Yep but to be honest that misquote is probably going to be among the least stupid things these clowns are going to do.
These two make Saul Goodman look like a model citizen and lawyer.
Did y'all know that the creator of beloved 2000s sitcom Malcolm in the Middle is named Linwood Boomer.
I have nowhere else to put this information.
Ah, the dream team.
The State Bar of Georgia has authored a 1,677-page Memorandum of Grievance against attorney L. Lin Wood, Jr. Though the document is marked "confidential," Wood himself recently posted a link to it on his Telegram account.
The Memorandum says the State Disciplinary Board initiated proceedings against Wood on the Board's own accord. The board believes it has possible proof that "Mr. Wood may have engaged in conduct in violation of Georgia Rules of Professional Conduct," the Feb. 5th Memorandum states in a brief cover page.
Nine pages summarize the matter; hundreds of pages of exhibits are attached after the summary.
The nine-page summary walks readers through Wood's various litigation steps and public statements related to the 2020 presidential election, yet it also focuses on other matters. The summary reads as an indictment of Wood's factual evidence, litigation tactics, and other alleged or documented personal behaviors, but it is not a conviction. The document is an accusation; it is not a conclusion or a disciplinary finding, such as a censure, a reprimand, a suspension, or a disbarment.
The Michigan 'Kraken'
For instance, the Memorandum cites Michigan's so-called "Kraken" case — King v. Whitmer — which is currently the subject of arguments surrounding court-issued sanctions. It calls out Wood for proffering a witness he and his co-counsel described as "a former U.S. Military Intelligence expert" to allege "massive election fraud" under a myriad of laws.
"In fact," the Georgia Disciplinary Board says, "plaintiffs' expert never completed the training program and was not an intelligence analyst."
The Georgia 'Kraken'
The Memorandum goes on to raise complaints about the 2020 election case Wood and others filed in Georgia. In Pearson v. Kemp, Wood's plaintiffs "proposed that the district court order 'very limited' relief in 'two or three counties.'" When a judge "issued a written temporary restraining order . . . that gave the plaintiffs what they said they wanted," the plaintiffs went on to file appeals with the 11th Circuit and the U.S. Supreme Court asking that those courts "de-certify the results" of the election which put Joe Biden in the White House and to order that data be preserved "on all voting machines used in the November 2020 election." In other words, Wood, his co-counsel, and his plaintiffs asked the appeals courts to expand orders they already deemed were sufficient at the lower court level.
Can you imagine having a complete loon trying to defend you against a billion dollar lawsuit?
Dominion Voting Systems is planning to "imminently" sue MAGA mainstay and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, according to media reports.
Since former president Donald Trump decisively lost the Nov. 2020 contest to President Joe Biden, Lindell has been part of an unusual Trumpworld chorus making claims that Dominion and another voting machine vendor somehow illicitly worked to steal the election by joining leagues with foreign powers.
"These machines need to be removed, and [these people] brought to justice for what they did to our country in these attacks," Lindell went on to tell the outlet. "If they sue me, I would be so happy."