Funeral for the Living
TRAVEL ADVISORY — San Diego: Child Trafficking Network (CTN)
Inside San Diego County’s Family-Severing Machine
Murdered on Paper. Still Breathing. Still Walking. Still Fighting.
Don’t be fooled again — all lawyers feeding the machine are complicit.

Murder ends the body. The heart stops. The brain shuts down. The nerves stop firing. The blood goes cold. Sometimes the body is found. Sometimes it is never recovered. Sometimes it rots, decays, and decomposes. Sometimes it is burned to ash, buried in the ground, sealed away, gone. There is no more panic, no more fear, no more screaming, no more reaching out, no more begging, no more waking up in the middle of the night with your soul on fire, and no more watching children cry for the arms they were stolen from.
Death is final.
San Diego County’s criminal intent is crueler: murder the family on paper, keep the victims breathing, and force them to live inside the agony. San Diego County is murdering a family without killing the bodies. Malaika and Xayah are being forced to live as if their mother, grandfather, father, siblings, and bloodline have been killed out of their lives — while everyone is still alive, still suffering, still fighting, and still refusing to disappear.
They are using court orders, sealed records, reports, restraining orders, false allegations, and adoption paperwork to make a living mother dead on paper. A living grandfather dead on paper. A living father dead on paper. Living siblings dead on paper. A blood family dead on paper.
Malaika and Xayah are not dead. Their family is not dead. But San Diego County is forcing these girls to live as if their family has been murdered out of their lives.
The girls can still breathe. They can still feel. They can still cry. They can still scream. They can still remember. But San Diego County is removing the arms they reach for, the voices they trust, the mother they love, the grandfather they know, the siblings they belong with, and the bloodline they were born into.
This is a living funeral forced on children. A funeral for a mother who is still alive. A funeral for a grandfather who is still alive. A funeral for siblings who are still alive. A funeral for a family that is still fighting.
That is why this is worse than murder. Murder leaves a body. San Diego County is leaving living victims.
This is prolonged cruelty and living agony. This is psychological torture. This is emotional warfare dressed up as death — except nobody gets the mercy of being gone. San Diego County is murdering this family on paper while forcing every victim to stay alive inside the suffering.
Malaika and Xayah are suffering catastrophic psychological and emotional harm while San Diego County keeps pushing forward like the screams do not matter, the bond does not matter, the expert warning does not matter, and the family does not exist.
But their family does exist. Their mother exists. Their grandfather exists. Their father exists. Their siblings exist. Their grandmother existed. Their great-grandmother existed. Their family/community exists.
San Diego County can bury truth in sealed courtrooms, but it cannot bury blood. It cannot bury memory. It cannot bury the videos. It cannot bury the cries. It cannot bury the bond.
This is the paper murder of the Robinson-Lopez family, and the victims are still breathing.
This is family murder by paperwork. This is a living funeral forced on Malaika and Xayah while San Diego County tries to make their mother, grandfather, father, siblings, and bloodline dead on paper.
But this family is not dead. This family is still here. This family is still fighting. And San Diego County’s sealed courtroom machine does not get to murder a family in silence.
That is the sickness of this case. The family is still alive, but San Diego County has already murdered them on paper. They are not in a morgue. They are walking, breathing, living victims — dead to the court record, dead to the adoption machine, but still alive inside the agony San Diego County created. Malaika and Xayah are being forced to live as if the people they love are already dead, while the family is still here, still fighting, and still refusing to disappear.
THE DEATH SENTENCE BY PAPERWORK
Ashlee Purnell launched the hunt. Norma Olivares aligned with it. David Miller and Nicole Montzingo-Avila, Chantal Hill built the retaliation record. Nicole McConn, Lisa Haight, Marissa Walter, and Jesica Nicole Fellman maliciously drove the family-severing machine. Judge Alexander Calero protected the machine early. Judge Alejandro Morales weaponized the restraining orders. Judge Devon L. Lomayesva handed down the death sentence by court order — a gross miscarriage of justice disguised as law.
Malaika & Xayah. Sentenced to Life. Hell on Earth.
San Diego County deliberately caused catastrophic psychological and emotional harm to Malaika and Xayah, then called them “adoptable” as if that word could erase their mother, their family, their blood, their siblings, their grandfather, and the trauma already inflicted. Their family did not abandon them. Their family is alive, bonded, and still fighting. This is retaliation dressed up as child welfare — state-inflicted family death used to punish a family for speaking out.
You are witnessing one of the most sadistic acts ever carried out by San Diego County against children and a living family: forcing Malaika and Xayah toward the final visits with their mother, then making her dead on paper. Their grandfather dead on paper. Their father dead on paper. Their siblings — including twin baby siblings they have not even met — dead on paper. Their blood family dead on paper.
Forced adoption is a living funeral forced onto children — a court-ordered death of the family while everyone is still breathing. Nicole McConn, Marissa Walter, Nicole Montzingo-Avila, David Miller, Ashlee Purnell, Lisa Haight, Norma Olivares, Judge Alexander Calero, and Judge Alejandro Morales helped drive the machine that tried to erase a living family. Judge Devon L. Lomayesva finished it. Using her gavel, she turned catastrophic harm into a permanent court order and drove the final nails into their living coffins.
Malaika and Xayah are not unwanted children. They are bonded children with a living mother, living family, living siblings, and a community still fighting. What San Diego County is doing is one of the most horrific acts a government can commit against children: forcing them to breathe through the death of a family that is still alive.
Fight for your God-given children until your last breath. No court paper, no county order, and no adoption machine can erase blood, love, truth, or the family God gave them. They are yours by birth, by bond, and by love — not theirs by tyranny.
— The Collective for Family Justice & Human Rights

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