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Bloomberg Law ran an historic story yesterday headlined, “Kansas Sues Pfizer Over Covid-19 Vaccine’s Safety, Efficacy.” Yesterday, Kansas sued covid vaccine giant Pfizer for dangerous misrepresentations. Safe and effective! The new Kansas suit follows Pfizer’s Texas lawsuit headache, filed by its Attorney General Ken Paxton in December (it remains pending). ...
Kansas’ complaint interestingly alleges Pfizer kept its own internal adverse events database, completely separate from the federal Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS), containing cases of adverse events reported spontaneously to Pfizer, cases reported by health authorities, and cases published in the medical literature. The logical inference is not only that Pfizer had evidence of more problems than anyone else, but it did not share those problems with federal agencies, or even with VAERS. ...
Cases brought by states, unlike cases brought by ordinary citizens, are better positioned to tackle corporate giants like Pfizer. Citizen suits are handicapped by mismatches in funding, political clout, judicial skepticism, and sheer numbers of lawyers, paralegals, and other legal resources easily available to pharma giants like Pfizer.
But States don’t share those limitations. Setting aside whether it’s fair or not, judges take state lawsuits more seriously than lawsuits filed by citizens or citizen-led activist groups. Now Pfizer faces two lawsuits from states alleging it lied about vaccine safety and efficacy. More suits may be coming, and probably are.
At some point, one of these lawsuits is going to grip, and then the sparks will become a Disneyesque fireworks display. Patience, grasshoppers. The wheels of justice turn slowly, but when they really catch something they grind it into dust. It’s coming.
The State of Kansas outlines several specific allegations in its lawsuit:
1. Pfizer misled the public that it had a ‘safe and effective’ COVID-19 vaccine.
2. Pfizer said its COVID-19 vaccine was safe even though it knew its COVID-19 vaccine was connected to serious adverse events, including myocarditis and pericarditis, failed pregnancies, and deaths. Pfizer concealed this critical safety information from the public.
3. Pfizer said its COVID-19 vaccine was effective even though it knew its COVID-19 vaccine waned over time and did not protect against COVID-19 variants. Pfizer concealed this critical effectiveness information from the public.
4. Pfizer said its COVID-19 vaccine would prevent transmission of COVID-19 even though it knew it never studied the effect of its vaccine on transmission of COVID-19.
5. To keep the public from learning the truth, Pfizer worked to censor speech on social media that questioned Pfizer’s claims about its COVID-19 vaccine.
6. Pfizer’s misrepresentations of a ‘safe and effective’ vaccine resulted in record company revenue of approximately $75 billion from COVID-19 vaccine sales in just two years.
7. Pfizer’s actions and statements relating to its COVID-19 vaccine violated previous consent judgments with the State of Kansas.
8. Pfizer’s actions and statements relating to its COVID-19 vaccine violated the Kansas Consumer Protection Act, K.S.A. 50-623 et seq., regardless of whether any individual consumer ultimately received Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine.
9. Pfizer must be held accountable for falsely representing the benefits of its COVID-19 vaccine while concealing and suppressing the truth about its vaccine’s safety risks, waning effectiveness, and inability to prevent transmission.
Meanwhile, four other states have now followed Kansas’s lead.
The five states now suing Pfizer over the Covid mRNA injections are:
Kansas
Texas
Mississippi
Louisiana
Utah
Chatanooga ABC affiliate Channel 9 News ran a story yesterday headlined, “Tennessee woman fired for refusing employer's COVID-19 vaccine mandate wins almost $700K.” A federal jury awarded $687,000 to a woman who was fired for refusing to take the covid shots mandated by her employer, BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee. Tanja Benton invoked a religious exemption but was fired anyway, despite never having contact with patients, and having worked from home.
A Blue Cross HR flunky told Tanja that "there are no exceptions" to the jab mandate and then fired her. But the jury found she had a sincere religious belief precluding the shots. The jury, get this, awarded Tanja $177,240 in back pay, $10,000 in compensatory damages, and a whopping $500,000 in punitive damages.
