Rachel Kwon has announced the release of a new book recounting her experience as the “secret girlfriend to a K‑pop idol” to N.Sonic’s J.Heart, as well as the stalking case that followed, one involving her former friend and YouTuber CariCakes.
To promote the book, Rachel launched a new Instagram account, @dearseoulbook, and has begun sharing archived screenshots and reflections tied to the era many online once dismissed as “drama.” For longtime viewers, Rachel may also be familiar as Rachelheheh and, earlier, @dearseoul, where she documented her life in South Korea on YouTube.
What was once reduced to forum speculation and Reddit threads is now being retold directly by Rachel, in her own words. (If you have been following Rachel for a while perhaps you remember her been all over PULL (Pretty Little Ugly Liar) forums and Reddit).
According to her, the situation involved secrecy, fear, and prolonged stalking, far more serious than internet gossip suggested at the time.
Rachel on Why She Wrote the Book
Rachel shared the following message announcing the project:
“When I first began posting his series, I never in a million years expected to write a book. Let alone one based on my own life
But after seeing all of your positive reactions and encouragement, I felt inspired to share even more of my story
I want to thank you for lighting this spark in me and for giving me the courage to share the things I’ve hidden away for so long
Let this serve as a reminder to you that life gets SO much better. I could not be more excited for @dearseoulbook”
The book likely will got more into depth about her relationship with her former K-pop idol and now husband, Jay or J.Heart (former leader of N-Sonic).
Part 1: Moving to Korea (2013)
Rachel begins by recounting her move to South Korea as an English teacher in 2013.
She describes living in a love motel for a week before her school apartment was ready, followed immediately by teaching kindergarten with zero training. The stress was overwhelming—she lost 10 pounds quickly, struggled with culture shock, and spent her first Christmas alone in Myeongdong, crying after a barista wrote “Merry Christmas” on her cup.
She writes about loneliness, cutting her hair, getting a $5 ear piercing “just to feel something,” and partying every weekend to escape work stress. Eventually, she met her future husband during a night out.
The twist:
Met my future husband on a night out at a club and started casually dating
Surprise he ended up being a kpop idol
She recalls seeing his face on a water bottle during a trip to Hong Kong, celebrating birthdays apart from her twin, and slowly falling in love despite rarely being able to meet.
Part 2: Choosing the Secret
Rachel explains that her first year in Korea “broke me mentally.” She fainted from stress, began taking medication, and faced a major decision as her contract ended: return to the U.S., or stay in Korea with her secret K‑pop idol boyfriend.
She chose to stay.
During a particularly emotional period, Jay was overseas on tour for a month. One night, after asking “Do you miss me,” he surprised her in person.
She describes guilt over missing major family milestones, including watching her brother’s wedding via livestream, but also says that when she was with Jay, “all the guilt work stress and horrible sickness would magically disappear.”
Part 3: Exposure Anxiety (2015)
By 2015, Rachel had been secretly dating a K‑pop idol for nearly two years.
Everything shifted when they were spotted together at a café. A fan tweeted:
“Oppa what are doing? I saw you with a girlㅋㅋ”
Soon after, Jay’s boss demanded answers:
“who is the foreign girl”
Jay responded:
“She’s my English tutor.”
From that point forward, they became even more cautious—home dates only, no public affection, and Rachel becoming increasingly self‑conscious, especially after being criticized during modeling attempts.
Part 4: The Reality of Being a “Secret Girlfriend”
Rachel makes it clear that being a “secret girlfriend” was neither glamorous nor fun.
I was fully in love with a K-pop idol, but it was far from a fairytale…He was always traveling sometimes I didn’t even know what country he was in.
Jay was constantly traveling, paranoid after the Twitter incident, and the relationship remained hidden even after nearly three years together. Rachel questioned whether Jay’s parents even knew she existed.
He was paranoid after the Twitter scandal and I felt it was all my fault. Turns out that being a “secret girlfriend” isn’t sexy or fun it’s frustrating.
She adopted a puppy, moved into a bigger apartment, and believed things were stabilizing—until she writes:
I had no idea the worst was yet to come
Part 5: Lawsuit Era and DearSeoul
In 2016, Jay was living in a dorm with his members, fully committed to N‑Sonic.
