About USGAC

The United States Government Accountability Commission is a civilian accountability institution established to restore lawful public oversight, reconstitute the grand juries, and preserve the public record of governmental breach. It exists to examine the exercise of public power, determine whether lawful authority was present, and record the result through formal findings, public notice, and civilian review.

USGAC is not a political organization, advocacy group, or policy campaign. It does not exist to advance partisan interests, ideological programs, or legislative agendas. It exists to examine claims of public authority under fixed standards of law and to determine whether those claims can lawfully stand.

The Commission is governed by Operation Firewall, a fixed system of lawful review grounded in immutable principles of law, constitutional delegation, due process, and public accountability. Operation Firewall does not evaluate public acts by preference, policy, or institutional custom. It tests whether authority existed to act at all, whether that authority was lawfully delegated, whether it was exercised within lawful limits, and whether the resulting act can withstand structural review.

At the center of that system is the Firewall of Law, the governing standard that defines what must be true before public power may lawfully exist. The Firewall establishes the conditions of lawful authority through fixed principles that do not change with office, statute, institution, or political circumstance. It is paired with the Chain of Authority, the operational method used to determine whether those conditions can actually be demonstrated in fact through a complete and continuous chain from source, to delegation, to jurisdiction, to act.

Together, these instruments form a single system of lawful validation. The Firewall defines what must be true. The Chain determines whether it is true in fact. If the chain fails, authority fails. If authority fails, jurisdiction fails. If jurisdiction fails, the act is without lawful force.

USGAC applies this system to identify structural breach, examine claims of authority, publish findings, preserve evidence, and maintain a permanent public record of acts that fail lawful review. Its work is published through formal findings, doctrinal reports, structural analyses, and recorded determinations entered into the public docket.

The Commission operates through a national body and developing state chapters organized as civilian review institutions. These chapters serve as local instruments of public accountability trained to document breach, preserve records, support lawful review, and assist in the restoration of civilian grand jury function under constitutional control.

USGAC is not founded on grievance, protest, or political opposition. It is founded on the principle that public authority must be lawful, that lawful authority must be provable, and that what cannot be lawfully proven cannot lawfully stand.

Its purpose is simple: restore lawful civilian oversight, reconstitute the grand juries, and record every breach.

 
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