No. 25-6697

Adedayo Abioye v. Mojisola Braimoh

Lower Court: California
Docketed: 2026-02-03
Status: Pending
Type: IFP
IFP
Tags: criminal-conduct false-statement federal-statute fiduciary-duty mortgage-loan victim-damages
Latest Conference: N/A
Question Presented (from Petition)

Federal statute of the United States Code - 18 U.S.C. § 1014, prohibits making a (misleading or) "false statement " for the purpose of influencing certain small business investment corporations, financial institutions, any person or entity that makes in whole or in part a federally related mortgage loan as defined in section 3 of the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act of 1974. This case presents the following questions:

1) Is it legal for entities (fiduciaries or a non-fiduciaries) to engage in heinous criminally tortious conduct that affects many victims?

2) Will the courts allow entities to illegally violate individuals that entities are meant to care for (with a fiduciary 's standard of care or an ordinary duty of care)?

3) Can a person/entity be held accountable for his/her/it 's false and misleading statements that have caused damages and have established a precedent that influences others and causes limitless damages to other victims?

4) Should the U.S. Supreme Court review the court cases that have been unfairly prolonged due to the defendants ' (threatening and intimidating) criminally tortious conduct towards me and the courts?

Question Presented (AI Summary)

Whether entities can be held accountable for false and misleading statements causing damages to victims under 18 U.S.C. § 1014

Docket Entries

2026-01-23
Petition for a writ of certiorari and motion for leave to proceed in forma pauperis filed. (Response due March 5, 2026)

Attorneys

Adedayo Abioye
Adedayo Abioye — Petitioner