🚨 Conspiracy Charges Are Bullsh*t
You don’t need to commit a crime anymore — they’ll just say you talked about it. Welcome to the injustice of “conspiracy” charges.
🧨 What is a Conspiracy Charge?
“Conspiracy” means you allegedly agreed with someone else to commit a crime — even if the crime never happened, even if you weren’t there, even if you didn’t do sh*t.
- ⚖️ No drugs in your hands? Doesn’t matter.
- 👤 Never sold anything? Doesn’t matter.
- 📞 Texted someone who did? That’s “evidence.”
- 🗣 Heard something from someone who lied? Still counts.
🚫 Why It’s Broken
The system loves conspiracy charges because they’re vague, wide, and easy to prove. All they need is:
- 👂 Someone testifying “you knew something” (a co-defendant cutting a deal)
- 📱 A text, call, or message — even out of context
- 🧾 A name drop — “He knew the guy who knew the guy.”
It’s lazy prosecution. It’s guilt by association. And it’s happening every day.
🛡 How to Fight It
- 🔍 Demand all discovery — texts, audio, transcripts, wiretaps
- 📣 Challenge the credibility of informants and snitches
- 🧠 Ask Sage for federal rulings on insufficient evidence in conspiracy cases
- 📜 File a motion to dismiss for lack of overt act or agreement
- 🗂 Demand specific jury instructions that define “agreement” and “intent”
💬 Real Talk
They slapped me with conspiracy twice. I never held a bag. I never made a deal. I never even saw the damn thing. But I knew someone — and that was enough.
If that’s your story too, you’re not alone. And you’re not powerless.