Judge William K. Sessions III, a Bill Clinton appointee, granted Liberty Counsel’s motion on March 31. Sessions ruled that Jenkins’ case against Liberty Counsel had no merit. This came, however, after nine years of legal proceedings involving 186,000 documents, over 500 pages of legal writing, over 5,000 exhibits, and 25 depositions, Staver said. After all that, the judge ruled that Liberty Counsel played no role in assisting the international kidnapping of a child and that the statute of limitations had run on Jenkins’ claim. Now, Staver plans to countersue. “We’re not going to stand back and let SPLC get away with this frivolous lawsuit because they need to now pay for the time and expenses for this frivolous case that they knew was frivolous,” he said. “We’re going to go after Janet Jenkins not only for cost but for attorney’s fees, and we’re going to go after the SPLC for cost and attorney’s fees, as well.”Like the man said, you do it to us...
Tuesday, April 8, 2025
Sue You
Quid pro quo
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