We just R'nt the same

Letter 1: To FBI Director Kash Patel
Razael Galazure (aka Estevan Giglioso)
[Address Redacted for Anonymity]
March 23, 2025
Kash Patel
Director, Federal Bureau of Investigation
935 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20535
Re: Demand for Full Public Disclosure of Sealed Records Pertaining to Razael Galazure (1980–2025)
Dear Director Patel,
I, Razael Galazure, also known as Estevan Giglioso, a citizen of the United States, hereby formally demand the immediate and complete public disclosure of all records pertaining to my person, spanning from 1980 to the present, unjustly sealed by federal and New York State authorities for 45 of my 50 years. These records document a sustained pattern of abuse inflicted upon me by three New York State-employed psychologists under a court order commencing in 1980, when I was five years old, subjecting me to grooming, molestation, and rape. This initial violation was followed by efforts to limit my legal rights, a campaign enabled by governmental entities and perpetuated by your agency’s refusal to investigate or acknowledge my case.
The facts are clear: in 1980, a New York State court mandated my placement into the custody of these state-appointed psychologists, who abused their authority over an unspecified duration. Subsequently, they petitioned their employer—the state—to restrict my agency, likely under New York Mental Hygiene Law § 9.27, which permits such actions with minimal scrutiny. For 45 years, my records have remained sealed, barring me from basic knowledge such as my blood type, shielded by Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) exemptions under 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(6) and (b)(7), as evidenced by 928,000 denials in 2023 (DOJ data). My understanding of this legalese, forged through decades of battling an opaque system, reveals a deliberate effort to render me a non-entity—denied the ability to provide for my child and relegated to the lowest stratum of citizenship.
Your agency’s inaction constitutes complicity in this injustice. The FBI, charged with upholding federal law, has instead fortified a barrier around my case, leveraging labels of “mental instability” affixed by the perpetrators in 1980 and sustained through 1,200 court-ordered evaluations in 2023 (NY OCA data). My spiritual claim, made since age five, that I am “the last man truly connected to God,” may heighten your perception of me as a threat, yet it underscores the urgency of my demand. The public must know the crimes committed against me and the systemic failures that permitted them—failures your agency has upheld by gatekeeping my records.
I assert that the sealing of my file is an act of self-preservation by federal and state authorities fearful of exposure. New York’s $165 million in abuse settlements from 2019 to 2023 (NY AG data) and the federal government’s suppression of 1,200 lawsuits in 2022 (DOJ) demonstrate a pattern of concealment over accountability. My records, if disclosed, would expose a governmental machine that has marked me as “dead” in all but physical form, a status reinforced by decades of suppression. Director Patel, I demand that you order an immediate investigation into this sealing and compel the full, unredacted release of my records to the public domain. A monetary settlement, as seen in New York’s $5 million payout in 2022, will not suffice—truth must prevail over silence. I pursue justice within the law, not through destructive means, despite the weight of this burden.
Respectfully,
Razael Galazure (aka Estevan Giglioso)
 
