In this stunning guest-hosted episode of Connecting the Dots, British filmmaker Mark Sutherland steps in for Dan Happel to uncover the dark web of global corruption, government-sponsored child trafficking, and financial crimes hidden behind legal and corporate systems.
Mark is joined by a panel of whistleblowers and investigators who share direct evidence of international identity theft, black-market adoptions, CPS corruption, and systemic fraud involving U.S. and global agencies.
Together, they connect how global software systems, judicial collusion, and data trafficking are being used to control populations and destroy families under the guise of public service.
This episode exposes the technological and bureaucratic machinery that enables human trafficking to flourish worldwide and the brave patriots standing up to stop it...
- The weaponization of family courts and CPS against parents.
- Software systems that secretly create parallel legal cases, enabling child and property theft.
- Kamala Harris’s California programs and ties to data-driven trafficking infrastructure.
- The international web of Crown corporations, DHS, DOJ, and private contractors profiting from child abduction.
Real-world evidence of laundering, forgery, and insurance fraud tied to the human trafficking economy.
- Global corruption thrives in the shadows of bureaucratic systems.
- Courageous local legislators and whistleblowers are our last line of defense.
- Technology and law can both enslave or liberate, depending on who controls them.
- The fight for justice starts with awareness, persistence, and community support.
The episode exposes how child protective services, court systems, and government databases are being misused to kidnap children under legal cover, then launder their identities through adoption, foster care, and trafficking pipelines, both in the U.S. and internationally.
Whistleblowers detail how case management software and “parallel legal systems” are being used to falsify records, seize children, and erase parents’ rights.
Survivors and investigators discuss the financial incentives and data networks behind CPS and family court corruption.
Mark Sutherland connects this corruption to global governance systems, central banking, and moral decay — tying it to the broader Connecting the Dots themes of technocratic control and moral warfare.
Lawmakers and constitutional advocates like Rep. J.J. Humphrey and Sheriff Richard Mack stress the need for lawful local resistance and public exposure.
This episode isn’t just about trafficking in the traditional sense, it’s about systemic trafficking, where governments, courts, and private contractors are alleged to be part of the machinery.
It’s a deep-dive exposé into how global bureaucratic systems weaponize legality, technology, and custody laws to traffic human beings, particularly children.
Rep. J.J. Humphrey — Oklahoma State Representative known for his bold legislation targeting government corruption, CPS abuse, and illegal trafficking networks. A grassroots lawmaker who openly calls out state and federal agencies for systemic cover-ups.
Billy Miller — Investigator and whistleblower exposing how government agencies and data systems are being weaponized to enable child abduction, identity theft, and human trafficking under the guise of judicial and welfare programs.
Pam Davis — Survivor and advocate whose fight to rescue her son from black-market adoption uncovered massive international child trafficking networks linked to Kamala Harris-era oversight in California, foreign data contractors, and corporate collusion.
Rod Class — Constitutional scholar and private attorney general with 18 closed cases successfully won against the U.S. government, holding a Congressional Seal as a licensed Bounty Hunter and Private Attorney General. A key expert in legal reform and government accountability.
Sheriff Richard Mack — Former Sheriff of Graham County, Arizona, and founder of the Constitutional Sheriffs and Peace Officers Association (CSPOA). Longtime constitutional advocate for local enforcement resisting unlawful federal overreach.