The judge opened the envelope I had submitted and began reviewing the evidence. Inside were forged caregiver statements, an expired notary record, and proof that my sister’s attorney had used a private investigator to pressure witnesses into lying. Across the courtroom, Blake’s face turned pale.
Vanessa looked confused at first, but the moment she saw her lawyer panic, she knew something was terribly wrong. I calmly explained that I had spent fifteen years managing my father’s legal files and recognized multiple violations before the case had even reached discovery.
When the judge asked Blake whether his office had filed the declarations, he suddenly wanted more time to review the evidence. The judge wasn’t impressed. “You filed them,” he said. “You already had time.” Vanessa grabbed Blake’s arm, demanding answers, but he refused to look at her.
Then I requested sanctions and a referral for professional misconduct. Blake tried arguing that it was only a family dispute, but I reminded the court that fabricated evidence was never a family matter. The judge’s response stunned the room: he advised Blake to stop speaking until he found legal representation for himself-
