Atrocity

TRAVEL ADVISORY — San Diego: Child Trafficking Network (CTN)

Meadow Lark Horror: Department 10, where the breezeway leads to a family bloodletting — children’s tears, a mothers’ pain, and county power draining the life from a bloodline one hearing at a time.

Reported from inside the courthouse through firsthand family observation. Source observations include paternal grandfather Ricky Robinson. Published by the family’s public advocacy collective.

COURT WATCH NOTICE: Ruling is set for Tuesday, May 26, 2026, at 8:30 AM in Department 10 at Meadow Lark. Show up for Evelyn Lopez, Malaika, Xayah, and the Robinson/Lopez family. The court and the county need to see the public watching. Keep this case in the light. Turn the light up brighter. Turn it up until every shadow in Department 10 is exposed. These girls’ names are known. Their story is known. Their family is loud, present, and not backing down.

Nicole Ann McConn #198509 — Guardian-Side Supervisor From Hell: A wife and mother entrusted with a role tied to children’s welfare, yet her conduct has shown retaliation, bias, and a relentless vendetta against reunification. McConn has continued pushing separation while Malaika and Xayah remain traumatized, cut off from their mother, their grandfather, their siblings, their blood family, their friends, their pets, and the life they should have had. Her role should be protection. Her conduct is punishment — deliberate, cruel, and inflicted on an entire family.
Marissa Louise Walter — County Counsel, #270862: The new County Counsel in Department 10, now appearing aligned with Nicole McConn as the same machinery fights reunification, protects the county narrative, and keeps Malaika and Xayah separated from their mother and blood family. The face changes, but the pattern stays the same: attack the family, bury the trauma, and keep reported sexual-abuse concerns in the shadows while the children remain trapped in county-controlled horror.

Yesterday made one thing clear: Nicole McConn will not stop. Her fixation on keeping these girls separated has become sick, malicious, and soulless — and a lot of people watching this case are disgusted by what they are seeing.

A guardian ad litem-side supervisor is supposed to protect children’s interests — not act out a personal grudge. But what is being witnessed is not neutral child advocacy. It is retaliation, vendetta, and abuse of process dressed up in court language.

McConn remains fixated on keeping Malaika and Xayah separated from their mother, grandfather, siblings, blood family, friends, pets, and home life. The harm is obvious. The trauma is obvious. The family suffering is obvious. And still, she keeps pushing.

She is not protecting children.

She is prolonging trauma.

She is not acting neutral.

She is operating like someone with a personal stake in punishing this family.

Yesterday, McConn appeared aligned with the new County Counsel, communicating and operating in step while the family continues fighting for reunification. That matters. A guardian-side actor with a history of retaliation concerns, restraining-order pressure, speech-control issues, and hostility toward family advocacy should not be influencing a case where two children’s future is on the line.

The new County Counsel has been identified as Marissa Louise Walter, State Bar No. 270862, an active California attorney listed with the Office of County Counsel. She appears to have taken over the same role previously occupied by Jesica Nicole Fellman — the County Counsel actor this family remembers for fighting reunification, backing separation, and pushing county power against a mother and children instead of helping restore a blood family. The faces change, but the machinery does not. County Counsel keeps protecting the system while reported child abuse, reported sexual-abuse concerns, medical distress, and child trauma are pushed into the shadows. Instead of demanding truth and protection for Malaika and Xayah, they attack the family sounding the alarm. That is predator protection with a county badge and a courtroom voice.

And look at the pattern.

When one narrative fails, they shift to another.

If it is not the van story, it is abuse.
If it is not abuse, it is psychological abuse.
If it is not coercion, it is “no bond.”
If the bond evidence cuts through that, then suddenly they want to dig into the mother’s past.

That is not justice. That is a moving-target attack.

This real-time report was also provided to an outside news source because the public needs to know what is happening inside these proceedings. Families should not be isolated behind closed doors while court-connected actors use shifting narratives, speech-control pressure, and government power to keep children separated from their own blood family.

This is malicious prosecution. This is retaliatory persecution. This is a grudge campaign against a mother, a grandfather, and an entire blood family that refused to stay silent.

Malaika and Xayah are not leverage. They are not trophies. They are not case numbers. They are children who have been kept in trauma while adults with titles protect the narrative instead of protecting the bond, the family, and the truth.

Nicole McConn needs to be removed from any influence over this case.

County Counsel needs to stop enabling a moving-target attack on reunification.

And the court needs to see what this has become:

Not child advocacy.

Not neutrality.

Not protection.

A personal vendetta wrapped in government power.

Malaika and Xayah — say their names, share their story, bring them home. Protect these girls from the evil being done under county power by Nicole McConn, Marissa Walter, and every county-connected actor prolonging their trauma, burying the truth, and fighting to keep them from their mother and blood family. God shield Malaika, Xayah, their mother Evelyn Lopez, their entire family, their friends, and even the pets they are being forced to live without — from every predator, liar, and government actor prolonging this nightmare. Bring them home.

— The Collective for Family Justice & Human Rights

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