This article exposes a troubling pattern of judicial misconduct in California’s federal courts, where verified affidavits asserting State Citizenship and national status have been received but concealed from the official record. Specifically, it highlights the nondocketing of a key affidavit in Kevin: Walker v. Bianco et al. before Judge Wesley Hsu, while extending temporary benefit of the doubt due to possible administrative backlog. The article also touches on and reconfirms how Judge Jesus G. Bernal falsely claimed non-response in a related case to justify an unlawful dismissal, now under appeal. These actions collectively suggest systemic obstruction, due process violations, and potential criminal liability under multiple federal statutes.
This article explores the crucial legal distinctions between a State Citizen and a U.S. citizen (14th Amendment subject) by analyzing the Supreme Court case Wong Kim Ark v. United States and the jurisdictional implications of the Buck Act of 1940. It reveals how federal jurisdiction is not based on geography, but on consent and contractual participation in federal benefit programs. Through detailed legal reasoning, it explains how one can owe allegiance to the United States as a constitutional Republic without being subject to its corporate statutory codes. The piece provides actionable remedies for rebutting federal presumptions and restoring lawful State Citizenship.
This minimalist legal graphic showcases Canon 2055 and Canon 2056, foundational principles in equity and trust law. Canon 2055 affirms that a legal fiction cannot own property, while Canon 2056 declares that unrebutted claims in the public record stand as law. The clean, centered design emphasizes the gravity and simplicity of these doctrines. Though not codified in statutory law, these canons govern how presumptions, trusts, and legal identity function within commercial and administrative systems. This image is ideal for educational or advocacy use in private law and sovereignty discussions.
When a politician accepts public office, they operate under a different legal capacity — no longer as a private State Citizen with unalienable rights, but as a U.S. citizen bound to statutory obligations. Their oath of office contracts them into fiduciary duty, placing them under administrative and commercial law, not common law. This transition subordinates natural rights in favor of public trust obligations. Under doctrines like Clearfield Trust and UCC § 1-201(27), politicians act as agents of the corporate UNITED STATES and are subject to public policy, not sovereign authority. In essence, holding office means operating as a trustee of the public, not a free individual.
Charles Rogers, Jeremiah D. Raxter, and Monika Vermani have engaged in a criminal racketeering enterprise in Riverside County, California, committing fraud, extortion, and deprivation of rights under color of law. Rogers and Raxter, both inactive and unauthorized to practice law, unlawfully acted as judicial officers, issuing void orders and illegal warrants. Vermani knowingly pursued fraudulent prosecutions despite clear constitutional violations, further implicating her under 18 U.S.C. §§ 241, 242, and RICO 18 U.S.C. § 1962. Their coordinated acts constitute felonies and establish a pattern of racketeering activity subject to immediate federal civil rights and criminal actions. All fraudulent obligations have been assigned to the Treasury under UCC 1-308 and 31 U.S.C. § 3123, and full prosecution and sanctions are being pursued.
Sheriff Chad Bianco of Riverside County, District Attorney Michael Hestrin, Deputies Derrick Eastwood, Nicholas Gruwell, Robert Bowman, and associates stand in verified default for $1,000,000,000 under active federal case No. 5:25-cv-00646-WLH-MAA. Unrebutted affidavits and commercial notices confirm violations of RICO, 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and 18 U.S.C. §§ 241 and 242. Despite standing in commercial dishonor and default, Bianco is actively campaigning for Governor of California. High-level officials Pam Bondi and Kash Patel were formally notified but failed to act, compounding their exposure to Misprision of Felony. The People of California now face irrefutable evidence of systemic criminal racketeering under the false color of law by Riverside County officials.
Tamara L. Wagner (CA Bar #188613), a licensed attorney acting as a judicial officer in Riverside County, is now at the center of a federal removal action citing judicial fraud, civil rights violations, and RICO conspiracy. Defendants allege she is unlawfully practicing law from the bench without constitutional authority, advancing proceedings in open dishonor. Verified affidavits, UCC filings, and summary judgment demands were ignored, leading to claims of railroading and systemic court corruption. The case, removed under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1441, 1443, and 1446, is now pending in federal court.
Attorney Monika Vermani (CA Bar #355080) is now publicly named in a high-profile fraud and RICO case involving Riverside County’s unlawful prosecution of a private trust estate. Verified affidavits and unrebutted commercial filings prove that Vermani is acting without jurisdiction, engaging in color of law violations, and facilitating the monetization of a private estate without consent. The filings demand $100 million in damages, dismissal with prejudice, and federal prosecution under 18 U.S.C. §§ 241, 242, 1961–1968. This case exposes systemic racketeering, securities fraud, and identity theft hidden inside routine court process.
A U.S. citizen is not an authorized representative of the United States unless specifically appointed by law, statute, or official delegation. Citizenship alone does not confer agency or authority to act on behalf of the federal government. In fact, the U.S. citizen is typically the regulated party—subject to federal jurisdiction, not acting for it. Authorized representatives must be lawfully delegated, such as officers, attorneys, or fiduciaries acting under express authority. This distinction is critical in legal, commercial, and equity contexts.
This article outlines how to convene a 12-panel grand jury when courts, counties, or prosecutors fail to act on fraud and color-of-law violations. Whether by demanding a statutory grand jury under federal law or forming a citizens’ grand jury under common law, the power lies with the people. Learn the lawful steps to initiate investigation, record findings, and serve officials with binding presentments. From Riverside County’s fraudulent title conduct to national real estate collusion, it’s time to enforce justice where the system won’t. This is remedy in real time, not theory.
Zillow has become a monopolistic force in U.S. real estate, systematically omitting key title documents like Grant Deeds and Warranty Deeds from its so-called “property reports.” This article exposes how Zillow’s data manipulation, in collusion with county agencies like Riverside County, enables fraudulent foreclosures and title theft under color of law. Verified public records show lawful conveyances by private trusts—including MEMORY STARBURST TRUST and WG PRIVATE IRREVOCABLE TRUST—being ignored. What Zillow presents as authority is often a cover for commercial fraud, suppression of due process, and mass dispossession by design.
Kevin Walker has filed a groundbreaking $1 trillion federal lawsuit against Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco, District Attorney Michael Hestrin, and multiple officials, alleging a conspiracy involving fraud, kidnapping, identity theft, and racketeering under color of law. The amended complaint, filed on April 17, 2025, proceeds solely in Walker’s name and is backed by unrebutted affidavits, UCC liens, and verified commercial defaults. Among the charges are violations of 18 U.S.C. §§ 241, 242, 1341, and 1962, as well as constitutional deprivations of due process and property rights. This case challenges the legitimacy of statutory enforcement practices and asserts equity, trust law, and secured party protections. If successful, it could set a national precedent for private remedies against public actors abusing administrative power.