Trauma by Design
TRAVEL ADVISORY
San Diego: Child Trafficking Network (CTN)
Wish Bri a Happy Birthday — Help bring Malaika and Xayah home.
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Evelyn has committed no crime.
She is still seeing her daughters twice a week, and yet the same people hovering over those visits keep writing the same lie into reports: “no bond.” No bond, while the children cry for their mother. No bond, while a judge has already acknowledged an undeniable love and bond. No bond, while the system keeps these girls suspended between blood family and strangers as if reality can be overwritten by paperwork.
This is not a lack of bond. This is the deliberate manufacture of separation.
They have stretched postpartum struggle into nearly two years of punishment. They have watched, hovered, written, distorted, and repeated the same fiction while trying to sever an entire blood family from these girls. They want to terminate a mother’s rights, erase a grandfather, destroy the RFA path, and normalize the unnatural.
And they did not just steal these girls from their mother.
They stole them from their father too — a father who had already lost his own mother, Amy Brown, during this same broader fight. After that loss, he was never going to bow to the people tormenting his family. He was never going to fake obedience while his daughters cried through visits, cried when it was time to leave, and cried for home. He was not going to stand there for two hours, watch his daughters suffer, and pretend that was care. He refused their script. He refused their case plan. And for that, they terminated his rights.
What has been stolen here is not only time.
They stole birthdays.
They stole childhood joy.
They stole the great-grandmother’s chance to know these girls in peace.
They stole the grandfather’s rightful place in their lives.
They stole the father’s place too.
They stole the simple happiness of family being family.
And while they call it protection, the children come out more traumatized, more confused, and more broken. Then the same system points to the damage it created and calls it “behavioral health,” as if the suffering appeared out of nowhere. But that is the scheme: create the trauma, deepen the separation, destabilize the children, and then repackage the damage as a behavioral-health issue caused by the family instead of by the system that manufactured it.
This is what the public needs to understand: the victims are being created in real time.
These girls should be surrounded by their mother, their grandfather, their father, and their blood family — not trapped inside a system that keeps writing “no bond” while everybody can see the truth with their own eyes.
This is not care.
This is not healing.
This is organized family separation dressed up as child welfare.
And one day San Diego will have to answer for it.
— The Collective for Family Justice & Human Rights



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