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HOME PAGE | JUNK LAW | JUDICIAL MISCONDUCT COMPLAINTS AGAINST JUDGE GRAHAM | SUA SPONTE ISSUED FILING INJUNCTION | JUDGE GRAHAM'S LAWSUIT | A TALE OF TWO APPEALS, SAME FACTS DIFFERENT RESULTS || ABOUT | METHODS USED TO CONCEAL THE MISCONDUCT OF JUDGE GRAHAM |
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Purpose and BackgroundThis web page is part of collection of web pages on this website, mmason.freeshell.org, that documents Judicial Misconduct and Abuse by U.S. District Judge Donald L. Graham and the extreme measures that his colleagues at the Eleventh Circuit, U.S. Court of Appeals will deploy to conceal the egregious conduct of Judge Graham. The core allegations of misconduct and abuse by Judge Graham are listed and documented at mmason.freeshell.org/CoreAllegations.htm. A full panoply of the methods used by the Eleventh Circuit to undermine appellate review conceal the misconduct of a judicial miscreant like Judge Donald L. Graham is set forth at mmason.freeshell.org/methods.htm. ACCESS TO THE COURTSDenying access to the Courts and appellate review is one of the many methods or tactics deployed by the Eleventh Circuit to place Judge Graham's miscreant behavior above the "rule of law". This pages documents how the Eleventh Circuit abused the in forma pauperis statutes to keep Marcellus Mason out of out court with his allegations of misconduct directed at Judge Donald L. Graham.
TABLE
OF CONTENTS
FILING
INJUNCTIONCASE SUMMARY LEGAL PROBLEMS ASSOCIATED WITH FILING INJUNCTION
SUA SPONTE ISSUED FILING INJUNCTIONS FORMS THE BASIS OF CRIMINAL CONTEMPT
Beginning on or about September
20, 2001, and continuing to on or about November 1, 2002, in Highlands
County, Dade county, and elsewhere, in the Southern District of Florida,
the defendant, MARCELLUS M . MASON, Jr ., did willfully and knowingly
disobey and resist a lawful order of a Court of the United States, that
is, the order issued by the Honorable Donald L . Graham, United States
District Judge, on September 20, 2001, in the Southern District of
Florida, in the case of Marcellus M . Mason v. Highlands County Board of
County Commissioners, et al ., Case Numbers ...
See Information, Docket Entry #6. Marcellus Mason was convicted of criminal contempt for violating this "filing injunction" or order of September 20, 2001, notwithstanding the following facts:
CASE SUMMARY Case
No. 99-14027
“Plaintiff
shall be prohibited from contacting any of the Defendants,
including their supervisory employees and/or the individual
Defendants, regarding any matter related to this case.”
(DE
#201)
“Plaintiff shall correspond only with Defendants' counsel including any requests for public records.” (DE #246), page 2 of 2 pages. Using literal and mathematical substitution for Judge
Graham's "order" yields the following: The law clearly prohibits or enjoins a Federal Magistrate from rendering an injunction notwithstanding the obvious First Amendment concerns. See mmason.freeshell.org/OverRuleFirstAmendment.htm . Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary-(A) a judge may designate a magistrate judge to hear and determine any pretrial matter pending before the court except a motion for injunction relief,…” 28 U.S.C. § 636 (b)(1)(A) .However, Judge Graham, uninhibited by 28
U.S.C. § 636 (b)(1)(A) and the rule of law held that the
Magistrate rendering of these injunctions is not clear error.
On June 19, 2000, the Honorable Magistrate Judge Frank J. Lynch entered an Order granting Defendants a preliminary Defendants in this action. Upon notice that Plaintiff was violating this order, Defendants filed a Renewed Motion For Preliminary Injunction. On July 25, 2000, Magistrate Judge Lynch entered an Order granting Defendants' Renewed Motion for Preliminary Injunction, once again prohibiting Plaintiff from contacting any of the Defendants in this action or their supervisory employees. Magistrate Judge Lynch also ordered that Plaintiff shall only correspond with Defendants' counsel.See Docket Entry No. 407 dated November 2, 2000. DISMISSAL AND POST JUDGMENT ACTIONS. Judge Graham ultimately dismissed this case on June 20, 2001, not on the merits, but because Marcellus Mason dared to communicate with his government, the Highlands County Board of County Commissioners, directly. The case was dismissed because alleged out of court communications and emails. See Banned Communications. mmason.freeshell.org/badfaith.htm#banned .The case was promptly noticed for appeal on
June 25, 2001. See
Eleventh Circuit's receipt. After Judge Graham got tired of
inquiries from Marcellus Mason about his legal authority to issue the "government
speaking prohibitions", Judge Graham refused to answer the inquiries
and then issued the "filing
injunction" on September 20, 2001 [Docket
Entry No. 878].
