UNTouchable: Power, Privilege, and How Justice Failed to Act is a gripping work of nonfiction that examines how influence reshapes accountability-and how systems meant to protect the public often protect themselves instead.
Through careful analysis, documented patterns, and real-world institutional behavior, this book explores what happens when power meets silence. It unpacks how privilege operates behind closed doors, how warning signs are minimized, how media narratives are managed, and why accountability repeatedly collapses when it matters most.
Rather than focusing on sensational accusations, UNTouchable takes a systems-level approach-revealing how laws, institutions, and public trust can be quietly undermined by delay, discretion, and strategic inaction. From the cost of speaking up to the human consequences of unchecked authority, each chapter exposes a reality many recognize but few confront.
This book is not about one individual. It is about a pattern. And a question society can no longer avoid:
Who is justice really for?
Thought-provoking, measured, and deeply relevant, UNTouchable is essential reading for anyone interested in social justice, accountability, power dynamics, and the fragile line between authority and impunity.