Fans of Jose “Chille” DeCastro were not at all shocked or surprised Sunday night as he announced that yet again, that his Constitutional HQ board game was neither finished nor shipping this week.
DeCastro attempted to distract his audience by hiding his announcement between screaming sessions in his vertically formatted livestream, which drew nearly 300 consecutive viewers at times on his main YouTube channel.
The YouTuber focused on Trifold sales and anti-police videos, then spent a good portion of the rest of his livestream pretending to be outraged over a recent case featured on the “We’re All Insane” YouTube channel of a woman suing her police chief father in New Jersey over alleged inappropriate activity.
The woman has filed suit against her father in federal court, alleging the abuse at his hands and that of a neighbor. She is also suing New Jersey’s child protective services for failing to act on the abuse.
While not mentioned in the lawsuit, the woman has since added allegations, without proof, that her father and the neighbor were part of a vast “seasonal” cult that terrorized New Jersey for decades.
DeCastro released both a video on his channel and multiple Twitter/X posts in support of the woman on Sunday, declaring her father corrupt and demanding his removal as police chief of Leonia, New Jersey. His livestream would feature a call to the late night police dispatcher in his “JD” character, demanding action taken to remove the chief.
Long time viewers recognized DeCastro’s feigned outrage and sudden all-in on a cause as yet another attempt to deflect from the fact that his board game was again delayed. He took no responsibility for the delay, simply stating that he would have the prototype cards back from the print shop later in the week and that he’d show each one on a live stream.
He again promised that he would be doing “daily” livestreams to support the game and would be improving his vertical presentation by switching from Streamyard to OBS as his livestreaming software.
DeCastro’s threatened price increase of his Constitution HQ board game has yet to materialize on his DeleteLawZ.com website. However, despite quoting various specific prices on his livestream for his trifold product, a single copy of his trifold is now priced at $25.00 with $11.00 shipping and handling.
Curiously, DeCastro continues to offer a $38.00 combo of a trifold and two of his Cop Card products with $11.00 shipping. DeCastro has made it clear that any purchase of a trifold would be accompanied by “several” complimentary cop cards, so it is unclear why he’d offer a product combination that could be acquired for free in another offer.
The links to DeCastro’s products featured on his main DeleteLawZ page were not working as of press time.
DeCastro’s latest delay of the board game marks the fifth such delay this year, as the product has slipped from a Thanksgiving 2024 release date to now indefinite future release date.
We’ll continue to monitor the situation as DeCastro continues to deflect from his latest product delay.
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