FAIR - Fighting Against Institutionalized Railroading

FAIR - Fighting Against Institutionalized Railroading

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05/01/2026

7 MORE DAYS‼️‼️‼️‼️

04/24/2026

I talked to KK Yesterday and he scolded me saying “Your journey started with us my 🥷You stopped helping. By posting me the other day, God is telling you to pause everything else and go back to your roots. US! Go back to the beginning. Apply everything you’ve learned and fight for us. It’s been long enough!” Then he ended the call frustrated.

I didn’t argue. They put so much trust in me but that in itself is difficult. Especially when I don’t know what else to do. I just meditated and prayed over what he was saying.

So let’s take a journey back in time, shall we!

On September 2019, I viewed a petition on Facebook. It was written by the brother of Mangwiro “Iz” Sadiki-Israel. I read it. It said he was facing life for bank fraud. I didn’t feel life was fair for this type of crime, so I signed. The bottom of the petition asked for $20. I gave it. But at the bottom of that petition was something more important than a donation request—it was a GTL account, a way to reach him directly.
So I did. I simply wanted confirmation that he received the money.

What started as a message turned into video visits while he was being held in Lovejoy. And from there, everything changed. Many of you watched it unfold in real time—on social media, through every call, every visit, every attempt I made to fight not just for him, but for everyone connected to this case who reached out for help.

Now, fast forward to today.
Everyone has been sentenced and serving time in different facilities. And now we can speak plainly.

Here is the truth:
Three people in this case had absolutely no guilt and were not named or mentioned in the FBI investigation reports. However, they did bring false witness to give testimony against them. None of their testimonies matched the FBI’s report.

Two of those three were convicted of only Count 1 of the RICO- being affiliated with an enterprise. (1st amendment should have been argued in their defense.) That alone raises serious legal questions. Because under RICO, a conviction requires a pattern—participation in at least two qualifying criminal acts of racketeering tied to this enterprise. That standard was not met.

Most of the individuals from Georgia were tied to low-level offenses—matters that should have been handled at the state level, not escalated into a sweeping federal-style RICO prosecution.

Take Lewis (OG) Mobley. He was already incarcerated. He was deemed incompetent to stand trial. He was not even part of the FBI’s original investigation. Yet somehow, an old case—where he had already been found not guilty on —was pulled in and used against him in this RICO case.

That is not justice. That is overreach.

Only two individuals in this entire case were convicted of crimes that could justify federal time. And even then, if pre-trial assessments were not done using RICO, none of them should have received sentences exceeding ten years.

And most importantly—the so-called “enterprise” did not materially benefit from the individual, minor offenses committed. Without that connection, this case does not meet the legal threshold for RICO. Lastly they pulled a murder case in that did not involve ANY of the defendants and added murder enhancements so that the time could exceed the 25 year minimum for RICO Convictions

Let’s talk about how this case was built.

The District Attorney reached across multiple states, pulling together men and women under the claim of a single enterprise. Many of these individuals had never met. Some still have not. They only learned each other’s names after being arrested and reading the indictment. Some met their co-defendants during federal transitions to other facilities.

That alone should raise concern.

The face of this case—the headliner—was a former police officer, accused of orchestrating murders for this so-called enterprise.

But in court?
No one knew him.
No one had heard of him.
Except one person—and that was only because he had once worked security at an event.

There was no evidence or statement supporting the prosecution’s claim that he was the hitman.

That is the foundation this case was built on.

In two weeks, it will mark ten years.
Ten years these men have been incarcerated.
And what are we doing?
Posting hashtags.

Enough is enough.

Cito’s mother. Shake’s wife. Spike’s sister. And Myself.
We have all been fighting—individually, tirelessly.

But it’s time to come together.
Because there is nothing more powerful than unified voices—especially when those voices belong to women and men standing in truth, in strength, and in righteousness.

We need you.
They have had them long enough.
It’s time to bring them home.

I believe in accountability. Crime should be punished.
But I also believe that those who enforce the law must follow it—honor their oath, respect due process, and uphold the very system they represent.

And when they don’t—
it is our responsibility to speak.
To stand.
To fight.
And to demand justice.

Or we can continue to wait to become victims of this unjust system

Before you say this will never happen to you

Remember, wrongful convictions are overturned almost every day and take decades to undo. I don’t want that for myself or my family

If you or your loved one was apart of this case or had similar issues dealing with these state and federal courts.

It’s time to end the silence and take a stand

We will be at Liberty Plaza in Atlanta on May 8th standing in solidarity for all who have undergone these types of injustices and more

And most importantly for all housed in facilities that are inhumane, extremely dangerous, understaffed, with rising death rates

Join us May 8.

We need EVERYBODY ‼️

04/19/2026

I’ve been getting a lot of messages about Kevin “OGKK” Clayton, so let me address this clearly.

