@Freedom4Dummies@camhigby Look up Tim Ballard. Read all his court cases. He is a fraud and hasn’t saved any children. The list is endless of what he has done. He is a good storyteller. That is it.
@LDS_Dems@yourproductsx@ThisMomSaid He has been excommunicated from the Mormon church. He has tried to fight it and get back in. The church will not let him. His takes zero accountability for his wrongs. He should be in prison for the things he has done.
@DChadwickAuthor@LDS_Dems No they were not. He hasn’t been to court yet on many of the cases. Some have been dismissed due to how the evidence was gathered. He still has open cases that he hasn’t gone in front of the judge and one in federal court in NYC for sex trafficking.
@LDS_Dems@yourproductsx@ThisMomSaid Keep doing research on Tim. All his court cases are public record and his excommunication with the church. His sex trafficking case in federal civil court in New York City. Tim is in a lot of trouble.
@TimmyG_60610@TruthWarrior_1@RealCandaceO None. There is zero documentation to show any evidence. What comes out of Tim’s mouth is a lie and his numbers change on the daily in every speech. His wife can’t even keep any numbers straight. With zero evidence and employees say over and over again that zero children rescued.
@ldsabuse He is guilty and knows his excommunication was done fairly. He admitted in his last court case he did sexually assault the woman and so he has lied the entire time …including about the excommunication with the church. This isn’t over with Tim Ballard it is just the beginning.
There comes a point when mythology collapses and only the truth remains.
That point has arrived for Tim Ballard.
For years, Ballard built a reputation that depended on myth rather than scrutiny. He presented himself as a central figure in a moral crusade while discouraging the very questions that would test his claims. His supporters followed suit, treating inquiry as hostility and criticism as betrayal.
That posture is no longer sustainable.
The declaration of Greg Rogers, a former FBI Special Agent with decades of undercover experience, states plainly that the “couples ruse” is not a legitimate investigative technique. It violates established standards and serves no operational purpose whatsoever. This is not opinion from critics. It is professional assessment from someone who spent a career doing the work Ballard claims to have done for profit.
Aaron Asay, an insider with direct operational involvement, provides sworn testimony describing conduct and practices that contradict the public narrative. His account raises serious concerns about how operations were conducted and how participants were treated.
Ryan Fisher’s declaration speaks to the origins and intent behind the organization itself.
Krista Kacey’s declaration adds further allegations regarding internal conduct.
Deanna Hanks provides an independent account placing Ballard, under his silly alias, in circumstances that raise additional questions about his behavior.
The deposition of Jon Lines, a career Homeland Security official, further undermines Ballard’s claims of expertise. His testimony calls into question the depth and nature of Ballard’s actual experience.
These accounts do not exist in isolation. They all align.
They are reinforced by the Davis County criminal investigation, which includes internal communications, witness statements, and investigative findings that challenge public claims about operations, fundraising, and methods. These are law enforcement materials, not speculation.
More telling is what has happened among Ballard’s former allies.
Sean Reyes, once publicly aligned with Ballard, has distanced himself in the face of these allegations and the accounts of the women involved.
Glenn Beck, an early supporter and financier, has acknowledged his failure.
And the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints took the extraordinary step of excommunicating Ballard for conduct it deemed incompatible with its standards. Yet the Church has chosen silence when transparency is needed. If the institution found the conduct serious enough to remove him, then it bears responsibility to release the underlying findings.
Withholding those records while allowing the public to speculate what they knew serves no one. It protects neither truth nor accountability.
These are not critics. These are former supporters, financiers and institutional allies. They helped create and prop up the myth.
Still, the most basic questions remain unanswered.
How many children were rescued?
Who took custody of those children?
Where did all that money go?
These are not unreasonable demands. They are the minimum standard for any organization that has raised hundred-of-millions under the banner of "saving the children".
There has been no clear accounting.
Instead there has been deflection, outrage, and a continued attempt to replace evidence with emotion. Supporters continue to repeat claims that have not been substantiated while ignoring a growing body of sworn testimony and documented records.
The record now speaks for itself.
Depositions. Declarations. Court filings. Investigative materials.