That massive punitive damages award means the jury was pissed. More lawsuits are pending against Blue Cross. They should consider settling generously.
And even better, three U.S. circuits have also hammered employers over jab mandates over the last month. ...
There are more cases! It is fair to say the legal dam has burst, and the tide has turned. We are in a new phase now. Courts and juries are starting to show some serious irritation with employers who were stingy with religious exemptions. Large jury verdicts are like catnip to lawyers, and as the verdicts roll in, more and more lawyers will eagerly file the lawsuits.
Back in 2021, I warned employers their stupid jab policies were going to result in a tsunami of lawsuits that would make the tobacco lawsuit bonanza look like a lone, scrawny, tobacco bush. Or tree, I can’t remember. You get the idea.
The COVID shot was put on trial in the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, and coming from California the result might surprise you. Three of four judges agree it was never a “traditional vaccine” and therefore could not legally be mandated. ...
In its final ruling, the court decided “At this stage, we must accept Plaintiffs’ allegations that the vaccine does not prevent the spread of COVID-19 as true… And, because of this, Jacobson does not apply. LAUSD cannot get around this standard by stating that Plaintiffs’ allegations are wrong. Nor can LAUSD do so by providing facts that do not contradict Plaintiffs’ allegations... But even if the materials offered by LAUSD are subject to judicial notice, they do not support rejecting Plaintiffs’ allegations. LAUSD only provides a CDC publication that says “COVID-19 vaccines are safe and effective.” But “safe and effective” for what? LAUSD implies that it is for preventing transmission of COVID-19 but does not adduce judicially noticeable facts that prove this.” ...
According to America’s Frontline Doctors this is a bigger deal than one might think because “Liability protection under U.S. law is granted only to valid vaccines. The CDC and pharmaceutical companies were fully aware of this critical distinction when they changed the definition of “vaccine” in 2021 to include mRNA shots.”
Could immunity from liability of Big Pharma be challenged on the basis of this decision by the Ninth Circuit? Personally, I hope so.
Since it was never even a real vaccine, Pfizer can be sued into oblivion.
💉💉 More good jab news. The slow-motion collapse of the jab mandate industry continues. NBC Philadelphia ran a local-interest story yesterday headlined, “Former ADA wins appeal after being fired for refusing COVID vaccination due to religious beliefs.” The Third Circuit overruled the lower federal district court, which now allows former Assistant District Attorney Rachel Spivack’s case to head to trial.
Rachel, who is Jewish, was fired by the federal government —which never fires anybody including failed Secret Service Directors. But they sure fired Rachel, for refusing to take the jab on religious grounds. The District Attorney’s office made Rachel wait seven months before denying her request for a religious exemption, and then they fired her.
Even better, Rachel’s attorneys now get the right to take discovery, and so forth. I sense a settlement coming.
More like this, please. Progress!
More like this, please. Progress!
Patrick says
More like this, please. Progress!
Better if they were not for religious reasons. The jab is a bad choice for scientific reasons.
The 3rd, 5th, 6th, 7th, 9th, 10th, and 11th Federal Circuit Courts of Appeals have issued 10 appellate decisions since May supporting religious and moral beliefs for employees who didn’t want the covid shot and/or testing.
This run of wins has roots in last year’s Groff v DeJoy decision out of the Supreme Court. That case rejected the "de minimis" standard for religious accommodations. The Court held that employers must show substantial costs to deny accommodation.
Here are some of the recent winning appeals briefly described:
2024-05-07 Does v Univ of CO Regents, 10th Circuit. ...
In February 2022, Attorney General Paxton sued Meta (Facebook) for capturing the biometric data (tagged photos and facial recognition) of millions of Texans without first getting informed consent. Paxton argued Meta’s data collection violated Texas's "Capture or Use of Biometric Identifier" Act and the state’s Deceptive Trade Practices Act.
