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Negligence: This legal concept implies a failure to act with the level of care that a reasonably prudent person would exercise in similar circumstances. It often results in unintentional harm to another party. For example, a driver who fails to stop at a red light and causes an accident may be found negligent.
Malice: In a legal context, malice refers to the intention to cause harm or the desire to act in a way that is harmful or illegal. It is often associated with a deliberate intention to injure another person or a reckless disregard for the consequences of one's actions. In defamation cases, "actual malice" means that the defendant published a statement knowing it was false or with reckless disregard for its truth
Psychological coercion is a form of manipulation that seeks to influence a person's thoughts, beliefs, and behaviors without their consent. It can involve tactics such as isolation, emotional manipulation, and the gradual erosion of a person's autonomy. The effects of psychological coercion can be devastating, leading to shattered identities, fractured lives, and a sense of helplessness. To protect oneself from psychological coercion, it is essential to recognize its tactics and understand the psychological mechanisms at play
Defamation occurs when a false statement is communicated to a third party and causes reputational harm. To establish a defamation claim, courts generally require four elements: the statement must be false, presented as a fact rather than opinion, published to at least one other person, and cause harm to the individual’s reputation, such as loss of income, social standing, or emotional distress
A defamatory statement or representation especially in the form of written or printed words
The action or crime of making a false spoken statement damaging to a person's reputation
Cyberbullying is bullying with the use of digital technologies. It can take place on social media, messaging platforms, gaming platforms and mobile phones. It is repeated behavior, aimed at scaring, angering or shaming those who are targeted. Examples include:
Physical Harassment covers a wide range of behaviors of an offensive nature. It is commonly understood as behavior that demeans, humiliates, and intimidates a person. In the legal sense, these are behaviors that are disturbing, upsetting, or threatening to a person. Some harassment evolves from discriminatory grounds and has the effect of nullifying a person's rights or impairing a person from utilizing their rights. When harassing behaviors become repetitive, it is defined as bullying. If you've been in a car accident, our attorneys can help you navigate the legal process and get the compensation you deserve.
Spiritual Harassment- results from people paid on assignment from occult religious sectors, such as Eastern stars of Freemasonry that come into your presence to take photos of you, chase, follow, or enter into your home, business, work places, presence using spiritual human intrusion to inflict your body to cause spiritual sicknesses, spiritual tormenting attacks with intent to unalive by the use of astral projection.
Stalking is unwanted and/or repeated surveillance or contact by an individual or group toward another person. Stalking behaviors are interrelated to harassment and intimidation and may include following the victim in person and/or monitoring them. The term stalking is used with some differing definitions in psychiatry and psychology, as well as in some legal jurisdictions as a term for a criminal offense
Financial thievery encompasses a range of illegal acts that involve deception, concealment, or a breach of trust to obtain money, property, or financial advantage. These offenses can include identity theft, fraud, money laundering, and other forms of financial crime. Financial thievery can have devastating consequences for individuals and businesses, leading to significant economic damage and loss of trust in financial systems. These types of criminals are typically witches from occult organizations, of Eastern Stars or freemasonry, that hold titles, who believe they are above the law, and cannot be touched. They file fraudulent police reports with lies stating the victim owes them money with the intent to send to the victim’s bank to get the bank to transfer money into their account.
An administrative lawsuit is characterized by the fact that its purpose is to protect an individual’s public rights. The states represented by its state bodies and officials are a party to the case. Any person who considers his or her rights to have been violated may file a civil action complaint form. Practice shows that the majority of administrative cases involve contesting the decisions of the authorities. In civil court, the administrative plaintiff must prove that such a decision violated their legal rights and interests and that the body will justify the legality of the decision.
Cybercrime, the use of a computer as an instrument to further illegal ends, such as committing fraud, stealing identities, or violating privacy. Cybercrime, especially through the Internet.
When a bank closes your account for suspicious activity, it can affect your money, your banking record, and your ability to open new accounts. When the victims bank account and money have been taken by criminals from their false reports given to the victim's bank to cause them to be black balled by banking institutions to prevent them from opening bank accounts to cause severe oppression, poverty, Homelessness to the victim's life.

