Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
A forthcoming publication, Buried Alive: My Fight Against Williamson County, aims to document these allegations and identify individuals and systems he believes played a role.
“This is not a memoir,” he states. “It’s a record.”
Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
Forthcoming Publication
A forthcoming publication, Buried Alive: My Fight Against Williamson County, aims to document these allegations and identify individuals and systems he believes played a role.
“This is not a memoir,” he states. “It’s a record.”
Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
Importantly, he frames these events as part of a broader systemic issue. “This isn’t just about me,” he states. “It’s about a system capable of burying people without ever putting them in the ground.”
Over time, he reports repeated surveillance, harassment, and obstruction when attempting to document or report these events. Consequently, each effort to seek help encountered resistance or delay.
He concludes, “I didn’t die physically in that place—but everything else did. What came out had to rebuild from nothing.”
Forthcoming Publication
A forthcoming publication, Buried Alive: My Fight Against Williamson County, aims to document these allegations and identify individuals and systems he believes played a role.
“This is not a memoir,” he states. “It’s a record.”
Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
Systemic Concerns
Importantly, he frames these events as part of a broader systemic issue. “This isn’t just about me,” he states. “It’s about a system capable of burying people without ever putting them in the ground.”
Over time, he reports repeated surveillance, harassment, and obstruction when attempting to document or report these events. Consequently, each effort to seek help encountered resistance or delay.
He concludes, “I didn’t die physically in that place—but everything else did. What came out had to rebuild from nothing.”
Forthcoming Publication
A forthcoming publication, Buried Alive: My Fight Against Williamson County, aims to document these allegations and identify individuals and systems he believes played a role.
“This is not a memoir,” he states. “It’s a record.”
Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
Additionally, he reports significant medical consequences following release. These include vision loss and physical impairment, which he attributes directly to detention conditions.
Beyond physical harm, he alleges reputational and digital damage. For example, he claims account removals, data flagging, and criminal charges that he characterizes as retaliatory actions.
Systemic Concerns
Importantly, he frames these events as part of a broader systemic issue. “This isn’t just about me,” he states. “It’s about a system capable of burying people without ever putting them in the ground.”
Over time, he reports repeated surveillance, harassment, and obstruction when attempting to document or report these events. Consequently, each effort to seek help encountered resistance or delay.
He concludes, “I didn’t die physically in that place—but everything else did. What came out had to rebuild from nothing.”
Forthcoming Publication
A forthcoming publication, Buried Alive: My Fight Against Williamson County, aims to document these allegations and identify individuals and systems he believes played a role.
“This is not a memoir,” he states. “It’s a record.”
Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
Medical and Personal Impact
Additionally, he reports significant medical consequences following release. These include vision loss and physical impairment, which he attributes directly to detention conditions.
Beyond physical harm, he alleges reputational and digital damage. For example, he claims account removals, data flagging, and criminal charges that he characterizes as retaliatory actions.
Systemic Concerns
Importantly, he frames these events as part of a broader systemic issue. “This isn’t just about me,” he states. “It’s about a system capable of burying people without ever putting them in the ground.”
Over time, he reports repeated surveillance, harassment, and obstruction when attempting to document or report these events. Consequently, each effort to seek help encountered resistance or delay.
He concludes, “I didn’t die physically in that place—but everything else did. What came out had to rebuild from nothing.”
Forthcoming Publication
A forthcoming publication, Buried Alive: My Fight Against Williamson County, aims to document these allegations and identify individuals and systems he believes played a role.
“This is not a memoir,” he states. “It’s a record.”
Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
In Williamson County, Texas, an individual alleges that officials subjected him to psychological and physical abuse while he remained in custody. Specifically, he claims staff applied suicide watch protocols as a punitive measure rather than a protective one.
According to the account, the individual remains under home confinement following a medical writ. He describes a multi-year sequence of detention events, retaliation, and separation from his family. As a result, he asserts that the system used suicide watch as a control mechanism instead of a medical safeguard.
He states, “They stripped me naked, deprived me of sleep, and placed me in solitary confinement for nearly a year—conditions engineered to destabilize the mind.” He further explains that constant lighting, temperature fluctuations, and disorienting noise intensified the experience.
Medical and Personal Impact
Additionally, he reports significant medical consequences following release. These include vision loss and physical impairment, which he attributes directly to detention conditions.
