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I have an enormous amount of liable systems and people regarding the ongoing, long-standing, ever worsening disability I’m fighting at the hands of my family first. I’ve been punished when seeking help honestly the whole time. My family has chosen to gatekeep me from help for my transness.
My disability has been consistently framed as willful noncompliance. My pleas to have executive dysfunction’s impulse control and communication dysfunctions understood have been ignored.
This feels more and more like a hate crime ongoing, and particularly for my parenthood. More comprehensive documentation is attached below. Much data is lost, but a troll of federal records on my phones and emails would be horrifyingly effective.
Daphne Garrido
daphnegarrido.carrd.co
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Brief: Systemic Discrimination, Algorithmic Harm, & Bias-Motivated Conduct
Claimant: Daphne Garrido (Tacoma, WA)
Date: June 2026
Liable Entities: Washington State (DSHS/HCA), Responsible Third Parties, and Major Social Media Platforms
Executive Summary
Washington State’s crisis-driven behavioral health model systematically relies on provisional labeling, creating a critical service gap that denies necessary community-based accommodations to individuals experiencing severe executive dysfunction. For the claimant, this institutional neglect cascaded into a loss of housing, denial of public benefits, punitive restraining orders, and the termination of parental rights without an ADA-compliant assessment.
These facts establish clear violations of ADA Title II, the Supreme Court's Olmstead integration mandate, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, the Fair Housing Act, and 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Furthermore, a distinct vector of liability arises from bystander neglect under Washington’s Vulnerable Adult Protection Act (RCW 74.34), potential bias-motivated/hate crime violations, and automated platform negligence. Experienced national or civil rights counsel is urgently sought to initiate formal litigation.
Key Liability Vectors
I. Institutional Diagnosis Discouragement & Olmstead Violations
- The Diagnostic Gap: State policies favor provisional "unspecified psychosis" labels in crisis settings while imposing fragmented pathways for comprehensive evaluations.
- The Consequence: This leaves severely impaired individuals "too impaired for standard services but not impaired enough" for robust community supports—a structural failure condemned in M.R. v. Dreyfus and C.F. v. Lashway. Unjustified segregation from community life violates the Olmstead mandate.
II. Third-Party Neglect & Bias-Motivated Conduct
- Vulnerable Adult Protection (RCW 74.34): Executive dysfunction qualifies the claimant as a vulnerable adult. Family members and specific individuals with actual knowledge of this impairment chose abandonment and active punishment over support, creating personal civil liability.
- Intersection of Hate Crime & Bias Statutes: The claimant's protected characteristics—severe executive dysfunction and status as a transgender woman—served as targets for discriminatory animus.
- Evidence Patterns:
- Documented disability symptoms (such as public pleas for help and executive dysfunction) were weaponized and treated as willful, dangerous misconduct rather than protected manifestations of a disability.
- Restraining orders (including actions by an ex-partner and others) were leveraged against disability-related behaviors instead of addressing legitimate safety concerns.
- Applicable Frameworks: These patterns demonstrate discriminatory intent, supporting civil claims for enhanced damages under the Federal Hate Crimes Prevention Act (18 U.S.C. § 249), Washington Hate Crime Statute (RCW 9A.36.080), and torts like Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress (IIED).
III. Constitutional Deprivations & Family Court Infection
- Civil Rights (42 U.S.C. § 1983): State and court officials acting under color of law deprived the claimant of due process and equal protection by punishing disability-related behaviors instead of providing mandated structural accommodations.
- Discriminatory Severance of Parental Rights: Disability discrimination and bias-motivated actions directly infected prior family court proceedings. Federal law requires individualized, ADA-compliant assessments and accommodations before parental rights can be restricted. The loss of parenting time with her daughter provides a strong basis to reopen and challenge those past proceedings.
IV. Algorithmic Silence & Platform Liability