.601 — Defense Activation
Upon declaration of emergency involving security threats, the Chief Minister of Defense and Intelligence shall coordinate response under Title 17.
Section 32.602 — Civil Coordination
Emergency coordination shall integrate:
(a) Ministry of Health;
(b) Ministry of Public Works;
(c) Ministry of Economics and Engineering;
(d) Department of Travel where necessary.
CHAPTER 7 — ECONOMIC STABILIZATION
Section 32.701 — Treasury Authority
During declared economic emergency, Treasury may:
(a) Adjust reserve deployment;
(b) Stabilize internal clearing systems;
(c) Implement temporary financial controls.
CHAPTER 8 — PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCY
Section 32.801 — Health Authority
The Ministry of Health may:
(a) Coordinate public health measures;
(b) Issue advisories;
(c) Mobilize medical infrastructure.
All measures shall remain consistent with constitutional rights.
CHAPTER 9 — CIVIL LIBERTY PROTECTIONS
Section 32.901 — Preservation of Rights
Emergency powers shall not:
(a) Permanently suspend civil liberties;
(b) Eliminate due process;
(c) Nullify covenant protections.
Section 32.902 — Judicial Review
The Jural Society retains authority to review emergency actions for constitutional compliance.
CHAPTER 10 — TERMINATION OF EMERGENCY
Section 32.1001 — Termination
An emergency shall terminate when:
(a) The Chief Executive issues a termination order;
(b) Parliament revokes the declaration;
(c) The prescribed duration expires.
Termination shall be published in the ENR Tribune.
CHAPTER 11 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — PURPOSE & SCOPE
Section 33.101 — Purpose
This Title establishes the commercial law framework governing transactions, contracts, secured interests, and trade within the Echadi Nation Republic.
Section 33.102 — Applicability
This Title applies to:
(a) Commercial transactions within ENR jurisdiction;
(b) Contracts executed by ENR Nationals and Members;
(c) Cooperative and enterprise transactions recorded under Title 14;
(d) Secured interests governed by ENR law.
CHAPTER 2 — GENERAL COMMERCIAL PRINCIPLES
Section 33.201 — Freedom of Contract
Parties may enter lawful agreements consistent with:
(a) ENR Constitution;
(b) Public policy;
(c) Covenant principles.
Section 33.202 — Good Faith
All commercial dealings shall be conducted in good faith and fair dealing.
Section 33.203 — Capacity
Contracts require:
(a) Competent parties;
(b) Lawful purpose;
(c) Mutual assent;
(d) Consideration or lawful exchange.
CHAPTER 3 — CONTRACT FORMATION
Section 33.301 — Written & Electronic Agreements
Contracts may be formed:
(a) In writing;
(b) Electronically;
(c) Through digital signature systems recognized by ENR.
Section 33.302 — Enforceability
Agreements recorded in the National Registry pursuant to Title 14 carry evidentiary presumption of validity.
CHAPTER 4 — NEGOTIABLE INSTRUMENTS
Section 33.401 — Recognition
The Nation recognizes negotiable instruments including:
(a) Promissory notes;
(b) Drafts;
(c) Bills of exchange;
(d) Cooperative financial instruments.
Section 33.402 — Holder in Due Course
A holder in due course who takes an instrument:
(a) In good faith;
(b) For value;
(c) Without notice of defect;
Shall be entitled to enforce it under this Title.
CHAPTER 5 — SECURED TRANSACTIONS
Section 33.501 — Security Interests
A security interest is created when:
(a) Value is given;
(b) Debtor has rights in collateral;
(c) A security agreement is authenticated.
Section 33.502 — Perfection
Security interests may be perfected by:
(a) Filing in the National Registry;
(b) Possession;
(c) Control of digital collateral.
Section 33.503 — Priority
Priority among competing claims shall be determined by:
(a) Order of filing;
(b) Possession where applicable;
(c) Contractual subordination.
