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YesToHellWith

YesToHellWith

By: and may TRUTH reign supreme!
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Summary

YesToHellWith is determined to expose the wrongful conviction and imprisonment of Orlando Carter. We are asking that President Trump review this injustice and exonerate Carter.

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Political Science Politics & Government
Episodes
  • Gregory Lockhart and Richard Chema
    May 13 2026

    Lockhart and Chema: The Duty To Verify

    It is May 13, 2026. Welcome to yestohellwith.com.

    Today we begin examining the prosecutors.

    And we begin with Gregory Lockhart and Richard Chema. Gregory Lockhart Richard Chema

    Most Americans believe the prosecutor’s role is simple:

    prove guilt.

    But legally and ethically…

    that is incomplete.

    A federal prosecutor is supposed to serve justice.

    A prosecutor is supposed to independently verify the structure of the case before presenting it to a jury.

    A prosecutor is supposed to function as the firewall between investigation and injustice.

    The four-million-dollar obligation became the foundation of the prosecution.

    So the questions become:

    Did prosecutors independently authenticate the obligation?

    Did prosecutors require the original loan records?

    Did prosecutors independently verify the guaranty structure?

    Did prosecutors distinguish lease structure from loan structure?

    Did prosecutors independently examine corporate authorization and resolutions?

    These questions matter because once prosecutors accept assumptions without independently verifying them…

    those assumptions harden into institutional truth.

    And that truth enters:

    indictments,

    hearings,

    filings,

    and eventually jury instructions.

    The issue is not perfection.

    The issue is whether major structural contradictions were overlooked before a man was sentenced to fifteen years in federal prison.

    Years later:

    the OCC reflected only a $250,000 debt.

    PNC disclaimed the alleged $4 million loan.

    And serious questions emerged concerning whether authenticated proof of the obligation ever existed in the manner presented during trial.

    That raises the obvious question:

    Why were these contradictions not discovered before conviction?

    Because once assumptions are accepted early…

    the prosecution begins building downstream from those assumptions.

    And the courtroom slowly reorganizes itself around the assumption as though it were already established fact.

    That is the danger.

    The courtroom stops asking:

    “Was the structure independently proven?”

    And instead begins asking:

    “How do we prove the defendant concealed the structure?”

    This episode is not merely about Gregory Lockhart and Richard Chema personally.

    This episode is about the prosecutorial function itself.

    Because prosecutors possess extraordinary discretion.

    They decide:

    which theories move forward,

    which evidence matters,

    which contradictions receive attention,

    and which assumptions become courtroom reality.

    The prosecution moved forward despite foundational structural weaknesses that later became increasingly difficult to reconcile.

    And instead of revisiting the underlying structure…

    the system defended the record itself.

    That progression starts here.

    With the original assumptions.

    With the original prosecutors.

    And with the failure to independently verify the foundation before criminal enforcement moved forward.

    Because once assumptions enter the courtroom…

    they begin transforming into official judicial history.

    And as always…

    may truth reign supreme.



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    3 mins
  • The POWER of Presumptions
    May 12 2026
    The Courtroom NarrativeIt is May 11, 2026. Welcome to yestohellwith.com.Today we discuss one of the most important realities in modern prosecution.The courtroom is where Presumptions become official history.Let’s understand something:Jurors do not walk into court as blank slates.They already carry institutional assumptions.They assume:the FBI investigated properly,prosecutors verified the evidence,the bank’s records are authentic,the government would not bring the case unless the underlying structure was real,and the courtroom itself would somehow prevent unsupported allegations from ever reaching trial.But in the Carter case, that assumption itself allegedly became part of the structural problem.Because according to the later filings…the alleged four-million-dollar obligation became the centerpiece of the prosecution narrative.And once that obligation was treated as established…large portions of the rest of the case flowed automatically from it.Now think carefully about what happens psychologically inside a courtroom.Once jurors hear:“loan,”“guaranty,”“bank loss,”“fraud,”“federal investigation,”they naturally begin assuming the underlying structure already exists.The courtroom environment itself creates momentum.That momentum hardened Presumptions into accepted reality before the foundational obligation was independently verified in the manner the public expects.Now understand something important.Witness testimony about a transaction is not the same thing as authenticated proof that the underlying obligation lawfully existed.Those are not the same thing.Yet the prosecution relied heavily upon witness interpretation, narrative framing, and institutional conclusions.And this is where the earlier prosecutor series becomes extremely important.Because we previously discussed the difference between:Narrative.And proof.Narrative creates emotional coherence.Proof independently establishes structure.In the Carter case, that distinction allegedly collapsed inside the courtroom.Now let us slow this down even further.If the jury assumes the obligation already existed…then the case quietly shifts away from:“Was the obligation real?”and toward:“Did the defendant conceal it?”That shift changes the entire burden structure psychologically.Because now the defendant is no longer defending against an unproven premise.The defendant is defending against a premise already emotionally accepted inside the courtroom.And that is exactly why the courtroom stage became so important years later.Because once the narrative entered the judicial record…future prosecutors and institutions merely defended that record rather than independently re-examining the original structure beneath it.What does this mean?Once presumptions become:trial exhibits,testimony,jury findings,judicial statements,and appellate records,those very presumptions begin acquiring institutional permanence.And eventually…future officials do what prior officials did: They never ask:“Was the original obligation independently verified?”Rather, they ask:“How do we preserve the conviction?”That is the danger this episode is designed to expose. Why?Because later contradictions emerged concerning the alleged obligation itself.The OCC reflected only a $250,000 obligation.PNC later stated it never asserted the existence of the alleged four-million-dollar loan.And authenticated records remained unresolved.But by then…the narrative had already become “the record.”And once something becomes “the record”…challenging it becomes nearly impossible.Let me be clear. This is not merely about one prosecution.This is a structural warning.Because once courtroom narratives harden into official reality…later institutions often become psychologically and institutionally invested in preserving continuity rather than independently revisiting the foundation.And that is precisely what allegedly happened here.Next episode…Gregory Lockhart and Richard Chema.Because prosecutors are not merely advocates.They are supposed to be ministers of justice.And that means their duty is not merely to win.Their duty is to verify.And as always…may truth reign supreme. Get full access to YesToHellWith at yestohellwith.substack.com/subscribe
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    6 mins
  • PNC Bank committed a crime?
    May 12 2026

