San Diego’s Dirty Dozen
September 8, 2025
Robinson-Lopez Case File Update
INSIDE SAN DIEGO’S CHILD KIDNAPPING CONSPIRACY
SAY THEIR NAMES
Malaika & Xayah
BRING THEM HOME
Independent accounts confirm that San Diego’s dependency system is under worldwide scrutiny. From the U.S. to Europe and Asia, observers are tracking allegations that the system is not protecting children, but punishing families. Despite the mother Evelyn Lopez completing her case plan, she was reclassified under fabricated claims shortly after speaking at a Board of Supervisors meeting.
Records and testimony describe visits carried out under inhumane, degrading conditions — constant surveillance, social workers trailing a mother and her toddlers into bathrooms, phones in hand, monitoring every move. The paternal grandfather, a licensed RFA caregiver, has been stripped of contact altogether under bogus restraining orders. He is being punished, not for any crime, but for refusing to be silent. The retaliation has rippled through his household, affecting the care of his 88-year-old dependent mother with dementia, who has begun yelling in distress — behavior her family had not seen in years.
In one hearing, county counsel Jessica Nicole Fellman even introduced forced vaccinations into the record — an argument unrelated to reunification — raising alarms that children’s health is being weaponized as part of a vendetta.
At the center remains Norma Olivares, a non-relative caregiver aligned with county officials to push permanent separation. Advocates argue that Olivares is not protecting the children but conspiring against them — weaving false narratives while the girls cry for their family.
Observers stress that accountability will not end at the county line. With international attention now focused on this case, responsibility for any harm — physical, psychological, or medical — will extend to every official who enabled it, including Fellman. The world is watching, and their names are already tied to the record.
San Diego’s Dirty Dozen
The following officials are consistently cited in reports, filings, and eyewitness accounts as central players in what advocates describe as systemic abuse, retaliation, and child trafficking:
Judge Alexander Calero
David Miller (CWS monster social worker)
Ashlee Purnell (CWS social worker)
Nicole Montzingo (CWS supervisor)
Jessica Nicole Fellman (county counsel)
Lisa Haight (guardian ad litem)
Nicole McConn (GAL supervisor)
Kathleen Montiel (Kat) (CWS social worker)
Crystal Felusme (CWS social worker)
Annel Navarro (CWS social worker)
Kimberly Giardina (Director, Child & Family Well-Being)
Alfredo Guardado (HHSA Director)
The Dirty Dozen — twelve names now tied to retaliation, case-fixing perjury, and inhumane treatment.
Legal & Free Speech Disclaimer
All statements in this post are based on documented events, direct communications, and personal experiences. This content represents protected speech and opinion under the First Amendment of the United States Constitution. It is published for the purpose of public awareness, accountability, and child safety.
Trafficking Under Armed Guard
San Diego’s Child Welfare Reality
In San Diego, the so-called child welfare system hides behind a wall of armed deputies.
Families arriving for court hearings inside Meadow Lark Department 10 — not violent criminals, but parents and grandparents pleading for their children — are met by sheriffs in bulletproof vests, armed with tasers and sidearms. Their only “crime” is refusing to submit to a machine fueled by retaliation, lies, and federally funded fraud.
Observers have begun to ask:
When a county needs an armed escort to take children from loving families, is this protection — or persecution?
It is state-sanctioned trafficking, carried out under the shadow of guns and sealed courtroom doors.
https://x.com/eyeoftheSTORMsd/status/1991339392754151892?s=20


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