Unexplained Life Disruptions is a result by the practices of high priest or priestess of an Eastern Star, Freemasonry, Wicca, Hindu, or Religious Organization seeking to destroy the life of its member. Witchcraft doesn't always announce itself with loud bangs or dramatic events. Instead, it creeps into your life, slowly unraveling the fabric of your well-being. The signs are many, and though they may seem innocent on their own, when combined, they form a pattern that’s hard to ignore. Let’s explore the most telling signs that could indicate you’re under the influence of witchcraft, as drawn from various ancient practices and modern interpretations.
Sudden and Unexplained Illness
Have you fallen ill with no apparent cause? Witchcraft can manifest as physical ailments that baffle even the most seasoned doctors. Recurring headaches, chronic fatigue, or mysterious pains that resist treatment might be more than just health issues. Historically, many cultures believed these inexplicable illnesses were caused by curses or hexes, often implemented by those who practiced dark magic.
Recurring Nightmares
Your dreams are where your subconscious speaks. If you are haunted by repetitive nightmares, especially those filled with dark figures or feelings of dread, it could be a sign that something sinister is at work. Dreams involving symbols of death, snakes, or other ominous figures may indicate that negative spiritual forces are attempting to infiltrate your life. Nightmares linked to witchcraft often leave you waking up with a sense of unease that lingers throughout the day.
Financial and Relationship Troubles
Has your life suddenly spiraled into chaos? If your finances are inexplicably dwindling or your relationships are falling apart for no clear reason, these could be the marks of malevolent magic. Witchcraft often targets areas of personal importance, such as money, love, or family, causing unexplained arguments, financial losses, or even job instability. If your life was previously stable and these issues arise out of nowhere, it may be a sign that someone has cast a spell against you.
Unusual Animal Behavior
Animals are sensitive to energies that humans often cannot perceive. If pets suddenly behave strangely around you, especially showing fear or aggression where there was none before, it may be a sign of witchcraft. For instance, a dog that suddenly starts barking or growling at an empty corner of the room or a cat that hisses and avoids certain areas may be reacting to spiritual presences or energies that are harmful. In some cultures, it’s believed that animals can act as guardians, warning you of impending danger from unseen forces.
Strange Objects Found Around You
Discovering odd items like bones, feathers, or unfamiliar powders in or near your home might indicate that someone has placed a hex or curse on you. Such objects are often used in spells and rituals to harm or control the target. For example, finding a bundle of sticks tied with red thread under your doorstep or a small cloth bag filled with herbs in your garden could signify that someone is trying to manipulate your life through magical means.
Ritual abuse is an extreme, sadistic form of abuse of children and non-consenting adults.
When a person has been targeted to be put to death, through ritualistic ceremony, by a religious sector, occult organization, by burying the victims phot in a graveyard, by performing animal, and gross sexual group activities to cause the victim to die. Victims typically will experience unusual appearance of dirt that surface on the skin, severe spiritual attacks, human astral intrusion attacks, spiritual diseases that cannot be explain, such as sudden onset of muteness, deafness, crippling, unusual large animal defecations, or inability to defecate. Unusual vomiting, nausea, migraine headaches, excessive weight gain, excessive weight loss, without a cause. Foul odors in household and body, that spell like rotten eggs & Sulphur, animal & urine feces, Skunk like smells, smells of the bottom of the Ocean in household, smells of human & animal Death.
Ritual abuse trafficking (aka, satanic ritual abuse, organized ritual abuse, or ritual abuse ) of children represents some of the most disturbing and complex forms of exploitation. These heinous acts, often shrouded in secrecy and deeply intertwined with organized crime, involve psychological, physical, and emotional manipulation that devastates young lives. Ritual abuse involves repeated abuse within a ritualistic or ceremonial context, sometimes invoking symbols, beliefs, or practices that are leveraged to control and traumatize victims. Trafficking, on the other hand, refers to the recruitment, transportation, and exploitation of individuals, particularly vulnerable children, who are deprived of their rights and subjected to abuse and exploitation.
Characteristics of Ritual Abuse
Ritual abuse generally shares several characteristics, including:
Secrecy and Manipulation: Ritual abuse often occurs in closed groups or hidden networks that control and manipulate victims, instilling fear of reprisal.
Symbolism and Coercion: Abusers use symbolic language, ceremonies, or objects to create a sense of control and dependency among victims, convincing them of the power or danger posed by the abusers.
