>>19062113
Absolutely, if a 100+ or 1,000 submitted the same pleading and its updated each time it may be rejected, but then all cases are updated.
Great IDEA anon, flood the courts.
The situation was the Brunsons had to go up through the court system, city, state, Circuit, upper circuit and SC in each state, at that point if they were denied in each court, they went higher. So because all courts refused to judge on the merits if the case, only then they were allowed to go to the SC. If lots of people have time they can do the sane thing. But we cannot go directly to the SC.
Brunsons videos are very educational. The two brothers filed the same case in different venues at the same time. Raland basically used up every option at the SC (that doesn’t mean he will nog try again with updated filing), so his brother Loy submitted a new brief with all the lessons Raland learned, with more specific language. I personally think the are brilliant and the most patient patriots of all, because they never used an attorney (which would be millions they paid at this point). There oldest brother is self taught, he wrote and pled all his cases on his own. He’s a self taught lawyer (not licensed) but he came up with this because he successfully plead at the SC 3-4x without counsel.
Your idea is interesting, you could reach put to Raland and/or Loy and get some input.
I wonder if the SC would reject a 100 or 100,000 cases that have the same language, and reject it for trolling. All cases need to go through the Court Clerk (major position) before even considered. Close to 7,000 to 10,000 ormore case are submitted to the SC annually. Typically less than 100 - 150 are chosen. Its a process. Out of the 150 many never make it through conference.
Supreme Court Procedures | United States Courts
In fact, the Court accepts 100-150 of the more than 7,000 cases that it is asked to review each year. Typically, the Court hears cases that have been decided in either an appropriate U.S. Court of Appeals or the highest Court in a given state (if the state court decided a Constitutional issue). The Supreme Court has its own set of rules.
Tired forgive for misspellings etc