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Mike Spence

Just because you’re paranoid doesn’t mean they aren’t out to get you

Metropolitan News-Enterprise is a LA paper that covers various legal issue in La and distibuted in la Courthouses. If you ever get a ticket and are waiting around for the judge you will end up reading this paper, but I digress.

Today at Metnews is story about a guy suing the Ninth Circuit Court for being part of a conspiracy against him. Of course he lost. Poor guy didn’t have a chance—-if you know what I mean.

The story is pasted below.

Thursday, July 13, 2006 Page 3

 Man Unsuccessfully Sues Entire Ninth Circuit Bench for Conspiracy

 By TINA BAY, Staff Writer

 The Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals yesterday affirmed the dismissal of a Nevada man’s lawsuit accusing all of the Ninth Circuit judges of criminal conspiracy.

Tevis R. Ignacio failed to establish subject matter jurisdiction, the panel ruled.

Ignacio filed suit in 2003 in the District of Nevada, naming as defendants “Judges of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, in their capacity as judges,” specifically identifying a number of individual judges, including Chief Judge Mary M. Schroeder, both personally and in their official capacities.

Representing himself, Ignacio alleged that the circuit judges—along with various federal and California state judges, other government officials, and certain private individuals—conspired to dismiss the state and federal lawsuits he filed in the wake of his California divorce proceedings.

The divorce action ended in 1999 with a superior court judge denying him access to his minor son, on the grounds that Ignacio was bipolar with paranoid-psychophrenic tendencies.  The judge also designated him as a “vexatious litigant,” which placed restrictions on his ability to file claims and appeals in California state court.

Ignacio’s post-divorce lawsuits began with a federal court action, filed in the Northern District of California, in which he attacked the vexatious litigant determination.  After the district court’s 2002 dismissal of the suit for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, Ignacio moved to Nevada and there filed a similar state court action, which also failed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.

The 2003 lawsuit against the Ninth Circuit judges followed.

U.S. District Judge Philip M. Pro dismissed Ignacio’s complaint, which contained a long list of grievances regarding the California court’s determinations in his domestic dispute, on the basis that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction.

The Ninth Circuit agreed, holding that the panel—comprised of the chief judge and Judges Stephen S. Trott and Andrew J. Kleinfeld—could decide the appeal even though all three judges were parties to Ignacio’s lawsuit.

Writing for the panel, Trott explained that the “rule of necessity,” which allows a disqualified judge to hear a case when it cannot be heard otherwise, applies where a litigant has indiscriminately sues all of the circuit’s judges.

“[A]n underlying legal maxim for the rule of necessity is that ‘where all are disqualified, none are disqualified,” Trott said.

“If all the judges of the Ninth Circuit are disqualified as a result of Ignacio’s complaint, he has eliminated the proper legal forum charged with reviewing the dismissal of his action,” the judge wrote, adding that a ruling disqualifying all circuit judges would encourage plaintiffs to sue wholesale all judges in a district or circuit until their cases get transferred.

Trott concluded that Ignacio’s suit amounted to a collateral attack on the California superior court’s divorce determinations, noting that the majority of his briefs focused on attacking individuals who were involved in the state court divorce action.

“The only plausible interpretation of [Ignacio’s] complaint,” Trott said, “is that he wishes for the dismissed cases—all having to do with what he perceives as problems with his [California] domestic dispute—to be reinstated.”

The case is Ignacio v. Armstrong, 03-17181 03-17181.

2 Responses to “Just because you’re paranoid doesn’t mean they aren’t out to get you”

  1. tevis@myway.com Says:

    There are two sides to every story. I claimed under oath that these Judges under color of law and color of authority have and are covered up a criminal actions by Judges in the Santa Clara Courthouse. (Divorce Court)
    The Divorce Judge (James Stewart) had people picketing outside his courtroom prior to me being forced before him. He and I had an argument about what I can and say to my son. (His mother had an affair which I found out about) I filed four motions, one was a claimed (170.6) of bias after that he claimed I was mental ill, and I was a vexatious litigant. (the law say you have to lose 5 cases) None of these motions were heard before he claimed I was vexatious. They have fixed transcripts and perjured themselves.
    He refused to give me any of my half of the assets which was over $100,000 in stock. I ask for a attorney in court and he said “an attorney in this valley would not represent me.” My ex attorney sat in pro temp when his buddy took a day off. This guy was buddy-buddy with this judge. The Judge told me this the first time I meet him.
    I filed a federal lawsuit because they placed me on this vexatious litigant list for calling this judge bias to his face instead of picketing out in front of his courthouse.
    Think about it … I filed a suit against the 9th Circuit and they changed the name when it came before them to “Ignacio vs. Armstrong” who dismissed that lawsuit. I had listed her below all the 9th Circuit Judges.
    Why now does this case go public? It is not because of the “short title.” This opinion is a cover-up.
    I ask that it be transferred to another Circuit. Nobody wants to see Court of Appeals Judges in jail.
    I had to move out of state. I could say more but this is not the place. I would like to tell my son, but he was to young to understand how these people work.
    I just read some of the stuff said about me. I am a Private person. I am not mental ill and the doctor who said I was, saw me for one hour and I refuse to sign a waiver. (The judge knew this)
    I might of made mistakes, but I have not made the kind that get me in trouble that I can’t get out of.

    Tevis R.Ignacio

  2. tevis@myway.com Says:

    Correction on above my July 29,2006 10:48pm comment – I wrote “My ex attorney sat in pro temp …
    It should read “My ex-wife attorney sat in … because my ex attorney who I had agreed to hire, got paid out of my funds right away and he could not get me a dime of this $100,000 in stock.
    I know what the guy means, when he says i’m Poor.
    But, Don’t have a chance?