Psychological Tactics: Isolation, fear induction, and gaslighting are often used to erode the victim’s perception of reality and create dependency on the abuser. Ritual abuse differentiates from other forms of abuse in that it typically involves repeated, intentional psychological manipulation combined with ritualistic acts that reinforce the trauma. This type of abuse can be found in various settings, including secretive organizations and criminal networks, where such tactics serve to dominate and silence victims.
Organized Religious Ritual Abuse (ORA) is a form of sexual violence where multiple adults conspire to sexually abuse one or more children. This form of abuse is often linked to religious or ideological beliefs, where the abuse is presented as part of a ritual or ceremony. Victims may be coerced into participating in these acts, which can include physical, emotional, and sexual abuse, often justified by religious dogma. The abuse can occur in various contexts, including religious holidays, worship ceremonies, and even in the name of political ideologies. Survivors of ORA often experience complex trauma, including affect dysregulation, structural dissociation, and disorganized attachment patterns
Child abuse is any act or failure to act by a caregiver that causes or risks harm to a child under 18, including physical, sexual, emotional abuse, and neglect. Child abuse refers to the maltreatment of a child by a parent, caregiver, or another person in a custodial role, which results in actual harm, potential harm, or threat of harm to the child. It can occur in the home, schools, or other environments where children interact with adults
Elder abuse is any act or lack of action within a trusted relationship that causes harm or distress to an older person. Elder abuse, also known as abuse of older people, occurs when an older adult experiences harm or distress due to the actions—or inactions—of someone they trust, such as family members, caregivers, or professionals. It can happen once or repeatedly and often goes unreported due to fear, shame, or dependency on the abuser.
Forms of Elder Abuse
Physical Abuse: Inflicting bodily harm, such as hitting, pushing, or inappropriate restraint, which may result in bruises, fractures, or other injuries.
Emotional or Psychological Abuse: Intimidation, humiliation, verbal assaults, threats, or isolation, causing fear, anxiety, or withdrawal.
Financial Abuse: Exploiting an elder’s money, property, or assets, including coercion to change wills, misuse of powers of attorney, or scams.
Neglect: Failing to provide necessary care, such as withholding food, medication, hygiene, or medical attention.
Sexual Abuse: Non-consensual sexual contact or exploitation.
Self-Neglect: When an older person is unable or unwilling to care for themselves, potentially endangering their health or safety.
Organizational Abuse: Poor practices or neglect within institutions like nursing homes or care facilities.
Modern Slavery: Includes human trafficking, domestic servitude, or forced labor affecting older adults.
Psychiatric abuse refers to the intentional misuse of psychiatric knowledge, practices, or authority to harm, control, or suppress individuals, often violating ethical and human rights standards.
Definition and Forms
Psychiatric abuse occurs when mental health professionals intentionally apply psychiatric knowledge, skills, or technology in ways that do not serve the patient’s interests or actively cause harm. This can includes: Inappropriate use of medications: Prescribing excessive doses, wrong medications, or using drugs as a form of control or punishment, potentially causing physical harm, dependence, or psychological trauma.
Improper use of restraints and seclusion: Using physical or chemical restraints excessively or without justification, leading to physical injury or emotional distress.
Physical and verbal abuse: Direct mistreatment of patients within psychiatric facilities or community settings.
Political or ideological abuse: Diagnosing individuals as mentally ill to suppress dissent, incarcerate political opponents, or discredit ideas, often bypassing legal protections.
Psychological abuse is a form of abuse where a person intentionally manipulates, controls, or harms another’s mental and emotional well-being.
Definition and Overview
Psychological abuse, also known as emotional or mental abuse, involves behaviors that cause psychological trauma, such as anxiety, depression, or post-traumatic stress disorder. It often occurs in relationships where one person seeks to control, intimidate, or isolate another, and can happen in romantic, familial, workplace, or caregiving contexts. Unlike physical abuse, psychological abuse may not leave visible marks, making it harder to detect.
Human sex trafficking is a form of modern slavery where individuals are coerced, deceived, or forced into commercial sexual exploitation. Sex trafficking is a type of human trafficking that involves the recruitment, harboring, transportation, provision, or obtaining of a person for commercial sex acts through force, fraud, or coercion, or when the victim is under 18 years old, regardless of coercion (22 U.S.C. § 7102). It is considered a serious crime and a public health issue, affecting individuals, families, and communities. Any commercial sexual activity involving minors is legally classified as sex trafficking, as children cannot consent.
