Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Maureen Steele, who, along with Anne vander Steele, the co
founders of the American Maid Foundation. And you've got a
new movie that is premiering soon. It's called Taken State
Sanctioned Kidnapping. I hear there's a big premiere looming too,
in just a couple of days.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
On Sunday, September seventh, that's the premiere. And it's a
documentary that features the Rivera family, parents who lost their
five children to CPS, based off of lives. An extraordinary story,
but sadly it's not a one off. I literally have
hundreds of these cases in my inbox. This is going
(00:40):
on all over the country. Families are getting ripped apart
and children are getting you kidnapped by the state.
Speaker 1 (00:49):
Yeah, it's interesting. I don't have hundreds. I got a
handful over my years doing news talk radio. I played
a role in one a couple of years ago. A
listener who at one point, you know, I'm stationed here
in Connecticut. I do my show out to Connecticut. Maybe
you don't know that you're very busy these days doing
(01:09):
very important work. This is really important stuff. And the
woman had relocated. The mom had relocated to Florida, but
she got victimized by the Department of by DCYF herself
and pulled her family of power lost the child. The
word kidnapping wasn't used though. I mean, I agree with
(01:32):
you that word works, but that wasn't the term. I
don't know that that's a widely accepted term for what's
going on here. Do you feel that it is or
is it a little harsh or misleading?
Speaker 2 (01:47):
Maybe I don't think so. In fact, DC or DCYF
CPS themselves claimed to Texas because this case crossed state
line from Massachusetts detective to Texas. That's what they told
Texas that this was familial kidnapping, is what they called it.
When they had no They had never served this family.
(02:10):
There was no due process. They never had a hearing
where a judge said custody of these children is being
granted to the Department of Children using families that never happened.
So they fabricated evidence, allied. They had this family arrested
at gunpoint with ten police officers pointing weapons at this
innocent family. The children were terrorized, five of them and
(02:33):
all the children were taken back to Massachusetts and Texas
incarcerated the mother and father for thirty days on two
point five million dollars bill each. There are rapists and
murderers that don't get bail set like that, and these
people had no crime stealing your own children. How do
two parents steal their own children? And how does a
state claim they have that they stole them from the
(02:56):
state when the state never had custody of them. But
these sorts of stories are commonplace to the average person.
This is extraordinary. But this is going on in every
state around the country, but unfortunately Massachusetts is particularly egregious
when it comes to this. They currently have ten thousand
children in their system that are in CPS custody. And
(03:21):
a friend of mine who's an excellent researcher, his name
is Rom Bouchard of a group called We the People Too,
and they did all the research on this. Thirty nine
out of ten thousand kids were taken properly and with
just cause and taken lawfully. All the others were It
was judicial malfeasons. It was malfeasons on the behalf of CPS.
(03:44):
And also President Trump in twenty nineteen signed in executive
order that children should no longer be taken out of
their homes if there is an issue in the family,
that all services should be provided in home to try
to keep these families in tact if they need supports
or what have you. So, but CPS, because they operate
(04:05):
in the dark, just bypasses this along with the Chevron
defference which was overturned in July of twenty twenty four,
which basically said, these agencies can no longer make law,
interpret law, and judges by the way, you can no
longer rubber stamp what they say. But the judges are
nothing but criminal and criminals and black robes in these
(04:26):
lower courts, you know, just sidestep that as well. So
you know, we're we're out to expose that, we're out
to abolish CPS and abolish these lower courts. And really
we have court cases now, we're going to be launching
one actually in Massachusetts with this case. We were hoping
(04:47):
to file it the day after the premiere, suing the
judge and in CPS, you know, the head of CPS
for for these you know, these crimes, and really it's
stepp of rights under color of law.
Speaker 1 (05:03):
How dirty does this get to? Maureen? So, CBS is
Child Protective Services and you know the line right here.
Most people don't realize removing children from their homes is
not just an act of state intervention. That's a guy
sometimes some of the guys of state intervention. But it's
a multi billion dollar industry. Does it get as dirty
(05:26):
as Look, I've got a hot you know, an affluent
family they're looking to adopt. This is the perfect fit here.
We can pluck this kid right out of this house
that we're dealing with. There's neglect, they're a mess, and
I get a piece of this adoption. Is that part
of what's going on here?
Speaker 2 (05:46):
Oh, that's absolutely part of what's going on. And the
judges are in on it. The cops are in on it,
the sheriffs are in on it. The cops, the lawyers
are in on it.
Speaker 1 (05:54):
Oh you bet everybody's breaking off a piece.