American Crime Journal has compiled and continues to expand a legal archive containing these primary documents. This archive is not commentary. It is the evidence itself, available for public examination.
This is no longer a matter of competing narratives.
It is a matter of documented claims versus unanswered questions.
Those who continue to defend Ballard are no longer doing so in the absence of evidence. They are doing so in defiance of it.
The only question that remains is how much more of this record must surface before accountability is no longer optional.
#TimBallard #OperationUndergroundRailroad #OUR #ACJInvestigates
https://t.co/cmVDEciPWK
Absolutely ridiculous. Maybe instead of suing a podcast and John Dehlin, who by the admission of hundreds, if not thousands of people he and his guests have helped, how about not green lighting and endorsing rampant criminal fraud repeatedly under the ruse of "saving the children" and backing & funding known sex predators exploiting vulnerable third world countries?
Start there first next time. Any day now. How about taking some accountability. Not blaming it on a dead "profit", because your current leadership has invested into Tim Ballard's front non-profits.
Time to open Tim Ballard's file, so we can see when the LDS Church was told, about not only his sexual abuse, but the sex abuse of employees and the children who were abused in OUR funded aftercare facilities and employees or should I say "volunteers"?
We got the same email the LDS Church did in 2020. The original was dated 2017.
ACJ has fully indexed "The Deposition of Jon Lines".
Before you read the deposition,
This is no longer about Operation Underground Railroad and Tim Ballard's mythology. It will become immediately clear that this is not the polished version of events that has been sold to the public.
If we are to be serious for a moment, there is at least one fact that cannot be evaded: Sound of Freedom was a false bill of goods, marketed through a Christian and conservative media apparatus that elevated a fantasy of human trafficking into accepted truth, long after years of warnings to the contrary.
This is about people.
It is about young women and victims of sexual abuse whose allegations, across parallel proceedings, records, testimony, and our reporting, describe exploitation, grooming, and institutional failure. It is about individuals who claim they were harmed, then ignored, minimized, and in some cases further abused.
It is also about victims of fraud and deception: donors, supporters, and the public who were sold stories of heroism, flawless execution, and success, and are now confronted with sworn testimony, corroborated by our reporting, that raises serious questions about whether Ballard’s narrative was ever grounded in reality.
At the center of this deposition is a different kind of examination:
Not just what happened, but how decisions were made.
This is about Tim Ballard’s integrity, experience, and leadership under pressure:
-how dissent was handled
-how risk was assessed
-how operations were conducted
It is about whether decisions were guided by:
-professional standards
-integrity
-personal conviction
-or something else entirely
Because woven through this testimony are claims that go beyond ordinary judgment, including references to intuition, spiritual prompting, and what some may interpret as belief in extraordinary or divinely guided capabilities.
And Jon Lines' sworn testimony raises the unavoidable questions that I have asked since day one, January 2020:
Were any children rescued?
Were legitimate rescues actually carried out, and to what extent?
What methods were used? Were they lawful, effective, or theatrical?
How many children were rescued and actually helped versus how many stories were told?
Where did the millions of dollars go, and how were they used?
These are not rhetorical questions. They are obligations.
This deposition puts Jon Lines on the record, and it can no longer be ignored.
His testimony, corroborated by our reporting, official statements, and additional testimony, forms a blueprint that now demands answers from municipal, state, and federal law enforcement, from the LDS Church, and most importantly, from Tim Ballard.
-Damion Moore
https://t.co/RGStgKaOGh
ACJ has fully indexed "The Deposition of Jon Lines".
Before you read the deposition,
This is no longer about Operation Underground Railroad and Tim Ballard's mythology. It will become immediately clear that this is not the polished version of events that has been sold to the public.
If we are to be serious for a moment, there is at least one fact that cannot be evaded: Sound of Freedom was a false bill of goods, marketed through a Christian and conservative media apparatus that elevated a fantasy of human trafficking into accepted truth, long after years of warnings to the contrary.
This is about people.
It is about young women and victims of sexual abuse whose allegations, across parallel proceedings, records, testimony, and our reporting, describe exploitation, grooming, and institutional failure. It is about individuals who claim they were harmed, then ignored, minimized, and in some cases further abused.