Yes, I reached out to him. He told me people have been saying I don’t post about him anymore, and that it might be “too risky” for me to speak on his case while running for public office.

Let me be very clear: I have never been the type to stay quiet out of fear. Not for power, not for politics, not for anybody. If it’s the truth, I’m going to say it—period. I don’t care how uncomfortable it makes people. I don’t care who doesn’t like it.

Now let me ask a real question—are people actually advocating for him, or just posting for attention? Because too many people will sit and watch a documentary filled with misinformation, but won’t take the time to hear the truth from the people actually fighting the case.

Here are the facts:

OGKK being a GD is not illegal. According to the FBI’s own investigation, his name was not even mentioned in pre-trial documents. He was brought into the case based on false statements—word-of-mouth, not evidence. Because he had name recognition, he became a target.

There was no physical evidence tying him to criminal acts. None.

I have personally reviewed his sentencing transcripts, pre-trial screening report, and appeal records. I was the only person sitting in that courtroom during his appeal hearing. I organized a rally for him and the others on his case back in 2020—and nobody showed up. Not even family.

Let that sink in.

Under RICO law, you must be found guilty of at least two predicate acts to sustain a conviction. OGKK was not. He was convicted solely on alleged association, and then hit with a murder enhancement tied to someone else’s actions—someone who wasn’t even originally named in a murder investigation.

This case was built by pulling together over 40 individuals—many of whom didn’t even know each other—and forcing a narrative to fit a RICO charge. That’s not justice. That’s strategy.

And when it came time for post-conviction? Instead of stepping aside, the same prosecutor stayed involved, protecting the case all the way through—until these men ran out of options without new evidence.

If you say you love OGKK and none of this moves you, then you need to ask yourself what that love really looks like.

I’ve had real conversations with him. I’ve cried with him. I’ve fought for him when nobody else was standing there. And I’m still fighting.

Running for office doesn’t silence me—it strengthens my ability to fight. Not just for him, but for cases like his across this country.

So don’t question whether I’m speaking. Pay attention to whether you are.

04/09/2026

KNOW THE TRUTH: FREEDOM OF ASSOCIATION

“I have the right to associate.”
Yes—you do.

But don’t let that truth be twisted.

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What the Law ACTUALLY Says

Under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, you have the right to:

✔ Join groups
✔ Build relationships
✔ Stand with others who share your beliefs

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But Here’s the Line You CANNOT CROSS

🚫 Freedom of association does NOT protect criminal activity
🚫 You cannot use “association” as a shield for illegal behavior
🚫 Being part of crime—even in a group—can get you charged

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REALITY CHECK

If a group is involved in crime and you:
⚠️ Participate
⚠️ Help plan
⚠️ Benefit from it

You can be held accountable under laws like the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act.

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THE TRUTH IN ONE SENTENCE

You have the right to associate.
You do NOT have the right to break the law.

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CHOOSE WISELY

Who you stand with matters.
Your future depends on it.

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**KNOW YOUR RIGHTS. PROTECT YOUR FUTURE.

03/14/2026

🚨 GEORGIA — A HISTORIC MOMENT IS COMING

Some men and women in Georgia have served 20… 30… even 40 years in prison.

During that time, many of them have:
• Earned degrees
• Completed every rehabilitation program available
• Mentored younger inmates
• Found faith
• Taken full responsibility for their past
• Completely transformed their lives

Yet despite decades of change, Georgia law often leaves them with no real path to prove they deserve a second chance.

That is about to change.

I’ve written one of the most comprehensive justice reform bills our state has ever seen:
The Georgia Second Chance and Smart Justice Reform Act

This legislation recognizes something simple but powerful: people can change.

This bill will:
• Recognize decades of rehabilitation
• Allow long-serving individuals to have their sentences reviewed
• Create compassionate and geriatric release when public safety allows
• Provide job training, housing support, and community resources for returning citizens
• Ensure victims remain informed and respected throughout the process

Justice should protect society — but it should also recognize growth, redemption, and transformation.

When truly rehabilitated people are given a second chance:
• Families are reunited
• Communities grow stronger
• Taxpayers save millions
• Justice finally becomes balanced

📍 A Historic Press Conference Is Coming

The law firm representing this bill has requested a press conference at the Georgia State Capitol. We’re waiting for approval from the Georgia Building Authority, and we expect a confirmed date as early as next week.

Once the date is announced, I want the Rotunda filled.

For the first time, I am personally calling on families of incarcerated men and women from across Georgia to come together. Stand for your loved ones. Stand for justice. Stand for second chances.

People will be traveling from across Georgia — and even from other states — to witness what many believe could become a historic turning point in Georgia justice reform.

This moment is bigger than politics.
This is about hope.
This is about redemption.
This is about second chances.

Together, we can show Georgia that rehabilitation should matter.

Stay tuned for the official press conference date — history may be about to happen.

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