PUBLIC NOTICE OF INHERENT RIGHT
The Principal exercises absolute commercial and jurisdictional authority derived fundamentally from inherent Indigenous sovereignty, explicitly codified and publicly asserted via the 1911 Declaration of the Lillooet Tribe. This undertaking operates exclusively under unceded title and inherent rights, permanently excluding it from the presumptive regulatory frameworks of the Province of British Columbia.
Pursuant to the functional test established in NIL/TU,O Inc. v. B.C. Government and Service Employees' Union (2010 SCC 45), the core daily operations and regular activities of TGTR Global constitute an exercise of inherent Indigenous governance and federal-level trade. Consequently, provincial regulatory bodies, including the British Columbia Securities Commission, lack the constitutional authority to regulate, audit, or intervene in this undertaking.
All digital infrastructure, tokens, and NFT releases deployed by the Principal on the Avalanche C-Chain are strictly classified as Utility Trade Protocols and Network Access Licenses. They are issued for consumptive access to TGTR Global's trade network. They do not constitute an "investment contract" or "security" as defined under the Securities Act (RSBC 1996, c 418, Section 1), as there is no expectation of financial profit derived primarily from the managerial efforts of the Principal.
Any unilateral attempt by a provincial regulator to enforce localized securities law against this inherent undertaking without explicitly obtaining Free, Prior, and Informed Consent (FPIC) constitutes a breach of statutory duty. Under BC Interpretation Act Section 8.1(3), all provincial acts must be construed as consistent with UNDRIP. As established in Gitxaala v. BC (2025 BCCA) and enforced via administrative quashing in Gitanyow v. BC (2026 BCSC 18), provincial regulatory action that fails to accommodate inherent economic rights is legally void.
The commercial authority of the Principal is fundamentally protected by unextinguished inherent rights, explicitly recognized and affirmed under Section 35(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982. Furthermore, the Government of Canada and its regulatory agencies are legally bound by the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act (S.C. 2021, c. 14) to ensure all federal laws and administrative actions are consistent with UNDRIP. Any federal regulatory infringement upon the Principal's inherent right to freely pursue economic development and trade constitutes an unconstitutional breach requiring strict legal justification under the R. v. Sparrow (1990) 1 SCR 1075 precedent.
Access to TGTR Global proprietary assets requires formal acknowledgment of the Principal's foundational jurisdiction.