Anonymous ID: 98fd39 Jan. 9, 2023, 7:04 a.m. No.18109632   🗄️.is 🔗kun

The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled on the Writ for Certiorari in Brunson v. Adam (Case No. 11-380:Denied.

 

https://www.supremecourt.gov/orders/ordersofthecourt/22 (see Order of 1/9/23 - list of all orders from 1/6/23 conference under heading "Writ of Certiorari Denied").

 

The Writ is the document that is filed in the Supreme Court to try to persuade the Court that the matter needs the attention of the highest court in the land.

 

If the Writ is granted,, then a certified copy of the record from the lower court is ordered and full briefing and a hearing are usually the next steps.

 

The vast majority of Writs are denied by the Supreme Court every session.

 

It isnot a decision on the merits.

 

The Supreme Court routinely denies matters that meet criteria for review.

 

It is, however, theend of the roadin appeals for the case, except for an even more unlikely-to-be-successful Request for Rehearing.

 

It was a novel approach and a good effort by good people, in my opinion. Not being lawyers has its advantages but it also has its disadvantages.

 

The named legislators did violate their oaths of office, in my opinion, by not investigating the hundreds of issues presented by patriot legislators regarding some of the state's certifications of their respective 2020 electors on January 6, 2021.

 

But, as presented - which was an uphill battle, this case did not get the Supreme Court's attention for a review. The ruing from the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeal, which was the ruling appealed, denied the appeal from the district court's dismissal on the usual grounds: standing of the plaintiffs and immunity of the defendants, among others.

 

And the Supreme Court, today, declined to review.