REGISTRY ACCESS

Welcome to the Court Actor Registry

By

This is a list of judges, GALs, attorneys, evaluators, and CPS workers named by Stand With Meg families. To protect the families in the registry, access is limited to people who have shared their own story.

First time here?

Someone shared this page with you?

The registry is built from real family-court stories. To see it, please take the free 5-minute Stand With Meg survey first. As soon as you submit, you'll get immediate access.

Public actor pages are threshold-gated. Names are shown only after repeated trusted family reports meet the registry rules, and submitter identities are not published with actor records.

Take the 5-Minute Survey →
Connection CirclesPrivate · Verified · Handle-first

Someone on your case too? Connect without exposing your identity.

A Facebook-like space for family-court parents. Use a private handle, find others who reported the same court actor, and chat anonymously.

0connected
0handles
0messages today

How the registry is used

Families use the registry to see whether the same court actor, agency, county, or role appears in more than one report. Advocates use the public pattern pages to show repeated concerns without exposing one parent's private case file, child details, address, or email.

Records here are family-submitted experiences and allegations unless a separate public source says otherwise. Stand With Meg keeps extracted or unreviewed rows inside the admin workflow until they are ready for public use.

The review process looks for consistent spelling, role, court, county, state, and separate reporter signals before a name becomes part of the visible pattern pages. This helps reduce duplicate rows, protects people who supplied details, and makes the search tool more useful for advocacy and media review.

The registry is not a public accusation board. It is a pattern index built from submitter reports, threshold rules, and review notes, with private rows kept out of public search until they have enough support to be useful and fair.

If a name, role, court, or county looks wrong, families can submit corrections through the actor update form so review stays tied to records instead of screenshots or social-media comments.

Already shared your story?