Lawsuit: Pending Multiman155 v. Federal Reserve Bank [2026] DCR 29

Franciscus

26th President
Judge
Congressional Staff
Supporter
Oakridge Resident
State Department
Homeland Security Department
Multiman155
Multiman155
Judge
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1,765

Case Filing



IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
CIVIL ACTION

Multiman155
Plaintiff

v.

Federal Reserve Bank,
Defendant;
&
DonTrillions,
Defendant


Complaint​

On 25 February 2026, the Federal Reserve Bank publicly announced what it described as a “board decision” to move financial institutions onto the Compliant reporting system and require daily API-based reporting. That same day, Plaintiff submitted a Freedom of Information request through the FRB’s official ticket system seeking the records and communications behind that decision. The FRB Governor was present in that ticket.

The law required a response within seven days. The FRB and its Governor did not approve the request, deny it as unreasonable, propose narrowing it, provide a partial release, or offer redactions or a summary. It simply did nothing. Silence is not compliance. Silence is a failure to perform a basic statutory duty.

This case is about enforcing a simple rule of public administration: when a government entity is asked for records about a major public decision, it must answer. The FRB, and its Governor, did not.



I. Parties​

  1. Multiman155 (Plaintiff)
  2. Federal Reserve Bank (Defendant)
  3. DonTrillions (Defendant)



II. Facts​

  1. On 25 February 2026, the Federal Reserve Bank (FRB) publicly announced that it would move financial institutions to "Compliant" as the required system for reporting total client deposits, tracking central reserve positions, and monitoring institutional balances (Exhibit P-001).
  2. The announcement stated that the change was a "board decision," that the transition was mandatory for all financial institutions, and that daily reporting through the Compliant API would be required (Exhibit P-001).
  3. The announcement further represented that all financial institutions would be expected to provide real-time deposit information through automated API reporting (Exhibit P-001).
  4. The same afternoon, Plaintiff publicly petitioned against the announced change (Exhibit P-002).
  5. Also on 25 February 2026, Plaintiff opened ticket #ticket-96 in the FRB’s official ticket system and submitted a Freedom of Information request ("the Request"; see Exhibit P-003).
  6. The Request sought all communications regarding the decision to transition to Compliant, including but not limited to:
    1. conversations between the FRB and Redmont Group regarding the subject;
    2. conversations on the FRB server regarding the subject; and
    3. other records in the possession of the FRB regarding the subject.
  7. The Request was directed to the FRB and concerned a discrete FRB decision and the records underlying it.
  8. The Request targeted records held by, maintained by, or accessible to the FRB in its official capacity, including official server communications and other records in FRB possession.
  9. If Defendants believed any part of the Request was too broad, the law still required a response and the fullest possible compliance by way of narrowing, partial production, redaction, or summary.
  10. Seven days passed without any response from the FRB nor its Governor as to the Request.
  11. Plaintiff received no approval, denial, request for clarification, partial release, summary, or explanation of any kind from the FRB nor its Governor with regards to the Request.
  12. While DonTrillions has publicly stated his intent to depart as FRB governor and train his successor (Exhibit P-009), he still retained the office of the FRB Governor at all times relevant to this case (Exhibits P-007, P-008, P-011).
  13. On 5 March 2026 Plaintiff provided the Department of Justice with notice of intent to file suit (Exhibit P-006).
  14. The Department of Justice acknowledged the notice and stated that it would attempt to resolve the matter before suit (Exhibit P-006), but no FRB response followed (Exhibit P-003).
  15. As of the filing of this complaint, the FRB still has not responded to Plaintiff’s FOI request.
  16. The public importance of the requested records is heightened by the fact that the FRB announcement described the Compliant transition as a "board decision" (Exhibit P-003), while at least one person publicly identified as a Board Member stated, "talking to board, there was no vote on this" (Exhibit P-004; Exhibit P-005).
  17. Plaintiff operates the bLAWg, a news organization (Exhibit P-010).
  18. The mission of the bLAWg is cover to updates in the business community, legal community, and beyond (Exhibit P-010).
  19. Plaintiff has been de facto prohibited timely access to records sought to evaluate the lawfulness, process, and factual basis of a major FRB policy announcement affecting all financial institutions.
  20. The de facto prohibition on timely access has harmed the ability of the bLAWg to engage in investigative reporting regarding the subject of the Request.
  21. On 7 March, ElysiaCrynn and FloorIsTired (among others) conversed in #economics about this lawsuit (Exhibits P-015, P-016, and P-017).
  22. In the conversation described within Fact 21, Ex-Officio FRB Board Member ElysiaCrynn publicly expressed that she was "pretty sure [she] saw some stuff for it get deleted" (Exhibit P-016).
  23. In the conversation described within Fact 21, FRB Employee FloorIsTired publicly expressed that "they deleted the template" and "they deleted the announcement without consulting me" (Exhibit P-016).
  24. After receiving the freedom of information request in Ticket-96, and before responding to it, the FRB or its agents deleted messages potentially responsive to that FOI request (Exhibits P-015, P-016, and P-017).


III. Claims for Relief​

III.I Failure to Respond to Freedom of Information​

Plaintiff alleges that the Defendants violated the Redmont Civil Code Act (RCCA) by failing to respond to Plaintiff’s valid FOI request within the time required by law.

Failure to Respond to Freedom of Information is a tort under RCCA, Part XI, Section II:

2. Failure to Respond to Freedom of Information
Violation Type: Strict Liability
Penalty: Up to 50 Civil Penalty Units; Writ of Mandamus
A person commits a violation if the person:
(a) unreasonably delays or fails to respond to a valid Freedom of Information request within the time limits prescribed by law.
Relevant Law: Act of Congress - Classified Materials Act

The Classified Material Act (CMA), which sets the "time limits prescribed by law" referred to in the RCCA, requires that FOI requests to government entities receive a response within seven days (CMA, Section 8(2)). For requests submitted to the FRB, the responsible officer is the FRB Governor (CMA, Section 8(5)(d)). The government must comply with reasonable FOI requests to the fullest extent possible, including through partial release, redaction, or summary where full disclosure would be unlawful or harmful (CMA, Section 8(6)).

