EB4Strong Due Process Matters
Advocating due process, transparency and accountability in prolonged pretrial detention.
02/07/2026
Behind every racer is a family, a story, and a responsibility to protect the well-being of young athletes.
Elliot’s story is what happens when intense pressure, repeated head injuries, and trauma collide at an age when a young person is still forming their identity. Neurological development in young men continues into the mid-20s, particularly in areas tied to judgment, impulse control, and emotional regulation.
When you’re on top of the world, people applaud. When you become vulnerable,
young people deserve protection and guidance during vulnerable seasons. Systems are strongest when they respond with clarity, care, and accountability.
Context matters. Truth matters. And so does accountability and transparency .
💜💚🙏
Book Review: She Raised a Racer by Mollie Densley
She Raised a Racer is one of those books I really believe every new moto mom should read before diving headfirst into racing. Not once you’re already booked for every weekend of the season. Not after the camper, the bikes, the gear. Before. Because this book doesn’t just talk about racing, it talks about what racing quietly does to a family.
The part that stayed with me the most, and honestly brought the most tears, was the chapter written by Mollie's older son, the one who didn’t race. That perspective hit close to home for me. I had one kid fully immersed in sport and another who wasn't, and I constantly worry about whether that child is getting pushed to the back without meaning to. Reading that chapter made me stop and really sit with that discomfort. It was tender and honest and hard in the way that the truth usually is.
The book itself is emotional, and I think that’s exactly how it should be. Densley walks through what it’s like in the beginning stages of racing, the excitement, the overwhelm, and the fear that never fully goes away. Faith plays a big role throughout the book, with prayers woven into many chapters. While I personally lean more secular in my reading, I still appreciate the intention behind it. Taking a moment to pause, breathe, and send out good thoughts or prayers before your kid rides is something I think most parents can relate to, regardless of belief.
I also liked the reflective aspect of the book. Many chapters include questions or prompts that encourage you to think about your choices and your priorities as a parent in this sport. I think that kind of self check-in is really valuable, especially in a world where it’s easy to just keep pushing forward without stopping to ask if something still feels right.
If there was one thing I wished had gone a little deeper, it would be the finances. The numbers shared are accurate, but I would have loved to see even more blunt honesty around what families are actually spending. I don’t think we say it out loud enough. Yes, some families are spending well into six figures a year on racing. Being that direct can help new families make more informed decisions before they’re fully committed.
One of my favorite parts of the book was the inclusion of letters from other moto moms. It added a strong sense of community and reminded me that so many of us are navigating the same emotions, fears, and questions, even if it feels lonely at times.
Overall, this is a short, easy read that I finished in just a couple of hours, but it left me thinking long after. She Raised a Racer isn’t just about raising a racer. It’s about raising kids, maintaining family balance, and being honest about what this sport asks of all of us.
And for that reason, it’s a book I’m really glad I read.
Buy it now at https://a.co/d/4cc4y2Q (be sure to buy with THIS cover, there's plagiarized knockoffs out there)
This book was sent to me for an honest review, and I was not paid for it.
02/05/2026
Last night, after praying around 2:00 a.m., God placed these words clearly on my heart: God’s divine order and restoration. I wrote them down as they were given to me.
Though the legal process has been complex and restoration efforts have not resulted in stability. God’s divine order and restoration in the heavenlies cannot be taken away. That is God’s law. What God establishes in heaven is not subject to man, systems, or time. Though restoration has been denied in the natural for three years, it has not been denied by God. We are believing and receiving that.
Later, in my dream, the color purple was very prominent, and I was hugging Elliot, holding him close. I don’t remember every detail of the dream, but I remember that clearly.
Purple represents kingship, righteousness, and divine order. Even in Scripture, when Jesus was clothed in purple in mockery, it still pointed to who He truly was. Truth stood, even when misunderstood.
Before everything changed, Elliot shared Scripture with me. Right before he left me that day, he said, “Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding.” Proverbs 3:5
And he would always remind me, “God went before us, Mom.”
So we remain steadfast, standing in agreement, trusting God’s divine order and restoration for Elliot, believing that the God who goes before us will see this through.
