No. 23-1104

In Re Robert M. Miller

Lower Court: N/A
Docketed: 2024-04-11
Status: Denied
Type: Paid
Response Waived
Tags: abuse-of-discretion bias-prejudice civil-procedure court-discretion federal-defendant judicial-bias judicial-misconduct pro-se-litigant pro-se-litigation writ-of-mandamus
Key Terms:
AdministrativeLaw ERISA EmploymentDiscrimina JusticiabilityDoctri
Latest Conference: 2024-05-16
Question Presented (AI Summary)

Whether this Court should issue a writ of mandamus to reassign cases due to judge's bias

Question Presented (OCR Extract)

QUESTIONS PRESENTED The same district judge presides over three of ; Petitioner’s pending cases. Throughout the proceedings, the judge condoned dozens of defendants’ rule violations, failed to timely rule on motions, made arbitrary decisions, and refused to take a pro se : litigant’s facts or arguments seriously. The judge created false facts, to claim Petitioner's past and current filings were “frivolous” and “duplicative,” and the judge threatened Petitioner with sanctions. The judge’s intemperate comments indicate he is profoundly biased and prejudiced against Petitioner. : The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia also made decisions unsupported by facts or law and demonstrative of bias and prejudice. The questions presented are: ; 1. Whether this Court should issue a writ of ; mandamus to U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to reassign the cases because of the presiding judge’s deep-seated antagonism toward a pro se litigant and favoritism toward a federal defendant as to make fair judgment impossible. : 2. Whether the lower courts erred in fact and law and abused their discretion. 8. Whether Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and court practices are prejudicial to pro se litigants.

Docket Entries

2024-05-20
Petition DENIED.
2024-04-30
DISTRIBUTED for Conference of 5/16/2024.
2024-04-18
Waiver of right of respondent FDIC to respond filed.
2024-04-08

Attorneys

FDIC
Elizabeth B. PrelogarSolicitor General, Respondent
In Re Robert M. Miller
Robert M. Miller — Petitioner