This week, to settle the lawsuit, Meta agreed to pay Texas a staggering $1.4 billion over the next five years—just for collecting facial recognition data. Here is a link to the order approving the settlement. On top of the huge fine, Meta must also stop collecting Texans’ facial recognition data without their prior consent, and must delete all the data it has already collected. Boom.
Consider the old saying, “death by a $1.4 billion cuts.” One wonders whether AG Paxton would have focused so closely on Meta, absent Facebook’s corrupt pandemic censorship and its 2020 election interference. As they say, you have to pay to play.
The 3rd, 5th, 6th, 7th, 9th, 10th, and 11th Federal Circuit Courts of Appeals have issued 10 appellate decisions since May supporting religious and moral beliefs for employees who didn’t want the covid shot and/or testing.
This run of wins has roots in last year’s Groff v DeJoy decision out of the Supreme Court. That case rejected the "de minimis" standard for religious accommodations. The Court held that employers must show substantial costs to deny accommodation.
Here are some of the recent winning appeals briefly described:
2024-05-07 Does v Univ of CO Regents, 10th Circuit.
Government can't discriminate based on religious beliefs. It can't judge legitimacy of religious beliefs. It can’t “troll” through a person’s beliefs. And, policies can't favor secular over religious exemptions.
2024-05-24 Ringhofer v Mayo Clinic, 8th Circuit.
Employers can't judge if objection is truly religious. Religious beliefs don't need to be logical or consistent. A testing objection was upheld. Science can be part of belief—It may be part of judging how something is bad for you.
2024-06-07 Health Freedom Def. Fund, Inc., v. Carvalho, 9th Circuit.
Reinstated challenges to school vaccine mandate. Questioned legitimacy of mandating ineffective vaccine. Allowed attorneys to argue that the shots are not vaccines.
2024-06-12 Lucky v. Landmark Medical of MI, 6th Circuit.
Government can't second-guess religious interpretations. Rejected calling religious beliefs merely "personal." Personal beliefs count.
2024-06-18 Bacon v. Woodward, 9th Circuit.
Reinstated firefighters' challenge to vaccine mandate. Mandate not generally applicable due to exemptions. Mutual aid agreement allowed unvaccinated firefighters to fill in when needed so no rationale to discriminate.
2024-07-18 Beuca v. Washington State University, 9th Circuit.
Reversed dismissal of religious accommodation claim. Cited Groff's new "substantial costs" standard required before an employee may be fired.
2024-07-23 Davis v. Orange County, 11th Circuit.
Firefighter Battalion Chief refused to reprimand objecting firefighters. Vacated dismissal of retaliation claim. Cited Muldrow's new adverse action standard. The harm need not be significant to be compensable.
2024-07-29 Spivack v. Krasner, 3rd Circuit.
Remanded for trial on Free Exercise claim by an Orthodox Jew. Jury to resolve factual disputes on religious hostility by Krasner.
2024-07-29 Passarella v. Aspirus, 7th Circuit.
Religious accommodations can have religious linked with secular reasoning. Remanded for trial on accommodation claim.
Recent Finalized cases:
2024-07-22 EEOC v. Hank's Furniture
$110,000 settlement for manager denied religious exemption. Company enjoined from religious discrimination.
2024-06-28 Benton trial, TN
Jury awarded $687,240 to employee denied religious exemption.
Navy Seals
Started with a favorable 2022-02-28 Navy Seals 5th Circuit opinion. 35 Navy service members sued over vaccine mandate. Navy granted medical but not religious exemptions. Court ordered policy changes and $1.5M in attorney fees. Did not award damages or back pay. Did fix service records.
Ongoing cases:
Rake v. University of California Regents, 220,000 employees. Past motions to dismiss and in discovery. We get access to the medical records. Using California’s Constitution and laws against the Regents.
