Category Archives: Hawaiian issues

Another Saturday morning

I’m afraid you’ll have to wait just a while longer for my next substantive post. I’m just trying to finish a follow-up on the Julh 1 arrests of a group that occupied 30-acres in a Kunia agricultural park, claiming Hawaiian rights.

Earlier, I watched video interviews with several of those who were arrested that are posted on social media, where (among other things) they complained that no reporters had contacted them. So I reached out and asked for an interview in order to hear their story directly.

The answer came in the form of a social media post.

Here’s an excerpt which conveys the tone:

“You have posted misleading and
falsified information about the
reclamation process of heirs and lineal
descendants to the great Mahele. You
also have shared false information
about ofha and reposted things that
have posted on my Instagram account
and documents I sent to my court cases
with a false narrative. It seems as if Your
false reports were an attempt to
sabotage the reclamation process to
these Kuleana lands and try to paint a
picture as if OFHA is the head force of
this process when that is not true. you
yourself by the looks of your recent
report on kunia, don’t even understand
royal patents, land commission awards
or THE LAW.”

I replied: “So I guess that’s a “no, thanks” on the request for an interview?”

In any case, hopefully I’m finishing up this next article. Stay tuned.

Meanwhile, two views from this morning.

Also see:

Standoff In Waipahu: Hawaiian Rights ‘Army’ Has Illegally Occupied A Private Pot Farm,” Civil Beat, June 7, 2022

Group Occupying Honolulu Pot Farm Faces Deadline To Move Out,” June 12, 2022

Hawaiian ‘Occupied Forces’ Group Ousted From Kunia Property By Police,” July 3, 2022

A few more thoughts about the Kunia land occupation

I thought I would take a little time to respond to some of the questions raised about my reporting on the land occupation in Kunia supported by Occupied Forces Hawaii Army.

There are several reasons I’ve been following this case. Here’s reason #1. All land titles in Hawaii can be traced back to the land distributions at the time of the Mahele of 1848. So the idea behind the Kunia land occupation–that descendants of original land grant recipients retain an ownership interest in that land that can be asserted today and that is superior to modern titles–puts every property in the state, each and every home or business, whether owned by Hawaiians or non-Hawaiians, at risk of similar baseless challenges.

The unsettling thing is that this isn’t a belief held only by a small group like the couple of dozen people involved in the Kunia land takeover. Comments on social media indicate a wider audience.

Of course, the idea is based on misunderstandings or, worse, misrepresentations of land titles. Those early land grants, like modern deeds, provided title in perpetuity, but also provided that the owner could sell, mortgage, transfer, or otherwise dispose of their property without answering to others. And when real property is transferred, that title transfers to the new owner and his/her heirs “in perpetuity” unless and until it changes hands again.

I can trace my own family back to a land commission grant in 1855 to my great grandfather. Does that allow me to claim a “superior” title to the current legal owner? Obviously not.

So the theory that modern land titles can be claimed on the basis of “heirdom” is simply wrong. One of my underlying interests is how this idea is being spread and popularized.

In the past, this kind of idea has often been associated with a scam or con pitched to people facing financial or legal hardships who are desperate for ways of pushing back. This case has many of the same trappings of people who claimed taxes are “voluntary” and were willing to sell you the book and the tax forms to make Uncle Sam stop taking your hard earned dollars. Unfortunately, it just meant more of that money went to the con artist selling the idea, while the suckers got stuck with the legal liability of nonpayment of taxes.

A decade ago, a Maui group active across the state presented workshops on genealogy and land titles, and then solicited payments in exchange for their packet of paperwork they claimed could be used to stop foreclosures and pay off mortgage debts. They were convicted, most served time in federal prison, and at least one is still in prison after violating the terms of her supervised release.

Whenever and wherever people are desperate, encouraged to distrust and reject all authority, and to suspend disbelief in things that seem to good to be true, they create the conditions in which con artists and fraudsters thrive.