It is also about victims of fraud and deception: donors, supporters, and the public who were sold stories of heroism, flawless execution, and success, and are now confronted with sworn testimony, corroborated by our reporting, that raises serious questions about whether Ballard’s narrative was ever grounded in reality.
At the center of this deposition is a different kind of examination:
Not just what happened, but how decisions were made.
This is about Tim Ballard’s integrity, experience, and leadership under pressure:
-how dissent was handled
-how risk was assessed
-how operations were conducted
It is about whether decisions were guided by:
-professional standards
-integrity
-personal conviction
-or something else entirely
Because woven through this testimony are claims that go beyond ordinary judgment, including references to intuition, spiritual prompting, and what some may interpret as belief in extraordinary or divinely guided capabilities.
And Jon Lines' sworn testimony raises the unavoidable questions that I have asked since day one, January 2020:
Were any children rescued?
Were legitimate rescues actually carried out, and to what extent?
What methods were used? Were they lawful, effective, or theatrical?
How many children were rescued and actually helped versus how many stories were told?
Where did the millions of dollars go, and how were they used?
These are not rhetorical questions. They are obligations.
This deposition puts Jon Lines on the record, and it can no longer be ignored.
His testimony, corroborated by our reporting, official statements, and additional testimony, forms a blueprint that now demands answers from municipal, state, and federal law enforcement, from the LDS Church, and most importantly, from Tim Ballard.
-Damion Moore
https://t.co/RGStgKaOGh
ACJ has fully indexed "The Deposition of Jon Lines".
Before you read the deposition,
This is no longer about Operation Underground Railroad and Tim Ballard's mythology. It will become immediately clear that this is not the polished version of events that has been sold to the public.
If we are to be serious for a moment, there is at least one fact that cannot be evaded: Sound of Freedom was a false bill of goods, marketed through a Christian and conservative media apparatus that elevated a fantasy of human trafficking into accepted truth, long after years of warnings to the contrary.
This is about people.
It is about young women and victims of sexual abuse whose allegations, across parallel proceedings, records, testimony, and our reporting, describe exploitation, grooming, and institutional failure. It is about individuals who claim they were harmed, then ignored, minimized, and in some cases further abused.
It is also about victims of fraud and deception: donors, supporters, and the public who were sold stories of heroism, flawless execution, and success, and are now confronted with sworn testimony, corroborated by our reporting, that raises serious questions about whether Ballard’s narrative was ever grounded in reality.
At the center of this deposition is a different kind of examination:
Not just what happened, but how decisions were made.
This is about Tim Ballard’s integrity, experience, and leadership under pressure:
-how dissent was handled
-how risk was assessed
-how operations were conducted
It is about whether decisions were guided by:
-professional standards
-integrity
-personal conviction
-or something else entirely
Because woven through this testimony are claims that go beyond ordinary judgment, including references to intuition, spiritual prompting, and what some may interpret as belief in extraordinary or divinely guided capabilities.
And Jon Lines' sworn testimony raises the unavoidable questions that I have asked since day one, January 2020:
Were any children rescued?
Were legitimate rescues actually carried out, and to what extent?
What methods were used? Were they lawful, effective, or theatrical?
How many children were rescued and actually helped versus how many stories were told?
Where did the millions of dollars go, and how were they used?
These are not rhetorical questions. They are obligations.
This deposition puts Jon Lines on the record, and it can no longer be ignored.
His testimony, corroborated by our reporting, official statements, and additional testimony, forms a blueprint that now demands answers from municipal, state, and federal law enforcement, from the LDS Church, and most importantly, from Tim Ballard.
-Damion Moore
https://t.co/RGStgKaOGh
@DDLMoore I could not agree more with this. The church needs to stand up , be accountable for Tim’s crimes and make Tim take full responsibility and accountability. Which should be given jail time and pay back the donors The victims deserve the church to protect them with the truth
@HollyMille10082@glennbeck@chrishansen You are completely wrong. Please add he was excommunicated from the Mormon Church. His last court hearing. He finally admitted he was having sex with these women. They have DNA. He has lied and needs to be in prison. He still has many civil lawsuits and a federal lawsuit in NYC.