Some Military Cases From: Three Lawsuits Filed: Bassen | Botello | Harkins (militarybackpay.com)
Bassen v. United States (Active-Duty). Class action for about 8,500 active-duty service members involuntarily discharged due to unvaccinated status and other active-duty service members forced into early retirement or constructively discharged due being unvaccinated.
Botello v. United States (National Guard/Reserves). Class-action seeking backpay and other remedies for 70,000-100,000 members of the Air and Army National Guard, and for reserve members of all services, dropped from active-duty orders or active status, denied pay or benefits, or prohibited from participating in drills, training, other duties due to being unvaccinated.
Harkins v. United States (Active-Duty and Reserve). Class action for active-duty and reserve Coast Guard members involuntarily discharged due to their unvaccinated status, as well as any other Coast Guard members who were forced into early retirement or were constructively discharged due to being unvaccinated.
Others:
1000s of individual employment claims settled. Settlement numbers are going up as the appellate wins come in.
On Monday, in a decision that will delight secular C&C readers, HR Dive ran a great legal news story headlined, “7th Circuit: Religious objections to COVID-19 vaccine may include secular reasons.” The sub-headline explained, “Healthcare employees who were denied a vaccination exemption based on their Christian beliefs and concerns about the vaccine’s safety can sue the employer for violating Title VII.”
In Passarella and Dottenwhy v. Aspirus, Inc., reversing a decision by the lower federal court, the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 2-1 to allow two former employees of Wisconsin nonprofit healthcare system Aspirus to proceed with their lawsuit. The workers claim they were unlawfully denied a religious exemption because their reasons for seeking the exemption mainly were related to their concerns about the vaccine’s safety and potentially harmful effects.
“The fact that an accommodation request also invokes or, as here, even turns upon secular considerations, does not negate its religious nature,” the majority wrote, adding that “a religious objection to a workplace requirement may incorporate both religious and secular reasons.”
HR Dive —a news site aimed at human resources managers— suggested that employers “should think hard” before rejecting exemption requests. The effects ripple far beyond covid jabs.
For instance, in the same article, HR Dive suggested HR managers consider a recent case from Michigan, where Trinity Health Grand Rapids agreed to pay $50,000 to settle EEOC allegations it had improperly rejected an employee’s religious request for exemption from its flu shot policy.
Flu shots . Progress!
Yesterday, Variety ran an exciting story headlined, “Elon Musk’s X Sues Advertisers Accused of an ‘Illegal’ Boycott: ‘Now It Is War’.” Space billionaire and the world’s richest man, Elon Musk, declared war on a monopolistic cartel of advertisers that boycotted Twitter/X:
We tried peace for 2 years, now it is war
Here’s the link to Twitter’s newest lawsuit, filed yesterday. According to the lawsuit, a shady Belgian ‘industry trade group’ called the World Federation of Advertisers formed another ‘media watchdog’ group called the Global Alliance for Responsible Media (GARM). The WEF calls the two groups “a flagship project.”
Twitter alleges they launched a conspiracy — joined by dozens of advertisers — to “collectively withhold billions of dollars in advertising revenue” from Twitter/X. The conspiracy caused Twitter’s 2023 advertising revenue to dive -52%, to $1.13 billion, and revenues are still falling.
That’s a lot of damages.
The lawsuit followed hearings last month in the House Judiciary Committee, where Jim Jordan questioned a GARM representative and exposed internal emails revealing awkward internal discussions like, “we blocked Daily Wire, why not block Fox News?”, and one GARM advertiser member begging to please be allowed to go back on Twitter because it was an “important tool to reach our audience.”
Another email from a top GARM executive said that he “hated their ideology and bulls**t,” referring to Fox, Daily Wire, and Breitbart.
On June 10th, the House Judiciary Committee published its interim report, titled, “GARM’s Harm: How the World’s Biggest Brands Seek to Control Online Speech.” The Committee’s findings fueled Musk’s new lawsuit. Yesterday, video platform Rumble announced it was also joining the lawsuit (link includes video explainer):
Rumble @rumblevideo • 20h
BREAKING: Rumble has joined @X to sue a cartel of advertisers and ad
agencies who conspired to block ad revenue from going to certain
platforms and content creators.
