🚨 BREAKING - SANCTIONS ORDER IN MATA V. AVIANCA CHATGPT CASE
Case dismissed and lawyers fined; I've seen that. But this order also contains something I've never seen before: the lawyers have to write each of the judges in their fake opinions & apologize. storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.usco…
First, note this is a *THIRTY-FOUR* page opinion. It's not just a sanctions order; it's extensive documentary evidence of the fraud perpetrated on the court by the Levidow, Levidow & Oberman lawyers, LoDoca and Schwartz. /2
From the very beginning, it's clear that Judge Castel wasn't fooled; this wasn't just "boomers r bad at the Internets" - it was "you deliberately created fake opinions and kept going long after you knew you were caught." /3
So let's cut to the punch line first & then back up and look at the court's reasoning. Here's what the lawyers have to do: /4
So, okay, part (d) is straightforward - pay a $5,000 fine. The Court also dismissed the lawsuit via a separate order because all of the authorities raised in opposition were fraudulent nonsense. By contrast, the order on the merits is only 6 pg long! /5
The rest of the sanctions are designed to generate bar complaints against the attorneys. Part (a) directs the firm to send a copy of these orders to their client within 14 days AND the transcript AND LoDuca's fraudulent April 25 declaration. Ouch. /6
Mata is going to realize his lawyers gave him objectively terrible advice and representation at every step along the way. Even if this is a contingency fee case, Mata likely paid for some expenses. I would expect him to file a bar complaint & sue. But then there's this... /7
The firm has to contact EVERY judge whose name it stuck on the fake cases it submitted to the court & send them a copy of the opinion, the transcript, and the April 25 declaration as well. /8
This court didn't have the power to disbar LoDuca and Schwartz. But I would be stunned if its order didn't result in disciplinary proceedings being opened against them. /9
That's the relief; let's look at the analysis. It's BAD. One new thing we learned at the hearing is that LoDuca lied about being on vacation when he requested a week's extension to print cases. I've never met a lawyer who would lie in court about vacation. Ever. /10
Judge Castel called that "subjective bad faith" in dealing with the court. Ouch. /11
As for Schwartz, Judge Castel decided to make a specific finding of the dumbest, most embarrassing moment during the hearing, when this 35-year veteran practitioner somehow thought the F.3d Reporter meant "federal district, third department." /12
(That's not sanctionable; that's just the court dunking on you, Steve.) /13
I really really really hope Judge Castel listened to our episode where we said similar stuff about the obvious facial deficiencies in the fake "Varghese" opinion... but I'm pretty sure he just also noticed how bad it was. It wasn't hard to notice. /14
Judge Castel also noticed the fake "MIller" decision hilariously identified former disgraced Attorney General Alberto Gonzales (who served under George W. Bush) as defense counsel for United Airlines, which he definitely was not, even if this case were not fake, which it is. /15
Fredo Gonzales, if you've forgotten him, was equal parts stupid and evil, and he's the guy who authored the DOJ memo authorizing the Bush administration to torture prisoners at Guantanamo Bay. That's not relevant to this case but still, screw that guy. /16 americanprogress.org/article/albert…
Back to funny stuff. If you're wondering, 'hey, did the court also find Steve Schwartz acted in bad faith,' the answer is 'you betcha.' For one, he tried to pretend that he did real research "supplemented" with fake ChatGPT stuff, but then admitted no, it was all nonsense. /17
👇PAY ATTENTION TO THIS ONE - I know we're 18 Tweets in, but holy crap, Judge Castel found that LoDuca & Castel's conduct is on a par with **FORGERY** (!!!) /18
Despite everything, Judge Castel notes that LoDuca & Schwartz have been publicly shamed, didn't do this for overt financial gain, and are (to put it mildly) unlikely to do it again. ("Particularly if they're disbarred," the court did not add.) /19
Having to go to a judge and say "I basically forged your name on a fake opinion and then never retracted the pleading I filed in court that relied on said fake opinion" is... not great, Bob. /END
Oh and @5DollarFeminist rightly points out I missed the most important factual paragraph: /21 (and hopefully the end)
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If you're wondering, "how pissed is Judge Lewis Kaplan at Trump in the E. Jean Carroll litigation," the answer is "pissed enough to write a 17-page reasoned decision that your appeal is frivolous as a matter of law."
For clarity: this case is Carroll I - the initial defamation lawsuit filed by E. Jean Carroll back in 2019 when Trump was President. Carroll II went to trial & the jury awarded her $5 million. We explain why Carroll II got decided first in episode 750. /2
After the verdict, the 2d Cir & D.C.'s highest court issued rulings on Presidential job duties. That led Judge Kaplan to rule that commenting on a woman's appearance isn't one of them, no matter how much Bill Barr looks like the baby from Dinosaurs. (We paraphrase slightly.) /3
The more I read Judge Aileen Cannon, FSW's order from this morning, the more absolutely crazy it seems, particularly paragraph 4. I've never seen a judge literally direct a defendant what to write in their briefs BEFORE their first opposition was due. /1
Let's be clear: courts can (and do) request supplemental briefing all the time - e.g., when both sides miss the point. And yes, those orders tell you a lot about what a judge is thinking. But without fail, that comes either AFTER the issues have been fully briefed or... /2
...if there's been a significant intervening event since the initial pleading was filed, like a Supreme Court ruling that seems to change the rules or some major factual development like the death of a party. Okay. But this... /3
Remember Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss, the 2 GA pollworkers whom Co-Conspirator 1 a/k/a/ Rudy Giuliani defamed the hell out of in the wake of the 2020 election & then refused to turn over discovery when they sued him? Well... /1
...we've covered that lawsuit a LOT, including most recently in Ep. 783. Rudy filed a stipulation conceding to liability to try and finally evade discovery once and for all. We also told you that stip had some problems & might not work. /2
Specifically, Rudy's stipulation seemed to concede the liability elements of defamation. Of course, he and his spox started immediately lying about it before the ink was even dry. @5DollarFeminist covered that in detail for @atlblog today: /3
🚨BREAKING - JACK SMITH MOVES TO DISQUALIFY STAN WOODWARD IN TRUMP DOCUMENTS CASE
Woodward is Walt Nauta's lawyer (paid by Trump) & we've been shouting from the rooftops that he has MASSIVE conflicts of interest. Looks like Jack Smith agrees. /1
The DOJ has requested a hearing pursuant to U.S. v. Garcia, 517 F.2d 272 (5th Cir. 1975), which directs the trial court to "actively participate" in an inquiry as to whether a defendant has knowingly & voluntarily waived conflicts of interest. /3
🧵OPENING ARGUMENTS TRIES NOT TO GET KICKED OFF TWITTER
There's a recently-filed lawsuit by one X Corp., a Nevada-based social media platform that allows its users to “tweet” at one another. X Corp. announced a “general amnesty” for previously-banned users in November 2022. /1
As we all know, that amnesty welcomed back tens of thousands of neo-Nazis, white supremacists, misogynists, racists, antisemites, conspiracy theorists, and other dangerous loons. Within weeks of their reinstatement, hate speech exploded. /2
One of the sources for the Times was the Center for Countering Digital Hate, a public charity devoted to holding social media companies responsible for spreading hateful disinfo. In February 2023, they published a 22-page report called “Toxic Twitter.” /3