Plaintiff submitted an FOI request to the FRB on 25 February 2026 through the FRB’s official ticket system. The request sought records and communications regarding the announced transition to Compliant. Defendants gave no response at all within the statutory period.

The materials sought were facially within the FRB’s possession, jurisdiction, or knowledge. Defendants were still required to respond within seven days by approving the request, denying it as unreasonable, or complying to the fullest lawful extent through narrowing, partial release, redaction, or summary. Defendants did none of those things.

Plaintiff does not claim any special press-only entitlement to government records beyond the law. Rather, Plaintiff relies on the Classified Materials Act, which grants FOI rights to any individual or entity and requires a response within seven days. But the Court should construe that statutory right in light of the Constitution’s protection of Freedom of the Press and Media. Where a news organization seeks records concerning a major public financial decision, silence by the government does more than violate a statute; it frustrates timely public scrutiny and impairs the ability of the press to inform the public on a matter of immediate importance.

As such, defendants committed Failure to Respond to Freedom of Information, and Plaintiff is entitled to a writ of mandamus and the statutory civil penalty.

III.II Failure to Perform Statutory Duty​

We now examine whether the Defendants, as a government body and responsible officer, failed to perform a duty required by law.

Failure to Perform Statutory Duty is a tort under Redmont Civil Code Act Part XI, Section 7:

7. Failure to Perform Statutory Duty
Violation Type: Negligent
Remedy: Writ of Mandamus
A person commits a violation if the person:
(a) being a government officer or body, fails to perform a duty required by law; and
(b) the failure causes harm to the plaintiff.
This violation shall not occur where:
(c) The failure was due to circumstances beyond the defendant’s control.

As discussed supra in Claim for Relief III.I of this complaint, a legal duty to timely respond to Plaintiff’s FOI request is imposed by the RCCA and CMA. In addition, the Federal Reserve Act (FRA) requires that the FRB "be transparent about its operations, only limited by the reasonable adverse effects of this transparency" (FRA, Section 4(2)(c)).

Plaintiff alleges that the following duties were breached:
  1. The duty to respond to Freedom of Information requests imposed by RCCA, Part XI, Section II; and
  2. The duties of the FRB Governor under CMA, Sections 8(2), 8(5)(d), and 8(6);
  3. The duty of the FRB itself to be transparent under FRA, Section 4(2)(c).
The FRB had a statutory duty to answer Plaintiff’s FOI request. The Governor had the statutory role for handling FRB FOI matters and the broader legal responsibility to ensure compliance with law. Plaintiff was harmed by that failure because the nonresponse deprived him of timely access to records concerning a major public FRB action, impaired his ability to assess whether the announced “board decision” was lawfully made, and frustrated journalistic scrutiny of a matter affecting all financial institutions.

Defendants, therefore, committed Failure to Perform Statutory Duty, and Plaintiff is entitled to mandamus compelling a lawful response and production process.

III.III On Original Jurisdiction and Parties joined to this case​

III.III.I The Constitution grants the District Court original jurisdiction over this case​

"The Constitution is the highest law of the Commonwealth. It binds all institutions, people, and overrides any law or authority that conflicts with it" (Const., Preamble). This Constitution lays out the original jurisdiction of the District Court, granting it original jurisdiction over both "public official misconduct" (Const. 16(1)(c)) and "minor‌ ‌civil‌ ‌cases‌ ‌whose‌ ‌value‌ ‌does‌ ‌not‌ ‌exceed‌ more than $120,000 dollars" (Const. 16(1)(e)).

This case is a minor civil case whose value does not exceed more than $120,000. Even if we were to read either tort as public official misconduct, the District Court would retain constitutional jurisdiction over this case.

I note this only because the text of the Classified Materials Act purports to grant the Federal Court jurisdiction over challenges to ignored and denied FOI requests "made to the Executive or Congress" (CMA, Section 8(7)(a)), stating that upon denial or failure to respond "that the appeal shall be lodged in the Federal Court in the first instance. The Judiciary shall order the full or partial release of the material if it determines that the request was reasonable. The Court may impose redactions or conditions on any such disclosure" (ibid.).

Statute cannot override the Constitution, and attempts to modify the Constitution "with statute must fail because the Constitution is the supreme law of the land" (In re [2023] SCR 5 | [2026] SCR 4, Decision, Par. 15). As such, the District Court retains jurisdiction here, regardless of statute that would purport to strip jurisdiction therefrom.

III.III.II The FRB, and its governor, are both direct parties to this case.​

III.III.II.I The FRB Governor may bear some personal liability for Failure to Respond to Freedom of Information
RCCA, Part XI, Section II notes that a person commits the violation of Failure to Respond to Freedom of Information, when that person "unreasonably delays or fails to respond to a valid Freedom of Information request within the time limits prescribed by law".

Plaintiff recognizes that, within Redmont, "it is well established that when a government department causes harm through its officers, liability attaches to the department itself" (YeetGlazer v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 76, Verdict, "Opinion and Analysis of the Court", "On Colour of Law and Institutional Liability", Par. 3). This liability need not solely arise "on a theory of respondeat superior, but on the independent ground that the Department's own policies, customs, and failures of supervision were the proximate cause of the Plaintiff's injuries. Where the policy of an institution is indifference to the rights of those subject to its authority, the institution bears responsibility for the foreseeable consequences of that indifference" (id., Par. 7). When an individual acts using the power of the underlying government institution, thus, that institution may be held liable.

This case may be different; the duty to handle Freedom of Information requests is imposed directly upon the "The FRB Governor" (CMA, Section 8(3)(d)). The liability for this violation, therefore, may lie (in whole, or in part) with the Governor himself.

As his personal rights may be implicated by the relief sought here, the FRB Governor must be listed as a direct party (see generally: MasterCaelen v. Hon. Magistrate Dr_Eksplosive [2026] FCR 14); he is thus included as a Defendant.

III.III.II.II The Federal Reserve Bank is nevertheless a Direct Party for its to adhere to FRA 4(2)(c)
The Federal Reserve Bank is a governmental entity (and thus a distinct legal entity) under the law (Legal Entity Act, Part II, Section 5(d)). As "Legal entities shall be a legal person with separate rights and liabilities, strictly distinct from their directors, managers, members, shareholders, employees and other agents" (Legal Entity Act, Part I, Section 2(b)), the legal liability from the FRB's duty to be transparent under FRA Section 4(2)(c) thus attaches directly to the FRB. The FRB itself is, thus, a direct party to this case, regardless of how liability attaches for the claim discussed in Claim for Relief III.I.

III.IV Abuse of Power and Misfeasance in Public Office​

Plaintiff alleges that Defendant (or Defendant's agents) caused the Plaintiff harm and violated:
  1. The Criminal Code Act's prohibition on abuse of power. Plaintiff alleges that the Defendant unlawfully deleted messages sought in the Plaintiff's FOI, with knowledge of or reckless disregard as to whether those deletions were lawful.
  2. The Redmont Civil Code Act's prohibition of misfeasance in public office. Plaintiff alleges that Defendant, or a director thereof, unlawfully and intentionally deleted messages, that this deletion caused harm to the Plaintiff inasmuch as it frustrated recovery of the information through FOI, and that one knew or ought to have known that deleting such messages after an FOI request was filed would be illegal.
Under the Criminal Code Act, a person commits abuse of power when that person:
(a) exercises any power, function, or duty vested in them by virtue of their position as members of the Executive, Legislative, or Judicial branches, or employee of a government agency, in contravention of the law; and
(b) either:
(i) knows that the exercise of power is unlawful; or
(ii) acts with reckless disregard as to whether the exercise of power is lawful.
(CCA, Part II, Section 2).

Under the Redmont Civil Code Act, a person commits misfeasance in public office when that person:
(a) being a public official, intentionally misuses their power; and
(b) the misuse causes harm to the plaintiff; and
(c) the official knew or ought to have known that the conduct was unlawful.
(RCCA, Part XI, Section 3).

When an action that harms a Plaintiff would constitute crime under the Criminal Code and a violation of the RCCA, a Plaintiff may "pursue both, provided that there is no double recovery for the same loss" (RCCA, Part II, Section 4(3)(c). The Plaintiff sees that these two laws prohibit very similar things, and chooses to pursue both as it pertains to the deletion of messages.

III.IV.I The FRB has a lawful duty to transparency under the Federal Reserve Act​

The Federal Reserve Bank has a statutory duty to "be transparent about its operations, only limited by the reasonable adverse effects of this transparency" (FRA, Section 4(2)(c)). The powers and duties of the FRB as a whole vest in its Board; "[a]ny authority or power given to the FRB as a whole shall be regarded as given to the Federal Reserve Board" (FRA, Section 5(1)(d)). The composition of the FRB's Board is "4 seats for Sitting Board Members and additionally 1 ex officio seat for the Secretary of the Department of Commerce" (FRA, Section 5(1)(c)).

III.IV.II The FRB is obligated to comply with FOI requests to the fullest extent possible​

The Classified Materials Act establishes that "[t]he Government is obligated to comply with all reasonable FOI requests to the fullest extent possible, including through partial releases, redactions, or summaries where full disclosure would be unlawful or harmful" (Classified Materials Act, Section 8(6)). The FRB is included in this obligation of the "Government"; it a governmental entity (LEA, Part II, Section 1(5)(d)) created directly by a statute (Federal Reserve Act).

III.IV.III Deletion of messages sent by another is an exercise of power granted by one's role​

Deletion of another's message is a privileged administrative function (see: Exhibits P-021 and P-024). Permissions required to delete another's message in the FRB are not available to everyone (see: Exhibit P-025). Roles in the server are set up in a way that aligns with one's relationship with the FRB (see: Exhibit P-026); Reserve Members, the Reserve Governor, FRB employees, and FI reps are given different roles from ordinary people. The Plaintiff understands that certain people have the ability to delete messages sent by others (see: Exhibit P-016, FloorIsTired saying "they deleted the announcement"; Exhibit P-001, for FloorIsTired's announcement).

III.IV.IV The FRB unlawfully deleted records plausibly related to the Plaintiff's FOI request after the request was filed​

ElysiaCrynn, at all times relevant, held a position a member of the Reserve Board as an ex-officio member in her capacity as Secretary of Commerce (Exhibits P-018 P-019; FRA, Sections 3(6)(b), 5(1)(b), 5(1)(h)). FloorIsTired, meanwhile, has served as an employee of the FRB at all times relevant (Exhibit P-001 through P-003, P-020).

In discovery, the Plaintiff submitted additional information relating to the deletion of information that was potentially responsive to the Plaintiff's FOI request. Among these were candid admissions by ElysiaCrynn and FloorIsTired that relevant information was deleted (Exhibits P-015, P-016, and P-017). Indeed, the public statements "stand[] unrebutted, uncontradicted, and unimpeached. It is a confession from within the walls of the Department itself" (YeetGlazer v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 76, Order of the Court, Section V.B, Par. 4). While the Plaintiff has shown one specific instance of deletion in the Emergency Injunction request within Post No. 2, admissions in a public forum thus show that more was deleted.

On balance of probabilities, a privileged actor in the FRB deleted messages that were sent by others. After all, FloorIsTired publicly stated that "they deleted the template" and "they deleted the announcement without consulting me" (Exhibit P-016). From the context of the conversation, "they" refers plainly to the Board of the FRB itself.

As shown Sections III.I, III.II, III.IV.I and III.IV.II, the FRB has obligations under the law to be transparent and fulfil FOI requests to the fullest extent possible. Deletion of material violates both of these lawful obligations.

As deletion here was "committed by government agents wielding powers available to them solely by virtue of their offices" (YeetGlazer v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 76, Verdict, Opionion and Analysis of the Court, On Colour of Law and Institutional Liability, Par. 1) and as "it is well established that when a government department causes harm through its officers, liability attaches to the department itself" (id., Par. 2), the FRB is ultimately responsible for these deletions.

