
A1R28
1.7K posts

















MMTLP #FAFO #Veterans #1stAmendment 🔥 THREAD: New Civil Liberties Alliance (NCLA) Takes the SEC’s Gag Rule to the Supreme Court, and YES, it connects to MMTLP. @annvandersteel @TheRobbCarter @cvpayne 🚨BREAKING: NCLA just filed a petition asking the U.S. Supreme Court to review the SEC’s unconstitutional Gag Rule. A rule that forces people to give up their First Amendment rights for life if they settle with the agency. This is a massive moment. Why does this matter? Because the SEC’s Gag Rule is designed to do one thing: 👉 Silence the people who know the truth about SEC actions. Forever. And if you’re in the MMTLP community, this should hit hard. You’ve lived the consequences of a system where the SEC can act in the dark, hide records, and avoid accountability while the public is left with redactions, denials, and silence. MMTLP exposed a simple reality: · When regulators can operate without transparency, investors pay the price. · When regulators can silence people, the truth never reaches the public. · The Gag Rule is the architecture that protects that system. In MMTLP, we’ve seen: • FOIA blackouts • Withheld factual records • A U3 halt with no explanation • 14 months of trading on a placeholder • Zero transparency from the agencies involved Now imagine adding a lifetime gag order on top of that. That’s exactly what the SEC does in settlements: “Sign this agreement, and you can never publicly dispute our allegations even if we were wrong.” That’s not regulation. That’s censorship. NCLA is right: The SEC should not have the power to silence Americans for life. And MMTLP proves why. When the public can’t hear from the people closest to the facts, the narrative belongs entirely to the agency no matter how incomplete or inaccurate. If the Supreme Court strikes down the Gag Rule, it won’t just be a First Amendment victory. It will crack open the wall of secrecy that has shielded the SEC for decades the same secrecy that has fueled the MMTLP transparency crisis. Sunlight is coming. Accountability is coming. And the era of regulators operating without scrutiny needs to end. MMTLP is the case study. The Gag Rule is the mechanism. The Supreme Court is now the venue. The fight for transparency is bigger than one ticker. It’s about restoring the public’s right to speak, to know, and to challenge government power. And that fight just moved to the highest court in the country. More to come! MMTLP remember, FOCUS. The SEC Can Silence You for Life youtu.be/_OhBoqGVdAA?si… via @YouTube



The SEC’s $2.5 billion outsourcing contract with C2 Alaska—a subsidiary of Chenega Corporation—exposes the rot. While retail investors get stonewalled on MMTLP FOIA requests, bureaucrats funnel taxpayer cash into no-bid contracts for "administrative support." This isn’t about market integrity—it’s about shielding Wall Street while fleecing Main Street. The SEC’s own records show 1,821 MMTLP-related FOIA requests yielded a 0.0115% disclosure rate, yet they’ve spent billions outsourcing legal work to contractors who exist to bury paper trails. When agencies weaponize FOIA exemptions and hide behind $2.5B vendor deals, it’s not “investor protection”—it’s a protection racket. The real fraud isn’t just the trading halt—it’s a system where regulators outsource accountability to firms that profit from opacity.




$MMAT $TRCH $MMTLP Putting The Pieces Together “In December, a retired California Highway Patrol officer named Wilma Stone filed an unusual Freedom of Information Act request with the Securities and Exchange Commission…. …that was how Wilma Stone got the idea to file her FOIA request with the SEC. Stone’s FOIA request sought “all emails, texts, memos, meeting notes, calendar entries, Microsoft Teams chats, and Bloomberg messages (or similar communication platforms) sent or received between Kathryn Ruemmler, current Goldman Sachs Chief Legal Officer, and Jeffrey Epstein (American financier) that contain any of the following keywords: S-1, Fraud, Oversold Position, Phantom Shares, and Ghost Shares.” Stone said she hasn’t received anything back from the SEC, other than an acknowledgment. But then came the newly released Justice Department records, adding fresh fuel to the MMTLP conspiracy theories. Among the millions of pages of documents published by the Justice Department from Epstein’s financial files was a June 2014 Ameriprise brokerage statement showing that Epstein once held a $213,004 position in Torchlight Energy Resources, the small oil exploration company whose corporate lineage would later produce MMTLP. At the time, Torchlight was a relatively obscure oil-and-gas exploration company, and there is no public evidence that Epstein had any operational role at the company….” lawstreetmedia.com/insights/the-e…


Based upon this exchange, the @SECGov reached-out to my office to inform me that this is currently under investigation. I proudly joined my colleagues in demanding MMTLP transparency back in 2023 and I thank the Trump admin–SEC for fighting to ensure that this issue is resolved. We will continue to monitor the situation.