One con artist who I tracked for several decades would offer his services to people in trouble with the IRS or facing foreclosure. Part of his pitch went something like this: “I’m not a lawyer, but that’s why I can help you in court. Lawyers have a code of ethics they must follow. And since I’m not a lawyer, I’m not bound by those ethics.”

As a non-lawyer, he couldn’t go to court to represent someone facing a foreclosure lawsuit by their lender. So he instructed people that he needed to take at least a partial interest in their property “on paper,” while promising he would return it whenever they requested. He would often trade, handing over bogus title to another property in exchange for taking part of his “client’s” property.

I remember talking to a women who had initially turned over a part interest in her condominium, which was threatened with foreclosure. This allowed the non-lawyer to appear in court representing himself, as an owner. After some time, he went back to the woman and told her the court was cracking down on fraudulent property transfers, so they needed to do more to make it look legit. To do this, he told her to just sign over all her interest, and then move out, of course promising that this would only be temporary and could be reversed whenever she asked

He was very effective in court, at least in stalling court cases, often for years. What he did would now be called “paper terrorism.” Taking advantage of the typical deference of judges when dealing with non-lawyers representing themselves pro se, he would file document after document, each long, dense, and most often irrelevant or nonsensical, alleging all sorts of “facts” and making up legal citations. Because of the way the courts work, whenever one argument was rejected, he would seek reconsideration, then would appeal, then would file more pseudo-legal gobbledygook and start the process again.

And by the time the condo owner figured out she was being conned, he laughed and threatened to turn her in to authorities for trying to defraud the court and the lender. And, of course, he had all the evidence because he was part of the fraud. When push came to shove, he would send a packet of evidence to the IRS, claiming to be a fraud investigator.

So here’s a question I can’t really answer. Are the participants in the Kunia land occupation con artists, like the one I described in the last few paragraphs, or are they more akin to the condominium owner who took the bait, believed what she was told, who distrusted lawyers who warned her not to do it, and walked right into the deal, only to be ripped off as a result. In the Kunia case, who’s running the con, and who’s getting conned?

And finally, several people have asked why I haven’t jumped on Tom Berg, the former Honolulu city council member now employed as a land manager by the property owner of the Kuna agricultural park, and adjoining golf course, where this land seizure has played out.

For example, one person using the name “Caddyshack Rambo” commented:

While your continued exploration of this colorful saga is much appreciated, I respectfully suggest that you’ve ventured far into the thickets of nonsense claims and rhetorical excess while glossing over the apparent armed confrontation and another violent encounter at the subject property that could definitely stand more scrutiny and explanation.

Pointing a pistol at another person is a Very Big Deal, and it remains unclear why golf course and land manager Tom Berg was not arrested after doing so in the photograph that accompanies your new Civil Beat story. (And it is a photograph, not a screenshot of a video as mislabeled in the caption.) Hawaii News Now has reported that Berg claimed the pistol was an air gun, but even if true — and that’s certainly not clear, and your story doesn’t touch it — does that really make it OK? Today’s air guns are quite powerful weapons and have been used in plenty of crimes and assaults.

Following the incident, two people filed applications for temporary restraining orders, saying they feared for their safety and the safety of their families after Berg pointed a pistol at them.

Both TRO applications described Berg having been caught snooping on their “private property” for at least six months.

According to one applicant: “Myself and my family live at 94-405 Kunia Rd. Waipahu, HI 96797, a property that the mother of my children is an owner of.”

Neither mentioned Berg was the agent for the legal landowner sent to check what was happening on the land.

In any case, a court hearing was held on the two TRO applications. Each of the petitioners testified and gave their evidence. Then Berg had his opportunity. According to court minutes, he brought and displayed a video of the full encounter, in which he was harassed and threatened as he walked through the 30-acre parcel that had been seized by the group. I haven’t seen the video, but have to surmise it showed that what actually took place was substantially different from what had been claimed in the TRO applications, with Berg now seen as a victim rather than simply a pistol-toting aggressor. The judge in the case not only threw out the restraining orders against Berg, but also assessed the applicants $2,500 to pay his legal fees and costs. That’s not something I’ve seen before while digging through court records on different stories.

Squatters cleared from Kunia land (for now)

Honolulu police and state sheriffs showed up early Friday morning to evict the squatters who illegally seized a five acre parcel of agricultural land back in September, and expanded to a full 30 acres since then.

Today I got around to doing a story for Civil Beat about the raid and resulting nine arrests: “Hawaiian ‘Occupied Forces’ Group Ousted From Kunia Property By Police.”

I’ll have more to add tomorrow.

Also see:

6 arrested for trespassing as authorities seek to evict paramilitary group,” Hawaii News Now, 7/1/2022.

Where the frivolity never ends

Undeterred by previous court rulings that their arguments are frivolous, two people claiming ownership of a plot of land in a Kunia agricultural subdivision “by heirdom” went back to court on Thursday seeking to disqualify a state court judge because he ruled against them.

The “Motion for Recusal,” filed in Honolulu’s First Circuit Court at 1:56 pm by Travis Thomas Mokiao and Kaiulani Mokiao, demands the “immediate disqualificiation” and recusal of Circuit Court Judge James McWhinnie, who previously ruled in favor of the landowner, Guyland LLC, and on June 15 rejected attempts to delay execution of a “Writ of Possession” he had already approved.

This latest motion came just one day after police backed down and failed to enforce a court order directing them to remove the group and their possessions. Since they took control of the area more than nine months ago, they have expanded the site from five to thirty acres.

In their recusal motion, the two merely rehash discredited claims that have already been ruled against multiple times.

For example, they claim to have been victims of “defective service,” even alleging “extensive fraud,” because several people were not legally served during the earlier court proceedings. Keola Wayne Kaleimamahu was not properly served because he was being held at the Oahu Community Correctional Center on terroristic threatening charges. That part is true. However, Kaleimamahu was previously dismissed from the case, so whether or not he was properly served is no longer an issue.

The Mokiaos argue that two others, Sam Lilikoi and Napua Hueu, both affiliated with the group known as Occupied Forces Hawaii Army, were not served and therefore were denied a right to be heard in court.

But Fred Arensmeyer, attorney for the landowner, responds that neither Lilikoi nor Hueu is a party in the case and, therefore, do not need to be served. Further, neither is an attorney, and so cannot appear in court on behalf of Occupied Forces Hawaii Army, which is now a named defendant.

A new argument raised in the recusal motion accuses Judge McWhinnie of bias because he served as president of Oahu Country Club 15 years ago.

The recusal motion argues that this case “relates to” the Hawaii Country Club, a golf course adjacent to the agricultural subdivision.

The Mokiaos alleged “he may be acting out of bias in favor of the various Country Clubs on the island, and for this reason should be recused immediately from all future hearings related to this legal matter.”

“The Mokiao Defendants are grasping at straws,” Arensmeyer responded. Hawai Country Club is not a party to this case, and nas no connections with Oahu Country Club, a nonprofit corporation with no shareholders.

“The two golf courses those entities operate are located miles apart from one-another, and do not share common management…The mere fact that Guy Fong (owner of the landowner, Guyland LLC) and Judge McWhinnie might both be interested in golf and/or golf course management certainly does not give rise to any inference that Judge McWhinnie is unable to preside impartially in this ejectment action, which has nothing to do with golf.”

Enough of the fun and games.

In other cases facing similar barrages of nonsensical paperwork, judges have ordered that court clerks refuse further filings absent a court order.

And at some point, the court is going to have to impose sanctions against the defendants for these repeated baseless motions, each of which causes delays and additional costs.

See:
Introducing Occupied Forces Hawaii,” iLind.net, April 22, 2022.


Standoff In Waipahu: Hawaiian Rights ‘Army’ Has Illegally Occupied A Private Pot Farm,” Civil Beat, June 7, 2022.

False beliefs about land titles fuel property takeovers,” iLind.net, June 7, 2022.

Group Occupying Honolulu Pot Farm Faces Deadline To Move Out,” Civil Beat, June 12, 2022.

Courts quickly reject attempts to delay eviction of squatters on Kunia ag land,” iLind.net, June 15, 2022.