III.IV.V The Plaintiff was harmed by deletions​

The FOI returns provided by the FRB did not appear to contain the information that the FRB's employees had said was deleted (see: Exhibits P-022 and P-023). The returns did not appear to contain any sort of "draft" that ElysiaCrynn and FloorIsTired publicly discussed as having been deleted (see: Exhibit P-016), nor the "template" publicly mentioned as deleted by FloorIsTired (id.). The deletion of these documents caused harm to the Plaintiff inasmuch as they frustrated the Plaintiff's ability to obtain them via FOI.

III.IV.VI The FRB knew, or ought to have known, that deleting material sought in a reasonable FOI request would be illegal; the deletion occurred with (at minimum) reckless disregard for the law​

In Ticket No. 96, in which the FOI request was filed, present were then-FRB Board members DonTrillions, jJoshuaTheGreat, and xSyncx (see: Exhibit P-002). Each of them were pinged by role when the ticket was opened (Exhibit P-027). As "[a]ny authority or power given to the FRB as a whole shall be regarded as given to the Federal Reserve Board" (FRA, Section 5(1)(d)), the FRB knew (or should have known) that an FOI was pending - the FOI was requested a mere two minutes after the ticket was opened (Exhibit P-003). It should be plainly obvious that deleting information sought in that FOI request would be illegal for the FRB to do, given its mandate of transparency and its obligations to fulfil FOIs.

At minimum, deleting relevant information after having been informed of a pending FOI constitutes reckless disregard for the law. The FRB, in deleting related content (as described in Exhibits P-015, P-016, and P-017) did this.

III.IV.VII FRB Board Members hold public office​

Public office is "Any position to which a person may be elected or nominated to" (Const. 54).

There are two types of board members on the FRB: "Sitting Board Member is a Member of the Board who was confirmed into the position. ... Ex Officio Board Member is a member who holds the seat by virtue of being Department of Commerce Secretary" (FRA, Section 3(6)(a)-(b)). Sitting board members are nominated to the role: "Sitting Board Members shall be nominated by the House of Representatives with a majority, and confirmed by the Senate with a supermajority" (FRA, section 5(1)(i)). The ex officio member is a Cabinet Secretary, who must be nominated and confirmed by the Senate before sitting in office (Const. 4(4)). As such, all FRB Board members, including the ex officio member, hold the position as a result of being in public office.

III.IV.VIII No exceptions under the law saves the FRB​

The Abuse of Power definition provides possible defenses: (1) that a good-faith mistake was made as to legality; and (2) that the action was performed on advice of counsel (CCA, Part II, Section 1(c)-(d)). The former is not plausible here - one cannot make a good faith mistake as to legality by deleting information plausibly resonsive to an FOI request after seeing the FOI request come in. The latter is also unlikely: the Defense has not demonstrated that these deletions were on advice of counsel, and the Department of Justice seems to have heard crickets from the FRB at the relevant times (Exhibit P-006).



IV. Prayer for Relief​

Plaintiff prays that the Court enter judgment providing the following relief:
  1. Declaratory Judgement.Plaintiff prays that the Court declare:
    1. That Plaintiff’s FOI request was valid;
    2. That Defendants committed Failure to Respond to Freedom of Information in violation of RCCA, Part XI, Section 2;
    3. That FRB Governor Dontrillions committed Failure to Perform Statutory Duty in violation of RCCA, Part XI, Section 7, by failing to perform duties of the FRB Governor under CMA, Sections 8(2) and 8(5)(d);
    4. That the governmental entity known as the Federal Reserve Bank committed Failure to Perform Statutory Duty in violation of RCCA, Part XI, Section 7, by failing to perform duties of the government under CMA Section 8(6) and by failing to "be transparent about its operations" as required by FRA Section 4(2)(c).
    5. That the FRB, through its agents, caused harm to the Plaintiff arising from Abuse of Power, in violation of CCA, Part II, Section 1.
    6. That the FRB, through its agents, caused harm to the Platintiff arising from Misfeasance in Public Office, in violation of RCCA, Part XI, Section 3.
  2. Injunctive Relief.Plaintiff prays that the Court issue the following injunctive relief:
    1. A Writ of Mandamus ordering Defendants to formally respond to Plaintiff’s 25 February 2026 FOI request within 72 hours of judgment.
    2. A Writ of Mandamus requiring Defendants to produce all responsive non-exempt records held by or accessible to the FRB in official channels, files, tickets, motions, votes, orders, and maintained correspondence, within a deadline set by the Court.
    3. A Writ of Mandamus requiring that, for any responsive material withheld in whole or in part, Defendants must identify the category of material withheld and state the specific legal grounds for withholding it.
    4. A Writ of Mandamus requiring partial release, redactions, summaries, or other tailored disclosure to the fullest extent possible if the Court concludes that any portion of the request cannot lawfully be released in full.
    5. A preservation order preventing the deletion, destruction, or alteration of responsive records, including official FRB server messages, tickets, board motions, votes, gubernatorial orders, and external communications held by the FRB relating to the Compliant transition.
  3. Monetary Relief. The Plaintiff prays that this Court order the following Monetary Relief and/or damages:
    1. Civil Penalties. For Failure to Respond to Freedom of Information (Claim III.I): A civil penalty of up to 50 Civil Penalty Units, as authorized under RCCA, Part XI, Section II.
    2. Punitive damages. Deleting information sought in an FOI request after such a request has been filed is plainly outrageous. For violations of the Criminal Code Act's prohibition on Abuse of Power and the Redmont Civil Code Act's prohibition of Misfeasance in Public Office, punitive damages in the amount of $25,000 are sought, in line with RCCA, Part III, Section 3.
    3. Nominal Damages. For Failure to Perform Statutory Duty (Claim III.II): Nominal Damages in the amount of $7,500 from each defendant, as authorized under RCCA, Part III, Section 4.
    4. Legal Fees. As a pro-se litigant, Plaintiff seeks legal fees equal to 30% of the total case value, pursuant to RCCA, Part III, Sections 7(2)(a) and 7(2)(h).
  4. Other Relief. Such other and further monetary or equitable relief as the Court deems just and proper.


