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When Counties Corner Themselves: The Filing They Can’t Ignore

Updated: Sep 7


On August 11, 2025, I officially lodged a motion with the United States District Court for the Central District of California that leaves Los Angeles County and San Bernardino County with exactly zero safe exits.


This isn’t just another filing. It’s a Notice of Lodging that delivers sworn admissions, certified exhibits, and judicially noticeable evidence from companion cases — all pointing to a coordinated pattern of constitutional violations.


We’re talking:

  • Fabricated allegations

  • Brady violations (withholding exculpatory evidence)

  • ADA and Rehabilitation Act noncompliance

  • ICWA & WIC § 361.3 placement violations

  • Repeated misconduct by the same key players across multiple lawsuits


These are not isolated mistakes. They are a repeat playbook — and it’s fully documented in the PACER record.


The Law Is Not On Their Side

This evidence falls squarely within controlling precedent:

  • Tolan v. Cotton (2014) – All competent evidence must be considered in civil rights cases.

  • Santosky v. Kramer (1982) – The constitutional threshold for terminating parental rights is sky-high — and they didn’t meet it.

  • Henry v. County of Shasta (1997) – You can’t hide constitutional violations behind confidentiality laws.

Under Rule 56(c)(3) and FRE 201(b)(2), the court must consider this record. If the counties try to ignore or block it, that’s not just reversible error — it could cross into criminal territory under 18 U.S.C. §§ 1503 & 1512 for obstruction of justice.


Why They’re Stuck

Here’s the trap: If they challenge the evidence, they have to address its substance — and that substance destroys their defense. If they ignore it, they’re on record violating procedural and constitutional law. If they try to seal it, precedent says they can’t.


Either way, the full record comes into the light — and the truth wins.


Message to Los Angeles & San Bernardino Counties

You can’t outrun the record. You can’t hide it. You can’t seal it. The pattern is established, the law is clear, and the public has the right to see what you’ve done.


This is law and order in action — and this time, the accountability is coming for you.


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