Thank You, Lord. 💜🙏
02/05/2026
Treatment Saves. Neglect Costs.
Meet Katie R. Dale. In 2003, her world shifted into a "Mental Odyssey" of bipolar disorder and psychosis. What followed was a battle between two realities: one of clinical stability and one of total systemic neglect.
Katie’s story is a powerful reminder that Treatment Saves. When she had access to the right medical care, she graduated summa cm laude and built a thriving life. But when Anosognosia—the biological inability to recognize her own illness—took hold, the system’s failure to provide long-term support pushed her back to the brink.
Today, Katie is a leader here at NSSC, proving that with "hope in one's heart and help for one's head," recovery is possible. We aren't just fighting for beds; we are fighting for lives like Katie's.
"Darkness doesn’t have the final say over this final frontier."
👉 Read Katie’s Full Story Here: https://www.nationalshatteringsilencecoalition.org/blog/back-from-the-brink-of-the-final-frontier
Treatment isn't just a clinical success—it's a fiscal and moral one. Today we share Katie Dale’s story to show our policymakers that when we treat the brain as a medical priority, people thrive. We urge the 119th Congress to pass the Michelle Alyssa Go Act. Katie is living proof that . Let’s stop paying for neglect. "
Dr. Mehmet Oz Secretary Kennedy President Donald J. Trump United States House of Representatives, United States Senate U.S. Senator Bill CassidyCongressman Dan Goldman
Due process isn’t just a concept. It’s a responsibility.
When reports are submitted, when timelines extend, and when cases take longer than families expect, it raises understandable questions about clarity and communication. Due process works best when it moves forward consistently and transparently.
Advocacy about assigning guilt or innocence. It’s about asking the system to do its job transparently, responsibly, and humanely.
We will continue to seek clarity, preserve the record, and stand for process over pressure,
facts over narrative, and justice that actually moves forward.
Faith tells us that truth does not need force. It only needs light.
When someone is vulnerable, systems work best when they protect carefully, move thoughtfully, and prioritize well-being.
Accountability strengthens institutions and individuals alike.
We place this case under God’s authority, not human momentum.
We speak life, clarity, and justice over Elliot.
We trust that truth stands on its own, in every forum.
No weapon formed against him will prosper.
Rumors can travel quickly. Facts require time, process, and careful review.
Due process exists to ensure that truth is examined thoughtfully and decisions are made in the proper forum, with fairness and constitutional protections for everyone involved.
God’s authority is unshaken, even in seasons of uncertainty. (Daniel 4:34–35)
We remain committed to patience, clarity, and trust in a process that is meant to move forward with integrity.
Real cases are often more complex than they first appear.
When timelines are extended and information unfolds gradually, it’s important to allow the process to work carefully and thoroughly. Justice depends on facts being reviewed in the right setting, with constitutional protections upheld for everyone involved.
This page isn’t about asking the public to decide guilt or innocence. It’s about supporting a process that prioritizes accuracy, transparency, and fairness over assumptions.
Due process exists precisely for moments when clarity takes time.
01/19/2026
Today we honor Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s belief that justice must be equal and applied fairly to all.
Equal justice requires due process, transparency, and humane treatment especially before conviction. These principles protect the integrity of the system and the dignity of every person.
Justice works best when it moves forward consistently, carefully, and fairly.
Today is a quiet reminder:
We’re asking for due process, transparency, and humane treatment not opinions on guilt or innocence.
Thank you to everyone who continues to stand with our family.
01/12/2026
Before courtrooms and delays, he was simply a young man with dreams.
Elliot was 19 when this began. He worked hard, loved his family deeply, and poured himself into motocross.
I can’t discuss case specifics publicly, but due process and constitutional rights matter especially in cases involving competency proceedings and extended pretrial detention.
These principles exist to protect fairness, clarity, and humane treatment for everyone.
Silence isn’t weakness.
Sometimes it’s wisdom.
Sometimes it’s protection.
Sometimes it’s love.
We’re still here.
We’re still standing.
And when the time is right, truth speaks for itself.
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