Once you read my works there is no turning back!

STATEMENT OF DEFENCE & COUNTER

CLAIM FILED MAY 16 ™, 2025

This is not theory, not speculation, and not safe reading. It is a first-hand account of what happens when a citizen challenges powerful systems and refuses to be silenced. Built from real court filings, sworn statements, and lived experience, this book exposes how justice can be bent, delayed, and denied especially to Indigenous families and those living under institutional control.

About the Author

Nancy Oneill

Author | Educator | Legal Researcher | Advocate

Also known as: “Is This Justice”, she is not a career activist or a detached commentator. She is a mother of five, an educator with over two decades of experience, and a woman who lived and worked inside First Nations communities across Canada for more than twenty years.
Her work spans education, family advocacy, legal research, and community leadership. She has taught across multiple reserves, worked directly with children impacted by generational trauma, and navigated complex legal systems from the inside. Not as a theorist, but as someone forced to learn quickly when her own family was affected.
Nancy is also a four-time international bestselling co-author and contributor to multiple anthologies. Her writing is grounded in documentation, lived experience, and an insistence on accountability. She does not write to be comfortable. She writes to be accurate. 

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Nancy Oneill

Our Core Values

Mission

Mission

To expose systemic failures, document truth without distortion, and empower individuals to question institutions that operate without accountability.

Approach

Approach

Evidence before opinion, documentation over persuasion, first-hand experience, not abstraction and transparency, even when it’s uncomfortable. This work does not rely on speculation. 

About the Book

STATEMENT OF DEFENCE & COUNTER

CLAIM FILED MAY 16 ™, 2025

Statement of Defence & Counterclaim is a nonfiction work built from real legal filings, correspondence, and documented events. At its core is a civil filing supported by thousands of pages of evidence, much of it originating from government and Crown-affiliated sources.

The book examines the inner workings of child and family services, the treatment of indigenous families within state systems, the role of courts, legal professionals, and institutions. How bureaucracy can be used to silence, delay, and control. What happens when someone refuses to step back? Rather than simplifying or sanitizing the material, the book presents it as it exists direct, confronting, and intact. It challenges readers to look beyond official narratives and examine how justice operates in practice, not just in principle. This is not a political slogan. It is a documented confrontation.

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What Readers Says About Book

“I had to pause several times while reading not because it was confusing but because it was heavy. The documentation, the lived experience and the refusal to soften the truth it all hits hard. You don’t finish this book unchanged.”

– George. T

“What struck me most is how much of this is built on actual filings and correspondence. This isn’t opinion dressed up as fact. More than a book. It’s a record.”

– Hannah. J

“This book doesn’t guide you gently. It drops you straight into the middle of real systems and real consequences. I respect that it doesn’t try to persuade but just shows you what happened and lets you sit with it.”

– Jason. P Designation

“You can feel that this was written by someone who lived it. That’s what makes it compelling. It reads like someone who learned the system the hard way and decided to document everything before it could be erased.”

– Jenna. A Designation

“This book asks a question most people avoid. We’re taught to trust systems without really understanding them. This book challenges that idea head-on. It made me rethink what justice actually looks like when power is involved.”

– Trevor. B Designation

“If you’re expecting a neatly packaged narrative this isn’t it. It’s messy, intense and sometimes overwhelming. But that’s also what makes it honest. It feels closer to a courtroom file than a memoir and that’s the point.”

– Anna. H Designation