As far as I know, circuit court rules are consistent. But, I'm really only sure about the rules for the Los Angles area. So if you are in the 9th circuit, and care, check your district court rules.
http://www.ca9.uscourts.gov/images/CircuitMap_01.jpg
I did just try a site search for this with keywords that were in the missing section that was on top of the local court rules in 2005.
"pro se" "civil rights" "co-plaintiffs" assignment of magistrates and judges site:cacd.uscourts.gov
No results.
The rule provided a new magistrate and judge to a civil rights case that was filed, dismissed, then refiled with new co plaintiffs. The rule was create in perhaps 1885 during the post reconstruction area. Blacks in the south could not get a fair trial. Judges were prejudiced against them.
The supreme court wrote the rule to provide justice where, obviously, the lack of it caused an expansion of complaint.
I found the rule online in 2005. Then filed with 3 grandmothers with a civil rights suit that had been filed 3 times previous always going to the same magistrate and judge.
I am not an attorney and forgot to cite the rule. I depended on the judges to do their job. I do have ADHD. The suit was about getting treatment for alcohol and drug addiction. I've lost about 60 friends to this problem and the grandmothers have children and grandchildren that are afflicted. One died during appeal.
We were assigned to the same magistrate and judge and the case was dismissed. In 2006 I went to the Roybal building where the law library is and the 15-20 page section that was separate from the main body of rules was gone. The librarian had no idea it ever existed, There was no note of revision.
Online there was a note of revision for about 2 months. Then that disappeared.
A copy of the suit, which really had no legitimate defenses, was given to a reporter at a local paper. Two weeks later she was fired. Six weeks later 16 other reporters and editors were fired or resigned and were gagged. Here are scans of the paper and other articles related.
http://algoxy.com/law/no_free_press/...tsofmedia.html
It appears the case filed dealt with a VERY sensitive and important subject. So important that yanking these rules was justified within the agenda of those destroying America from within.
There are links back to the pleadings and product of the district court, the 9th circuit court of appeals, and the results of an application for a writ of Certiorari. Basically it appears that only the supreme court can write rules, and these rules were revised at some point that put them in a separate section. This facilitated great ease in unconstitutionally removing them.
All that needed to be done was remove the thin section and a page of the main body of rules that referred to them.
The public defender, a necessary defendant, was served my opposition to the county counsels motion to dismissed. Three days later he resigned.
I've tried for years to find a pre 2004 copy of the local court rules printed from online sources or obtained from the law library with no luck.
This revision is purely against the law. It is unconstitutional. It is a direct violation of the Administrative Offices of the US District Courts regulation which states that any change in court rules that has a significant effect on civil rights must have public notice for a considerable time wherein the public comment upon the proposed is taken. Then the public comment is used in the final change.
Not only was that not done, there is no note of revision. Judicial councils can abrogate rules, but only if there is no significant effect on civil rights.
There are going to be civil rights suits filed that no attorney will ever represent. And the people who need the justice will not even have enough money to tempt one. Those missing rules are going to perhaps cause the end of free America, one way or the other.
Who has a copy of the pre 2004 rules?
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