    When A Bank Becomes The Victim

    It is May 12, 2026. Welcome to yestohellwith.com.

    Today we examine something extremely important.

    What happens when the government accepts the narrative of a major financial institution without independently challenging the structure beneath it?

    That is exactly what occurred.

    Now understand carefully.

    Banks possess enormous institutional credibility.

    Jurors trust banks.

    Investigators trust banks.

    Prosecutors trust banks.

    Courts often presume banks maintain accurate records.

    And once a bank identifies itself as the “victim”…

    that designation carries tremendous weight.

    But under the Liberty Dialogues framework, no institution is supposed to be exempt from proof.

    Not even a bank.

    The question is not:

    “What did the bank say?”

    The question is:

    “What can the bank prove?”

    Now according to what I have in my possession, major structural contradictions emerged from the outset and years later, OCC correspondence reportedly reflected only a two-hundred-fifty-thousand-dollar obligation on file.

    Not four million.

    And then later still…

    PNC filed a judicial statement declaring:

    “PNC does not and never has asserted that it made a $4 million loan to CBST.”

    Now think carefully about what that means.

    Because if the bank itself later states it never asserted the existence of the alleged four-million-dollar loan…

    then what exactly was the FBI and DOJ prosecuting?

    This becomes one of the central questions of the entire series.

    The OCC, which oversees national banks, reflected only a $250,000 debt.

    PNC later reportedly disclaimed the four-million-dollar loan.

    And authenticated records allegedly proving the obligation have never been publicly reconciled.

    Now this is where the public must slow down.

    Because this series is not claiming that every banking irregularity proves innocence.

    The issue is far more structural.

    The issue is whether investigators and prosecutors independently verified the alleged obligation before transforming it into a federal criminal case.

    And according to the Carter materials…

    that verification never occurred.

    Now here is where the danger becomes obvious.

    Once the FBI accepts the bank’s narrative…

    then prosecutors inherit it.

    Once prosecutors inherit it…

    then the courtroom inherits it.

    Once the courtroom inherits it…

    then jurors presume the underlying structure was already verified.

    And eventually…

    assumption becomes reality.

    This is why institutional prestige matters.

    Because people stop asking:

    “Was the obligation independently proven?”

    And instead begin assuming:

    “Surely the government already checked.”

    But according to the later filings and OCC materials…

    that assumption was dangerously misplaced.

    Now understand something else carefully.

    Banks are not merely private institutions.

    Large national banks often operate with enormous influence inside federal investigations because investigators naturally presume:

    the bank’s internal records are accurate,

    its personnel are reliable,

    its narratives are credible,

    and its representations were independently created in good faith.

    However, that presumption itself became part of the structural problem.

    Because according to the later filings:

    the prosecution centered around an alleged four-million-dollar obligation.

    I will say it plainly. Years later, PNC Bank admitted in writing to the OCC that thre was only a $250,000 obligation,

    and PNC provided authenticated records, from the records custodian that there was no $4 million loan. That contradiction changes everything.

    Because now the issue is no longer merely whether mistakes occurred.

    The issue becomes whether investigators and prosecutors allowed institutional prestige to substitute for independent verification.

    And that is one of the most dangerous things that can happen inside any justice system.

    Because once prestige replaces proof…

    the burden quietly shifts away from the government.

    The public begins trusting the institution instead of demanding verification of the structure itself.

    that is exactly what happened here.

    Next episode…

    The Courtroom Narrative.

    And we discuss how assumptions become official history once they enter the courtroom and harden into “the record.”

    And as always…

    may truth reign supreme.



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    6 mins
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