

We have now reached 500 signatures. That is 500 people standing together to demand justice for my grandmother. Her voice was taken from her, but she has not been silenced.
This case has already been reviewed by the responding officer, his sergeant, and the Deputy State’s Attorney. Each recognized that it could not be dismissed. It has now been formally sent to the Criminal Investigations Division, where a detective is investigating. What they did is now part of the official record. This is only the beginning of accountability.
Those responsible had an opportunity to be accountable. This could have been resolved with a simple deed restitution, by restoring the property in line with my grandmother’s notarized will. Instead, they chose to double down. They blocked me. They went silent. They insulted me. They attacked my character rather than confront the evidence. They minimized what this was, as if forgery, perjury, and the rewriting of a dying woman’s wishes were nothing more than a family dispute. They still believe they did nothing wrong. That is not just denial. That is evil.
I want to remind everyone what this actually means. To be erased from your own grandmother’s will is not about money. It is about being cut out of your family by fraud. It is about being told that your place, your bond, your relationship never mattered. My grandmother was not a distant figure in my life. She was a second home, a caretaker, and a constant presence in my upbringing. We spent countless hours together, and she shaped who I am. That is the weight of what they did. It is the act of erasing someone’s place in their own family, as if their love and their life never existed.
500 signatures means this story is no longer hidden. It is out in the open, and it is being investigated. To everyone who has signed and shared, thank you. You are proving that justice cannot be buried and that the dying deserve protection, not exploitation.
-Eric