Truth in Justice Project

Truth in Justice Project

Truth in Justice Project

About Us

Truth in Justice Project

What is driving the creation of Wikifactum and its Truth in Justice Project?

The need for a resource providing reliable disclosure of information about injustice in the prosecution and conviction system of the United States’ justice system is crucial. This is achieved through an independent ombudsperson’s research into alleged injustices to expose the wrongdoing of investigators and officers of the court and to combat official government propaganda and falsehoods. Courageous patriots need to speak out against entrenched politicians and bureaucrats who oversee the Department of Justice, US attorneys’ offices and federal investigators as well as those who supervise and manage federal investigators and prosecutors. Wikifactum aims to see justice upheld as envisioned by the good intentions of the founding fathers of the United States rather than the systemic corrupt practices and mismanagement of criminal justice that prevail in the country. 

These issues are evident to resident aliens or any foreigners from other countries with values based on common law. Corrupt practices in law enforcement and judicial malfeasance are well-known to many U.S citizens who have experienced the flaws in the prosecutorial system.

Snowden, Manning and Assange, at great personal risk, disclosed what they had learned. All too often, reporters or authors engaged in research outside the scope of official government propaganda are silenced. They are accused of creating fake news, salacious reporting or disclosing protected classified information, threatening national security or worse. Frequently, they are the targets of criminal investigations into their tax returns, financial dealings and business interests. How often have courageous individuals been charged with crimes that discredit their trustworthiness? Government witch-hunts and cover-ups are no longer rare. They appear to have become the norm.

Within Wikifactum, first-time users need to get a sense of the role the site plays and go to the landing page for the US district court in Danville, Virginia, part of the US Fourth Circuit and the venue where two trials took place, first the civil FCA trial which the government’s whistleblower and informant lost, yet used his testimony dishonestly, with other equally dishonest factors to convict Wikifactum founder William R. Whyte (Case No. 4:12-CR-21-JLK-2). Users will learn about Whyte’s success and ruin as a government contractor, along with the criminal investigation, indictment, trial, conviction and sentence that ignited the creation of Wikifactum and the Truth in Justice Project.

Users of Wikifactum site may find themselves facing difficult choices and asking themselves tough questions. Am I willing to risk my career or freedom for the truth? Do I expose government wrongdoing even though I know that the government may retaliate against me? Will I lose my income, my home, my assets and my freedom? Investigative reporting is not easy, and honest whistle-blowers often sacrifice everything to bring injustices to light. They must ask the question: do I have the courage to do what is right?

Some interested readers may be employees of the government, working at the DOJ, a US attorney’s office, the FBI, DEA, ATF, DHS or DCIS, or another of the hundreds of federal law enforcement agencies, or perhaps an employee at a federal courthouse or federal prison. Many government employees know that there are serious problems with the system that employs them. Some will have the courage to tell the truth and expose the corruption, and we hope they can make a contribution to the cases documented on our site.

Shopping Cart

No products in the cart.