Rachel recalls an emotional moment when Jay told his mother about her:
“She’s worried that living in Korea must be hard for you without your family”
But the tone quickly darkens. Rachel describes learning that N‑Sonic members were allegedly exploited, working for years without pay, verbally abused, and ultimately filing a lawsuit.
and were paid nothing. $0.
During this time, Rachel launched her YouTube channel DearSeoul, which she describes as her “safe space.” She was careful to never show Jay’s face as the lawsuit continued and he prepared for mandatory military service.
Part 6: Military Service and a False Sense of Calm
Jay left for mandatory military service, and Rachel describes the heartbreak of preparing for two years apart.
When she received her first letter:
surprised he wrote in English
Just weeks later, he unexpectedly returned due to heart arrhythmia and served in public service instead.
Rachel details burnout from juggling teaching, tutoring, YouTube, and modeling again until a healing trip planned by Jay changed everything.
Soon after, she received an anonymous message at work.
Part 7: The Reddit Post
The anonymous message warned Rachel about a Reddit rumor post speculating that a K‑pop idol was dating a foreigner.
The message read:
Hi Rachel! I started following your YouTube back when [redacted] was still a regular and just firstly want to say thanks for the amazing content! Hope you keep the channel going!
Hopefully I’m just over reacting but | saw something recently and just felt the need to tell you. A user on Reddit Kpop recently made a post speculating that a kpop idol is dating/living with a foreigner. | don’t know if it is true or not but the user explicitly mentions you and the idol’s name+face.
| know you don’t want to reveal |your boyfriend’s identity publicly, |at least not now, so | just want to |give you a heads up about that |user’s post. |Hopefully I’m over reacting, but |I’m worried some immature fans of |that idol may start spreading |mean comments about you and | |would be so sad to see you get |bashed online.
| don’t know the situation about that idol, whether he is still activ eor not, etc. so | guess I’m just |letting you know that such post |currently exists and might |eventually spread to his fans. |If none of this even applies to you |or the issue is not that big, please |ignore this whole message and |continue with your day haha! || hope that this is just a big |overreaction by me, and once |again, keep your good work up with dearseoul!
She later discovered the thread:
[RUMOR] N.Sonic’s Leader J.Heart Possibly Dating/Living With Foreigner
Despite never posting photos together, someone identified Jay from a millisecond of exposed footage in a video.
Rachel writes:
I feel horrible this is all my fault. how am I going to tell Jay?
Part 8: Stalking and Fear
After telling Jay, he reassured her:
“It’s okay. Just ignore it”
But things escalated. Deleted videos were reposted to gossip sites. Updates appeared daily. Friends were monitored. Rachel was doxxed, with her address posted publicly.
The same person had my deleted downloaded and posted them to the gossip site. And as much as I hated I constantly felt the need to check the gossip. My mental health began to spiral. Everything I did, the posted updates daily. They kept a close on eye on Jay and all of my friends too.
She began experiencing chest pain and was hospitalized.
the dr told me it was from stress and prescribed beta blockers
Rachel describes living in constant fear, always looking over her shoulder.
Part 9: Coming Soon
Rachel has indicated that Part 9 of her story is forthcoming, continuing the account of the stalking case and its long‑term impact.
UPDATE: Part 9 and Part 10 have now been posted on Rachel’s alternative Instagram account where she follows up about her stalker.
Fans Immediately Clocked Who It Was
As Rachel began sharing more details publicly, fans were quick to connect the dots.
Comment sections filled with speculation, shock, and anger, many claiming it was immediately obvious who was behind the anonymous posts as this isn’t the first time Rachel has this very story online.
Some fans focused on the severity of the behavior itself, questioning how anyone could become so consumed by another person’s relationship:
“Who really has so much time to spend hurting other people like this? Why would you ever get yourself sooooo invested in someone else’s love life that you even feel like you can post someone’s address online? I can’t even believe it!”
