This deposit establishes intellectual priority over the structural findings of the first Molina Methodology (MM) analysis of Cypro-Minoan writing, effective March 22, 2026. Cypro-Minoan (c. 1550–1050 BCE) is the undeciphered syllabic script of Bronze Age Cyprus, used primarily for administrative and commercial record-keeping across the Late Bronze Age eastern Mediterranean. This analysis applies five universal structural laws to the Corazza, Tamburini, Valério, and Ferrara (2022) PLoS ONE corpus (218 inscriptions, 2,315 tokens, 97 sign types, 29 sites). Key findings: (1) 75 confirmed positional locks — the highest absolute lock count in the MM corpus to date, exceeding Linear B (69 locks), Neo-Assyrian, and all other analyzed scripts; (2) three signs at absolute 100% medial lock; (3) the Aegean OPENER→MEDIAL→CLOSER grammar confirmed in Cypro-Minoan, establishing structural continuity across all four Aegean syllabic scripts (Cretan Hieroglyphic, Linear A, Cypro-Minoan, Linear B) over 550+ years; (4) 26 formula pairs confirmed at up to 38.7× above chance, including a cross-site stamp formula at 30× confirmed across Enkomi and Hala Sultan Tekke; (5) complete corpus closure at 100% — all 218 inscriptions structurally classified with no bilingual inscription required. This deposit directly addresses the consensus established by Palaima (1989) and Ferrara (2012) that Cypro-Minoan cannot be interpreted without a bilingual. That consensus is correct for phonetic decipherment. It is not correct for structural decipherment. The administrative grammar — operator positions, formula structure, domain separation, and document class function — is fully recoverable from positional statistics alone. Files included: Priority claim document (public), structural ledger with eight formula entries in four-row format (ORIGINAL / FUNCTION / INTERPRETATION / ENGLISH), and an interactive animated demonstration (fictional sign data, methodology withheld). A private deposit containing complete statistical tables, full positional frequency data, formula bigram inventory, corpus classification audit, and computational methodology has been filed on the same date. Its SHA-256 hash is: e71d5562909ebb0a29e4009c3462600d8667da330d418e1c73567b94e487493c
Juan Gabriel Molina (Sun,) studied this question.