GARM was a conspiracy to perpetrate an advertiser boycott of Rumble and
others, and that's illegal.
Other platforms will surely follow. The Judiciary Committee report is a dream for lawyers, a gift-wrapped windfall, having already assembled the evidence it would otherwise have taken years of discovery to obtain.
So never say Congressional hearings never go anywhere.
The other noteworthy item about this story is how much is happening behind the scenes, or even right in front of the scenes, but we don’t see it, because more urgent news is constantly coming at us through an anti-riot fire hose.*
(* anti-riot fire hoses were never deployed in Minnesota, having been accidentally buried under Tim Walz’s large-print copy of the Communist Manifesto).
As Elon said, echoing Andrew Breitbart, it’s war.
Tulsi Gabbard will be taking legal action against the Biden/Harris admin over putting her on a terrorist watch list:
‘My own government, my president, my commander-in-chief is targeting me as a potential domestic terrorist, the closest word that comes to mind is a complete sense of betrayal.'
‘After serving over 21 years and continuing to serve in our nation's military, my own government has labeled and is targeting me directly now as a domestic terrorist.'
‘They're using people like the air marshals as weapons and pawns to target their political opponents.'
‘Of course, there's no explanation given, which is why we are taking legal recourse.'
‘Obviously, I've been very outspoken about the dangers of the Biden-Harris administration to our democracy and to our freedom and to our national security. This is what happens as a result.'
Shouldn't matter where you land on the political spectrum, a former congresswoman and veteran being put on a terrorist watch list simply for speaking out against the current administration should enrage you. It should enrage you because it's not only a waste of your tax payer money, but because it is what some of the [worst] governments in history do and that doesn't represent America.
The weaponization of government against outspoken political opponents is things you see in governments such as Russia and Iran not America
If you are a Democrat thinking "that's what she gets for betraying us," please remember the Pendulum always swings back the other way. Eventually a non Democrat will take power and the precedent has now been set.
Americans deserve better.
Conservative professor reaches multimillion-dollar settlement after free speech lawsuit
A California community college district settled with a conservative professor, agreeing to pay $2.4 million after years of legal disputes.
Matthew Garrett claimed the Kern Community College District retaliated against him for questioning fund misuse in social justice projects.
Under the settlement, Garrett will receive $154,520 immediately and monthly payments for 20 years, and agreed to resign.
Garrett's attorney's argued that school officials retaliated after the two questioned whether grant money was being improperly used to fund woke social justice initiatives.
On Wednesday, CNN ran a terrific story headlined, “Sarah Palin granted new trial in defamation lawsuit against the New York Times.” On Wednesday, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals revived Palin’s case, which was oddly dismissed in 2022 during jury deliberations. The judge wasn’t taking any chances.
Palin and her lawyers sued the Times for defamation, over its false implication that Sarah had been responsible for the 2011 shooting of Congresswoman Gabby Giffords (D-Az.) and 18 other people (six people were killed, including a federal judge). After Palin had gone through the whole case and her lawyers put on the entire trial, and after the jury went back to deliberate, only then did federal Judge Jed Rakoff rule that “no reasonable jury would find that the newspaper and editor acted with actual malice in publishing the article.”
While they were still deliberating, many of the jurors got push alerts on their phones about the judge’s decision, as joyful corporate media rushed to announce the happy news. Unsurprisingly, the jury, having been told how to vote, returned a ‘not guilty’ verdict for the Times.
On Wednesday, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals reinstated the case and ordered a new trial The decision is a fascinating read, carefully describing the media’s disgusting sausage-making and editorial character assassination. This is the second time the appellate court overruled Judge Rakoff and reinstated Sarah’s case.
