A Travesty of Justice
My Experience of the Courts is a Microcosm of What is Happening in the Nation
Most will believe I am about to write about my high-profile lawsuit against Yale, which was recently dismissed on dubious grounds and under suspicious circumstances (many were watching it intently, as it had the potential to uncover many aspects of Alan Dershowitz’s abuse scandals and Yale’s enmeshment with questionable donors).
However, here I have something else in mind.
I was recently arrested. For the first time in my quarter-century of frequenting jails and prisons, I saw the inside of a jail cell. I never thought my first arrest (if there ever were to be one) would be for trying to save the lives of children — namely, my niece and nephew. However, whenever Family Court is involved, there is a greater chance of being incarcerated for trying to protect abused children than for being their abuser. This is because “justice” in Family Courts “follows the money,” which in families the abuser usually controls.
My brother-in-law is also a student and disciple of Dershowitz. Corrupt powers are themselves said to employ Family Courts for the political persecution of dissidents (I am increasingly hearing of Family Court involvement in the silencing of whistleblowers and truthtellers through their children — and it has been suggested to me that, since I do not have children myself, they could be using my niece and nephew to “tie me up”).