V. Evidence​

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VI. Witness List​

  1. Multiman155
  2. DonTrillions
  3. jJoshuaTheGreat
  4. FloorIsTired
  5. xSyncx
  6. Kaiserin_


VII. Attestation​


By making this submission, I agree I understand the penalties of lying in court and the fact that I am subject to perjury should I knowingly make a false statement in court.

DATED: This 7 day of March 2026

 
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Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION FOR EMERGENCY INJUNCTION

Your Honor:

In order for a final judgement to be meaningful, records sought must be preserved. Preservation of records does not cause harm to the FRB, but deletion of records after the filing of the FOI would irreparably harm the Plaintiff.

At present, the Federal Reserve Bank has already deleted at least one message plausibly related to the FOI request. This includes the message shown in Exhibit P-001, which has since been deleted from the #fi-announcements channel on the FRB discord (See: Exhibit P-013). This deletion occurred after the FOI was filed (compare timestamps in Exhibit P-003 with that of Exhibit P-014).

On an emergency basis, the Plaintiff thus prays that this Court issue:

  • A writ of Mandamus preventing the deletion, destruction, or alteration of records possibly responsive to the FOI scope, including but not limited to official FRB server messages, tickets, board motions, votes, gubernatorial orders, and external communications held by the FRB relating to the Compliant transition. This should last until final judgement is issued.

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Writ of Summons

@DonTrillions @xSyncx @coshjlose @Soundi83 , is required to appear before the District Court in the case of Multiman155 v. Federal Reserve Bank & DonTrillions [2026] DCR 29

Failure to appear within 72 hours of this summons will result in a default judgement based on the known facts of the case.

Both parties should make themselves aware of the Court Rules and Procedures, including the option of an in-game trial should both parties request one.


Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION FOR EMERGENCY INJUNCTION

Your Honor:

In order for a final judgement to be meaningful, records sought must be preserved. Preservation of records does not cause harm to the FRB, but deletion of records after the filing of the FOI would irreparably harm the Plaintiff.

At present, the Federal Reserve Bank has already deleted at least one message plausibly related to the FOI request. This includes the message shown in Exhibit P-001, which has since been deleted from the #fi-announcements channel on the FRB discord (See: Exhibit P-013). This deletion occurred after the FOI was filed (compare timestamps in Exhibit P-003 with that of Exhibit P-014).

On an emergency basis, the Plaintiff thus prays that this Court issue:

  • A writ of Mandamus preventing the deletion, destruction, or alteration of records possibly responsive to the FOI scope, including but not limited to official FRB server messages, tickets, board motions, votes, gubernatorial orders, and external communications held by the FRB relating to the Compliant transition. This should last until final judgement is issued.

Granted.
 
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Your Honour,

The Department of Justice is present on behalf of the Federal Reserve Bank. We have been unable to make contact with DonTrillions, and we are not statutorily authorised to represent a private individual.
 

Attachments

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Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION FOR DEFAULT JUDGEMENT - Defendant DonTrillions

Your Honor,

I file this motion solely with respect to co-defendant DonTrillions in his personal capacity. He is not being represented by Kaiserin_ on this matter and thus had an independent obligation to answer the complaint within 48 hours, as he did not requests an extension.

48 hours have come and gone since your instruction in Post No. 7. No answer from DonTrillions has been received.

Therefore, for failure to respond, I request default judgement against that defendant or, in the alternative, that a public defender be swiftly assigned.

 

Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION FOR DEFAULT JUDGEMENT - Defendant DonTrillions

Your Honor,

I file this motion solely with respect to co-defendant DonTrillions in his personal capacity. He is not being represented by Kaiserin_ on this matter and thus had an independent obligation to answer the complaint within 48 hours, as he did not requests an extension.

48 hours have come and gone since your instruction in Post No. 7. No answer from DonTrillions has been received.

Therefore, for failure to respond, I request default judgement against that defendant or, in the alternative, that a public defender be swiftly assigned.

PD to be assigned.
 

Answer to Complaint


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
ANSWER TO COMPLAINT


Multiman155
Plaintiff

v.

Federal Reserve Bank
Defendant

I. ANSWER TO COMPLAINT

1–3. AFFIRM the facts regarding the FRB’s announcement.
4. AFFIRM that Plaintiff initiated a public petition against the decision.
5–8. AFFIRM the material facts of the FOI request.
9. AFFIRM that the law requires a response.
10–11. AFFIRM that Plaintiff received no response from the FRB within 7 days of the FOI request.
12. AFFIRM that DonTrillions has publicly stated his intent to resign as Governor, and that he retained the office during this period.
13–14. AFFIRM the facts regarding Plaintiff’s communication with the DOJ.
15. AFFIRM that Plaintiff had not received a response to the FOI request prior to the filing of this suit, NOTING that the request has since been accepted and fulfilled.
16. NEITHER AFFIRM NOR DENY that the public importance of the request was especially high, NOTING that there were likely other avenues through which the alleged confusion could be cleared.
17–18. AFFIRM the facts regarding the nature of Plaintiff’s “bLAWg” news organisation.
19–20. NEITHER AFFIRM NOR DENY that Plaintiff has suffered harm with regard to the operation of bLAWg, NOTING that there are avenues for reporting that do not rely on FOI requests, and that this purported harm is unsubstantiated and minimal.

II. DEFENCES
1. The inability of the FRB to fulfill the FOI request was due primarily to the de facto absence of the FRB Governor, who the Plaintiff correctly notes is intent on resigning imminently.
2. The excessive workload of the FRB, especially in light of the de facto absence of the Governor, makes the fulfillment of incredibly substantial FOI requests, such as that filed by the Plaintiff, very difficult to maintain. Witness testimony will confirm this. Though Plaintiff was legally entitled to a response, the unique situation of the FRB at the time of the request warrants special consideration, including diminishing of damages.
3. Little harm was suffered by Plaintiff due to the bureaucratic stalling experienced by the FRB during this time. Other avenues, such as interviews with the board member mentioned in fact 16, could have expounded on the facts of the situation which Plaintiff sought to report on. Additionally, no monetary or material harm was suffered by Plaintiff as a result of the missed FOI request.

By making this submission, I agree I understand the penalties of lying in court and the fact that I am subject to perjury should I knowingly make a false statement in court.