Homeland Security
Victims of sex trafficking can be anyone, regardless of age, gender, race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, citizenship, or socioeconomic status. Traffickers often target vulnerable populations, including runaway or homeless youth, individuals in poverty, migrants, LGBTQI+ individuals, and those lacking stable housing or legal status. Victims are frequently deceived with promises of love, employment, or a better life, and are then trapped through physical abuse, threats, isolation, debt bondage, or manipulation.
U.S. Department of Justice
Sex traffickers can be anyone, including relatives, romantic partners, acquaintances, or organized criminal networks. They exploit victims for profit, often using emotional, financial, or physical control. Traffickers may operate in public-facing businesses such as massage parlors, nail salons, or near military bases, as well as online platforms. The common factor among traffickers is the pursuit of financial gain at the expense of victims.
Homeland Security
Methods of Control-Traffickers maintain control through force, threats, fraud, and coercion, including withholding money, documents, or basic necessities, and using addictive substances to create dependency. Victims may be confined in homes, businesses, or public spaces, and are often isolated from family and support networks. Psychological manipulation and fear are key tools to prevent escape. Globally, an estimated 27.6 million people are victims of human trafficking, with a significant portion subjected to sexual exploitation. In the United States, sex trafficking occurs in all 50 states, including tribal lands and U.S. territories, though exact numbers are difficult to determine due to the covert nature of the crime. Domestic minor sex trafficking (DMST) often involves children aged 12 to 14 years, with victims frequently coming from impoverished or marginalized backgrounds.
Homeland Security/ Signs and Indicators
Common indicators of sex trafficking include: Physical signs: malnourishment, exhaustion, injuries, or inappropriate clothing for the environment.
Behavioral signs: fear, anxiety, submissiveness, avoidance of eye contact, or withdrawal from social interactions.
Living and work conditions: overcrowded or surveilled housing, long work hours, little or no pay, and restricted freedom.
Sexual abuse is any unwanted sexual contact or behavior obtained through force, threats, or when a person cannot consent.
Definition and Scope
Sexual abuse occurs when sexual activity happens without consent, including situations where the victim is unable to give consent due to age, intoxication, or vulnerability. It is not limited to physical acts; it also encompasses non-contact behaviors such as sexual harassment, verbal sexual assault, exposing someone to pornography, or distributing sexual images without consent (revenge porn),. Child sexual abuse and sexual coercion are also forms of sexual abuse.
Common Perpetrators
Most survivors know their abuser, who may be a friend, intimate partner, coworker, neighbor, or family member. For women, intimate partners are often the abuser, while men are more likely to be abused by acquaintances. Sexual abuse is frequently used as a method of power and control, often alongside physical, emotional, or financial abuse.
Forms of Sexual Abuse
Sexual abuse can take many forms, including Complete or attempted sexual acts (vaginal, anal, or oral intercourse)
Touching or hurting private areas
Non-contact abuse (exposing genitals, forcing someone to watch pornography)
Reproductive coercion (forcing pregnancy or preventing birth control use)
Exploitation of vulnerable individuals (children, incapacitated adults, or unconscious persons)
Distribution of sexual images without consent (revenge porn)
These behaviors may also involve coercion in front of children or within family settings, constituting incest or child sexual abuse
Negligence is a failure to exercise reasonable care causing harm, while malpractice is a professional’s failure to meet the specialized standard of care, resulting in injury.
Definition of Negligence
Negligence occurs when a person fails to act with the level of care that a reasonably prudent person would exercise in similar circumstances, leading to harm or injury. To establish negligence, four elements must be proven: duty of care, breach of that duty, causation linking the breach to the harm, and actual damages suffered by the victim. Examples include a driver running a red light causing an accident or a homeowner failing to maintain safe premises, resulting in injury to a visitor.
Definition of Malpractice
Malpractice is a specific type of negligence committed by a professional, such as a doctor, lawyer, or accountant. It occurs when a professional’s actions fall below the accepted standard of practice in their field, causing harm to a client or patient. Unlike general negligence, malpractice is judged against the professional standard of care, which considers what a reasonably skilled and competent professional in the same field would have done under similar circumstances.
Scope: Negligence can be committed by anyone, while malpractice is limited to licensed professionals providing specialized services.
Standard of Care: Negligence uses the “reasonable person” standard; malpractice uses the “reasonable professional” standard.
