Grudge Trial
A public warning about San Diego County’s retaliation machine — where children’s trauma is buried, families are punished, and blood bonds are treated like a problem.
A judge who follows her heart should have no trouble following the evidence — and the evidence leads these children home.
San Diego County calls it “no bond.” The children’s trauma says otherwise.
This trial is about more than paperwork. It is about retaliation, false narratives, cover-ups, and a grudge-driven campaign to erase a family bond that is obvious to anyone willing to look. Malaika and Xayah cry, cling, reach, ask for their mother, and want to go home. That is not “no bond.” That is a bond being tortured.
When minor’s counsel supervisor Nicole McConn ignores visible trauma, ignores the children’s bond with their mother and family, and helps carry a collapsing “no bond” narrative, that is not advocacy. That is betrayal. That is fraud. That is child trafficking dressed up as juvenile court.
Malaika and Xayah do not need another attorney helping the system explain away their pain. They need someone with the courage to tell the truth: the bond is real, the trauma is real, and these children have been kept from the family they love for far too long.
Now the questions are simple.
Will this new judge see through the fraud, the lies, and the retaliation?
Will the court recognize the trauma San Diego County has caused these children?
Will the court finally admit that the “no bond” narrative is collapsing?
Will the court send Malaika and Xayah home where they belong?
Or will the system keep writing a real-life Hansel and Gretel story — keeping these girls from the family they love and leaving them trapped in the witch’s house?
Please show up. Please witness this. Malaika and Xayah need to come home.
— The Collective for Family Justice & Human Rights

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