> Per reporting by Katherine Long of the Seattle Times, during
> that hearing Parler's attorney:
> 
>       - forgot the name of Parler's CEO
> 
>       - stated that he's unfamiliar with some of the terminology
>       because he's not on social media
> 
>       - admitted that he filed a day late because he needed to
>       update his PACER account

This is because, if reports can be believed, Parler's own lawyers abandoned 
ship a few days ago.

> I am not an attorney but my general understanding is that if you wish
> to file a civil complaint against multiple defendants that you should
> actually go through the trouble of naming them all as defendants on the
> complaint (and serving them).

It's actually not uncommon to include unnamed defendants  - however, in order 
to do so, and in order to reserve the ability, one needs to include in the list 
of defendants something  like "And Does 1-10', or such (or request leave to 
amend the complaint).

Given everything everything, I'd say it's pretty clear that this attorney took 
the case at the 11th hour.  He is a patent and other IP issues attorney - which 
this case is not.

Anne

--
Anne P. Mitchell,  Attorney at Law
Dean of Cyberlaw & Cybersecurity, Lincoln Law School
CEO, SuretyMail Email Reputation Certification
Author: Section 6 of the CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 (the Federal anti-spam law)ultant
Board of Directors, Denver Internet Exchange
Chair Emeritus, Asilomar Microcomputer Workshop
Former Counsel: Mail Abuse Prevention System (MAPS)

Reply via email to