Intent: Medical negligence often involves unintentional errors, whereas malpractice may involve recklessness or awareness of potential harm.
Examples in Medicine: Negligence includes misdiagnosis, surgical errors, or failure to obtain informed consent without intent to harm. Malpractice may involve prescribing harmful medication knowingly, operating under the influence, or ignoring critical test results.
Legal Implications
Both negligence and malpractice can lead to claims for compensation if harm occurs. In medical contexts, claimants must demonstrate that the professional owed a duty of care, breached that duty, and caused significant harm. Malpractice claims often require expert testimony to establish the professional standard of care and prove that it was violated.

Liability and Patient Suicide- The legal landscape surrounding suicide malpractice lawsuits is complex and evolving. Psychiatrists and healthcare providers have a duty to assess suicide risk and take reasonable precautions to protect patients. However, the foreseeability of harm is a critical factor in determining liability. In some cases, healthcare providers may be held liable for malpractice if they failed to conduct a competent suicide risk assessment or failed to protect a patient from suicide.
Recent cases have highlighted the challenges in proving negligence in suicide-related malpractice lawsuits. For instance, a jury found that a supervising physician and PA were proximately responsible for a patient's suicide, but the Supreme Court of Texas reversed the judgment, emphasizing the importance of considering causation standards in such cases.
The legal community is increasingly recognizing the need for a comprehensive approach to suicide risk assessment and risk management planning to mitigate potential harm. Understanding the nuances of liability and the evolving case law is essential for healthcare providers and legal professionals involved in these cases.
Accident victims have the right to pursue a personal injury claim and recover compensation for losses. But what if an accident is fatal? In those tragic circumstances, a wrongful death claim can help surviving family members recover compensation from those who are to blame.
Wrongful death occurs when a person or entity fails to fulfill a legal duty and causes a death to occur. When this happens, a wrongful death lawsuit can be filed by certain surviving family members or by a personal representative from the estate of the deceased.
In a wrongful death lawsuit, the plaintiff must prove certain things in order to recover compensation. Plaintiffs must prove:
A person or entity behaved negligently or committed an intentional wrongful act
Their actions were the direct cause of a death
There are damages associated with the death
Astral projection, while often portrayed as a harmless or enlightening experience, poses significant spiritual risks. Engaging in astral projection can open doors to spiritual harassment from demonic entities, which may deceive individuals into further bondage. It is often associated with practices rooted in modern witchcraft and the occult, violating God's commandments against such practices and leading to spiritual corruption. The dangers of astral projection include the potential for harm, such as deaths, injuries, hospitalizations, and other damages. These risks highlight the importance of critical thinking and caution when considering astral projection as a spiritual practice.
Astral projection gang stalking. are spiritual & physical criminals who are human introjects, human soul invaders, who project their human spirits out their fleshly bodies to travel into the air, to enter into another person flesh to cause torment, harassment, oppression, spiritual sicknesses, to unsuspecting individuals, inducing fear, confusion, and unexplained illnesses. These are spiritual attacks causes by high level occultist, who carry the titles of high priest or priestess of wicca or shrine temples who believe they have power over humanity to cause death.
Since the early 1980s, psychologists have been tracking a steady rise in narcissism. Narcissism, Narcissistic are human witches, whose minds are connected to evil spirits called alters, who belong to witch covens that practice witchcraft under the authority of a high priest or priestess that run shrine temples. They are taught how to astral project their human spirits out of their fleshly bodies to spy on victims using astral projection. Another name for them is called monitoring human spirits. These types of people harass, torment, chase, attack victims using their invisible human spirits to unalive victims in the physical realm using as murderers.
Financial thievery refers to the intentional act or omission designed to deceive others, resulting in a loss for the victim and/or a gain for the perpetrator. This can include activities like counterfeiting, cyber-criminality, bribery, money laundering, and social engineering. Financial statement fraud, asset misappropriation, submitting false police reports to the victim banks to get them to transfer money to them, obtaining falsified statements to Judges to obtain a court order to steal money out of the victims’ banks. These types of corruptions are known from occult organizations, witch covens, Shriners, secret societies who are criminals, are the three main types of occupational fraud that can occur within organizations. These frauds can significantly impact the organization's financial health and reputation, leading to financial losses and damage to the organization's ability to fulfill its mission.
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