On September 20, 2001, Judge Graham reaffirmed his prohibition
of direct communication with the Government.
[I]ncluding continual attempts to
directly communicate with the Defendants rather their attorneys, the
Court enjoined Mason from any further contact with the Defendants or
Defendants' employees. Mason, however, ignored the Court's order and
continued to contact the Defendants.
Using literal and mathematical substitution for Judge Graham's order
yields the following:
including continual attempts to
directly communicate with the [GOVERNMENT] rather their attorneys, the
Court enjoined Mason from any further contact with the [GOVERNMENT] or
[GOVERNMENT] 'S employees. Mason, however, ignored the Court's order and
continued to contact the [GOVERNMENT].
JUDGE GRAHAM INTENTIONALLY MISSTATED MATERIAL FACTS AND LIED IN ORDER TO RENDER THE FILING INJUNCTION
See (pdf format), (DE -10) Case No. 00-14201. See also (DE -10) Case No. 00-14202. No filing fee was paid in either of the above cases [(1)Case No. 00-14202, (2)Case No. 00-14201, (3)Case No. 00-14116, (4)Case No. 01-14074, (5)01-14078,] because Judge Graham arbitrarily denied Mason the benefit of the in forma pauperis, "IFP", statutes. In fact, Judge Graham has a long history of arbitrary denials of IFP status. See Eleventh Circuit and Judge Graham make a mockery of the In Forma Pauperis Statutes. Using Judge Graham's definition there were only 11 minus 5 or 6 lawsuits “filed.” Case No. 00-14240 which Judge Graham also counts, was filed by Highlands County, not Marcellus Mason. Imagine that!! Now Judge Graham has only 5 lawsuits filed. Case No. 01-14230 was filed in state court and removed to the S.D. Fla. by Highlands County after Judge Graham crafted this injunction where they knew the case would be assigned to Judge Graham. See Notice of Removal. Judge now has only four lawsuits that Mason filed, not the 11 Judge Graham concocted.
LEGAL PROBLEMS ASSOCIATED WITH SUA SPONTE ISSUED
FILING
INJUNCTION
ISSUED WITHOUT NOTICE AND OPPORTUNITY TO RESPOND Judge Graham proudly exclaims on the very first page of narrative [page 3] of the filing injunction: "THIS CAUSE came before the Court sua sponte." The fact the filing injunction was issued without notice and opportunity to respond makes the filing injunction illegal and void. Sua sponte means on his own or Judge Graham's motion. Sua Sponte issuance of filing injunctions are patently illegal and void because a party must be given notice and opportunity to respond prior to the issuance of a filing injunction. In GILBERT LAU v. MARK M. MEDDAUGH, Docket No. 99-9363 Decided: October 05, 2000), U.S. 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals, the Court stated: ""[t]he unequivocal rule in this circuit is that the district court may not impose a filing injunction on a litigant sua sponte without providing the litigant with notice and an opportunity to be heard."" For more authority rejecting sua sponte issued pre-filing injunctions, see mmason.freeshell.org/RejectSuaSponte.htm . More importantly,the United States Supreme Court and the Eleventh Circuit, USCA, Judge Graham's bosses have stated: FINDING OF BAD FAITH REQUIRES DUE PROCESS
A court
should be cautious in exerting its inherent power and "must
comply with the mandates of due process,
both in determining that the requisite bad faith exists and in assessing
fees.” Byrne
v. Nezhat, 261 F.3d 1075 (11th Cir. 2001)(quoting US Supreme Court Chambers
v. NASCO, Inc., 501 U.S. 32, 50 (1991)). “In
addition, the
accused must be given an opportunity to respond, orally or in writing,
to the invocation of such sanctions and to justify his actions.”
In
Re Mroz, 65 F.3d 1567, 1575 (11th Cir. 1995).
The United States Supreme Court has stated: “A court must, of course, exercise caution in invoking its inherent power, and it must comply with the mandates of due process, both in determining that the requisite bad faith exists and in assessing fees.” (emphasis added) Chambers v. Nasco, Inc., 501 U.S. 32, 50 (1991). DISHONESTY
AND THE ELEVENTH'S CIRCUIT
This pages is being phase out in favor of mmason.freeshell.org/ignore_issue.htm
, which better organized and more detailed.
