Government Overreach:  with 7 Real Examples

Government overreach and SEC receivership illustrated through court files, property records, and due process concerns in Barton v. SEC.

Government overreach is not just a political slogan. It becomes real when legal process takes property, leverage, reputation, and defense resources before any jury has decided the facts. The Barton receivership offers a live case study.

12 Organizations That Stood with Tim Barton

Twelve organizations that stood with Tim Barton at the Supreme Court

Twelve organizations filed amicus briefs supporting Tim Barton’s Supreme Court petition in Barton v. SEC. They came from Congress, civil-liberties groups, technology foundations, state-policy organizations, and property-rights advocates. They did not all share the same politics — but they shared one constitutional concern: whether a federal receivership can strip a citizen of the resources needed to defend himself without clear authorization from Congress.

Barton v. SEC: How a Dallas Developer Lost Everything

Tim Barton SEC case cover image showing federal receivership, property seizure, court filings, and Dallas real estate assets

The Tim Barton SEC case traces one of the most aggressive federal receivership battles in recent Texas history, from the SEC complaint and receiver appointment to Fifth Circuit appeals, a Supreme Court petition, disputed property sales, receiver fees, and a pending criminal trial.