Help Stop The War On Women Taken In All Forms

  • by: Kini Cosma
  • recipient: Inter-American Commission

We are sick of being under severe psychiatric distress from cops who get away with the atrocities they commit on vulnerable people.  

Will VAWA Help The Sexual Assault Epidemic Against American Women?

Probably not.  American women are considered sexually deviant. The last time a woman has fought for her honor may have been when Gloria Allred stated that "under an 1883 law making it a misdemeanor to question a woman's chastity ...."

It doesn't matter if  women are isolated with limited access to phones, internet, police or anything else. They are considered promiscuous and whatever they did to get raped, they did it to themselves.  For over 20 years I have contacted Senators, Congress, lawyers and 1000's of powerful legal agencies because of what the police were doing to me. I was ignored. Especially the media: They have covered up the story and now the cruel and unusual punishment has spun out of control. To this day, I am being isolated in a concentration type setting with no septic, hot water, or electricity wondering what US officials are going to make happen next because I won't shut up and go away.  

My desperate plight is a graphic illustration of how the USA treats its most vulnerable women. Harassed and intimidated, I have spent the past twenty years between prisons, jails, psychiatric institutions, and homelessness using false arrest and judicial impropriety.

Sending women to mental institutions is a common tactic in the USA for containing and controlling women who expose the government's criminal activities. In Cosma's case, it has meant a life of social isolation and fear whose trauma, abuse, emotional, or mental health challenges have kept her from achieving her full potential. 

The state of siege and the possibility for influence have included homelessness, loneliness and despair to drive Cosma to self-destruction. Distress is further heightened by a lack of proper response from service providers or law enforcement.

Being maliciously and wrongfully convicted of heinous sex crimes defeats any opportunity for a decent relationship.  What ever cruelty and anger and lunacy state and federal judges have pent up, they need only a moment to exercise the greatest power anyone can wield, the power to take a life. 

This true story illustrates the victim-blaming that many survivors face if they speak out and the lack of initiatives focused on preventing or addressing  harassment and excess force by law enforcement and the judiciary.


In a moment where women in America are being degraded beyond human comprehension and is in need of, not just help, but fairness, agencies and organizations to so aggressively turn on her is absolutely appalling.


An investigative and powerful examination of the epidemic of  these institutions that cover up extrinsic evidence are profound and are affecting personal and social consequences that arise from the brutality.


Plaintiffs are alleging that the defendants are failing to prevent plaintiffs and others from being provided an adequate judicial system as required by law and by Bivens v. Six Unknown Agents of Federal Bureau of Narcotics, 403 U.S. 388, 397 (1971).

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