CHAPTER 6 — LIENS
Section 33.601 — Statutory Liens
The Nation recognizes:
(a) Mechanic’s liens;
(b) Cooperative liens;
(c) Treasury liens where lawfully imposed.
Section 33.602 — Filing
Liens must be recorded in the National Registry to obtain priority status.
CHAPTER 7 — COMMERCIAL REMEDIES
Section 33.701 — Default
Upon default, secured parties may:
(a) Repossess collateral lawfully;
(b) Seek judicial enforcement;
(c) Initiate arbitration where agreed.
Section 33.702 — Commercial Arbitration
Parties may agree to arbitration.
Arbitration awards may be confirmed by the Jural Society.
CHAPTER 8 — TRUST & COLLATERAL REGISTRATION
Section 33.801 — Trust Interests
Trust property used as commercial collateral shall be disclosed and recorded.
Section 33.802 — Assignment of Interests
Assignments of beneficial or secured interests shall be recorded for priority protection.
CHAPTER 9 — DIGITAL & INTANGIBLE ASSETS
Section 33.901 — Digital Assets
Digital assets, including tokens and digital instruments, may serve as collateral.
Section 33.902 — Control
Control of digital collateral may constitute perfection where recognized by regulation.
CHAPTER 10 — INTERGOVERNMENTAL COMMERCIAL INTERFACE
Section 33.1001 — External Transactions
Transactions involving external jurisdictions shall:
(a) Respect applicable foreign commercial law;
(b) Preserve ENR governing law where agreed by contract.
CHAPTER 11 — FRAUD & MISREPRESENTATION
Section 33.1101 — Fraudulent Conduct
Fraudulent inducement, concealment, or misrepresentation voids enforceability.
CHAPTER 12 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — PURPOSE, SCOPE & SOVEREIGN AUTHORITY
Section 34.101 — Purpose
This Title establishes the comprehensive framework governing intellectual property, Indigenous cultural heritage, traditional knowledge, creative works, commercial identifiers, and national symbols within the jurisdiction of the Echadi Nation Republic.
Section 34.102 — Sovereign Authority
The Echadi Nation Republic retains exclusive authority over intellectual property created, registered, administered, or protected under its jurisdiction.
Such authority derives from:
Section 34.103 — Scope of Protection
Protection under this Title extends to:
(a) Nationals and Members;
(b) Ministries and official institutions;
(c) ENR chartered entities;
(d) Recognized cultural bodies;
(e) Collectively held Indigenous knowledge.
CHAPTER 2 — ESTABLISHMENT OF ENRPTCO
Section 34.201 — Office Established
There is hereby established the Echadi Nation Republic Patent, Trademark & Copyright Office (ENRPTCO) as the competent authority administering this Title.
Section 34.202 — Powers & Duties
ENRPTCO shall:
(a) Receive and examine applications;
(b) Issue official certificates;
(c) Maintain public and confidential registries;
(d) Publish notices in the ENR Tribune;
(e) Maintain digital and blockchain authentication systems;
(f) Conduct opposition and cancellation proceedings;
(g) Enforce cultural and sacred protections;
(h) Promulgate implementing regulations.
Section 34.203 — Organizational Divisions
ENRPTCO shall include:
CHAPTER 3 — COPYRIGHT PROTECTION
Section 34.301 — Protected Works
Protection extends to:
(a) Literary works;
(b) Music and compositions;
(c) Audiovisual productions;
(d) Software and digital applications;
(e) Educational and ceremonial works;
(f) Multimedia and online publications.
Section 34.302 — Registration & Evidence
Registration with ENRPTCO creates prima facie evidence of ownership within ENR jurisdiction.
Section 34.303 — Duration
Copyright shall extend for:
Life of the creator plus seventy years, unless otherwise regulated.
Collective or institutional works may follow separate duration standards.
