Right -
— Mike Dunford (@questauthority) June 3, 2021
Mike Lindell is suing Dominion. I'm going to get dinner and then livetweet. If you want a headstart, the complaint is linked below.
And it looks like Lindell decided to give our good friend @Popehat a special treat - because guess what's there!https://t.co/8usWb54h5M
The Hauge Convention v. the Hague Concention. Seriously. P. 8. In concurrent paragraphs.
And then there's the "cause of action":
Lindell will prove that the Dominion Defendants, acting in concert and as part of an unlawful enterprise alongside the Smartmatic Defendants, have weaponized the court system and the litigation process in an attempt to silence Lindell’s and others’ political speech about election fraud and the role of electronic voting machines in it. In the specific context of political speech about something as vital to a republican form of government as election integrity, no litigant should be permitted to use the courts and the litigation process as a bludgeon to suppress and stifle dissent. But that is what the Dominion Defendants and Smartmatic Defendants have done. Many of their victims lack the resources to fight back and expose the defendants’ scheme for what it is—an authoritarian abuse of state power fueled by the virtually unlimited resources from their ideological comrades. But Mike Lindell has the resources and the will to fight back, albeit at great personal and financial cost; Mike Lindell believes the future of the American republic depends on fighting back against censorship of information concerning the fundamental aspect of our republic—fair and secure elections. So Mike Lindell brings this suit to bring a stop to the defendants’ abuses of the legal system and protect Americans’ right to speak freely on matters of the utmost public concern.
I will defer to greater expertise than mine:
It's signed by actual lawyers (two of them from Houston), but it reads like pro se pleadings where the plaintiff copied some of the language from the petition already served on him by Dominion.That is the most poorly-pled RICO claim I have ever seen, and I’ve seen one written on the back of a prison grievance form.
— LolWhatInsurrectionHat (@Popehat) June 3, 2021
And they’re suing for defamation for being called “liar”? Good luck.
Money talks, I guess. Not an excuse, and I'm in agreement: I can't imagine any lawyer except the most unknown-and-desperate-for-cash, signing off on this bilge. Until I got to the signature blocks, I wasn't sure it wasn't drafted by Lindell instead of any attorney with any experience in litigation. I'm still not sure it isn't. But let's wander through it with the help of Mike Dunford:Most shocking part of Lindell’s lawsuit is not its demi-literacy or its coffee-table-book sensibility for pictures or its lunatic legal theories, but that lawyers from seeming mainstream firms put their name on it. For shame.
— LolWhatInsurrectionHat (@Popehat) June 4, 2021
Lindell seems to think the Dominion suit is a SLAPP suit. Nice work if you can get it. Dunford says, in another tweet, that Lindell is "continuing his assault on our republic through the use of performative frivolous litigation." Eh; I've seen worse. And I think the Republic will survive. In fact, this is more akin to Molly Ivins' riposte to a critic: the experience, she said, was like being gummed by a newt. It did no harm, but left your ankle all slimy.Just in case any of you had any doubt that the complaint that the Biglaw disgrace in question signed is all about the Big Lie, allow me to call your attention to the highlighted bit on the first page of the complaint. pic.twitter.com/pJ5S8yKOBF
— Mike Dunford (@questauthority) June 4, 2021
I post that so you can see the pictures that illustrate the complaint. Why the VPOTUS needs to be seen in a photograph in a federal legal pleading is beyond me. And presenting an assertion as a "fact" (there are lots of things labeled "fact" in this document) is a nice rhetorical dodge, but it doesn't really get you to the Supreme Court by August. Nor does this one:And here we have the Big Lie. Again.
— Mike Dunford (@questauthority) June 4, 2021
Bloody disgraceful filing. pic.twitter.com/90CaXLw2HF
You get the idea. The complaint goes on to restate (and so affirm Lindell said so) many statements by Lindell which are the factual basis for Dominion's lawsuit against him. Again, I question whether the signatory lawyers read this thing, or whether they were stupid enough to just sign it. I'm serious; I can't tell which condition is true.Fact: As every minimally competent lawyer knows, labeling a legal argument a "fact" doesn't actually convert it to a fact.
— Mike Dunford (@questauthority) June 4, 2021
This is even more true when it is distinctly not a fact at all. But I'm sure the judge will be impressed by this. Really. pic.twitter.com/BulelBjeDE
Apparently the lawfirm at the Minnesota end of this crap is a large and so respectable one (you don't get big by being clowns). Don't know about the Houston end, but my guess is they are carrying the water here, using the Minnesota firm to get into the U.S. court in Minnesota (that's a lawyer thing; it's done all the time). It's stuff like this that makes me wonder:This paragraph is absolutely true and the reason that Barnes and Thornburg should have to pay Dominion and Smartmatic's attorneys' fees in this case. pic.twitter.com/sYATUowS0A
— Mike Dunford (@questauthority) June 4, 2021
I knew that and I haven't practiced law in almost 30 years.This is...not a thing you do by filing a separate lawsuit and wasting court time. If you think that the defamation suit in DC is doing this, file a Rule 11 motion there.
— Mike Dunford (@questauthority) June 4, 2021
A different suit in Minnesota is just buffoonery. pic.twitter.com/tJesENQMFg
My guess is they got tired of quoting Orwell. My other guess is they found all these quotes via Google, because they're all so badly taken out of context that's the only explanation for how they're being used here.WTF pic.twitter.com/HnXWZV7ZES
— Mike Dunford (@questauthority) June 4, 2021
This is a fundamental problem. The Complaint rambles on for over 65 pages before it gets down to causes of action (those things courts can actually consider providing relief on). I don't disagree the facts don't establish any causes of action, but the causes of action themselves don't do that.None of this violates any of Mike Lindell's rights or causes Mike Lindell judicially cognizable injuries in this case. pic.twitter.com/GAaazsba51
— Mike Dunford (@questauthority) June 4, 2021
No comments:
Post a Comment