Selective Justice in Illinois: White Lawyers’ Convenient Application of the Law to Frame Indigenous, Brown, and People of Color

Author:

Resigned Due to Exposure of Pedophilia By BDM, LLC

By Broc D. Montgomery, MEd, MBA, Managing Partner, BDM, LLC

At BDM, LLC, we are committed to exposing systemic inequities within judicial systems that perpetuate white-collar fraud, corporate corruption, and institutional biases, particularly those disproportionately affecting vulnerable populations, including children and marginalized communities.

As detailed on our website at brocmontgomery.com and through our investigations into DuPage County, Illinois, this post examines how white lawyers in Illinois selectively invoke legal mechanisms to frame indigenous, brown, and people of color (POC) for offenses such as court fraud, grand larceny, and false imprisonment. These practices are evident in my own cases, where procedural manipulations have been employed to discredit and isolate targets. In stark contrast, individuals like Nichole Montgomery—a Dan Cronin, JB Pritzker, and Hyatt-connected pedophile with documented patterns of incest—are obstructed from accountability in the courts, shielded by influential networks that prioritize protection over justice.

Racial Disparities in Illinois’ Criminal Justice System: A Framework for Framing

Illinois’ criminal justice system exhibits profound racial disparities, where POC, especially Black and Latino individuals, are overrepresented at every stage—from arrest to incarceration—often through selective enforcement and biased application of laws. According to analyses by The Sentencing Project, Black Americans in Illinois are incarcerated at rates nearly five times that of white Americans, with ethnic disparities peaking in states like Illinois where more than half the prison population is Black.

This overrepresentation stems from systemic biases, including heightened policing in communities of color, discriminatory charging decisions, and harsher sentencing for similar offenses.

White lawyers, often embedded within these systems as prosecutors, defense attorneys, or judges, apply the law selectively when it serves to frame POC. For instance, in Cook County, Black defendants comprise over 60% of criminal court charges despite representing only a quarter of the population, leading to incarceration rates 17 times higher than whites.

These disparities manifest in fabricated cases and procedural irregularities, such as unwarranted detentions under Illinois statutes like 720 ILCS 5/10-3 (unlawful restraint), which are disproportionately used against POC to achieve false imprisonment. Grand larceny charges (720 ILCS 5/16-1) and court fraud allegations are similarly weaponized, exploiting evidentiary suppression to portray whistleblowers or victims as perpetrators, violating due process under the Fourteenth Amendment.

In my cases, as an indigenous and brown individual, these tactics have been deployed through gaslighting, organized stalking, and employment harassment, as previously detailed in our exposés. Affidavits available on brocmontgomery.com document how spurious legal actions—initiated under the guise of family disputes—have led to extended holds without probable cause, mirroring broader patterns where POC are detained unlawfully at twice the rate of whites in federal cases. This selective justice is not incidental but structural, as evidenced by reports from the Prison Policy Initiative, which highlight racial biases in housing, sentencing, and policing that exacerbate disproportionalities.

Shielding the Connected: Nichole Montgomery’s Protection Through Networks

In contrast to the aggressive framing of POC, the system obstructs accountability for well-connected white individuals like Nichole Montgomery, whose degenerate behaviors—including pedophilia and incest—are shielded by ties to influential figures such as Dan Cronin (former DuPage County Board Chairman), JB Pritzker (Illinois Governor), and the Hyatt empire. Montgomery’s role as Vice President and General Manager at Lamb Weston positions her within corporate channels potentially facilitating money laundering, while her family’s origins trace patterns of exploitation and criminality that courts refuse to expose.

The Pritzker family’s documented associations with Jeffrey Epstein underscore this protection. Thomas Pritzker, cousin to JB Pritzker and executive chairman of Hyatt until his February 2026 resignation, maintained regular contact with Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell post-2008 conviction, including emails and dinner invitations, citing “terrible judgment.” Despite JB Pritzker’s denials of direct ties, the family’s Hyatt connections and philanthropic influence—such as renaming Northwestern’s law school—create overlapping spheres that allegedly insulate figures like Montgomery. Dan Cronin’s involvement in DuPage County politics, amid allegations of corruption in areas like gerrymandering and institutional oversight, further enables this obstruction.

In criminal hearings, State’s attorneys have consistently refused to admit evidence of Montgomery’s delinquency, including incestuous patterns within her family, violating the Confrontation Clause (Sixth Amendment) and Illinois Rules of Evidence (Rule 404(b)). This protection allows her to perpetuate financial crimes, such as six years of contempt on maintenance payments calculated at one-tenth of her million-dollar earnings, under 750 ILCS 5/504.

Legal Implications and Calls for Reform

These disparities violate foundational principles, including equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment and prohibitions against discriminatory enforcement. Precedents like Brady v. Maryland(373 U.S. 83, 1963) condemn evidentiary suppression, while People v. Montgomery highlights suppression’s role in protecting networks. BDM, LLC, registered outside Illinois, urges federal intervention to dismantle these RICO-like enterprises (18 U.S.C. § 1961 et seq.).

We invite review of our affidavits on brocmontgomery.com, engagement on X at @Heir_Montgomery, or LinkedIn connections for anti-corruption efforts.

Contact BDM, LLC for consultations.

Together, we rise against corruption

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *