Beyond Jurisdiction
About this series
A hidden network thrives in the cracks between jurisdictions, and across five books a scattered team uncovers how borders, systems, and power structures weaponise themselves against Indigenous communities until the truth forces a reckoning no one can outrun.
All the books in the series bear the title Beyond Jurisdiction.
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Book 1:
Theme: The hidden crisis
Focus: Missing Indigenous youth, cross‑jurisdictional failures, shell corporations
Purpose in series:
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Introduces the investigative team
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Exposes the trafficking network’s existence
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Reveals the jurisdictional loopholes
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Ends with the corporation wounded but not destroyed
This book is the “discovery” phase of the series.
Book 2:
Theme: Manufactured consent
Focus: Environmental protest, water contamination, corporate lobbying, trafficking hidden in the chaos
Purpose in series:
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Shows the corporation scaling up
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Introduces national attention and political pressure
Reveals that the trafficking is not a side operation — it’s part of the business model
This book is the “expansion” phase.
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Book 3:
Theme: Corruption as infrastructure
Focus:
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Federal hearings
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Lobbyists
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PAC money
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Politicians pressured to ignore Indigenous sovereignty
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Shows how the corporation protects itself through legislation
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Introduces whistleblowers, journalists, and federal investigators
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Reveals the trafficking network’s interstate logistics
This book is the “institutional exposure” phase.
Book 4: \
Theme: Extraction without borders
Focus:
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How trafficked youth are moved across state and national lines
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International buyers, offshore accounts, foreign shell companies
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Shows the global scale of the trafficking network
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Reveals the corporation’s true leadership
This book is the “global revelation” phase.
Book 5:
Theme: Sovereignty reclaimed
Focus:
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All four reservations
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All protagonists
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Tribal coalitions
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Federal investigations
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Community‑led resistance
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The collapse of the corporate empire
Purpose in series: -
Every thread from Books 1–4 converges
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Each reservation contributes unique knowledge and evidence
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The investigative team completes its arcs
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People exposed the corporation publicly.
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The ending is realistic:
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Some justice
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Some loss
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Some healing
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No simple answers
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This book is the “reckoning.”
AI Disclosure: Cover art was created with AI assistance.
Stories

Beyond Jurisdiction: The Difference Between Sovereignty on Paper and Sovereignty Lived
Story 1 • 109 chapters
When ten‑year‑old Aiyana Red Elk is found miles from home on the outskirts of the Black Rock Reservation—barefoot, bruised, and unable to explain how she crossed multiple jurisdictions—her discovery exposes a truth far more dangerous than a single disappearance. Her case pulls investigators from three sovereign reservations, two U.S. states, and Canada into the dark spaces where law has no reach and accountability dissolves at the border.
As RCMP analyst Leah Gagnon, Tribal Police officers from Red Rock Flats, Black Rock, and Boundary Ridge, and a reluctant federal agent unravel Aiyana’s fragmented memories, they uncover a pattern of children taken across borders through a network built to exploit the cracks between nations.
Those cracks are not accidental.
They are the architecture of the system itself.
The investigation exposes systemic barriers with brutal clarity:
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Tribal police have authority only on their own land.
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County sheriffs refuse to share evidence.
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State police demand protocols but offer no resources.
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The FBI asserts jurisdiction but deprioritizes Indigenous victims.
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Cross‑border cooperation with Canada is slow, symbolic, and often meaningless.
These are not abstract policy failures—they are lived realities that stall cases, erase evidence, and leave families without answers.
The system is not broken. It is functioning exactly as intended.
Across four locations—each distinct, each carrying its own weight—the people who cross these jurisdictional lines come together like strands in a braid. Their unity becomes the only force strong enough to expose a network that exists solely to harm.
Beyond Jurisdiction starts a series that examines the manipulation, weaponisation, and corruption of jurisdiction on sovereign Indigenous Nations. It explores the uncomfortable truth that Native Americans are U.S. citizens — yet they are the only citizens not consistently counted when they go missing.
The situations are real.
The historical context is accurate.
The documentation shows the systemic failures.
But the reservations, characters, and storylines are fictional — crafted to illuminate the truth without exposing actual families or communities to further harm.
Beyond Jurisdiction introduces a five-book series that explores how exploitation conceals itself in the blind spots of sovereignty. Book One exposes the fissures. Book Two explains how consent gets manufactured; Book Three exposes corruption as infrastructure; Book Four crosses borders without permission; and Book Five becomes the reckoning—sovereignty reclaimed.
The Girl in the Grass
Blue House
Aiyana Says Her Second Word
Who is NorthStar?
