- Joined
- May 16, 2019
Whether intentionally or not, Hardin has now shoved the judge into facing down two paths of dismissal, with a third to come.I think the judge might go down that route if only to create as many reasons for dismissal as possible that an appeals court won't touch it because even if they hate Null, it's too much of a mess for them to "fix" without overturning a lot of existing precedent or contravening established law. At one point the judge might have assumed that the easiest path forward was to get this case to trial, but Greer's complete retardation derailed that train months ago
Choose your own adventure:
Path #2 is still developing. Through a series of unforced errors, Russ has been stacking up sanctionable activity in some of the worst areas for him. A tard-shielding judge who doesn't want to rewind time 5 years to smack Greer on technicalities, may be more willing to smack Greer for raw stupidity from the last month.
Path #3 isn't on the docket yet, my impression is that was what Hardin was originally maneuvering towards. The judge seemed to anticipate it being the main event during the November hearing. I've ranted about the "death march to trial" before, but the judge may simply be marching to summary judgement instead.
- Re-litigating the very beginnings of this 5 year old suit: unsealing ECF 1 for IFP fraud, fighting over ECF 15 and over jurisdiction. He also wants to re-argue the Appeals decision, if he can get the judge to let him.
- Case ending-sanctions for Greer's inexcusable lies and fuck-ups
- To come: boring old summary judgement on the merits, if discovery ever completes
Path #2 is still developing. Through a series of unforced errors, Russ has been stacking up sanctionable activity in some of the worst areas for him. A tard-shielding judge who doesn't want to rewind time 5 years to smack Greer on technicalities, may be more willing to smack Greer for raw stupidity from the last month.
Path #3 isn't on the docket yet, my impression is that was what Hardin was originally maneuvering towards. The judge seemed to anticipate it being the main event during the November hearing. I've ranted about the "death march to trial" before, but the judge may simply be marching to summary judgement instead.
I think the judge doesn't want #1, had planned for #3, but is now facing down an unavoidable #2. Even with witness tampering and STEVE IS FUCKING DEAD, Russ still managed to put himself in even worse position over the last 30 days. I wouldn't have called #2 likely before the May 6th hearing; now I think it's turning into the next major phase of the suit.
The question is, does the judge prefer a death march to trial/SJ, no matter how many sanctions it costs his pet tard? Or does he prefer one of many fraud-related off-ramps?
I don't know the technicalities of multiple-cause dismissals. Can the judge pick his top 5 reasons to dismiss, and an appeal has to defeat all 5? Or does he have to pick one and just mention the others? We are nearing (or past) the point where "good reasons to dismiss" are in the double digits.