The Public's Record
- Lewdo

- 6 days ago
- 2 min read
🇺🇸 When Justice Is Locked Out of the Courthouse, the Record Goes Public
This is not a personal dispute.This is a procedural crisis – and it affects everyone.
On Christmas night 2024 – when courts should have been closed – a judge’s order denying relief was quietly bypassed.
Within hours, new paperwork appeared. Enforcement began. Lives changed.
The problem?
The underlying case never lawfully existed in the system.
That fact has been acknowledged – repeatedly – by every level involved.
So we did what the system tells citizens to do.
We went to court.First locally.Then to federal district court.Then – after repeated procedural blocks – all the way to the U.S. Court of Appeals.
That’s when the truth became unavoidable:
The orders were void.The enforcement was unlawful.And the federal proceedings that followed were built on authority that never properly existed.
At that point, we sought intervention from the one place designed to correct institutional breakdowns: administrative review by the Chief Judge.
That review has not occurred.
Instead, we are now stuck in a legal limbo – where courts acknowledge jurisdictional defects, yet procedural pathways to correct them are blocked.
This is not about winning or losing a case.
It’s about whether procedural rules mean what they say – and whether citizens can access the mechanisms designed to fix systemic failures.
▶️ [VIDEO: DOCUMENTING CONTACT WITH THE COURT & RECORD PRESERVATION]
Why the Phone Call Matters
When administrative review is unavailable, public accountability becomes essential.
That is why respectful phone calls matter.
Not to argue facts.Not to demand outcomes.But to ask a simple, lawful question:
If a court can dismiss filings for technical reasons,why are mandatory procedural rules – like defaults, sanctions, and jurisdictional limits – not enforced the same way?
There is only one office with administrative authority to address that question.
📞 Chief Judge Matthew W. Brann(570) 323-9772
Be respectful. Be brief. Reference the public record.
This is about process, not personalities.
Why This Affects Everyone
If procedural rules can be selectively enforced in one case, they can be selectively enforced in any case.
That impacts:
• families,
• workers,
• small businesses,
• pro se litigants,
• and anyone who may one day rely on a court to be neutral and rule-bound.
When Lady Justice is locked out of her own courthouse, the record doesn’t disappear – it leaves the building.
And when the courts won’t correct the record, the public has a right to see it.
📂 Evidence and documents are available below
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📞 Call
Because access to justice should never depend on silence.
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