CHAPTER 4 — TRADEMARK & NATIONAL SYMBOL PROTECTION
Section 34.401 — Protected Marks
Trademarks include:
(a) Words;
(b) Logos;
(c) Symbols;
(d) Trade dress;
(e) Collective and certification marks.
Section 34.402 — National Symbols
Unauthorized use of:
Is prohibited.
Section 34.403 — Recordation
All approved marks shall be recorded pursuant to Title 14.
CHAPTER 5 — PATENT PROTECTION
Section 34.501 — Patentable Subject Matter
Patent protection may extend to:
(a) Processes;
(b) Machines;
(c) Manufactured articles;
(d) Improvements;
(e) Indigenous technological adaptations.
Section 34.502 — Indigenous Innovation Doctrine
Innovation rooted in ancestral knowledge, ecological sustainability, or traditional systems may qualify for protection, provided misappropriation is not present.
Section 34.503 — Patent Term
Twenty years from filing unless otherwise prescribed.
CHAPTER 6 — TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE & SACRED HERITAGE
Section 34.601 — Collective Ownership
Traditional knowledge may be collectively owned by:
(a) The Nation;
(b) Recognized lineage;
(c) Indigenous community;
(d) Cultural custodial body.
Section 34.602 — Sacred Knowledge Protection
Sacred teachings, ceremonial rites, medicinal formulas, agricultural practices, and ancestral narratives shall not be commercially exploited without lawful authorization.
Section 34.603 — Misappropriation
Unauthorized registration, external patenting, or commercial extraction of protected traditional knowledge is prohibited.
CHAPTER 7 — GEOGRAPHIC INDICATIONS
Section 34.701 — Protection of Geographic Names
Geographic Indications (GI) protect products uniquely associated with ENR territory, including:
(a) Agricultural goods;
(b) Medicinal plants;
(c) Cultural crafts;
(d) Nation-specific food products.
Section 34.702 — GI Registry
ENRPTCO shall maintain a Geographic Indication Registry.
Unauthorized use of registered geographic names is prohibited.
CHAPTER 8 — CULTURAL EXPORT CONTROL
Section 34.801 — Export Licensing
Export of sacred or culturally sensitive materials requires authorization.
Section 34.802 — Cultural Integrity
Commercial export must preserve attribution and prevent exploitation or distortion.
CHAPTER 9 — APPLICATION & EXAMINATION PROCEDURES
Section 34.901 — Filing Requirements
Applications must include:
Section 34.902 — Examination Standards
ENRPTCO shall examine for:
Section 34.903 — Opposition & Publication
Approved applications shall be published in the ENR Tribune and subject to opposition prior to final registration.
CHAPTER 10 — CERTIFICATES & AUTHENTICATION
Section 34.1001 — Certificate Requirements
All certificates shall contain:
Section 34.1002 — Legal Effect
Certificates constitute official recognition and carry evidentiary weight within ENR jurisdiction.
CHAPTER 11 — DIGITAL & BLOCKCHAIN AUTHORITY
Section 34.1101 — Digital Registry
ENRPTCO may:
(a) Issue digital certificates;
(b) Timestamp records;
(c) Utilize blockchain authentication;
(d) Link verification to official portals.
Section 34.1102 — NFT & Digital Representation
Digital tokenization of works does not transfer ownership unless expressly declared and recorded.
CHAPTER 12 — ENFORCEMENT
Section 34.1201 — Civil Remedies
Available remedies include:
Section 34.1202 — Criminal Enforcement
Willful infringement or counterfeit use may result in criminal prosecution under Title 9.
Section 34.1203 — Enhanced Cultural Protection
Misappropriation of sacred knowledge may result in elevated penalties.
CHAPTER 13 — OFFICIAL SEAL OF ENRPTCO
Section 34.1301 — Adoption of Seal
The circular gold emblem bearing the inscription:
“ECHADI NATION REPUBLIC — PATENT • COPYRIGHT • TRADEMARK OFFICE”
is hereby adopted as the official seal of ENRPTCO.