Beyond physical harm, he alleges reputational and digital damage. For example, he claims account removals, data flagging, and criminal charges that he characterizes as retaliatory actions.
Systemic Concerns
Importantly, he frames these events as part of a broader systemic issue. “This isn’t just about me,” he states. “It’s about a system capable of burying people without ever putting them in the ground.”
Over time, he reports repeated surveillance, harassment, and obstruction when attempting to document or report these events. Consequently, each effort to seek help encountered resistance or delay.
He concludes, “I didn’t die physically in that place—but everything else did. What came out had to rebuild from nothing.”
Forthcoming Publication
A forthcoming publication, Buried Alive: My Fight Against Williamson County, aims to document these allegations and identify individuals and systems he believes played a role.
“This is not a memoir,” he states. “It’s a record.”
Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
Allegations of Suicide Watch Misuse
In Williamson County, Texas, an individual alleges that officials subjected him to psychological and physical abuse while he remained in custody. Specifically, he claims staff applied suicide watch protocols as a punitive measure rather than a protective one.
According to the account, the individual remains under home confinement following a medical writ. He describes a multi-year sequence of detention events, retaliation, and separation from his family. As a result, he asserts that the system used suicide watch as a control mechanism instead of a medical safeguard.
He states, “They stripped me naked, deprived me of sleep, and placed me in solitary confinement for nearly a year—conditions engineered to destabilize the mind.” He further explains that constant lighting, temperature fluctuations, and disorienting noise intensified the experience.
Medical and Personal Impact
Additionally, he reports significant medical consequences following release. These include vision loss and physical impairment, which he attributes directly to detention conditions.
Beyond physical harm, he alleges reputational and digital damage. For example, he claims account removals, data flagging, and criminal charges that he characterizes as retaliatory actions.
Systemic Concerns
Importantly, he frames these events as part of a broader systemic issue. “This isn’t just about me,” he states. “It’s about a system capable of burying people without ever putting them in the ground.”
Over time, he reports repeated surveillance, harassment, and obstruction when attempting to document or report these events. Consequently, each effort to seek help encountered resistance or delay.
He concludes, “I didn’t die physically in that place—but everything else did. What came out had to rebuild from nothing.”
Forthcoming Publication
A forthcoming publication, Buried Alive: My Fight Against Williamson County, aims to document these allegations and identify individuals and systems he believes played a role.
“This is not a memoir,” he states. “It’s a record.”
Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
Allegations of Suicide Watch Misuse
In Williamson County, Texas, an individual alleges that officials subjected him to psychological and physical abuse while he remained in custody. Specifically, he claims staff applied suicide watch protocols as a punitive measure rather than a protective one.
According to the account, the individual remains under home confinement following a medical writ. He describes a multi-year sequence of detention events, retaliation, and separation from his family. As a result, he asserts that the system used suicide watch as a control mechanism instead of a medical safeguard.
He states, “They stripped me naked, deprived me of sleep, and placed me in solitary confinement for nearly a year—conditions engineered to destabilize the mind.” He further explains that constant lighting, temperature fluctuations, and disorienting noise intensified the experience.
Medical and Personal Impact
Additionally, he reports significant medical consequences following release. These include vision loss and physical impairment, which he attributes directly to detention conditions.
Beyond physical harm, he alleges reputational and digital damage. For example, he claims account removals, data flagging, and criminal charges that he characterizes as retaliatory actions.
Systemic Concerns
Importantly, he frames these events as part of a broader systemic issue. “This isn’t just about me,” he states. “It’s about a system capable of burying people without ever putting them in the ground.”
Over time, he reports repeated surveillance, harassment, and obstruction when attempting to document or report these events. Consequently, each effort to seek help encountered resistance or delay.
He concludes, “I didn’t die physically in that place—but everything else did. What came out had to rebuild from nothing.”
Forthcoming Publication
A forthcoming publication, Buried Alive: My Fight Against Williamson County, aims to document these allegations and identify individuals and systems he believes played a role.
“This is not a memoir,” he states. “It’s a record.”
Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
From: LeRoy Nellis <leroynellis2@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, August 2, 2025 3:50:42 AM
To: investigates@cbsnews.com; GrahamS@cbsnews.com; HuffR@cbsnews.com; RojoH@paramount.com; PahzN@cbs.com; GibsonA@cbsnews.com
Subject: Unpublished (other than my blog) asking for media assistance — unjustly labeled as a pedophile
Allegations of Suicide Watch Misuse
In Williamson County, Texas, an individual alleges that officials subjected him to psychological and physical abuse while he remained in custody. Specifically, he claims staff applied suicide watch protocols as a punitive measure rather than a protective one.
According to the account, the individual remains under home confinement following a medical writ. He describes a multi-year sequence of detention events, retaliation, and separation from his family. As a result, he asserts that the system used suicide watch as a control mechanism instead of a medical safeguard.
He states, “They stripped me naked, deprived me of sleep, and placed me in solitary confinement for nearly a year—conditions engineered to destabilize the mind.” He further explains that constant lighting, temperature fluctuations, and disorienting noise intensified the experience.
Medical and Personal Impact
Additionally, he reports significant medical consequences following release. These include vision loss and physical impairment, which he attributes directly to detention conditions.
Beyond physical harm, he alleges reputational and digital damage. For example, he claims account removals, data flagging, and criminal charges that he characterizes as retaliatory actions.
Systemic Concerns
Importantly, he frames these events as part of a broader systemic issue. “This isn’t just about me,” he states. “It’s about a system capable of burying people without ever putting them in the ground.”
Over time, he reports repeated surveillance, harassment, and obstruction when attempting to document or report these events. Consequently, each effort to seek help encountered resistance or delay.
He concludes, “I didn’t die physically in that place—but everything else did. What came out had to rebuild from nothing.”
Forthcoming Publication
A forthcoming publication, Buried Alive: My Fight Against Williamson County, aims to document these allegations and identify individuals and systems he believes played a role.
“This is not a memoir,” he states. “It’s a record.”
Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
The following content remains preserved as originally submitted. No substantive alterations have been made.
From: LeRoy Nellis <leroynellis2@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, August 2, 2025 3:50:42 AM
To: investigates@cbsnews.com; GrahamS@cbsnews.com; HuffR@cbsnews.com; RojoH@paramount.com; PahzN@cbs.com; GibsonA@cbsnews.com
Subject: Unpublished (other than my blog) asking for media assistance — unjustly labeled as a pedophile
Allegations of Suicide Watch Misuse
In Williamson County, Texas, an individual alleges that officials subjected him to psychological and physical abuse while he remained in custody. Specifically, he claims staff applied suicide watch protocols as a punitive measure rather than a protective one.
According to the account, the individual remains under home confinement following a medical writ. He describes a multi-year sequence of detention events, retaliation, and separation from his family. As a result, he asserts that the system used suicide watch as a control mechanism instead of a medical safeguard.
He states, “They stripped me naked, deprived me of sleep, and placed me in solitary confinement for nearly a year—conditions engineered to destabilize the mind.” He further explains that constant lighting, temperature fluctuations, and disorienting noise intensified the experience.
Medical and Personal Impact
Additionally, he reports significant medical consequences following release. These include vision loss and physical impairment, which he attributes directly to detention conditions.
Beyond physical harm, he alleges reputational and digital damage. For example, he claims account removals, data flagging, and criminal charges that he characterizes as retaliatory actions.
Systemic Concerns
Importantly, he frames these events as part of a broader systemic issue. “This isn’t just about me,” he states. “It’s about a system capable of burying people without ever putting them in the ground.”
Over time, he reports repeated surveillance, harassment, and obstruction when attempting to document or report these events. Consequently, each effort to seek help encountered resistance or delay.
He concludes, “I didn’t die physically in that place—but everything else did. What came out had to rebuild from nothing.”
Forthcoming Publication
A forthcoming publication, Buried Alive: My Fight Against Williamson County, aims to document these allegations and identify individuals and systems he believes played a role.
“This is not a memoir,” he states. “It’s a record.”
Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
Preserved Email Record
The following content remains preserved as originally submitted. No substantive alterations have been made.
From: LeRoy Nellis <leroynellis2@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, August 2, 2025 3:50:42 AM
To: investigates@cbsnews.com; GrahamS@cbsnews.com; HuffR@cbsnews.com; RojoH@paramount.com; PahzN@cbs.com; GibsonA@cbsnews.com
Subject: Unpublished (other than my blog) asking for media assistance — unjustly labeled as a pedophile
Allegations of Suicide Watch Misuse
In Williamson County, Texas, an individual alleges that officials subjected him to psychological and physical abuse while he remained in custody. Specifically, he claims staff applied suicide watch protocols as a punitive measure rather than a protective one.