DATED: This 14th day of March, 2026.

 

Answer to Complaint


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
ANSWER TO COMPLAINT


Multiman155
Plaintiff

v.

Federal Reserve Bank
Defendant

I. ANSWER TO COMPLAINT

1–3. AFFIRM the facts regarding the FRB’s announcement.
4. AFFIRM that Plaintiff initiated a public petition against the decision.
5–8. AFFIRM the material facts of the FOI request.
9. AFFIRM that the law requires a response.
10–11. AFFIRM that Plaintiff received no response from the FRB within 7 days of the FOI request.
12. AFFIRM that DonTrillions has publicly stated his intent to resign as Governor, and that he retained the office during this period.
13–14. AFFIRM the facts regarding Plaintiff’s communication with the DOJ.
15. AFFIRM that Plaintiff had not received a response to the FOI request prior to the filing of this suit, NOTING that the request has since been accepted and fulfilled.
16. NEITHER AFFIRM NOR DENY that the public importance of the request was especially high, NOTING that there were likely other avenues through which the alleged confusion could be cleared.
17–18. AFFIRM the facts regarding the nature of Plaintiff’s “bLAWg” news organisation.
19–20. NEITHER AFFIRM NOR DENY that Plaintiff has suffered harm with regard to the operation of bLAWg, NOTING that there are avenues for reporting that do not rely on FOI requests, and that this purported harm is unsubstantiated and minimal.

II. DEFENCES
1. The inability of the FRB to fulfill the FOI request was due primarily to the de facto absence of the FRB Governor, who the Plaintiff correctly notes is intent on resigning imminently.
2. The excessive workload of the FRB, especially in light of the de facto absence of the Governor, makes the fulfillment of incredibly substantial FOI requests, such as that filed by the Plaintiff, very difficult to maintain. Witness testimony will confirm this. Though Plaintiff was legally entitled to a response, the unique situation of the FRB at the time of the request warrants special consideration, including diminishing of damages.
3. Little harm was suffered by Plaintiff due to the bureaucratic stalling experienced by the FRB during this time. Other avenues, such as interviews with the board member mentioned in fact 16, could have expounded on the facts of the situation which Plaintiff sought to report on. Additionally, no monetary or material harm was suffered by Plaintiff as a result of the missed FOI request.

By making this submission, I agree I understand the penalties of lying in court and the fact that I am subject to perjury should I knowingly make a false statement in court.

DATED: This 14th day of March, 2026.

thank you. we shall continue once a PD has been assigned.
 
Your Honour,

Pursuant to the precedent set in Dragonfly0001, Brustklefurry, YourLocalDiabeto V. CopTop_YT, lawanoespr, Alexthelillion [2024] FCR 85, we request that this case be severed and that the Plaintiff file these cases individually as the counsel in this matter are different.
Your Honor,

May I respond to this request?

Response


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
RESPONSE OPPOSING REQUEST TO SEVER

In this case, Co-Defendant DonTrillions has asked that this "case be severed and that the Plaintiff file these cases individually as the counsel in this matter are different". The Plaintiff opposes the request to sever on the basis that the Co-Defendant's cited precedent has been superceded by subsequent changes in statute; the RCCA's new handling of joinder of parties (including the ability of parties to file cross-claims, and the ability to join third parties via a third-party complaint) permits joinder of co-defendants represented by separate counsels.

1. The RCCA is controlling and expressly permits joinder​

1.1 On Joinder and RCCA controls​

The current law regarding joinder of defendants in cases is found in the Redmont Civil Code Act, which was signed into law in February 2026. In that law, the Congress and explicitly permitted joinder of additional parties to a case under the following circumstances:
(1) The court may order the joinder of additional parties where:
(a) Complete relief cannot be granted without the additional party; or
(b) The additional party claims an interest in the subject matter such that disposing of the case without them may impair their ability to protect that interest.

(2) The court may consolidate multiple proceedings involving common questions of law or facts in the interest of judicial efficiency.
(RCCA, Part IV, Section 6).

As applied to this case, complete relief to the Plaintiff cannot be granted without both defendants present. What's more, separating out these two cases would create multiple proceedings "involving common questions of law or facts", which would hamper judicial efficiency.

Regarding the prior ruling cited by the Plaintiff: Plaintiff's cited case is from 2024, and all other cases I could find that granted this sort of severance pre-date the passage of the RCCA. RCCA post-dates it, and is controlling at this moment. Joinder of defendants, therefore, is justified and permitted under the law as it currently stands; mere difference in counsel is no longer a reason that grants severance.

1.2 On how the RCCA deals with ancillary claims​

Rather than swift severance whenever two defendants may have had opposing interests, the RCCA reformed civil procedure through the creation of a robust set of ancillary claims (see: RCCA, Part IV). The joinder provision, combined with the presence of these sorts of claims, permits one single case to handle rather complex chains of claims. This newly includes the handling of related claims by one co-defendant against another and claims by a (co-)defendant against a third party. The RCCA also formalized guidance around counterclaims, which had previously largely been had at Common Law.

Prior to the RCCA, severance was common and was granted fairly swiftly. But, as shown both above and below, this practice is no longer the law. Rather, the RCCA seeks to keep cases joined whenever practicable and provides parties with complex tools to protect their interests in this new joinder-focused system. One such tool, cross-claims, is discussed in the section immediately below. Another such tool, third-party claims, is discussed in Section 3. Reading all of these together, the structural relationship helps to reinforce the reading of joinder as laid out in Section 1.1.

2. The RCCA's creation of Cross-Claims reinforces the authority to join co-defendants with separate counsels​

Next, we turn to an example scenario contemplated by the RCCA in which two co-defendants would be joined to a case and more or less required to have separate counsels: the RCCA's creation of cross-claims.

The RCCA created a new civil procedure regarding cross-claims. Cross-claims are similar conceptually to counter-claims, inasmuch as existing parties to the case file paperwork in order to sue another party to the case. The main difference is that cross-claims are filed by one co-Plaintiff/co-Defendant against their fellow co-Plaintiff or co-Defendant, whereas counterclaims are filed by a Defendant against a Plaintiff.

