Hello everyone, and thank you for welcoming me into this network.
I’m here because I’ve spent a significant amount of time studying how families interact with our legal, child-welfare, and support-enforcement systems—and where those systems succeed, and more importantly, where they fail people in very real ways.
Over time, it became clear that many of the harms families experience are not isolated incidents or bad actors, but structural problems: gaps in due process, lack of transparency, outdated assumptions about violence, unqualified decision-makers, and systems that prioritize procedure or incentives over human outcomes.
In response to that, I’ve developed a comprehensive reform framework called The Declaration of Family Integrity & Justice and the Federal Family Rights & Court Accountability Act of 2026. This work treats family rights as civil rights. It’s grounded in constitutional law, modern trauma science, and internationally recognized human-rights standards.
At its core, the reform focuses on a few key principles:
- recognizing psychological and emotional abuse as real harm,
- restoring due process and jury access when fundamental rights are at stake,
- reforming child-welfare and support-enforcement practices that rely on coercion rather than evidence,
- ensuring qualified, accountable professionals are making life-altering decisions,
- and creating transparency, oversight, and remedies where families currently have none.
I’m not here to attack institutions or individuals. I’m here to share information, listen, and work collaboratively with people who care about improving outcomes for children and families. My goal is education, connection, and constructive reform—so that families are protected, systems are trusted, and justice is something people can actually feel, not just read about.
I’m grateful to be part of this space and look forward to learning from you, answering questions, and exploring how we can move this work forward together.