Others echoed the fear Rachel described:
“people are so scary 😟”
Very quickly, fans began naming names. Multiple commenters identified another YouTuber as the alleged stalker:
“another content creator. She posts about books, travels and lifestyle in Korea”
“it’s caricakes on youtube. They both made videos on it years ago”
That realization sparked disappointment among viewers who had followed her content:
“Disappointing… I saw her sorry video and it did not make me feel sorry for her tbh 😂”
“Noooo not caricakes….. I watch her book review channel 😢”
Some commenters described the behavior as obsessive rather than accidental:
“she was envious and obsessed about Rachel 😢”
“this is what erotomany can do to people”
“literally psycho behavior”
Others pointed out that the Caricake’s apology itself felt calculated:
“the stalker posted a fake apology only after being caught and then deleted all the comments on the video where people called her out for not actually taking accountability. i’ve also seen her respond very aggressively to people that disagree with her. it’s a shame that she still has a following :/”
Several fans emphasized that harassment and doxxing are not mistakes:
“I don’t pity her because she did get caught. She felt sorry about herself and scared about what would happen to her. She did not for a second feel sorry about Rachel. And tbh this is not a mistake or an immature act for me. This is psycho behavior and no apology video will make me change my mind. It’s fucked up.”
“Harassment is not a mistake, is a choice.”
Others speculated about motive, tying it back to fandom culture and industry pressure:
“i assumed it was someone on the receiving end of the lawsuit who wanted to retaliate and expose their relationship to prove that jay had broken the contract”
“consequences of the fake love idols sell. Even with actual relationships you’ll find obsessive ones”
Amid the outrage, many expressed empathy for Rachel and how dangerous the situation had become:
“That is terrifying 😭”
“Imagine living such a miserable life that you feel the need to stalk and even doxx a random lady just because shes dating someone you’re obsessed with. Jesus christ..”
“Poor Rachel ended up in the ER from all the stress and paranoia 😭”
Longtime viewers also reflected on watching it unfold in real time:
“I can’t even begin to describe how hard it was watching you go through this in real time, especially being so far away. It was genuinely terrifying and no one deserves to live in constant fear. So incredibly proud of you for being brave enough to share your story 🤍”
For many, the most unsettling part wasn’t fandom, but that the alleged stalker was another creator:
“it seems like the stalker wasn’t even a crazy fan of Jay, but another YouTuber who was afraid of competition (Rachel)… Somehow it’s even more disturbing.”
Who Is Cari Cakes & Why She Admitted to Stalking Rachel Kwon
Cari Cakes, better known online as “cari can read,” is a Seoul-based BookTube and lifestyle YouTuber with over 300,000 subscribers. Originally from California, she built her following through cozy, long-form content centered on reading, journaling, art projects, and everyday life in South Korea.
Her channel often blends book discussions with personal vlogs, Q&As, and sponsored creative content. She is married to a Korean man named Kurt, who frequently appears in her videos, and together they present a relaxed, introspective, “soft life in Seoul” aesthetic that resonates strongly with international viewers.
However, Cari’s name entered a very different conversation after she openly admitted, in her own words, to behavior involving Rachel Kwon that many viewers interpreted as stalking.
Cari Cakes Stalking Timeline Circulating Online
Much of the detailed timeline circulating online comes from viewers who followed the situation closely and later shared their understanding on Reddit. One user prefaced their account by noting that they didn’t have every detail and that most public information came from Rachel Kwon’s own statements, acknowledging an inherent bias toward Rachel’s side, but still laying out a disturbing pattern of behavior that Cari herself later confirmed.
According to this retelling, Cari believed (without evidence) that Rachel was attempting to sabotage her YouTube channel by mass-disliking her videos and engaging in other hostile behavior. Cari later admitted this assumption was completely unfounded.
Around the same period, Cari had spoken publicly about an extremely stressful and traumatic job experience she endured roughly a year earlier. While some viewers speculate that this stress may have contributed to her mental state at the time, the Reddit user emphasized that it does not excuse what followed.

Cari ultimately admitted that she cyberstalked Rachel, as well as Rachel’s then-boyfriend (now her husband), and harassed other YouTubers within Rachel’s social circle. This allegedly involved creating multiple anonymous accounts, badmouthing Rachel and her friends on gossip forums, and sharing private details about Rachel’s life.
What unsettled many people further was the fact that Cari and Rachel had never met. There was no prior relationship, personal conflict, or offline interaction. There were just two creators operating in the same online space in South Korea.
Caricake’s Apology to Rachel Kwon
Eventually, Cari sent Rachel a Facebook message admitting to everything, which later became central to how the story was understood publicly.
Hi Rachel,
Reading this will feel like a punch in the gut, so please save this for a time when you’re ready. I have something I’ve been hiding for a few months and it’s time to tell the truth. You deserve more than an apology but that is all I can offer. We’re not friends, but I hope you can understand how sorry I am about the I have caused you.