As such, the Congress provided a means by which allow co-defendants to file claims against fellow co-defendants:
1. Definitions
...

(2) Cross-claim means a claim brought by a party against a co-party (e.g. one plaintiff against another plaintiff, or one defendant against another defendant) within the same proceeding.

...

(4) Compulsory claim means a counterclaim or cross-claim arising from the same transaction, occurrence, or subject matter as the original claim, which must be brought in the current proceeding.

(5) Permissive claim means a counterclaim or cross-claim arising from a different transaction or occurrence than the original claim, which may be brought in the current proceeding.

...
3. Cross-Claims
(1) A party may file a compulsory or permissive cross-claim against a co-party.

(2) Compulsory cross-claims must be filed before the close of discovery, or they are waived.

(3) Permissive cross-claims may be filed before the close of discovery, provided they fall within the jurisdiction of the court.

(4) A cross-claim may seek:
(a) A share of any damages owed to the plaintiff, proportionate to the co-party’s responsibility;
(b) Full reimbursement from the co-party where the cross-claimant’s liability is solely the result of the co-party’s conduct; or
(c) Separate damages for harm the co-party caused directly to the cross-claimant.
(RCCA, Part IV, Sections 1(2), 1(4)-(5), 3(1)-(4)).

When someone files a cross-claim, they would become a cross-plaintiff with respect to that claim; likewise when someone is on the receiving end of a cross-claim, they would become a cross-defendant. The existence of cross-claims more or less requires that co-defendants have separate counsels for their own best interests — a lawyer cannot in good faith represent a Plaintiff and Defendant in the same action (c.f. Criminal Code Act, Part III, Section 14).

The filing of cross-claims may more or less require separate counsels for civil co-defendants. But the RCCA does not say that severance is the answer; rather the RCCA's joinder provisions must be read as permitting co-defendants with separate counsels to be joined to a case.

3. The RCCA's creation of Third-party claims reinforces the authority to join co-defendants with separate counsels​

Next we turn to examining another provision which creates separate co-defendants with separate counsels: third-party claims. A third-party claim is "a claim brought by a defendant against a person not currently a party to the proceeding, alleging that the third party is or may be liable for all or part of the plaintiff’s claim against the defendant" (RCCA, Part IV, Section 1(3)). The RCCA lays out third-party claims as follows:

4. Third-Party Claims
(1) A defendant may file a third-party claim against a person not currently a party to the proceeding where:
(a) The third party is or may be liable to the defendant for all or part of the plaintiff’s claim; or
(b) The third party is or may be liable to the defendant for contribution or indemnification.

(2) A third-party claim must be filed within the defendant’s initial response or with leave of the court.

(3) Upon filing of a third-party claim, the third party becomes a party to the proceeding with all associated rights and obligations.

(4) The plaintiff may assert claims directly against the third party arising from the same transaction or occurrence.
(RCCA, Part IV, Section 4).

Third-party claims, like cross-claims, are new creations of the RCCA. Their filing requires the Court to join, as a defendant, someone who was not originally party to the case. They have even been used for this purpose in the FCR (see: Brick and Browse Inc. v. MasterCaelen, Third-Party Defendant Pepecuu [2026] FCR 18).

In a third-party complaint, the original cases's defendant becomes a Third-Party Plaintiff, and the defendant of a third-party complaint becomes a Third-Party Defendant. The Third-Party Defendant also becomes a defendant to the original case in their own right, as the original case's Plaintiff "plaintiff may assert claims directly against the third party arising from the same transaction or occurrence".

As with cross-claims, the third-party defendant is going to need different legal counsel than the individual who filed the third-party complaint. But, under the RCCA, the legal pathway the Courts follow is to join the parties to the same case, not to require that the case be severed and re-filed individually.

4. Conclusion​

As shown above, the RCCA creates a statutory scheme that focuses on joining related claims to the same case and providing for robust measures to handle disputes between co-parties. While this law is a departure from a previous rule-of-thumb practiced by the courts, it is the law; "Congress's will must be deferred to" (Galactic Empire of Redmont v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 78 - appeal, page 6, par. 5), and "Congress is free to make whatever changes to rules, regulations, or statues they wish, so long as those changes are constitutional" (id., page 7, par. 4).

Joinder, being expressly permitted, ought thus be enforced here.

 

Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION FOR DEFAULT JUDGEMENT

Your Honor,

On 14 March, you instructed the public defender for co-defendant DonTrillions to present an answer within 48 hours (Post No. 16). It is now 23 March—9 days later—and no answer to complaint has been filed on behalf of co-defendant DonTrillions.

Your Honor has not paused any deadlines, and the public defender has not asked for any extensions. There is no reason under the law as to why being 1 week late to file an answer to complaint would be permissible, particularly so when no extension was requested nor granted.

Plaintiff therefore requests default judgement against co-defendant DonTrillions for failure to present an answer to complaint.

 
Your Honour,

I apologise, I was under the assumption that deadlines were tolled.

I ask for a 48 hour extension, the Defendant should not be punished for an error that legal counsel committed.
 
Following the indefinite leave of absence filed by the former presiding officer, I will be taking over proceedings from here on. Please allow ~24 hours for rulings on pending motions. The court thanks you for your patience.
 
Your Honour,

Pursuant to the precedent set in Dragonfly0001, Brustklefurry, YourLocalDiabeto V. CopTop_YT, lawanoespr, Alexthelillion [2024] FCR 85, we request that this case be severed and that the Plaintiff file these cases individually as the counsel in this matter are different.
Your request has been respectfully Denied.

"The court may sever any claim under this Part for separate trial where it would unduly complicate or delay the original proceeding." (Part IV, Section 7.4 of the RCCA). As the facts in this case are directly aligned, and relief could not be properly applied without both parties, it shall remain as a joint proceeding.

Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION FOR DEFAULT JUDGEMENT

Your Honor,

On 14 March, you instructed the public defender for co-defendant DonTrillions to present an answer within 48 hours (Post No. 16). It is now 23 March—9 days later—and no answer to complaint has been filed on behalf of co-defendant DonTrillions.