Investigation of a Blue House
Canada Hears the News
Eliza and Elijah Debrief
Samantha Explains NorthStar's Network
Canada Meets US in Joint Task Force
Compass
Return to the Blue House
The FBI Arrives and Challenges Jurisdiction
RR-2
South Room
Interception
The Map Begins to Form
Shadows on the Road
Aiyanna Coming Back
Recognition and Interruption
Chain of Command
The Third Mark at BR-12
The Room With No Windows
The Sound in the Hall
The Bracelet in the Corner
The Thing He Wasn't Supposed To Find
The Warning
The Man with the Quiet Voice
The Warning He Didn't Want to Give
The Man in the Frame
The Moment Everything Shifts
The Name That Isn't There
The File That Shouldn't Exist
The Quiet Man's Trail
The Question She Couldn't Hold Any Longer
Mapping the South Rooms
The First Surveillance Sweep
The Line We Can't Uncross
North of the Line
The Signal
The Meeting in the Dark
The Network Moves First
Entry
The Trap
The Crawl Space
North of the Line, Again
The Real Transport
The Generator Room
The Pursuit
The Extraction
Marianne's Discovery
The Cutoff
The Lost Child
The Girl Who Shouldn't Be Alive
The Debrief Begins
St. Agnes Hospital
Stirring
Her Name
The Call Home
The Ones Who Come For Her
The Circle Holds, the Road Calls
The Quiet Roads, the Loud Shadows
The Coulee That Shouldn’t Exist
The Underbelly of Fourteen
Chet Good Thunder
Relay Point
The Night Tightens
Arrival at Black Rock
The Signal
Split Tooth Coulee
The Perimeter
The Hidden Door
The Wrong Voice
The Descent
The Inner Chamber
Breach Point
The Unlogged Transfer
Threshold Pressure
The Breach of the Inner Chamber
Collapse Point
Extraction Route
Surface Run
Stabilization
Transfer of Care
Trauma Bay
The Crash
Holding Line
ICU Transfer
Night Vigil
Fault Lines
Threshold
The Slip
Convergence
Fault Patterns
The Decision to Move
The Clearing
The First Cracks
The Edges of the System
The First Thread
The Next Site
The Acceleration
The Vanishing
The Blueprint
The Memory
The Shift
The Library of Inheritance
The Crossing
The Quiet After
The Line Between
EPILOGUE — The Cracks Beneath

Beyond Jurisdiction: Beneath the Surface
Story 2 • 3 chapters
When a young boy disappears during a routine medical transfer, Eliza Morningstar becomes involved in a case. This case initially focuses on the missing child but soon reveals something much more dangerous lurking beneath the reservation's land and water. As the tribal clinic reaches its limits and the county ambulance never arrives at the hospital, Eliza navigates a maze of jurisdictional dead ends, corporate stonewalling, and a county sheriff’s department eager to distance itself from responsibility.
What begins as a disappearance becomes a deeper investigation into environmental contamination, falsified compliance records, and a corporate footprint expanding into tribal territory under the guise of “community benefit.” The more Eliza uncovers, the clearer it becomes that Milo’s disappearance is not an isolated failure but part of a larger pattern—one that ties into PMEP’s operations, county politics, and a system designed to let Native children fall through the cracks.
As tensions rise and the community fractures under fear and suspicion, Eliza must confront the limits of her authority, the fragility of interagency cooperation, and the widening gap between what the county claims and what the evidence shows. Each step forward reveals another layer of buried truth—about the land, the water, and the people willing to exploit both.
Book Two deepens the series’ central themes:
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the weaponisation of jurisdictional boundaries
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the systemic failures that endanger Indigenous communities
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the quiet, grinding violence of environmental harm
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and the way a single missing child can expose the rot beneath institutional promises
While Book One focused on the immediate human cost of jurisdictional neglect, Book Two expands the lens, showing how environmental exploitation, political ambition, and corporate influence intertwine to create a threat that is both intimate and structural. It sets the stage for the broader conspiracy that will unfold across Books Three through Five, each reservation revealing another piece of a system built to fail the people living within it.
At its heart, this book is about a boy who vanished—
and the truth rises when a community insists on remembering him.
Beyond Jurisdiction is a series that examines the manipulation, weaponisation, and corruption of jurisdiction on sovereign Indigenous Nations. It explores the uncomfortable truth that Native Americans are U.S. citizens — yet they are the only citizens not consistently counted when they go missing.
The situations are real.
The historical context is accurate.
The documentation shows the systemic failures.
But the reservations, characters, and storylines are fictional — crafted to illuminate the truth without exposing actual families or communities to further harm.