COLLATERAL ORDERS ARE MALLEABLE: HAVING IT BOTH WAYS "The filing of a notice of appeal is an event of jurisdictional significance — it confers jurisdiction on the court of appeals and divests the district court of its control over those aspects of the case involved in the appeal." Griggs v. Provident Consumer Discount Co., 459 U.S. 56, 58 (1982). In their "unpublished order" of May 20, 2004, Case No. 01-11894, denying mandamus relief to Mason, the Eleventh concurred with the above:
[A]s a general rule, the filing of a notice of appeal divests the
district court of jurisdiction over those aspects of the case that are
the subject of the appeal. However, it may not divest the district
court of jurisdiction over collateral matters not affecting the
questions presented on appeal.
ELEVENTH CIRCUIT'S [CASE NO. 04-1194] MAY
2004 UNPUBLISHED OPINIONAlso available in PDF format. In this same "unpublished order" of May 20, 2004, Case No. 01-11894, the Eleventh Circuit and specifically Judge Ed Carnes and Judge Frank Hull unambiguously assert:
The September 20, 2001 order did not relate to the issue on appeal,
but instead enjoined Mason from filing any further pleadings in the
district court without permission . Because the order related to
collateral issues, the district court had jurisdiction to issue it.
See page 4. In stark contract to this bold assertion made by the Eleventh Circuit on May 20, 2004, they had a different opinion on October 16, 2002 [Direct Appeal, Case No. 01-13664] when they used this same injunction as part of their opinion to affirm Judge Graham. See Opinion, pg. 14. This is a clear reference to the filing injunction rendered by Judge Graham on September 20, 2001, or three months after the case was noticed for appeal on June 25, 2001. Thus it appears that the Eleventh Circuit can have it both ways. On the one hand, the Eleventh Circuit can say the filing injunction is a collateral issue when it suits their purposes and then make it part of the same appeal and not a collateral issue when it wants to. Lastly, and even more despicable, the Eleventh Circuit actually struck Mason's brief for arguing against this order and then turned around and used it against him. See Undermining An Appeal. LYING TO PROTECT JUDGE GRAHAM Someone at the Eleventh Circuit has been willing to lie to protect Judge Graham. For example, in their May 20, 2004 order, the Eleventh Circuit stated:
Moreover, Mason had an adequate
alternative remedy to mandamus relief in that he could have timely
appealed the September 20, 2001 order, but did not do so.
See page 4. This assertion is clearly false as a petition for mandamus submitted to the Eleventh Circuit, Respondents Judge Graham and Highlands County on or about September 29, 2001 [11th Cir. Case No. 01-15754]. The Eleventh Circuit received the mandamus petition on October 1, 2001 or just eleven days after Judge Graham rendered the filing injunction on September 20, 2001. It simply ignored the petition and refused appellate review. See No Right to Mandamus Review. Moreover even though a direct appeal, Case No. 01-13664, was pending at the time Judge Graham rendered this order on September 20, 2001 and the briefs had not been filed yet, the Eleventh Circuit refused to consolidate the two cases. Case No. 05-10623, March 16, 2005 [PDF format] The Eleventh Circuit's March 16, 2005 "unpublished order" [denying mandamus relief] even contradicted their lie of May 20, 2004 by stating:
"Furthermore, Mason appealed
the dismissal of his case as well as the district court's injunction
order September 20, 2001 , which required Mason to seek the court's
permission to file any motions in his case, including Rule 60(b)
motions."
Additionally, and contrary to their March 16, 2005 "unpublished order "March 16, 2005 "unpublished order" ,the May 20, 2004 Order also states:
Moreover, Mason had an adequate
alternative remedy to mandamus relief in that he could have timely
appealed the September 20, 2001 order, but did not do so.
In that appeal, Mason included
arguments relating to the September 20, 2001 order entered after the
notice of appeal was filed. This Court granted, in part, the appellees'
motion to strike Mason's brief, holding that the portions of the brief
that related to the September 20, 2001 order were beyond the scope of
appeal.
It is quite clear that the Eleventh Circuit has no intention of allowing Mason to have appellate review of the illegal and void filing injunction. The Eleventh Circuit is even willing to lie about the matter.
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