CIVIL LAWSUIT
Lilith Blackroot vs San Andreas Sheriff's Department
I. Opening Statement
I, Lilith Blackroot, a law abiding citizen, will be representing myself in this lawsuit against San Andreas Sheriff's Department and Inspector Aaron Reeve.
II. Jurisdiction
This court has jurisdiction over this matter as it involves:
- Interpretation and enforcement of Article I, Section II of Constitution
- Application of SA PSC II.13 (Self Defense)
- Alleged misuse of legal authority by SASD Inspector Aaron
- On February 21, 2026 I was present opposite to Market Ammunition road where SAFD Fiodor Dostoveiski and SAPD Thaddeus Thornbridge were looking into conduct of SAFD Volunteer Johnson Hobbs. I was lawfully present as I was assaulted by the volunteer.
- During this time, a vehicle arrived and opened fire on me, SAFD and SAPD officials present there. My life was placed under direct and immediate threat due to active gunfire.
- In accordance to rights granted under Section II of Constitution and SA PSC II.13, I drew my lawfully posessed firearm and returned fire in self defense in response to the life threatening attack. Once the vehicle fled the scene, I returned back to the investigation area. I remained on scene and did not evade law enforcement.
- SASD Aaron arrived and detained me. I did inform that I acted in self defense. I was transported to DSD where the arresting inspector, Aaron, stated that he did not care who shot first and based his decision solely on observing me shooting. I was arrested and charged with illegal brandishing of weapon.
- I later filed a complaint with SASD to which they responded:
"The allegation cannot be sustained. After careful examination and interviewing of the individuals present at the time of the incident, it is found that the allegation cannot be supported by the available evidence."
- SASD did not disclose who was interviewed, what evidence was reviewed or what legal standard was applied
- I. Violation of Section II of Constitution
Section II gurantees citizens right to bear arm and make lawful use of it and prohibits the use when there is no threat to one's life. I was directly in line of active gunfire at the time when I acted in self defense. The use of force was only directed towards the armed aggressor posing lethal threat. Under such circumstance inspector Aaron arrest penalised the lawful exercise of constitutionally protected right and by disregarding the existence of lethal threat, he not only narrowed the constitutional right beyond what constitution permits but also exceeded executive authority and intruded upon judicial interpretation.
- II. Improper use of SA PSC II.13
SA PSC II.13 permits citizens, whose life is under direct threat, to use equivalent or lesser force necessary to fend off the attack. The base element of SA PSC II.13 is existence of a direct threat.
Inspector Aaron explicitly stated that he did not care who initiated the gunfire and failed to determine the existence of direct threat. By disregarding the base element of SA PSC II.13, the inspector failed to apply the governing law properly and such arrest based on incomplete and ignored analysis depicts abuse of discretion.
- III. Constitutional overreach and exceeding statutory authority
Law enforcement possesses authority to investigate and arrest based on probable cause. They do not possess authority to nullify self defense protections through disregard of required element; existence of direct threat. By stating that the origin of gunfire was irrelevant, inspector Aaron substituted personal judgement for criteria. This conduct transformed a lawful defensive act into a criminal act without any proper legal basis, hence exceeding lawful enforcement authority and infringing upon rights reserved to citizens under Section II.
- IV. Lack of transparency and failure of accountability
SASD responded that the allegation could not be sustained after inverviewing unspecified individuals. They have failed to disclose identities of those interviewed, whether all individuals present on scene were questioned and the legal reasoning to support the conclusion. In complaint concerning statutory protections tranparency is necessary to ensure accountability and failing to disclose invesigatory basis undermines public trust and prevents meaningful review.
V. Damages
As a direct resulf of inspector Aarons action, I suffered:- Loss of liberty due to incarceration
- Emotional distress and reputational harm
- Interference with constitutional rights
I respectfully request that the Court:- Declare that my actions fell within lawful self-defense under SA PSC II.13
- Declare that the arrest and charge were inconsistent with protections under Section II of Constitution
- Expunge the charge of Illegal brandish of weapon
- Reimbruse financial losses
- Award compensatory damages in the amount of $500,000
- Order SASD to disclose:
- The identities of all individuals interviewed.
- The evidence reviewed.
- The legal reasoning applied in closing complaint.
- Order remedial training for inspector Aaron regarding proper application of SA PSC II.13 and constitutional protections
- Grant any additional relief Court deems just and proper.
In respectful submission,
Lilith Blackroot
March 1, 2026












