Public trust

Methodology

WouldYou.Care Records is built around one rule: serious claims should be tied to records people can inspect for themselves.

Verification Standard

We separate what the records show from what a person, agency, attorney, advocate, or family member says happened.

When we make a factual claim, we try to connect it to a source document shown on this site, an official military or government record, a sworn statement or affidavit, a court, committee, or oversight record, or a clearly attributed public statement.

If a point is an allegation, argument, opinion, or advocacy position, we identify it that way.

Source Types

  • Source documents shown on this site.
  • Official military or government records.
  • Sworn statements, affidavits, and court records.
  • Oversight, committee, and advisory reports.
  • Clearly attributed public statements.

How We Use Source Documents

Document pages include the original PDF when available, a short summary, key points, and searchable text.

The PDF is the controlling source. Searchable text is included to help readers find passages, but it may contain OCR or formatting errors.

Sensitive Claims

This site discusses serious allegations, military justice cases, criminal accusations, and claims of wrongful conviction. We handle those claims carefully.

We avoid publishing unnecessary private details. We do not treat every allegation as proven. We do not treat every conviction as beyond question. We ask readers to compare the claim to the record.

Corrections

If something is incomplete or wrong, we want to know. A correction should identify the page, the sentence at issue, and the record or source that supports the change.

The goal is simple: let the records speak, and make the reader’s next question harder to ignore.

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