Anatomy of a Fraud on the Court (Miller v. County of Lancaster)
VIDEO: https://youtu.be/q7UmyXDgAd4 CASE FILES: https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/69829520/michael-miller-v-county-of-lancaster/
VIDEO: https://youtu.be/q7UmyXDgAd4 CASE FILES: https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/69829520/michael-miller-v-county-of-lancaster/
County's response to a public records requests shows County's election clerk purchased replacement mail-in ballots AFTER May 17 election day to be counted in the election.
Opening Scene — A Court Without a Judge This isn’t a story about losing a lawsuit. It’s a story about never getting a judge. In Miller v. County of Lancaster (1:24-cv-00014, Appeal No. 24-2934), every rule meant to guarantee fairness was quietly flipped upside down. If the courthouse had a marquee, it would read: Now [...]
Why Rule 12(b) Matters Rule 12(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure is meant to be simple. It allows a defendant to ask a court to dismiss a complaint before answering it—if the complaint itself is legally defective on its face. Importantly, nothing is proven or disproven in this motion; the court may not [...]
Background In May 2022, I ran for State Senate in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. On Election Day, County officials made a stunning announcement: approximately 14,000 of the 22,000 ballots the County received from ‘mail-in’ voters could not be counted by County’s scanners because the ballots had been misprinted. (the clerk testified that 8,000 ballots scanned [...]
Most pro se litigants trust that if they follow the rules, the court will fairly apply the law. But here’s what really happens when a pro se litigant challenges a government entity in federal court: Step 1: The Judge Rewrites Your Case Judges and government lawyers pretend your case is about something it’s not—mischaracterizing your [...]
Imagine you take a case to federal court, because your constitutional rights have been violated. You follow the rules, file your complaint, and expect the judge to fairly apply the law. Instead, the court twists procedural rules to avoid even addressing your claims, dismissing your case without ever considering the merits. Worse, when you appeal, [...]