I was the one that posted the first screenshot of your boyfriend’s face taken from your vlog. Recently, I was old that there were fake account of you made and that you are quitting YouTube, and the same I was already feeling became too much and I knew I had to finally confess. …
I tried to make you feel what I was feeling. I am so sorry for not being strong enough to just ignore it. That’s why I posted the screenshot taken from your vlog. I’m not proud of it, but I’m completely ashamed of it, but I also never thought it would snowball to the effect that it did. I chose the one thing people were most curious about…
It was completely wrong and immature of me and goes against everything I stand for but I still did it. I am taking this time to work on myself and really figure out why I reacted the way that I did. You won’t care for the whole story but for many other reasons I’m considering therapy. There is no excuse for my actions and I need to delve deep and face this ugly side of myself.
I can’t do anything to make it better, but I thought you knowing my story could help in some way. I’m in way expecting forgiveness. I know if this happened to me or a loved one I would be beyond livid. What I did was weak, petty, and wrong. Again, I’m so sorry to you, your family, and your boyfriend for the pain I’ve caused.
After Rachel spoke about her experiences, Cari posted an apology video. While some viewers felt the apology itself was technically adequate, others, including the Reddit user who shared this account, felt deeply uncomfortable with how Cari handled the aftermath.
She reportedly liked and pinned comments scolding viewers for still being upset, giving the impression that she felt entitled to forgiveness once she had apologized. For many former fans, this response “completely soured” their perception of her. As one viewer put it, they had genuinely loved Cari’s content before, but no longer felt comfortable supporting her after seeing how the situation was addressed.
When It Resurfaced: Reddit Reacts (Two Weeks Ago)
When the situation resurfaced on a Book Tube subreddit in early 2026, the reaction was immediate and notably consistent. Many commenters said they were either newly discovering Cari’s past or had known about it for years but never fully shaken the discomfort.
A recurring theme was how starkly her actions clashed with the “cozy,” soft-spoken persona she currently presents online.
“I was so shocked when I found out as her past actions do not line up with the cozy persona she is trying to portray.”
— shuaidae
Several people mentioned quietly disengaging—leaving her Discord, unsubscribing, or avoiding recommended videos after learning the full scope of what happened.
“I actually just found her channel a week ago… the first thing that came up on Google was the stalking and harassing she did. I understand people change but holy sh*t that’s intense.”
— NoRestaurant6399
Others zeroed in on the language Cari has used since, particularly her framing of herself as a “people pleaser,” which many found jarring in light of her admitted behavior.
“She said she was a people pleaser and I’m like how is stalking and harassing a person considered ‘people pleasing’ lol.”
— PonytaQueen
What lingered most, though, was the sense that even for viewers who believe in growth and accountability, this wasn’t something that could be easily forgotten.
“I’ll occasionally watch a video of hers but yeah I can never forget the cyberstalking thing. It always lingers in my mind.”
— lesveuxsansvisage
Several commenters emphasized that calling it “stalking” alone felt insufficient.
“She didn’t ‘just’ stalk her, she harassed and bullied her—creating fake accounts just to slander her.”
— isi_na
There was also repeated discomfort with how the apology was handled—specifically the perception that Cari curated the response by pinning comments urging forgiveness and deleting critical ones.
“After she stalked, harassed and doxed Rachel she had the audacity to only like/pin comments saying people should forgive her and move on.”
— travelandtastes
Some commenters debated whether the behavior stemmed from a severe mental health episode, acknowledging that possibility while still drawing firm boundaries about harm and accountability.
“I always got the impression this was the result of a severe mental health episode… but the only thing I side-eye is keeping a public platform when you know you’re at risk of that behaviour.”
— alpinedvne
Others were less charitable, arguing that regardless of cause, the consequences were real—and long-lasting for the person harmed.
“Rachel has to sit with this trauma for the rest of her life… meanwhile Cari lives her dream life and profits off her social media.”
— No_Feedback3822
And finally, one comment captured the whiplash many viewers described: the uneasy feeling of realizing you’d been watching both creators without knowing the full context of what had once been happening behind the scenes.
“I just found out about this a few minutes ago, and I’m shocked. I really liked Cari Cakes and have been watching unknowingly for about two years. Sometimes her vibe made my gut go off, but I ignored it.
