How does one actually prosecute perjury and falsification in Ohio?
On Greenwood Village candidate night, hundreds of witnesses saw what really happened. I stood peacefully, never removed by anyone. At the end of the night, the man who had been by my side simply walked me out to my car. That’s it.
Yet Judge Susan Steinhauer later claimed in her protection order that the sheriffs had “trouble getting me out of the building.” That statement is a blatant lie—contradicted not only by me, but also by the Greenwood Village manager, the witnesses present, and even the sheriffs themselves. No such “struggle” ever took place. It was pure fabrication, inserted into a legal document to retaliate against me and to build a false narrative on the record.
This wasn’t just exaggeration. It was perjury. It was falsification of events in a sworn context, carried out by a sitting judge who knew full well the power of her words and the destruction such lies cause. When those entrusted with the law commit falsification and defamation, the crime goes beyond personal malice—it becomes an abuse of office and a direct attack on justice itself.
Liars like this destroy reputations, endanger families, and commit crimes against humanity for profit and power. They deserve accountability, not protection.
If anyone knows a lawyer willing to take on systemic corruption of this magnitude, please connect them with me. My greatest pet peeve in life is dirty, stinking liars—and Ohio’s system has been protecting them for far too long.
Oh, and I already filed a police report with the sheriffs department for the falsification and perjury she committed.
Carey Ann George