No family should lose a child and their financial future on the same day.
The Shield Initiative is a community trust that gives families in high-violence neighborhoods life insurance coverage they cannot currently access, fully funded, family-owned, and built on dignity.
Families pay nothing. Parents own the policies. Parents are the sole beneficiaries. The Shield Fund exists only to organize coverage and pay premiums through a national donor pool.
Family-owned coverage
Parents own the policies and are the sole beneficiaries.
Donor-funded premiums
Families pay $0. Premiums are funded through a national contribution pool.
Reserve protected
No cohort enrolls until 24 months of premiums are banked.
Gun violence does not end at the moment of loss.
When a young person is killed, the family faces more than grief. Funeral costs, medical debt, lost income, and the sudden financial shock of death can destabilize a household that was already under pressure.
Most families in high-violence neighborhoods have no life insurance coverage, or coverage too small to meet the moment. A family that loses a child should not also be financially destroyed.
Homicide is the leading cause of death for Black youth ages 10 to 24.
Black youth ages 13 to 24 are killed by gun homicide each year.
Young people lost every day.
A community trust layer for family protection.
Individual low-premium juvenile life insurance policies are often too small for carriers to distribute one family at a time. Shield pools families into organized cohorts, banks premiums in advance, and allows carriers to write coverage through a structured enrollment vehicle.
Families pay $0
Premiums are fully funded by a national donor contribution pool.
Parents own the policy
Parents are policy owners and sole beneficiaries.
The fund gets nothing
The fund never owns, touches, receives, or benefits from any death benefit.
Cohort-gated enrollment
No family enrolls until its cohort has 24 months of premiums banked.
Wind-down protection
If the fund ever winds down, families get 12+ months notice and may keep policies independently.
Community co-creation
Families and local leaders help shape enrollment, outreach, governance, and disclosure.
The fund is a conduit, not a beneficiary.
Nothing. The fund is a premium conduit only. It never owns, touches, receives, or benefits from any death benefit. That prohibition is a core safeguard of the model.
Memphis can lead the first Family Protection Pilot.
Memphis is the first pilot city under development. The city has the highest per-capita murder rate among major American cities, a Black population of approximately 396,000, and an estimated 63,000 Black youth ages 13 to 24.
Memphis is also posting historic reductions in violence, including 184 homicides in 2025, the lowest since 2019 and a 47% drop from 2023. Shield does not claim credit for those reductions. Shield's role is different: to help protect families regardless of what the numbers do next.
Built independently. Now entering validation.
The Shield Initiative is actively engaging academics, city leaders, and community organizations to test, refine, and responsibly structure the Family Protection Pilot.
Martin Sterling
Founder, independent policy researcher, RogueThoughts.
Dr. Charles Branas
Chair of Epidemiology, Columbia Mailman School. In conversation.
Dr. Desmond Upton Patton
PIK Professor, SAFELab founder, University of Pennsylvania. In conversation.
Memphis Mayor's Office
Active pilot conversation.
Community partners
Outreach, governance, family engagement, and trust design.
Academic reviewers
Advisory pipeline for safeguards and implementation review.
A civic model built outside the usual rooms.
The Shield Initiative was developed by Martin Sterling, an independent policy researcher, radiologic technologist, and public storyteller working under the RogueThoughts banner.
Shield is not a foundation, not a think tank, and not a product for sale. It is a proposed trust model seeking the right organizational, civic, academic, and donor partners to bring a carefully structured pilot to life.
Questions that deserve clear answers.
How is this different from regular life insurance?
Shield pools families into organized cohorts, uses donor-funded premiums, and creates access to coverage families often cannot obtain individually.
Who owns the policies?
Parents own the policies. Parents are the sole beneficiaries.
Does the Shield Fund receive any death benefit?
No. The fund never owns, touches, receives, or benefits from any death benefit. This is permanently prohibited by charter.
Is this a STOLI scheme?
No. Stranger-originated life insurance involves a third party creating or holding financial interest in another person's life. Shield does the opposite: parents own the policies, families receive the benefits, and the fund has no financial interest in any death.
Does Shield claim to reduce violence?
No. Shield does not claim to lower homicide rates or prevent violence. Shield protects families from financial devastation after loss.
What happens if the fund runs out of money?
Enrollment is cohort-gated. No family enrolls until 24 months of premiums are banked. If the fund ever winds down, families receive 12+ months notice and may keep their policies independently.
Why Memphis?
Memphis combines urgent need, historic violence reductions, strong community infrastructure, and active civic conversation. The pilot frames Memphis as a national leader in family protection.
Help build the first Family Protection Pilot.
For donors
Help fund premiums so families pay nothing.
For cities
Explore what a pilot partnership could look like without requiring city funding, staffing, legislation, or liability.
For organizations
Partner on outreach, governance, family engagement, and trust design.
For academics and researchers
Help validate the model, refine safeguards, and evaluate implementation.