Speaker 2 (05:58):
They're all getting greased your children, And you know, and
and the way the statutes are written is and this,
you know, if you look at this from a legal perspective,
if this was a criminal court, that's just hearsay. You know,
a teacher going, well, he had a bruise on him. Oh, well,
I think there, I think the parents in neglect. Well,
I saw the get outside without a jacket, and it
(06:20):
was forty degrees out all the while. The kids out
playing football with his brothers on the front lawn. And
if you've ever raised kids, they're out in the fall,
it's cold, but they're running around and they toss their
jacket aside. And but this, that's enough, That is enough,
one phone call like that for CPS to make the
excuse to come in and take your children. And then
the parents are labeled abusers. They have all these hoops
(06:42):
they have to jump through. Usually the kids are gone
for at least a year if you're lucky. If you're
not so lucky, you never see your kids again. Hillary
Clinton started this, what a surprise with the Adoption and
Say Families Act, which was nothing, nothing about adoption and
Say Families at all. It was about a pipeline to
(07:04):
kidnap children. If this is an eighty billion dollar a
year industry, and Vinnie, you're right, because once this starts,
it's once you start pulling this thread, it kind of
connects to so many other things. It connects to NGOs,
it connects to Catholic charities, it connects to the border,
it connects to the elite, It connects to Washington. This
(07:26):
is a huge industry and the United States of America
is the number one consumer of child sex slaves. We
are also the foster care system is the number one
supplier of children into the sex slave industry. So that's
that's an astounding figure. Also, big farms involved in this,
(07:46):
aren't they just involved in everything?
Speaker 1 (07:48):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (07:49):
Eight percent? Yeah, eighty five percent of children in foster
care and under CPS care are medicated and eighty five
percent of children foster care are abused physically or sexually.
These are astonishing figures. So most of these kids are
being taken from good families and this is all based
(08:10):
on hearsay. You know, they weren't wearing a jacket or
what have you. And now the kids are abused. So
the child, if you ever get your child back, it's
not the child that was taken. This child is traumatized
by the system.
Speaker 1 (08:25):
Yeah, now that's kind of wild to me. And again
Ron with Maureen Steele here, co founder of the American
Made Foundation. We're talking about a film taken state sanctioned kidnapping.
When you say these are good families, these are parents
who give a damn, you know, these are you know,
there's a mom and a dad in place, and it's
the nonsense of people phoning in, Hey, I'm seeing they're
(08:47):
not wearing a jacket. This kid's not being treated well
because there are so many kids who would be easier.
You know, I could see someone working with working for
DCYF or CPS and they're like, oh, this kid's right,
nobody's keeping an eye on them. There'd be considerably less
(09:09):
of a fight. They're looking. They're getting bigger fights here
when you're targeting a child in a family where mom
and dad are on board and care. Why aren't they
targeting the kids because there are so many who there's
We had a story right here in Connecticut. I don't
know if it ever reached you. It should have. It
went national. It was a child who was pulled out
(09:30):
of school at eleven years old. Nobody arched an eyebrow.
That child is now thirty two years old, was imprisoned
in their own home. The father passed away a year later.
This year lights his bedroom on fire. He's emaciated, his
teeth have rotted, He's been completely imprisoned in his own home. DCYF.
(09:53):
He fell right through their cracks because they do a
horrible job. Nobody knew he was in this bedroom. He
had lighted on fire to get to break free. He'd
be ripe for you know, you'd think it would be
kids in situations like that. I mean, he's a grown
man now, but he spent decades with nobody even looking
(10:14):
for him. Teachers, neighbors, parents of friends he was playing with.
So it surprises me to hear you say, Viny, this
is from good family. I realized the price tag is
probably higher on a kid who's all cleaned up and
has manners and has been you know, mom and dad
have been raising him well. But it would seem harder
(10:37):
to pull off. I don't they do it to.
Speaker 2 (10:40):
They do it to you know, lower income families as well,
and they take his babies and those get about two
million dollars when you sell those children into the sex
slave industry. It's really astonishing. But you know, the judges
are in on it. And that's that's where these lower
(11:01):
courts have just got to They've got to be abolished
to process does not happen. There's no innocence to proven
guilty in these lower courts, and the constitution is just
out the window. But they just rubber stamp cps.
Speaker 1 (11:14):
But how do you get it to a twelve year old,
say a twelve year old Marin who loves his mother
and father and doesn't feel neglected and is like, what's
going on here? Like I want to go home? I
love Like, how does it get pulled off?
Speaker 2 (11:29):
Oh? Because they just they try to. They drug the kids.
That's that's one of the things they do. Because these
kids get angry. You know, you're twelve, you're thirteen years old,
and you love your parents, you had a nice life,
and you are angry. So the kids are acting out.
They're slapping the you know, slapping people, kicking, trying to
run away, and so now they're drugged and that's what happened.
(11:50):
So then they drug the kids and then they try
to These kids are brainwashed sometimes or they just become
helpless and hopeless. You know. Sometimes parents are allowed to
have one hour visits with their child a week, and
that's heart wrenching. The kids are crying, you know, mommy,
give me out of there, Mommy, I want to come home.
And the caseworkers are told, you know, and the kids
tell the caseworkers, I want to go home. Well, your
(12:12):
parents aren't cooperating. With the plan. You know, they need
to take these parenting classes. And you know, the thing
is is that they give so many hoops to these
parents that the parents wind up losing their jobs because
they have to appear in court for this. They have
to go to all these classes, they have to go
see a therapist for nothing. And these are all the
(12:33):
parasitic organizations that work with them, and they're all getting
greased and paid to keep you in the system because
if you leave the system, they don't get the federal funds,
they don't get the state funds, and they don't get
the parents' funds, so they're not incentivized to go. No,
Marian Steele, she's a great mother. Get her out of here.
