washingtonpost.com'The stuff of which violent insurrections are made:' Federal judge punishes Colorado lawyers for 2020 election lawsuit
Rosalind Helderman
A federal judge in Colorado has disciplined two lawyers who filed a lawsuit challenging the 2020 election late last year, finding that the case was "frivolous," "not warranted by existing law" and filed "in bad faith."
In a scathing 68-page opinion, Magistrate Judge N. Reid Neureiter found that the lawyers made little effort to corroborate information they had included in the suit, which argued there had been a vast national conspiracy to steal the election from President Donald Trump.
He particularly called out the duo, Gary D. Fielder and Ernest John Walker, for quoting Trump in their legal filing, which cited a presidential tweet that claimed without evidence that voting machines manufactured by the company Dominion Voting Systems had "deleted 2.7 million Trump votes nationwide." Neureiter called that allegation "highly disputed and inflammatory" and said the lawyers made no efforts to verify it.
The two lawyers filed the case as a class action on behalf of 160 million American voters, alleging a complicated plot engineered by Dominion; Facebook; its founder Mark Zuckerberg; his wife, Priscilla Chan; and elected officials in four states. They had sought $160 billion in damages.
The case was dismissed in April, but Neureiter ruled that the attorneys had violated their ethical obligations by lodging it in the first place and by peppering their motions with wild allegations that they had made little effort to substantiate. Legal rules prohibit attorneys from clogging the court systems with frivolous motions or from filing information that is not true.
Calling the suit "one enormous conspiracy theory," Neureiter ordered that the duo must pay the legal fees of all the individuals and companies they had sued — 18 separate entities in all — as a way to deter future similar cases.
Neureiter ordered the defendants to compile records showing how much time they had spent on the case and their typical billing rates to determining how much the two lawyers will owe.
"In short, this was no slip-and-fall at the local grocery store," wrote Neureiter, who was appointed as a magistrate judge by other judges. "Albeit disorganized and fantastical, the Complaint's allegations are extraordinarily serious and, if accepted as true by large numbers of people, are the stuff of which violent insurrections are made."
While the lawyers attached affidavits from various people who alleged the election had been rigged — a common tactic of Trump supporters in the dozens of challenges filed in the months after the election — Neureiter said a close examination of the testimony showed it was "notable only in demonstrating no firsthand knowledge by any Plaintiff of any election fraud, misconduct, or malfeasance."
In an email, Fielder said the two planned to appeal the judge's order.
"We were never acting in bad faith," he wrote. He said the case was intended to seek "a peaceful and legal method" to address what he termed "the mountain of truthful and factual allegations in our complaint."
He added: "The case has nothing to do with Donald Trump, and is concerned only with the integrity of our Presidential elections."
Wednesday's order came as the judicial system nationally has been grappling with how to hold accountable the lawyers who filed flimsy challenges to the election.
In June, a panel of judges in New York suspended the law license of former New York mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani, arguing that Trump's personal lawyer had "communicated demonstrably false and misleading statements" that amounted to an ongoing threat to the public. Giuliani's lawyers have said they are confident his license will be restored after a hearing.
Last month, a federal judge in Michigan spent nearly six hours skeptically questioning a group of nine lawyers, including pro-Trump attorneys Sidney Powell and L. Lin Wood, as she sought to determine whether to sanction them over a lawsuit that sought to overturn President Biden's win in that state. A ruling is expected in that matter soon.
Other disciplinary actions are pending before a Wisconsin judge and in front of bar associations in multiple states.
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Wednesday, August 4, 2021
It's a mountain, alright.
A NASA software engineer for more than 20 years (retired), Egyptology hobbyist and ARCE-NC board of directors member for more than 25 years, former reporter and copy editor for the Kansas City Star and Louisville Courier-Journal. I favor open source development, Linux, network neutrality, medical care as a right and not a privilege, the ACLU, freedom of religion, separation of church and state, and freedom of speech, among other things.
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