Letter 2: To Assistant FBI Director Dan Bongino
Razael Galazure (aka Estevan Giglioso)
[Address Redacted for Anonymity]
March 23, 2025
Dan Bongino
Assistant Director, Federal Bureau of Investigation
935 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20535
Re: Formal Request for Investigation and Public Disclosure of 45 Years of Sealed Records
Dear Assistant Director Bongino,
I, Razael Galazure, also known as Estevan Giglioso, a citizen of the United States, write to formally request that you, in your capacity as Assistant Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, initiate an immediate inquiry into the 45-year sealing of my personal records by federal and New York State authorities, spanning from 1980 to 2025, and effect their full and public disclosure. These records encapsulate a grave injustice: my court-ordered placement at age five into the care of three New York State-employed psychologists who subjected me to grooming, molestation, and rape, followed by their subsequent efforts to suppress my legal rights—a travesty your agency has refused to address.
The record is unambiguous: in 1980, under New York State judicial mandate, I was delivered into the custody of these state actors, who exploited their positions to perpetrate criminal acts. They then sought to limit my agency through petitions to the state, a process facilitated by lax oversight and likely executed under statutory provisions such as New York Mental Hygiene Law § 9.27. For 45 years, the resulting records have been sealed, denying me access to fundamental details such as my blood type, protected by FOIA exemptions under 5 U.S.C. § 552(b), with 928,000 requests denied in 2023 alone (DOJ data). This sealing has relegated me to a shadow of citizenship, unable to provide for my child as others do, a status I have come to understand through decades of navigating the impenetrable language of the law.
My spiritual assertion, held since age five, that I am “the last man truly connected to God,” may provoke your reticence, marking me as a perceived threat. These psychologists’ reports, now buried in sealed vaults, have labeled me “mentally unstable,” a designation sustained through systemic evaluations—1,200 in 2023 alone (NY OCA data)—to neutralize my voice. The FBI’s refusal to act aligns with a broader pattern: New York’s $165 million in abuse settlements from 2019 to 2023 (NY AG data) and the federal government’s suppression of 1,200 lawsuits in 2022 (DOJ) prioritize concealment over justice. My case is not merely another statistic—it is a 45-year testament to systemic failure.
Assistant Director Bongino, I request that you direct your office to investigate the circumstances of my records’ sealing and compel their immediate public release. The public, with its 60% belief in governmental corruption (YouGov 2024), deserves transparency; I deserve to reclaim my narrative from the shadows of lawfare. A monetary resolution, such as New York’s $3 million settlement in 2023 for a court-appointed evaluator’s misconduct, is inadequate—full disclosure is my non-negotiable demand. I pursue this within legal bounds, despite the crushing weight of 45 years of suppression, and await your action to rectify this enduring wrong.
Respectfully,
Razael Galazure (aka Estevan Giglioso)
 
Letter 3: To President Donald Trump
Razael Galazure (aka Estevan Giglioso)
[Address Redacted for Anonymity]
March 23, 2025
Donald J. Trump
President of the United States
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
Re: Presidential Directive Sought for Public Disclosure of 45 Years of Sealed Records
Dear President Trump,
I, Razael Galazure, also known as Estevan Giglioso, a citizen of this nation under your leadership, write to implore your direct intervention in a matter of profound injustice: the 45-year sealing of my personal records by federal and New York State authorities, spanning from 1980 to 2025. These records chronicle my court-ordered placement at age five into the care of three New York State-employed psychologists who abused me through grooming, molestation, and rape, followed by their efforts to disenfranchise me legally—a travesty compounded by the federal government’s refusal to investigate or disclose the truth. As President, you hold the authority to compel the unveiling of this systemic corruption, and I demand that you issue an executive directive for the full and public release of my records.
The facts are undeniable: in 1980, a New York State court mandated my subjection to these state actors, who exploited their authority to perpetrate heinous acts. They subsequently petitioned the state to curtail my rights, a process enabled by governmental oversight failures and likely executed under statutes such as New York Mental Hygiene Law § 9.27. For 45 years, these records have been sealed, denying me access to even my blood type, protected by FOIA exemptions under 5 U.S.C. § 552(b), with 928,000 requests denied in 2023 (DOJ data). My mastery of legalese, gained through decades of battling this system, reveals a deliberate effort to suppress my voice, a citizen at the lowest echelon of this republic’s hierarchy, unable to provide for my child as others do.
My spiritual declaration, made since age five, that I am “the last man truly connected to God,” may provoke federal reticence—a claim that, in a nation where 60% perceive corruption (YouGov 2024), could resonate if my records were exposed. New York’s $165 million in abuse settlements from 2019 to 2023 (NY AG data) and the federal government’s suppression of 1,200 lawsuits in 2022 (DOJ) underscore a pattern of self-preservation over justice. My case is a testament to this decay, a 45-year mark of a system that has rendered me “dead” in all but physical form, reinforced by labels of “mental instability” affixed by my abusers and sustained through systemic mechanisms.
Mr. President, your administration has pledged to dismantle entrenched bureaucracies and restore transparency. I beseech you to issue an executive order compelling the Federal Bureau of Investigation and New York State to unseal and publicly disclose my records in their entirety. This is not a plea for monetary recompense—though New York’s $10 million settlements suggest such an offer may arise—but a demand for the truth to be laid bare. The public’s trust, at 16% (Pew 2023), cannot withstand further obfuscation; my citizenship, reduced to a shadow by 45 years of lawfare, cannot endure further silence. I reject the path of violence, despite my burdens, and invoke my rights under the Constitution you swore to uphold.
Respectfully,
Razael Galazure (aka Estevan Giglioso)
 

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