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The Day the Defendants Showed Their Desperation

Updated: Sep 7

Yesterday, August 13, was a major milestone in my fight for justice. I filed my Motion for Summary Judgment and Motion in Limine—two powerful filings that expose the truth and demand accountability from Los Angeles County and San Bernardino County. This wasn’t just another procedural step. It was the moment I put every piece of evidence, every court order they’ve ignored, and every violation they’ve committed right in front of the judge.


Instead of addressing their own misconduct, the defendants made a desperate move: they asked the court for my entire employment history. Think about that. After years of breaking the September 2017 court order by failing to re-investigate, after using uncertified interpreters in violation of my ADA rights, and after hiding critical evidence like Exhibit B, their big strategy is to dig into my past jobs.


Here’s the truth—they will find nothing that helps them. My work history has nothing to do with their illegal actions. This case is about their misconduct, not my résumé. It’s about the violations of my First, Fourth, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights, their willful ADA and Rehabilitation Act violations, and the destruction they caused to my family.


With my filings yesterday, I also submitted a proposed order for the judge to sign—one that would shut down their baseless motions, preclude them from offering late evidence, and set this case for trial on damages. If granted, it will officially end their delay tactics and put the focus exactly where it belongs: on the truth they’ve been running from for years.


August 13 will go down as the day I took back control of this case. The defendants are out of excuses, and they are out of time. Trial is coming—and so is accountability.



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