According to the account, the individual remains under home confinement following a medical writ. He describes a multi-year sequence of detention events, retaliation, and separation from his family. As a result, he asserts that the system used suicide watch as a control mechanism instead of a medical safeguard.
He states, “They stripped me naked, deprived me of sleep, and placed me in solitary confinement for nearly a year—conditions engineered to destabilize the mind.” He further explains that constant lighting, temperature fluctuations, and disorienting noise intensified the experience.
Medical and Personal Impact
Additionally, he reports significant medical consequences following release. These include vision loss and physical impairment, which he attributes directly to detention conditions.
Beyond physical harm, he alleges reputational and digital damage. For example, he claims account removals, data flagging, and criminal charges that he characterizes as retaliatory actions.
Systemic Concerns
Importantly, he frames these events as part of a broader systemic issue. “This isn’t just about me,” he states. “It’s about a system capable of burying people without ever putting them in the ground.”
Over time, he reports repeated surveillance, harassment, and obstruction when attempting to document or report these events. Consequently, each effort to seek help encountered resistance or delay.
He concludes, “I didn’t die physically in that place—but everything else did. What came out had to rebuild from nothing.”
Forthcoming Publication
A forthcoming publication, Buried Alive: My Fight Against Williamson County, aims to document these allegations and identify individuals and systems he believes played a role.
“This is not a memoir,” he states. “It’s a record.”
Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
Preserved Email Record
The following content remains preserved as originally submitted. No substantive alterations have been made.
From: LeRoy Nellis <leroynellis2@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, August 2, 2025 3:50:42 AM
To: investigates@cbsnews.com; GrahamS@cbsnews.com; HuffR@cbsnews.com; RojoH@paramount.com; PahzN@cbs.com; GibsonA@cbsnews.com
Subject: Unpublished (other than my blog) asking for media assistance — unjustly labeled as a pedophile
Allegations of Suicide Watch Misuse
In Williamson County, Texas, an individual alleges that officials subjected him to psychological and physical abuse while he remained in custody. Specifically, he claims staff applied suicide watch protocols as a punitive measure rather than a protective one.
According to the account, the individual remains under home confinement following a medical writ. He describes a multi-year sequence of detention events, retaliation, and separation from his family. As a result, he asserts that the system used suicide watch as a control mechanism instead of a medical safeguard.
He states, “They stripped me naked, deprived me of sleep, and placed me in solitary confinement for nearly a year—conditions engineered to destabilize the mind.” He further explains that constant lighting, temperature fluctuations, and disorienting noise intensified the experience.
Medical and Personal Impact
Additionally, he reports significant medical consequences following release. These include vision loss and physical impairment, which he attributes directly to detention conditions.
Beyond physical harm, he alleges reputational and digital damage. For example, he claims account removals, data flagging, and criminal charges that he characterizes as retaliatory actions.
Systemic Concerns
Importantly, he frames these events as part of a broader systemic issue. “This isn’t just about me,” he states. “It’s about a system capable of burying people without ever putting them in the ground.”
Over time, he reports repeated surveillance, harassment, and obstruction when attempting to document or report these events. Consequently, each effort to seek help encountered resistance or delay.
He concludes, “I didn’t die physically in that place—but everything else did. What came out had to rebuild from nothing.”
Forthcoming Publication
A forthcoming publication, Buried Alive: My Fight Against Williamson County, aims to document these allegations and identify individuals and systems he believes played a role.
“This is not a memoir,” he states. “It’s a record.”
Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
For related documentation, see the Master Timeline — Williamson County and the Live Evidentiary Record. In addition, review oversight agencies such as the U.S. Department of Justice Civil Rights Division and the Texas Commission on Jail Standards.
Preserved Email Record
The following content remains preserved as originally submitted. No substantive alterations have been made.