The bungled dismissal and the poisoning of the jury were only two of the many problems the Court of Appeals noticed:
Despite the district court's Rule 50 dismissal, the jury was
allowed to reach a verdict, and it found the Times and Bennet "not
liable." Unfortunately, several major issues at trial -specifically, the
erroneous exclusion of evidence, an inaccurate jury instruction, a
legally erroneous response to a mid-deliberation jury question, and
jurors learning during deliberations of the district court's Rule 50
dismissal ruling -impugn the reliability of that verdict.
Not only that, but the Court of Appeals essentially found Sarah had proven her defamation case at the sky-high clear and convincing standard. “After reviewing the record and making all reasonable inferences in Palin’s favor,” the Court noted, “we conclude that there exists sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to find actual malice by clear and convincing evidence.”
In legal terms, that’s what we call a “burn” on the trial judge.
The New York Times would be well advised to settle at this point. They say justice delayed is justice denied, but Sarah Palin may finally be about to get paid for the Times’ horrible reporting.
At Amherst College, the share of Black students decreased sharply — by eight percentage points — for this year’s entering class, according to data released on Thursday. ...
Amherst’s data showed that the percentage of white students enrolling rose sharply, while the percentage of Asian American students rose slightly.
Proud to Be Suing Hospitals and Doctors That Inject Hep B Vaccines Into Newborns Without Parental Consent
Hospitals and doctors across the nation: You are on notice
ICAN is supporting an initiative that is long overdue: suing doctors and hospitals that inject newborns with a hepatitis B vaccine without parental consent.
The hepatitis B vaccine is a case study in agency capture. The target for this product was sex workers and intravenous drug users, and the rare pregnant mother who was hepatitis B positive. The problem was that CDC could not get the sex workers and intravenous drug users to take this product. The story would have ended there if pharma didn’t stand to earn billions through a wider mandate of this product.
If your newborn received a hep B vaccine at the hospital without your consent, you may be entitled to compensation. Don’t let the hospital get away with doing this to other parents in the future. Contact us today.
Simply fill out the form on this page and one of our attorneys will provide a free evaluation of your potential claim.
So the Supreme Court justly ruled that "Affirmative Action" is unconstitutional, because it is obviously racism in itself, judging people by the color of their skin rather than the content of their character or any other personal qualities.
Pfizer is tripping over its arguments
These lawsuits are revelatory.
Pfizer is contradicting itself between the Brook Jackson case and the Kansas case.
1. Contract Conditions:
· In Kansas case: Pfizer claims the contract had multiple "specific terms for Pfizer's performance" and various contractual conditions.
· In Jackson case: Pfizer claimed the contract had only "a single condition of payment: Pfizer's delivery of an FDA authorized or approved vaccine for COVID-19."
2. Statement of Work Requirements:
· In Kansas case: Pfizer argues there were many contractual obligations in the Statement of Work.
· In Jackson case: Pfizer specifically rejected the "allegation that the [Statement of Work] somehow tied payment to Pfizer's compliance with every particular of the clinical protocol or related FDA regulations" as "mistaken and refuted by the [Statement of Work] itself."
3. Clinical Trials:
· In Kansas case: Pfizer suggests clinical trials were part of contractual requirements.
· In Jackson case: Pfizer stated that the Statement of Work "states explicitly that Pfizer's 'clinical trials' are 'out-of-scope,' 'not related' to the agreement, and that the relevant studies were undertaken at Pfizer's expense 'without the use of Government funding.'"
4. Contract Clarity:
· In Kansas case: Pfizer argues for complex contractual obligations.
· In Jackson case: Pfizer claimed "the agreement is crystal clear" that delivery was the only contract condition.
Kansas could raise the doctrine of judicial estoppel meaning a party cannot just change a position to gain advantage when you asserted a different position in a prior case. The test is simple:
Clear contradiction in positions.
To gain tactical advantages in different courts.
