Enough Suffering

Posted in Corruption on May 25, 2026 by Free Keenan

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

MALAIKA & XAYAH

END THEIR SUFFERING — BRING THEM HOME

What did Evelyn Lopez and this family do — commit mass murder?

San Diego County has dragged this mother, these children, and this family through nearly two years of nonstop court agony, shifting accusations, manufactured narratives, and a full-blown punishment campaign — while the girls suffer and the system keeps feeding itself.

Enough suffering. Enough retaliation. Enough damage to children and families. These girls have a mother, siblings, grandparents, friends, and an entire family/community waiting for them — and this family should not have to bury anyone else in the crossfire of San Diego County’s cruelty.

Please show up Tuesday, May 26th at 8:30 AM in Department 10 at the Meadow Lark Juvenile Dependency Courthouse, 2851 Meadow Lark Drive, San Diego, CA 92123, to support Evelyn Lopez, Malaika, Xayah, and the Robinson family.

Malaika and Xayah are not case numbers. They are two sisters who have been trapped in a foster-care horror story for nearly two years while San Diego County covers up the trauma, the abuse concerns, and the catastrophic emotional and psychological damage without a conscience. Millions flow through foster care, behavioral health, contractors, providers, and county systems — but the children are the ones suffering. These girls have a real mother, real siblings, real grandparents, real friends, and a real family/community waiting for them.

For two years, San Diego County has kept changing the story because the truth keeps getting in the way. First came the sexual-abuse and psychological-abuse allegations placed on the table against the mother. Then came the alleged car incident. Then came the false “no bond” narrative — even while the children’s own reactions, videos, witnesses, and family history show the opposite. Malaika and Xayah know their mother. They know their family. They cry for them, reach for them, and suffer every day San Diego County keeps them from home.

Evelyn Lopez spoke out at the San Diego County Board of Supervisors, and after that, the County retaliated relentlessly. The pressure escalated, the narratives shifted, and the attacks against the mother and family became even more aggressive. Now, after all of that, they want to dig through the mother’s entire past and put her whole life on trial. It never stops. They appear obsessed, fixated, and determined to keep expanding the attack because the County’s narrative keeps collapsing — and instead of ending the suffering, they keep inventing new ways to keep this case alive.

This family has been lied about, bullied, isolated, and criminalized while the County covers up the real damage: severe child trauma, catastrophic psychological and emotional harm, medical concerns, sexual-abuse concerns, international trafficking of the children, retaliatory restraining orders, and reports built on lies stacked on top of lies. The damage has reached the children, Evelyn Lopez, the Robinson family, the paternal grandfather, and the girls’ late elderly dependent great-grandmother who passed away in the crossfire of this battle.

This is not child protection. This is family destruction under color of authority.

Please show up. Please witness. Please support Evelyn Lopez, Malaika, Xayah, and the Robinson family. Department 10 — Meadow Lark Juvenile Dependency Courthouse — Tuesday, May 26th at 8:30 AM.

The County says there is no bond. The truth will be standing right in front of them.

— The Collective for Family Justice & Human Rights

But whoso shall offend one of these little ones which believe in me, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea. — Matthew 18:6

It is time for lawmakers to make sure what happened to Malaika and Xayah is never allowed to happen again. Put Malaika and Xayah into law.

Children’s Legal Services of San Diego publicly promotes kinship care while, in the Robinson-Lopez case, its own side helped fight an RFA-approved grandfather and household, attacked protected speech, and kept two bonded sisters away from family. Malaika and Xayah were not protected by this system — they were traumatized by it. Medical concerns, sexual-abuse concerns, catastrophic emotional and psychological harm, and international trafficking to the Dominican Republic were buried under reports, excuses, and retaliation. Publicly, they praise family. In court, they helped destroy one.

The Bond Doesn’t Exist

— The Collective for Family Justice & Human Rights