🟡 Project Snowstorm | The Bronner Abduction
A Truth Engine™ narrative for education and calm.
Ground | Disclaimer & Context This story is fiction.Educational content only. No legal advice.
🟤 Project Snowstorm | Truth Engine™ Reference Sheet
Educational Use Only — Not Legal Advice
This post summarizes verified case law and procedures that affect victims of mistaken or abusive ICE actions.
It explains facts, options, and public resources in plain language.
⚖️ Foundations | Factual Base
1 Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents (1971)
First Supreme Court ruling allowing citizens to sue federal officers for violating the Fourth Amendment.
Later cases—especially Egbert v. Boule (2022)—sharply limited these suits.
👉 Case summary – Justia
👉 Egbert analysis – SCOTUSblog
2 Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA)
Lets victims seek damages from the United States for certain torts.
You must file an administrative claim within two years.
👉 FTCA overview – DOJ
3 ICE Directive 11005.4 (2025)
Promises “victim-centered” enforcement for survivors of crimes eligible for U- or T-visas.
👉 Policy summary – NIWAP Library
🟡 Options | Practical Paths
🟤 **Bivens Claim** — *Bivens (1971)*
Who: Individual ICE Agents | Chance: Low | Note: Qualified immunity is a major barrier.
🟡 **FTCA Claim** — *28 U.S.C. § 1346 et seq.*
Who: United States | Chance: Moderate | Note: Must file admin claim first.
🟢 **State Tort Claim** — *State law*
Who: Local officers / contractors | Chance: Variable | Note: Possible when non-federal actors involved.
🟡 **Administrative Complaints** — *Internal policy*
Who: ICE OPR / DHS OIG | Chance: High visibility | Note: Builds record for later suits.
🔵 **Public Advocacy** — *First Amendment*
Who: Agencies / Media | Chance: High | Note: Drives policy change.
🟡 Quick Links / Forms
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement+1 – Verified:
Draft a Freedom of Information Act request for records about my ICE detention on [date] in [city]. Include my name and birth date.
🟤 Historical Examples
🟤 Historical Examples
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents (1971) — Plaintiff won for warrantless home entry.
Egbert v. Boule (2022) — Court denied extension to border context.
Lanuza v. Love (9th Cir. 2018) — ICE attorney personally liable for forged document.
🟢 Immediate Action Links
ICE Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) Complaint Form
→ https://www.ice.gov/webform/ice-professional-responsibility
DHS Office of Inspector General (OIG) Hotline
→ https://www.oig.dhs.gov/hotline?utm_source=chatgpt.com
FTCA Claim Form (SF-95)
→ https://www.justice.gov/civil/documents/standard-form-95
FTCA Overview — U.S. Department of Justice
→ https://www.justice.gov/civil/brief-federal-tort-claims-act
Public Counsel Litigation Example
→ https://publiccounsel.org/press-releases/legal-challenge-seeks-to-end-harmful-ice-policy-targeting-immigrant-survivors/
Local Civil-Rights Organizations
Search by region or referral:
→ https://www.naacpldf.org/contact/
→ https://www.aclu.org/affiliates
→ https://immigrantjustice.org
🟡 Quick Links / Forms
🔵 Quote Panel
The calm mind writes the clearest record.
AI becomes a tool for clarity, not anger.
It can draft letters, organize files, generate checklists.
It cannot replace counsel.
🧾 Truth Engine™ Ledger
DateVersionChange / VerificationVerified By2025-10-26v1.0Initial Snowstorm Reference Sheet published for educational use.TJB / CreatorHuman—v1.xfuture updates — policy or case law changes
© 2025 CreatorHuman / Truth Engine™ · Educational content only. No legal advice.
All assets are now standardized:
Header (1344×256)
Footer (1344×256)
Color Key (🟤🟡🟢🔵)
Text Ledger Table (Markdown version)
Ready for deployment or inclusion in your publication queue
.