From: LeRoy Nellis <leroynellis2@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, August 2, 2025 3:50:42 AM
To: investigates@cbsnews.com; GrahamS@cbsnews.com; HuffR@cbsnews.com; RojoH@paramount.com; PahzN@cbs.com; GibsonA@cbsnews.com
Subject: Unpublished (other than my blog) asking for media assistance — unjustly labeled as a pedophile
Allegations of Suicide Watch Misuse
In Williamson County, Texas, an individual alleges that officials subjected him to psychological and physical abuse while he remained in custody. Specifically, he claims staff applied suicide watch protocols as a punitive measure rather than a protective one.
According to the account, the individual remains under home confinement following a medical writ. He describes a multi-year sequence of detention events, retaliation, and separation from his family. As a result, he asserts that the system used suicide watch as a control mechanism instead of a medical safeguard.
He states, “They stripped me naked, deprived me of sleep, and placed me in solitary confinement for nearly a year—conditions engineered to destabilize the mind.” He further explains that constant lighting, temperature fluctuations, and disorienting noise intensified the experience.
Medical and Personal Impact
Additionally, he reports significant medical consequences following release. These include vision loss and physical impairment, which he attributes directly to detention conditions.
Beyond physical harm, he alleges reputational and digital damage. For example, he claims account removals, data flagging, and criminal charges that he characterizes as retaliatory actions.
Systemic Concerns
Importantly, he frames these events as part of a broader systemic issue. “This isn’t just about me,” he states. “It’s about a system capable of burying people without ever putting them in the ground.”
Over time, he reports repeated surveillance, harassment, and obstruction when attempting to document or report these events. Consequently, each effort to seek help encountered resistance or delay.
He concludes, “I didn’t die physically in that place—but everything else did. What came out had to rebuild from nothing.”
Forthcoming Publication
A forthcoming publication, Buried Alive: My Fight Against Williamson County, aims to document these allegations and identify individuals and systems he believes played a role.
“This is not a memoir,” he states. “It’s a record.”
Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
Suicide Watch Abuse Williamson County: Media Outreach Record
For related documentation, see the Master Timeline — Williamson County and the Live Evidentiary Record. In addition, review oversight agencies such as the U.S. Department of Justice Civil Rights Division and the Texas Commission on Jail Standards.
Preserved Email Record
The following content remains preserved as originally submitted. No substantive alterations have been made.
From: LeRoy Nellis <leroynellis2@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, August 2, 2025 3:50:42 AM
To: investigates@cbsnews.com; GrahamS@cbsnews.com; HuffR@cbsnews.com; RojoH@paramount.com; PahzN@cbs.com; GibsonA@cbsnews.com
Subject: Unpublished (other than my blog) asking for media assistance — unjustly labeled as a pedophile
Allegations of Suicide Watch Misuse
In Williamson County, Texas, an individual alleges that officials subjected him to psychological and physical abuse while he remained in custody. Specifically, he claims staff applied suicide watch protocols as a punitive measure rather than a protective one.
According to the account, the individual remains under home confinement following a medical writ. He describes a multi-year sequence of detention events, retaliation, and separation from his family. As a result, he asserts that the system used suicide watch as a control mechanism instead of a medical safeguard.
He states, “They stripped me naked, deprived me of sleep, and placed me in solitary confinement for nearly a year—conditions engineered to destabilize the mind.” He further explains that constant lighting, temperature fluctuations, and disorienting noise intensified the experience.
Medical and Personal Impact
Additionally, he reports significant medical consequences following release. These include vision loss and physical impairment, which he attributes directly to detention conditions.
Beyond physical harm, he alleges reputational and digital damage. For example, he claims account removals, data flagging, and criminal charges that he characterizes as retaliatory actions.
Systemic Concerns
Importantly, he frames these events as part of a broader systemic issue. “This isn’t just about me,” he states. “It’s about a system capable of burying people without ever putting them in the ground.”
Over time, he reports repeated surveillance, harassment, and obstruction when attempting to document or report these events. Consequently, each effort to seek help encountered resistance or delay.
He concludes, “I didn’t die physically in that place—but everything else did. What came out had to rebuild from nothing.”
Forthcoming Publication
A forthcoming publication, Buried Alive: My Fight Against Williamson County, aims to document these allegations and identify individuals and systems he believes played a role.
“This is not a memoir,” he states. “It’s a record.”
Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
Suicide Watch Abuse Williamson County: Media Outreach Record
For related documentation, see the Master Timeline — Williamson County and the Live Evidentiary Record. In addition, review oversight agencies such as the U.S. Department of Justice Civil Rights Division and the Texas Commission on Jail Standards.
