Constitutional Activist | Independent Journalist | Media Company (2M+ Community)
I’m SeanPaul Reyes, founder of Long Island Audit. I peacefully exercise my constitutional rights while holding public officials accountable through transparency and lawful action. I support law and order, but the same laws must apply to those who write and enforce them. Our mission is to expose corruption, defend our rights, and stand strong as We The People.
I’ve lead training's & seminars with police departments and district attorneys’ offices nationwide to help bridge the gap between law enforcement and the public. If your agency wants to work together—or if your rights were violated, or you have tips on corruption—email LongIslandAudit@gmail.com. Whistleblowers stay anonymous.
United we are strong;
divided we are weak.
You can follow my other social media channels &
donate to the mission below.
This isn't possible without all of standing together for freedom.
Long Island Audit
Resist Tyranny.
23 hours ago | [YT] | 160
View 13 replies
Long Island Audit
👇
1 day ago | [YT] | 78
View 8 replies
Long Island Audit
What should be the punishment for law enforcement violating court orders? https://youtu.be/UtDjgbq_pFM
1 day ago | [YT] | 674
View 409 replies
Long Island Audit
Fellow Patriots, this video is a MUST watch! 👇
1 day ago | [YT] | 124
View 6 replies
Long Island Audit
Some Things Will Never Change👇
1 week ago | [YT] | 100
View 7 replies
Long Island Audit
What kind of country are we becoming when a law enforcement officer can pistol-whip what appears to be minor, in the face while his hands are up?
That is not policing. That is not protection. That is a complete betrayal of the oath to serve and protect.
We the People are not the enemy. Our children are not targets. And no badge gives someone the right to deliver street justice with a weapon.
If this is what it looks like, it demands immediate transparency, a full investigation, and accountability.
Silence and excuses are how tyranny grows. Accountability is how a free nation survives.
This is not about left or right. This is about right and wrong. This is about whether government power is restrained by the Constitution or unleashed on the people it's supposed to protect.
The moment we start excusing brutality because of a uniform is the moment we surrender the very freedoms generations fough and died to secure.
We must stand united in saying this clearly: abuse of power is unacceptable, no matter who does it. A nation of laws cannot function if those enforcing the law are above it.
We the People deserve better. And we will not look away.
Watch The Video By Clicking Any Of The Links Below👇
Instagram:www.instagram.com/reel/DUM5KjsF42E/?igsh=MTl6ZHZlc…
Twitter: x.com/longislandaudit/status/2017816510190780515?s…
Facebook: www.facebook.com/share/r/1CYnBcjDHV/?mibextid=wwXI…
#backtheblueuntilithappenstoyou
1 week ago (edited) | [YT] | 3,526
View 986 replies
Long Island Audit
🤯👇
1 week ago | [YT] | 112
View 2 replies
Long Island Audit
I’ve been asked about my updated thoughts now that now that newly released footage from January 13, 2026 shows Alex Pretti in a heated confrontation with immigration agents. In the video, he is seen yelling, spitting in their direction, and kicking a vehicle taillight until it breaks. Agents then bring him to the ground, and during the struggle his concealed firearm becomes visible. For reasons still unexplained, the agents leave the scene without arresting him or even removing the firearm. Which in my mind raises serious concerns & questions regarding the training of immigration agents.
The footage shows Alex making poor criminal decisions that day. That should have been handled through the legal system like any other crime. Arrest, charges, court, due process. That is how accountability works in our country.
What it does NOT do is justify what happened later.
Nothing in that earlier incident changes the fact that Alex Pretti was killed by government agents after being disarmed. Nothing erases the reality that he was entitled to due process. Nothing makes street level, unilateral government use of lethal force an acceptable substitute for a courtroom, a defense attorney, and a jury.
We are a nation of laws. Guilt is decided in court, not on asphalt.
It is also deeply disturbing that the public was told Alex was a “would be assassin” and “domestic terrorist looking to massacre law enforcement.” Those are lies, meant to gaslight the American people. That should concern everyone, no matter your politics.
You can believe he acted wrong on January 13 and still believe his killing was unjustified. Those two things can exist at the same time. Accountability for citizens and accountability for government must go hand in hand, or freedom collapses.
This is not about left versus right. It is not about party, agency, or ideology.
It is about whether we still believe in the Constitution, due process, and the rule of law.
We need to stand united as Americans who believe that no one is above the law and no one is beneath its protection.
1 week ago | [YT] | 5,439
View 2,700 replies
Long Island Audit
A federal ICE agent looks at an American and says if you raise your voice I will erase your voice. He tries to walk it back but when the citizen repeats it to him he doubles down and says yeah just like that.
Think about the insanity of that moment.
A government agent standing on American soil telling a citizen that speaking up could get their voice erased. That is not law enforcement. That is not professionalism. That is not how public servants act in a free country. That is the language of intimidation and control.
And here is the bitter irony. We live in a time where regular Americans get mocked, profiled, and judged for their accents. People get treated like outsiders because of how they sound. Yet here is a federal agent with a thick accent, struggling to even say the threat correctly, while representing an agency that pulls people over and questions them about where they are from. The hypocrisy is off the charts. The same system that scrutinizes others for how they speak has no issue putting a badge and a gun on someone who threatens to erase a citizen’s voice.
Strip away the badge for a second. If a manager at a grocery store told a customer if you raise your voice I will erase your voice they would be fired on the spot and probably walked out in handcuffs. If a security guard at a mall said that it would be called a terroristic threat. If a private citizen said that during an argument police would be knocking on their door.
But when it comes from a federal agent suddenly we are told to relax, that is not what he meant, you are taking it out of context. No. Words matter. Especially when they come from someone with the power to detain you, arrest you, or use force against you.
This is not normal. This is not acceptable. This is not what government by the people looks like.
The First Amendment does not disappear because an agent does not like your tone. It does not vanish because your voice gets louder when you are scared, frustrated, or standing up for your rights. Free speech is not just for calm polite conversations. It exists specifically for moments of tension, for protest, for questioning authority, for saying no when the government is overstepping.
When an agent responds to speech with a threat instead of professionalism that is a red flag for tyranny. And tyranny does not show up overnight. It creeps in when people start accepting this kind of behavior as normal.
We cannot accept it. We cannot shrug it off. We cannot say well that is just how it is now.
We stand on the Constitution. We stand on the idea that government works for us. We stand on the principle that no badge, no uniform, no agency is above the Bill of Rights.
Stay firm. Stay educated. Keep your cameras rolling. Keep your voices strong. Because the moment we are afraid to speak is the moment we start losing the very freedoms generations fought to protect.
1 week ago | [YT] | 5,330
View 1,400 replies
Load more