07-15-2025, 05:12 PM
Let’s correct the record.
- I did not access the site.
- The website in question does not require login credentials, and
- Posts continued in my name while I was incarcerated, which the sheriff’s office confirmed.
- The site’s host and legal counsel later verified that I never accessed the platform.
- The website in question does not require login credentials, and
- My family’s IP logs were never linked to any posts.
- Accessing a public website is not illegal, nor does it prove authorship.
- No evidence has ever shown that my family posted anything—only that they may have viewed the site, likely out of concern.
- Accessing a public website is not illegal, nor does it prove authorship.
- The search warrant was not legal.
- It was issued five days after the alleged threat, without corroboration of the tip.
- It was a general warrant, authorizing the seizure of “any and all computers” and data—violating the Fourth Amendment’s particularity requirement.
- The warrant was later quashed, and the charges were dropped.
- It was issued five days after the alleged threat, without corroboration of the tip.