The fact that she was so vicious and calculated against someone she didn’t even know is insane. These are literal crimes. I’m shocked Rachel didn’t sue her—that was incredibly gracious.
I can’t see her the same way anymore. It’s crazy knowing I watched both of their content at a time when one of them was actively stalking the other.”
— Vaudevanilla
Seoul Clout Verdict
I’ll say this first: I found Rachel Kwon’s story interesting. And as several commenters already pointed out, what she’s shared so far doesn’t even cover the full arc of her life. There’s still almost ten years of story left that we haven’t heard yet.
What we’re getting now feels like a very curated slice of the past, framed to lead somewhere specific, so I’m curious how she will frame the rest of the story!
What’s hard to ignore is the contrast between then and now.
Back then, Rachel’s story centers on secrecy, fear, and powerlessness, being hidden, monitored, stalked, and ultimately traumatized by fandom behavior. Now? Her content has largely pivoted into being very openly about her identity as a former K-pop idol’s wife.
It’s soft lifestyle content with romance-forward framing, almost fairytale-coded.
Let’s Get Real About the “K-pop Idol” Part For A Sec
One thing that keeps bothering me is how vague the story stays about Jay’s actual level of fame. Yes, he was a K-pop idol, but let’s not pretend N-Sonic was some top-tier or highly coveted group during that era of K-pop.
They were frequently mocked, largely unknown to the general public, and mostly recognized by stans and hardcore Koreaboos, not everyday Koreans. Basically, your average person on the street would not have known who he was.
The actual reddit thread that exposed their relationship got less than 20 comments. So let’s not pretend people would have fallen to their knees upon hearing news that N.Sonic’s leader was in a relationship.
I’m happy for him, living with a lady he loves, left an abusive company and won the contract lawsuit! He’s living his life, let’s leave him be. 🙂
If he’s dating that’s great for him. But if he doesn’t want it public then it’s probably none of our business right? Dispatch isn’t going to come after him either, he’s too nugu.
nuguest of nugus so who cares lol. Hes no different than some random korean bboy over there. Call up when theres some one semi relevant, like Beenzino for example
EDIT: So something interesting happened. When I originally published this post on January 31, 2026, the OG reddit thread was still live. Now, close to a month later, the thread has been mysteriously removed by the mods of the sub. After 9 years. Am I the only one who thinks that’s sus?
I can still still screenshots though. The comments (besides the ones I highlighted) were all basically replying to one poster and not that much related to the topic, which is why I didn’t include them here. But I will try my best to recover these 20 comments as best as I can.
For now here is the original post:

[RUMOR] N.Sonic’s Leader J.Heart Possibly Dating/Living With Foreigner
someone posted this screencap {https://ibb.co/ewQE25} on PULL {https://prettyuglylittleliar.net/topic/2079-k-vloggers-general-discussion/?page=12] {youtube gossip site} and i thought i recognized the face. With this in mind I investigated but wasn’t sure. Yesterday, the idol in question posted an Instagram {now deleted} photo that confirmed it for me but still not confirmed by people involved
N.Sonic’s Leader J.Heart is dating and living with a foreigner If true, they’ve been dating since 2014 and have been living together for over a year. The girl started a YouTube channel called DearSeoul and teases that she will show her boyfriend, but in reality she cannot because he has an issue with his contract.
What she revealed: 1. Met BF at a club, is great dancerJ.Heart won many awards as a dancer 2. BF is 30 years old J.Heart is born March 4 1987 {30 years old} 3. Friends joked on tumblr {now deleted} that he’d need a contract to show his face Still in legal battle with entertainment company 4. She also showed his face for a moment in a video {https://ibb.co/ewQE25} his face/nose is totally recognizable.
Further Proof: 1. J.Heart uploaded a photo clearly taken in her home. Same washing machine, tile, {basically entire bathroom} window hangings, and apartment layout {where bathroom is} 2.Always wearing same watch {couple watch bought by gf} **3. Same head phones as boyfriend in rachls instagram photo ** and finally 4. Rachel follows N.Sonic people. Rachel follows and is followed by @jxngwkhere who follows @thebj_ who is Bongjun from nsonic, jxngwkhere is
That said, none of that actually matters when it comes to dating culture in K-pop.
