In Williams v. Duval County Recorder's Office,0:15-cv-60205 , United States District Court for Southern District of Florida, Williams and his merry band of lunatics, including a "common law grand jury" file suit trying to gain many things including absurd amounts of monetary damages, plus public apologies, for the Duval County Recorder's Office not accepting what was likely a gibberish document. This case was filed in February of 2015.
I guess Williams' presence and his citing to outdated laws from the 1800s didn't work this time.
Unsurprisingly, there has been a recommendation issued to dismiss the matter with prejudice.
I couldn't find a google scholar link, so you'll have to take my word for it. It doesn't appear that the Judge has dismissed it yet, but Williams, desiring to "head them off at the pass" has filed a "Notice of Fraud and Obstruction of Justice" which, like his other pleadings, is a collection of random quotes and citations, none of which make his case any the more meritorious. The other shoe should drop "forthwith."
While searching for this, also stumbled across another action, Williams v. State of Hawaii, in which he sued the State of Hawaii, in Florida District Court, for not recognizing him as a "private attorney general" among other things, which seem to be a really long list (oh the injustice!
![Sarcasm :sarcasmon:](./images/smilies/SarcasmOn.gif)
He attaches a very interesting document purporting to bear the seal of the US House of Representatives, then purporting to contain text making it an act of the Tennessee state government, which he maintains is his official oath of office for being a "private attorney general." It purports in its text to be from Nancy Pelosi (
![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_lol.gif)
So, this means an unbroken chain of sua sponte dismissals, most of them recent and in Florida. One wonders how long the local Florida District Courts can put up with this nonsense before there are some consequences. And so the slow motion train wreck continues...