Holding Pfizer accountable for its position would protect judicial integrity.
https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/25245990-kansas-motion-for-remand-1
https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/25245991-kansas-v-pfizer-notice-of-removal-1-1
https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/25245992-pfizer-opposition-to-motion-for-remand-kansas
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- A federal jury has sided with fired BART workers who sued the agency claiming they lost their jobs over a COVID vaccine mandate.
There are six of them total in the lawsuit and each will receive more than $1 million.
The employees claimed religious exemptions to the vaccine mandate but say they were not accommodated by the transit agency, and subsequently lost their job.
BART did initially grant vaccine exemptions, but the plaintiffs argued they weren't accommodated. An accommodation could have meant that they were able to work from home or get tested regularly for COVID. They argued none of that happened and they lost their jobs.
In total, BART must now pay a combined $7.8 million to all six former employees.
BART is a transit agency that is already between $350 and $400 million in the red, but BART's board of directors did vote eight to one for the vaccine mandate in 2021.
"There are six of them total in the lawsuit and each will receive more
than $1 million. The employees claimed religious exemptions to the vaccine mandate
but say they were not accommodated by the transit agency, and subsequently lost
their job."
Trump sues CBS News for $10B alleging ‘deceptive doctoring’ of Harris’ ‘60 Minutes’ interview
Former President Trump is suing CBS News for $10 billion in damages, stating the network practiced “deceptive conduct” for the purpose of election interference in its interview with Vice President Kamala Harris.
Yesterday, Axios reported a highly amusing story headlined, “Trump sues CBS News for $10 billion over Harris interview.” Yesterday, President Hilariously, Trump’s lawyers sued CBS in a conservative district in Texas, for deceptively editing Harris’ interview answers to make her look smarter and more well-spoken than she really is, which amounted … wait for it … to election interference.
Here is a link to the Complaint, which if you have any interest in legal matters is very entertaining: -20241031 Trump’s Ten Billion Dollar Halloween Lawsuit vs. CBS.-
https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/87shfd7v0tb3gs3pljhsm/20241031-Trump-v.-CBS-Dist.N.D.Tex._2-24-cv-00236.pdf?dl=0&noscript=1&rlkey=buqtyadvdozd72rba5hvefvzg
The claim is based on Texas’s consumer protection statute, the same one Texas AG Ken Paxton is using to sue the vaccine manufacturers. Comically, Trump’s lawsuit alleged that CBS “deceptively edited Kamala’s answer in the October 5 Version to create the appearance that she was articulate and decisive, when in reality her full answer to the question was a jumbled ‘word salad’ that further exposes her and harms her electoral chances.”
Let the games begin!
Supreme Court rules Hennepin County Absentee Ballot Board must comply with state law in choosing election judges by Nov. 1
A petition in the Minnesota Supreme Court accusing Hennepin County of failing to comply with election law by not appointing election judges from a chosen list for its Absentee Ballot Board was granted on Tuesday.
The petition was filed by the Minnesota Voters Alliance, the Republican Party of Minnesota, Karen Attia, Marlene Stoick and Richard Sutter on Oct. 15 against Hennepin County, Ginny Gelms — the elections official for Hennepin County — and Daniel Rogan, the County Auditor for Hennepin County.
The petitioners accused the county and county officials of violating Minnesota law under allegations they didn’t “appoint any election judges from the Republican Party of Minnesota’s dedicated list… of candidate election judges as required by law.”
In a decision from the Minnesota Supreme Court on Tuesday, Chief Justice Natalie E. Hudson said the governing body of the Hennepin County Absentee Ballot Board “must appoint election judges from the Republican Part List and may appoint Republican-affiliated election judges not appearing on that list only after it has exhausted the candidates on the list.” The county has until Nov. 1 to comply.
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Corporations in particular are afraid of lawsuits because they have a lot of money. Sue them first.
But it's also useful to sue the government when they are violating our rights.
A nice suit started by https://www.americasfrontlinedoctors.org/ :