There's no there there, there's no incentive to do that.
Their job is to find something wrong with you, and
(12:56):
then they pressure you. They gas light you into a
reaction as soon as you say, you know enough. This
is crazy. Oh, marine's unstable, you know, emotionally explosive. We've
got a real problem here. And once you lose your job,
then you lose your home, you lose your apartment, you
lose your car. And even if you can prove in
a court of law eventually that you know they manufactured
(13:19):
this evidence. Now they've got you on, well, your honor,
Marian can't provide for her children anymore. She doesn't have
a car, she doesn't even have a home to put
them in. It's like they caused that, and so now
they have an excuse to keep your kids because you
don't have a proper home for them anymore. When they're
the ones that blew your life up in the first
place off of lies. And that's their system and it
(13:40):
works perfectly. And what's even more perfect is that it's
all in the shadows. It's it's everything is steeled because
it's miners and they can't release it. So this is
a this is an agency that has zero oversight. You know,
billions of dollars at their fingertips, and you know, Doze
proved it when we saw all the NGOs at five,
OHO one and C three's that they use. And the
(14:02):
money just goes around and around. And I just talked
to someone yesterday and I'd love to come back on
your show and discuss it. Where they have receipts of
Zell payments and Venmo payments and PayPal payments going to
judges from CPS workers. It's just this is so insidious
and so disgusting. We have a book coming out. It's
(14:23):
called the CPS Pipeline Stank Sanctioned Kidnapping, and it explains
how it's done and the money involved and the trail.
But at the back of it is a bonus chapter
and it shows parents how to protect their child, how
to keep them out of the system, how to keep
them out of the clutches of CPS and authorities. And
(14:44):
it's imperative. It should be mandatory reading for every parent,
every grandparent, because even if you haven't had a run
in with CPS yet, you know they are actively grabbing
kids and they're doing it every day all over the country.
To protect your children or your grandchildren, and you have
to put a UCC lean on your child and then
(15:06):
they can't touch them, and it's amazing to watch it work.
So it just shows you that they know the system,
they know they're playing a game, and it's just that
we're not wise to it. So hopefully this book is
an eye opener, and I certainly hope that the documentary
has taken state sanctioned kidnapping. It follows the rivera family
who incidentally it's been seven months now and they still
(15:28):
are not reunited. This family is innocent. The state committed crimes.
CPS committed crimes, the judge committed crimes. They committed crimes
in Texas because what they do is they just rubber
stamp everything. So no one in Texas, Yeah, they just
they go, okay, well get your guns, everybody, let's go
get these kids. No one says, where's the warrant, what
(15:51):
are they charged to us? What does they do? No
one feels that if their job is to defend your rights,
their job is to defend CPS, which is the perpetrator,
which is the crime syndicate. H. So that's what we
need to do is educate police officers and sheriffs on
truly what their job is and expose the ones that
are corrupt and taking bribes and money for doing this
(16:13):
kind of work.
Speaker 1 (16:14):
That's what it's pickable. That's what's ticking me off the most.
I mean, I've spent years talking about the rubber stamping,
the lethargic work ethic, the I can't be bothered now
to hear on top of it. Well, here's a huge bonus,
uh if you help out here or here's how you
can make a ton of money for not only not
(16:35):
doing your job but doing a decidedly different, illegal, horrific
one that takes me.
Speaker 2 (16:41):
Yeah, but a lot of these people aren't aware of
what they're doing is illegal. They get a job at
twenty two years old, right out of college, and they're
told this is just how we do it, and so
they don't question anything. And we saw this in COVID.
You know, no one questions anything. We're a bunch of
lemmings and everyone just follows along. And so twenty percent
of us were proven that we're critical thinkers and didn't
(17:03):
really care, you know, about the pressure or what other
people thought. So eighty percent of the workforce out there
is just along for the ride and are just going
to do what they're told.
Speaker 1 (17:15):
This is important, you know, there's sheep, Yeah, this is
important stuff. The movie's taken state sanctioned kidnapping. There is
a premiere this weekend in Boston the Legacy Theater. How
can people see it beyond that? Though?
Speaker 2 (17:30):
So we're going to be doing red carpet of ms
throughout the country at various theaters in different states.
Speaker 1 (17:37):
I hope I can get you here in Connecticut if
there's a way I can help get you here in Connecticut.
I'd love to.
Speaker 2 (17:43):
Oh, I would love that. Yeah, let's try to do
that for sure. I'm heading out this weekend to a
wedding in Nantucket and I'm going to try to get
it at the Atheneum Theater or the Atheneum Library that has.
You know, they'll do movies there while I'm out there.
It's just so important for parents to see it and
to understand how they do it and what they're doing
(18:03):
and why they're doing it. It's a moneymaking machine, but
you will be able to see it eventually on our website,
Americanmaidfoundation dot org. We also have Americanmadaction dot org, so
people will be able to download it from our site
and watch it there eventually as well. But once we're
done with the premiere and red carpet events,