Section 34.1302 — Legal Significance
Affixation of the ENRPTCO seal signifies:
Unauthorized reproduction is prohibited.
CHAPTER 14 — APPEALS
Section 34.1401 — Administrative Review
Decisions of ENRPTCO may be reviewed internally.
Section 34.1402 — Judicial Appeal
Final administrative decisions may be appealed to the Jural Society.
CHAPTER 15 — DECLARATION
This Title affirms:
CHAPTER 1 — TERRITORIAL AUTHORITY DOCTRINE
Section 35.101 — Source of Territorial Authority
All territorial authority flows from the Nation, through the Capital Territory, to the Regions, to the Provinces, and finally to households and persons domiciled therein.
Such authority derives from:
(a) The ENR Constitution;
(b) Parliamentary authority;
(c) Indigenous sovereignty and trust stewardship;
(d) Lawful domicile and nationalization.
Section 35.102 — Transitional Geographic References
Former colonial or external place names may be referenced parenthetically for transitional clarity and geographic identification only.
Such references hold no governing authority within ENR law.
CHAPTER 2 — CAPITAL TERRITORY
Section 35.201 — Designation
The territorial region known internally as:
Neveora (formerly Nevada)
is designated the Capital Territory of the Echadi Nation Republic.
Section 35.202 — Seat of Government
The Seat of Government and National Headquarters of the Nation is located upon land lawfully held in trust and described as:
Township Thirty (30) North, Range Forty-Eight (48) East,
Section Seventeen (17),
Northwest One-Quarter (NW ¼) of the Southeast One-Quarter (SE ¼) of the Northwest One-Quarter (NW ¼),
within the geographic territory externally administered as Eureka County, Nevada.
This parcel constitutes the Capital Administrative District and territorial locus of national governance.
Section 35.203 — Capital Authority
The Capital Territory shall serve as:
(a) The domicile of Parliament;
(b) The residence of the Chief Executive / Aboriginal Chief;
(c) The seat of the Jural Society;
(d) The headquarters of national Ministries;
(e) The situs of national proclamations and records.
CHAPTER 3 — REGIONAL ORGANIZATION
Section 35.301 — Establishment of Regions
For purposes of governance coordination and territorial administration, the Provinces of the Echadi Nation Republic are organized into eight (8) Regions.
Regions serve as intermediate administrative divisions and do not constitute independent sovereign entities.
Section 35.302 — Regional Designations
REGION 1 — NORTHEAST
Wabanaki Region
Abenora (Maine)
Massadun (Massachusetts)
Quinnekah (Connecticut)
Aquora (Rhode Island)
Hackensora (New Jersey)
Lenora (New York)
Pemigara (New Hampshire)
Lenapewa (Delaware)
REGION 2 — EAST
Sharakhii Region
Powhatara (Virginia)
Appalara (West Virginia)
Chesora (Maryland)
Tarona-North (North Carolina)
Tarona-South (South Carolina)
REGION 3 — SOUTHEAST
Yamasih Region
Florana (Florida)
Savara (Georgia)
Tanasi-Echad (Tennessee)
Albamora (Alabama)
REGION 4 — CENTRAL
Shaykakhu Region
Kintara (Kentucky)
Ohiora (Ohio)
Indara (Indiana)
Illinara (Illinois)
REGION 5 — MIDWEST
Ia’au Region
Mishigama (Michigan)
Minisotae (Minnesota)
Wiskora (Wisconsin)
Ayowa (Iowa)
Kansara (Kansas)
Platora (Nebraska)
Dakora-North (North Dakota)
Dakora-South (South Dakota)
REGION 6 — SOUTH
Chatau Region
Missiora (Louisiana)
Mizura (Mississippi)
Canora (Missouri)
Okhama (Oklahoma)
Tejasin (Texas)
Quapara (Arkansas)
REGION 7 — WEST
Anasazi Region
Sonakia (Arizona)
Anahuara (New Mexico)
Yudah (Utah)
Rojaterra (Colorado)
Montara (Montana)
Shoshara (Wyoming)
REGION 8 — FAR WEST
Khalifa Region
Khalifa (California)
Oriona (Oregon)
Salishan (Washington)
Unangaea (Alaska)
Hawaiki-Echad (Hawaii)
Neveora (Nevada) — Capital Territory
CHAPTER 4 — PROVINCIAL STATUS
Section 35.401 — Nature of Provinces
Provinces are administrative districts subordinate to national authority and coordinated through their respective Regions.
