Did the FBI Conduct a Competent Investigation?
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to Wish List failed.
Remove from Wish List failed.
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
Summary
It is May 9, 2026. Welcome to yestohellwith.com.
Over the past several weeks, we have discussed the structure of prosecution in America.
We have discussed plea bargaining, prosecutorial immunity, withholding of evidence, pressure inside the courtroom, and why most people lose long before trial ever begins.
But now, we move from theory into example.
A real example.
An example involving a man named Orlando Carter.
A man who was convicted in federal court and sentenced to fifteen years in prison.
Now before we go further, understand something important.
This series is not merely about a conviction.
This series is about what allegedly happened after the conviction.
Because unlike many criminal cases that quietly disappear into history, this case never ended.
Years after conviction.
Years after imprisonment.
Years after release.
The fight continued.
And that raises an important question.
Why?
Why would a man continue searching for records, agencies, filings, banking documents, OCC correspondence, and federal contradictions years after leaving prison?
Most people do not continue fighting for decades after incarceration unless they believe something fundamental was wrong from the beginning.
And according to the Carter materials, that is exactly the issue.
Now understand carefully.
This series is not asking you to react emotionally.
This series is not asking you to hate prosecutors.
This series is not asking you to blindly distrust institutions.
This series is asking a much more dangerous question.
What happens if the foundation of a federal prosecution was never independently verified in the manner the public assumes?
Now think carefully about that.
Most Americans assume the FBI independently verified the records.
Prosecutors independently authenticated the financial structure.
Federal agencies reconciled contradictions.
Banks supplied accurate information.
And obligations allegedly underlying the prosecution actually existed in the manner presented to the jury.
But according to the Carter materials, serious questions allegedly emerged years later concerning whether the very obligation at the center of the prosecution ever existed in the manner represented during trial.
And if that is true, then everything downstream becomes unstable.
Now over the coming weeks, we are going to examine the alleged four-million-dollar obligation, the FBI investigation, the courtroom narrative, the OCC findings, the role of prosecutors Gregory Lockhart and Richard Chema, and eventually the conduct of later United States Attorneys Benjamin Glassman and Kenneth Parker.
Because according to the Carter materials, these later prosecutors allegedly encountered contradictory evidence years after conviction and yet allegedly preserved the prosecution narrative rather than independently re-examining the structure beneath it.
Now understand something very important.
The issue we are examining is not merely whether mistakes occurred.
The issue is whether assumptions hardened into official truth before the foundational structure was independently verified.
That distinction changes everything.
Because once assumptions become indictments, courtroom narratives, convictions, appeals, and official records, future institutions often begin protecting the record itself rather than revisiting the original assumptions beneath it.
And according to the Carter materials, that is precisely what allegedly happened here.
Now over this series, you are going to hear repeated references to presumption, burden of proof, institutional prestige, prosecutorial duty, OCC findings, contradictory federal positions, and what eventually becomes one of the most explosive allegations in the entire series:
that later United States Attorneys allegedly encountered evidence undermining the prosecution foundation and preserved the conviction anyway.
But before we arrive there, we must begin where every prosecution begins.
The alleged obligation itself.
Because according to the Carter materials, if the obligation collapses, then much of the prosecution structure allegedly collapses with it.
Next episode:
The $4 Million Loan.
And as always, may truth reign supreme.
Get full access to YesToHellWith at yestohellwith.substack.com/subscribe