After Emily’s presentation, I joined her on stage to announce the foundation’s newest initiative, a partnership with family courts in 12 states to establish child advocacy protocols specifically designed for financial fraud cases.
“The Katherine Gillian Foundation has demonstrated that children’s testimony is often the most reliable evidence of premeditated financial deception,” I told the audience. “Children observe family dynamics without agenda, remember conversations with accuracy, and report facts without the emotional complications that affect adult witnesses. Beginning this fall, family court systems in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, and Kentucky will implement standardized procedures for interviewing child witnesses in divorce cases involving suspected asset concealment. This means that children who notice confusing adult behavior around money will have trained advocates to help them report what they’ve observed. And family court judges will have established protocols for evaluating children’s testimony about financial fraud.”
During the question and answer session, a woman in her sixties raised her hand.
“Mrs. Gillian, my granddaughter Maya documented hidden assets that helped me recover $1.8 million from my ex-husband. But my son, Maya’s father, is angry that she testified against her grandfather. How do you handle family relationships when children’s testimony protects one family member by exposing another?”
I looked at Emily, who’d fielded similar questions at previous conferences.
“May I answer this?” Emily asked, and I nodded.
“When adults make bad choices that hurt people, children shouldn’t have to pretend those choices are okay just to keep family relationships comfortable,” Emily said. “My grandfather went to prison because he committed crimes, not because I told the truth about his crimes. Maya’s grandfather lost money because he stole it, not because Maya reported the stealing.”
“Adults who get mad at children for telling the truth about their bad behavior are teaching kids that family loyalty means protecting people who hurt other family members. That’s not loyalty. That’s enabling. Real family loyalty means protecting people who are being hurt, even when the people hurting them are also family.”
As the conference concluded and families began gathering their materials and saying goodbye, I found myself standing with Emily in the now empty auditorium, looking at the stage where hundreds of women and children had shared stories of courage, recovery, and systemic change.
“Emily, when you testified at my divorce hearing three years ago, did you imagine we’d be here today?”
“No. But I’m glad we are. Grandma Kathy, do you ever wonder what would have happened if I hadn’t paid attention to Grandpa Robert’s secret meetings?”
“You would have become someone different, and so would I. And hundreds of other families would still be suffering from financial fraud that they thought was their fault.”
“Do you think Grandpa Robert knows about all the families we’ve helped?”
“I don’t know, and I don’t think it matters, Emily. What matters is that his crimes led to resources that protect people he’ll never meet, taught children he’ll never know, and created justice that extends far beyond our family.”
“Grandma Kathy, what’s the most important thing I learned from all of this?”
I thought about the question as we walked toward the exit, past displays showing foundation statistics, client success stories, and photographs of children who’d chosen courage over convenience, truth over family politics, protection over politeness.
“What do you think is the most important thing you learned?”
“That being small doesn’t mean being powerless. That telling the truth can change everything, even when adults don’t want to hear it. And that sometimes the best way to love your family is to refuse to let bad people hurt them, even when those bad people are also family.”
As we drove home through the Memphis streets where this journey had begun with a phone call about divorce papers and Emily’s first questions about her grandfather’s secret visitors, I reflected on the transformation that had occurred in both our lives. Emily had grown from an observant eight-year-old into a confident 12-year-old advocate who understood justice, systemic change, and the difference between personal healing and public service. I had grown from a betrayed wife into a leader who’d learned to transform personal trauma into protection for others facing similar threats.
“Grandma Kathy,” Emily said as we pulled into our driveway, “when I’m grown up and have children of my own, I’m going to teach them what you taught me.”
“What’s that?”
“That love isn’t just about being nice to people. Sometimes love means being brave enough to tell uncomfortable truths, strong enough to fight for what’s right, and smart enough to know the difference between protecting people and enabling them.”
My granddaughter of 12 years taught me that the most important inheritance we can leave is not money or property, but the courage to stand up for justice even when justice requires fighting people we love.