Section 35.402 — Hierarchical Flow of Authority
Authority flows:
Nation → Capital Territory → Regions → Provinces → Households → Persons domiciled therein.
CHAPTER 5 — DOMICILE & HOUSEHOLD ATTACHMENT
Section 35.501 — Domicile
Domicile within ENR territorial lands establishes lawful attachment to national jurisdiction pursuant to Title 19.
Section 35.502 — Household Governance
Households domiciled within ENR territorial lands shall operate under:
(a) ENR statutory authority;
(b) Trust stewardship obligations where applicable;
(c) Constitutional covenantal duties.
CHAPTER 6 — TERRITORIAL EXPANSION & ANNEXATION
Section 35.601 — Authority to Annex
Parliament may approve annexation of lands into ENR territorial jurisdiction.
Section 35.602 — Methods of Annexation
Annexation may occur through:
(a) Trust acquisition under Title 16;
(b) Stewardship covenant;
(c) Nationalization-based territorial dedication;
(d) Treaty pursuant to Title 30.
Section 35.603 — Recordation Requirement
Annexed lands shall be recorded under Title 14 and published in the ENR Tribune to take effect.
CHAPTER 7 — INTERNATIONAL & INSTITUTIONAL NOTICE
Section 35.701 — Internal Territorial System
The Echadi Nation Republic maintains an internal territorial system for governance and administration.
These territorial names reflect Indigenous restoration and lawful jurisdictional organization.
Section 35.702 — Capital & Provincial Function
The Capital Territory of Neveora functions as the Nation’s Seat of Government.
Regions and Provinces serve as internal administrative districts for domicile, governance, and national records.
Section 35.703 — Compatibility & Governance Clause
These territorial designations:
(a) Do not conflict with international law;
(b) Do not assert hostile claims against surrounding jurisdictions;
(c) Are used for internal jurisdiction, domicile, and national records;
(d) Reflect lawful Indigenous governance.
Section 35.704 — Institutional Advisory Notice
Foreign governments, financial institutions, commercial entities, and international bodies are advised that:
(a) ENR territorial terminology is used for internal national administration;
(b) External geographic references may be used parenthetically for transitional clarity only;
(c) ENR territorial designations do not impair lawful cooperation, commerce, or diplomatic engagement.
CHAPTER 8 — OFFICIAL DOCUMENT TERRITORIAL FORMAT
Section 35.801 — Standard Territorial Identification
Official ENR documents may include:
Province: [ENR Province Name]
Region: [Region Number or Region Name]
Nation: Echadi Nation Republic
Physical Location (External): [External Geographic Reference]
Section 35.802 — Example
Province: Neveora
Region: Region 8 — Khalifa Region
Nation: Echadi Nation Republic
Physical Location (External): Nevada, USA
Section 35.803 — Legal Effect of Dual Reference
The inclusion of Region designation and external geographic reference:
(a) Is for clarity only;
(b) Does not subordinate ENR authority;
(c) Does not waive sovereignty;
(d) Does not create jurisdictional conflict;
(e) Reflects lawful Indigenous governance.
CHAPTER 9 — PUBLICATION & EFFECT
Section 35.901 — Recordation
This Title shall be recorded in the National Registry.
Section 35.902 — Publication
This Title shall be published in the ENR Tribune.
Section 35.903 — Effective Date
This Title shall take effect immediately upon publication.