Preserved Email Record
The following content remains preserved as originally submitted. No substantive alterations have been made.
From: LeRoy Nellis <leroynellis2@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, August 2, 2025 3:50:42 AM
To: investigates@cbsnews.com; GrahamS@cbsnews.com; HuffR@cbsnews.com; RojoH@paramount.com; PahzN@cbs.com; GibsonA@cbsnews.com
Subject: Unpublished (other than my blog) asking for media assistance — unjustly labeled as a pedophile
Allegations of Suicide Watch Misuse
In Williamson County, Texas, an individual alleges that officials subjected him to psychological and physical abuse while he remained in custody. Specifically, he claims staff applied suicide watch protocols as a punitive measure rather than a protective one.
According to the account, the individual remains under home confinement following a medical writ. He describes a multi-year sequence of detention events, retaliation, and separation from his family. As a result, he asserts that the system used suicide watch as a control mechanism instead of a medical safeguard.
He states, “They stripped me naked, deprived me of sleep, and placed me in solitary confinement for nearly a year—conditions engineered to destabilize the mind.” He further explains that constant lighting, temperature fluctuations, and disorienting noise intensified the experience.
Medical and Personal Impact
Additionally, he reports significant medical consequences following release. These include vision loss and physical impairment, which he attributes directly to detention conditions.
Beyond physical harm, he alleges reputational and digital damage. For example, he claims account removals, data flagging, and criminal charges that he characterizes as retaliatory actions.
Systemic Concerns
Importantly, he frames these events as part of a broader systemic issue. “This isn’t just about me,” he states. “It’s about a system capable of burying people without ever putting them in the ground.”
Over time, he reports repeated surveillance, harassment, and obstruction when attempting to document or report these events. Consequently, each effort to seek help encountered resistance or delay.
He concludes, “I didn’t die physically in that place—but everything else did. What came out had to rebuild from nothing.”
Forthcoming Publication
A forthcoming publication, Buried Alive: My Fight Against Williamson County, aims to document these allegations and identify individuals and systems he believes played a role.
“This is not a memoir,” he states. “It’s a record.”
Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
Suicide Watch Abuse Williamson County: Media Outreach Record
For related documentation, see the Master Timeline — Williamson County and the Live Evidentiary Record. In addition, review oversight agencies such as the U.S. Department of Justice Civil Rights Division and the Texas Commission on Jail Standards.
Preserved Email Record
The following content remains preserved as originally submitted. No substantive alterations have been made.
From: LeRoy Nellis <leroynellis2@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, August 2, 2025 3:50:42 AM
To: investigates@cbsnews.com; GrahamS@cbsnews.com; HuffR@cbsnews.com; RojoH@paramount.com; PahzN@cbs.com; GibsonA@cbsnews.com
Subject: Unpublished (other than my blog) asking for media assistance — unjustly labeled as a pedophile
Allegations of Suicide Watch Misuse
In Williamson County, Texas, an individual alleges that officials subjected him to psychological and physical abuse while he remained in custody. Specifically, he claims staff applied suicide watch protocols as a punitive measure rather than a protective one.
According to the account, the individual remains under home confinement following a medical writ. He describes a multi-year sequence of detention events, retaliation, and separation from his family. As a result, he asserts that the system used suicide watch as a control mechanism instead of a medical safeguard.
He states, “They stripped me naked, deprived me of sleep, and placed me in solitary confinement for nearly a year—conditions engineered to destabilize the mind.” He further explains that constant lighting, temperature fluctuations, and disorienting noise intensified the experience.
Medical and Personal Impact
Additionally, he reports significant medical consequences following release. These include vision loss and physical impairment, which he attributes directly to detention conditions.
Beyond physical harm, he alleges reputational and digital damage. For example, he claims account removals, data flagging, and criminal charges that he characterizes as retaliatory actions.
Systemic Concerns
Importantly, he frames these events as part of a broader systemic issue. “This isn’t just about me,” he states. “It’s about a system capable of burying people without ever putting them in the ground.”
Over time, he reports repeated surveillance, harassment, and obstruction when attempting to document or report these events. Consequently, each effort to seek help encountered resistance or delay.