Whether a group is popular, nugu, or somewhere in between, openly dating is simply not the norm. Hiding a girlfriend, especially a foreign one, was not unusual then, and honestly still isn’t now. Add in the presence of stalker fans, and secrecy becomes almost inevitable.
The Exception, Not the Rule
Rachel often frames her relationship as rare, and in some ways, it was. But not for the reasons people think.
She came to Korea at a time when there were far fewer foreigners in club scenes, and frankly, she stood out. She was attractive, English-speaking, and socially integrated in a way that wasn’t common at the time. That did give her access that many others didn’t have.
Fast-forward to now, and white girls coming to Korea, meeting idols, and later posting “storytimes” is almost a genre of content on its own. The difference? Most of those situations end in situationships, secrecy, or getting quietly dropped.
Which brings me to this uncomfortable thought…
She Got Lucky. Like, Really Lucky.
Jay was older (30 I believe) when he entered into a relationship with Rachel. That matters. A lot.
Because if this story happened today, with a younger idol, more international exposure, and social media everywhere. There’s a very real chance Rachel would’ve ended up like many foreign girls now: merely a hookup, emotionally strung along, and discarded once it got inconvenient.
Instead, she married him. That alone makes her an exception, not proof that the system works.
And here’s where I get skeptical.
Jay’s mom didn’t even know Rachel existed for three years. Three. Years.
Who’s to say he wasn’t checking out other options while working overseas? Who’s to say the secrecy was purely about “protecting her” and not also about keeping doors open? We’ll never know, but it’s a fair question, especially given how long she was hidden.
And sorry to this, but as internet personalities now, we the general public are allowed to speculate.
Capitalizing on the Love Story
What complicates all of this is that Rachel has undeniably capitalized on this love story, both past and present. From DearSeoul to now, the relationship has always been central to the brand, even when it was supposedly off-limits.
It makes her narrative feel less like closure and more like a rebrand. Trauma, reframed into content. Pain, repackaged into something aspirational.
And you know what? Good for her. She went through a lot!
Final Thought (For Now)
Stalking and doxxing are serious and terrifying, full stop. Rachel Kwon’s story genuinely gave me the chills, and I do feel for her during the moments where she was clearly overwhelmed, scared, and losing control of her own life.
No one deserves that, regardless of fandom, relationships, or internet messiness.
It still blows my mind that anyone would continue to follow Cari Cakes after all of this. (She is the ultimate villain in my book).
Nonetheless, I do feel Rachel’s story feels selectively told, heavily romanticized in hindsight, and shaped by the fact that she ultimately “won” in a way most people in similar situations never do.
I say this because so many fans consuming this content are young, impressionable, and already primed to romanticize Korea, K-pop, and proximity to idols.
When I say Rachel ultimately “won,” I don’t mean emotionally, psychologically, or even ethically. I mean she won the fantasy. She bagged a K-pop idol, married him, and now lives what looks on the surface like the fairytale that’s been sold for years to foreigners dreaming of life in Korea.
Love, marriage, stability, visibility, and a clean ending. Most people in situations like hers do not get that outcome.
And maybe that’s exactly why Rachel’s story keeps people hooked. It’s more than just a cautionary tale about fandom obsession, stalking, or the dangers of secrecy. It’s an exception pretending to be a rule, a rare outcome presented in a way that can quietly reinforce the fantasy rather than challenge it.
Part of me just wishes she could acknowledge that distinction more clearly. That her story is utterly unique. That most foreign girls don’t end up as the wife. That secrecy doesn’t usually pay off. And that the system didn’t just magically suddenly work…it just happened to work for her.
That’s all.
Disclaimer
This post is based entirely on information that has been publicly shared online by the individuals involved, including public videos, statements, social media posts, and fan commentary. I am not presenting new allegations, private information, or insider claims. I am discussing and reacting to content that is already publicly available and widely circulated.
Any references to specific individuals are based on what has been publicly identified or discussed online. Where appropriate, I use terms such as “allegedly” to reflect that certain claims stem from public discourse and reported accounts rather than independently verified facts.
This blog is an opinion and commentary platform. The views expressed here are my personal opinions, interpretations, and analysis of publicly available material. Commentary on public figures and online narratives falls within the scope of protected free expression under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.
Nothing in this post is intended as harassment, defamation, or a statement of undisclosed fact. Readers are encouraged to review original sources and form their own conclusions.
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