He concludes, “I didn’t die physically in that place—but everything else did. What came out had to rebuild from nothing.”
Forthcoming Publication
A forthcoming publication, Buried Alive: My Fight Against Williamson County, aims to document these allegations and identify individuals and systems he believes played a role.
“This is not a memoir,” he states. “It’s a record.”
Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
Stay Informed
Get updates on detention investigations, official records, and oversight developments.
UPDATED RECORD — April 20, 2026
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record documents a direct media outreach communication. It outlines allegations involving the misuse of suicide watch protocols inside a detention environment. This entry preserves the original submission as part of a continuing evidentiary record.
Suicide Watch Abuse Williamson County: Media Outreach Record
For related documentation, see the Master Timeline — Williamson County and the Live Evidentiary Record. In addition, review oversight agencies such as the U.S. Department of Justice Civil Rights Division and the Texas Commission on Jail Standards.
Preserved Email Record
The following content remains preserved as originally submitted. No substantive alterations have been made.
From: LeRoy Nellis <leroynellis2@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, August 2, 2025 3:50:42 AM
To: investigates@cbsnews.com; GrahamS@cbsnews.com; HuffR@cbsnews.com; RojoH@paramount.com; PahzN@cbs.com; GibsonA@cbsnews.com
Subject: Unpublished (other than my blog) asking for media assistance — unjustly labeled as a pedophile
Allegations of Suicide Watch Misuse
In Williamson County, Texas, an individual alleges that officials subjected him to psychological and physical abuse while he remained in custody. Specifically, he claims staff applied suicide watch protocols as a punitive measure rather than a protective one.
According to the account, the individual remains under home confinement following a medical writ. He describes a multi-year sequence of detention events, retaliation, and separation from his family. As a result, he asserts that the system used suicide watch as a control mechanism instead of a medical safeguard.
He states, “They stripped me naked, deprived me of sleep, and placed me in solitary confinement for nearly a year—conditions engineered to destabilize the mind.” He further explains that constant lighting, temperature fluctuations, and disorienting noise intensified the experience.
Medical and Personal Impact
Additionally, he reports significant medical consequences following release. These include vision loss and physical impairment, which he attributes directly to detention conditions.
Beyond physical harm, he alleges reputational and digital damage. For example, he claims account removals, data flagging, and criminal charges that he characterizes as retaliatory actions.
Systemic Concerns
Importantly, he frames these events as part of a broader systemic issue. “This isn’t just about me,” he states. “It’s about a system capable of burying people without ever putting them in the ground.”
Over time, he reports repeated surveillance, harassment, and obstruction when attempting to document or report these events. Consequently, each effort to seek help encountered resistance or delay.
He concludes, “I didn’t die physically in that place—but everything else did. What came out had to rebuild from nothing.”
Forthcoming Publication
A forthcoming publication, Buried Alive: My Fight Against Williamson County, aims to document these allegations and identify individuals and systems he believes played a role.
“This is not a memoir,” he states. “It’s a record.”
Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
Stay Informed
Get updates on detention investigations, official records, and oversight developments.
UPDATED RECORD — April 20, 2026
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record documents a direct media outreach communication. It outlines allegations involving the misuse of suicide watch protocols inside a detention environment. This entry preserves the original submission as part of a continuing evidentiary record.
Suicide Watch Abuse Williamson County: Media Outreach Record
For related documentation, see the Master Timeline — Williamson County and the Live Evidentiary Record. In addition, review oversight agencies such as the U.S. Department of Justice Civil Rights Division and the Texas Commission on Jail Standards.
Preserved Email Record
The following content remains preserved as originally submitted. No substantive alterations have been made.
From: LeRoy Nellis <leroynellis2@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, August 2, 2025 3:50:42 AM
To: investigates@cbsnews.com; GrahamS@cbsnews.com; HuffR@cbsnews.com; RojoH@paramount.com; PahzN@cbs.com; GibsonA@cbsnews.com
Subject: Unpublished (other than my blog) asking for media assistance — unjustly labeled as a pedophile
Allegations of Suicide Watch Misuse
In Williamson County, Texas, an individual alleges that officials subjected him to psychological and physical abuse while he remained in custody. Specifically, he claims staff applied suicide watch protocols as a punitive measure rather than a protective one.
According to the account, the individual remains under home confinement following a medical writ. He describes a multi-year sequence of detention events, retaliation, and separation from his family. As a result, he asserts that the system used suicide watch as a control mechanism instead of a medical safeguard.
He states, “They stripped me naked, deprived me of sleep, and placed me in solitary confinement for nearly a year—conditions engineered to destabilize the mind.” He further explains that constant lighting, temperature fluctuations, and disorienting noise intensified the experience.
Medical and Personal Impact
Additionally, he reports significant medical consequences following release. These include vision loss and physical impairment, which he attributes directly to detention conditions.
Beyond physical harm, he alleges reputational and digital damage. For example, he claims account removals, data flagging, and criminal charges that he characterizes as retaliatory actions.
Systemic Concerns
Importantly, he frames these events as part of a broader systemic issue. “This isn’t just about me,” he states. “It’s about a system capable of burying people without ever putting them in the ground.”
Over time, he reports repeated surveillance, harassment, and obstruction when attempting to document or report these events. Consequently, each effort to seek help encountered resistance or delay.
He concludes, “I didn’t die physically in that place—but everything else did. What came out had to rebuild from nothing.”
Forthcoming Publication
A forthcoming publication, Buried Alive: My Fight Against Williamson County, aims to document these allegations and identify individuals and systems he believes played a role.
“This is not a memoir,” he states. “It’s a record.”
Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
Stay Informed
Get updates on detention investigations, official records, and oversight developments.
UPDATED RECORD — April 20, 2026
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record documents a direct media outreach communication. It outlines allegations involving the misuse of suicide watch protocols inside a detention environment. This entry preserves the original submission as part of a continuing evidentiary record.
Suicide Watch Abuse Williamson County: Media Outreach Record
For related documentation, see the Master Timeline — Williamson County and the Live Evidentiary Record. In addition, review oversight agencies such as the U.S. Department of Justice Civil Rights Division and the Texas Commission on Jail Standards.
Preserved Email Record
The following content remains preserved as originally submitted. No substantive alterations have been made.
From: LeRoy Nellis <leroynellis2@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, August 2, 2025 3:50:42 AM
To: investigates@cbsnews.com; GrahamS@cbsnews.com; HuffR@cbsnews.com; RojoH@paramount.com; PahzN@cbs.com; GibsonA@cbsnews.com
Subject: Unpublished (other than my blog) asking for media assistance — unjustly labeled as a pedophile
Allegations of Suicide Watch Misuse
In Williamson County, Texas, an individual alleges that officials subjected him to psychological and physical abuse while he remained in custody. Specifically, he claims staff applied suicide watch protocols as a punitive measure rather than a protective one.
According to the account, the individual remains under home confinement following a medical writ. He describes a multi-year sequence of detention events, retaliation, and separation from his family. As a result, he asserts that the system used suicide watch as a control mechanism instead of a medical safeguard.
He states, “They stripped me naked, deprived me of sleep, and placed me in solitary confinement for nearly a year—conditions engineered to destabilize the mind.” He further explains that constant lighting, temperature fluctuations, and disorienting noise intensified the experience.
Medical and Personal Impact
Additionally, he reports significant medical consequences following release. These include vision loss and physical impairment, which he attributes directly to detention conditions.
Beyond physical harm, he alleges reputational and digital damage. For example, he claims account removals, data flagging, and criminal charges that he characterizes as retaliatory actions.
Systemic Concerns
Importantly, he frames these events as part of a broader systemic issue. “This isn’t just about me,” he states. “It’s about a system capable of burying people without ever putting them in the ground.”
Over time, he reports repeated surveillance, harassment, and obstruction when attempting to document or report these events. Consequently, each effort to seek help encountered resistance or delay.
He concludes, “I didn’t die physically in that place—but everything else did. What came out had to rebuild from nothing.”
Forthcoming Publication
A forthcoming publication, Buried Alive: My Fight Against Williamson County, aims to document these allegations and identify individuals and systems he believes played a role.
“This is not a memoir,” he states. “It’s a record.”
Record Context and Status
This suicide watch abuse Williamson County record establishes a documented media outreach attempt. It also outlines allegations related to detention conditions, mental health protocols, and oversight concerns.
This record forms part of a live evidentiary archive. It remains active and will be updated as additional documentation, responses, or investigative findings emerge. This version supersedes all prior versions.