Your Honor has not paused any deadlines, and the public defender has not asked for any extensions. There is no reason under the law as to why being 1 week late to file an answer to complaint would be permissible, particularly so when no extension was requested nor granted.

Plaintiff therefore requests default judgement against co-defendant DonTrillions for failure to present an answer to complaint.

Court Order


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
ORDER - MOTION FOR DEFAULT JUDGEMENT

Denied

The Court finds clear precedent in maintaining the right to representation, regardless of repeated missed deadlines. As proper representation is a right afforded to all citizens.

Precedent establishes that "The defendant still has a right to representation. The public defender program failing to give them that representation doesn't remove the defendant's right." (Vendeka v. absinf [2025] FCR 61)

Additionally, as there was uncertainty as to if proceedings were tolled while motions of dispositive nature (Post 16) was being ruled upon, Contempt, as customary in motions such as this ( Vendeka v. absinf [2025] FCR 61, Eddiegonza420 v. Home Investment, [2025] FCR 95) shall not be granted in this instance.



That being said, Co-Defendant DonTrillion (cc. @TheSnowGuardian) shall have 24 hours to submit an answer to complaint, if they are unable to provide the complaint within this time, they shall be held in contempt.
 
Your request has been respectfully Denied.

"The court may sever any claim under this Part for separate trial where it would unduly complicate or delay the original proceeding." (Part IV, Section 7.4 of the RCCA). As the facts in this case are directly aligned, and relief could not be properly applied without both parties, it shall remain as a joint proceeding.

Court Order


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
ORDER - MOTION FOR DEFAULT JUDGEMENT

Denied

The Court finds clear precedent in maintaining the right to representation, regardless of repeated missed deadlines. As proper representation is a right afforded to all citizens.

Precedent establishes that "The defendant still has a right to representation. The public defender program failing to give them that representation doesn't remove the defendant's right." (Vendeka v. absinf [2025] FCR 61)

Additionally, as there was uncertainty as to if proceedings were tolled while motions of dispositive nature (Post 16) was being ruled upon, Contempt, as customary in motions such as this ( Vendeka v. absinf [2025] FCR 61, Eddiegonza420 v. Home Investment, [2025] FCR 95) shall not be granted in this instance.



That being said, Co-Defendant DonTrillion (cc. @TheSnowGuardian) shall have 24 hours to submit an answer to complaint, if they are unable to provide the complaint within this time, they shall be held in contempt.

Your Honour,
I cannot access my PC at this time and I have been caught up with IRL stuff, I have my answer to complaint ready but I cannot post them, I would greatly appreciate a simple 24 hour extension.
 
Your Honour,
I cannot access my PC at this time and I have been caught up with IRL stuff, I have my answer to complaint ready but I cannot post them, I would greatly appreciate a simple 24 hour extension.
That is permissible; to aid you in your journey back to your computer, you shall have an additional 24 hours, but no further extension shall be granted.
 

Objection


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
OBJECTION — BREACH OF PROCEDURE

Your Honor,

Today is 16 days after the original deadline for the answer to complaint by Defendant DonTrillions (Post No. 15). During this time, the Public Defender has failed entirely to submit an answer to complaint on behalf of co-Defendant DonTrillions.

Even after Your Honor’s generous extensions, the final extended deadline for an Answer to Complaint to be submitted by Defendant DonTrillions has again come and passed (see: Post No. 25; Post No. 27).

As “no further extension shall be granted” (Post No. 26), Plaintiff objects to the Public Defender’s failure to publish an answer to complaint. I am sympathetic to the PD’s PC issues and irl events, but these repeated delays by the Public Defender program beyond what the Court has permitted collectively risk impinging upon my Ninth Charter Right as it pertains to a speedy trial.

I therefore pray that Your Honor dismiss the current public defender and reassign this case to an active public defender of Your Honor’s choosing, as was done in Muggy21 v. Riverardd [2025] DCR 96 when the District Court found that the PD “failed to adequately protect the Defendant's interests” (Muggy21 v. Riverardd [2025] DCR 96, Post No. 19; see also Appeal in re:Superwoops Contempt [2026] FCR 1, upholding contempt charges for a PD arising from the PD office’s non-compliance with the District Court’s Order in [2025] DCR 96). In the alternative, Plaintiff prays again for default judgement for failure to submit defense.

 

Objection


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
OBJECTION — BREACH OF PROCEDURE

Your Honor,

Today is 16 days after the original deadline for the answer to complaint by Defendant DonTrillions (Post No. 15). During this time, the Public Defender has failed entirely to submit an answer to complaint on behalf of co-Defendant DonTrillions.

Even after Your Honor’s generous extensions, the final extended deadline for an Answer to Complaint to be submitted by Defendant DonTrillions has again come and passed (see: Post No. 25; Post No. 27).

As “no further extension shall be granted” (Post No. 26), Plaintiff objects to the Public Defender’s failure to publish an answer to complaint. I am sympathetic to the PD’s PC issues and irl events, but these repeated delays by the Public Defender program beyond what the Court has permitted collectively risk impinging upon my Ninth Charter Right as it pertains to a speedy trial.

I therefore pray that Your Honor dismiss the current public defender and reassign this case to an active public defender of Your Honor’s choosing, as was done in Muggy21 v. Riverardd [2025] DCR 96 when the District Court found that the PD “failed to adequately protect the Defendant's interests” (Muggy21 v. Riverardd [2025] DCR 96, Post No. 19; see also Appeal in re:Superwoops Contempt [2026] FCR 1, upholding contempt charges for a PD arising from the PD office’s non-compliance with the District Court’s Order in [2025] DCR 96). In the alternative, Plaintiff prays again for default judgement for failure to submit defense.

Court Order


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
ORDER - DISMISSAL OF PUBLIC DEFENDER

The court has, again, reached the point where the existing Public Defender has not been able to uphold the bar to competency, as upheld by Rule 6.5 of the Court Rules

"A player who qualifies and is given a Public Defender to handle their case are only entitled to an attorney who will fulfill the following:

1) Timely respond to cases on their behalf"

With these rules broken for once again, and our proceedings unneedingly delayed, the correction of our course is now needed.
The court finds that the Public Defender has failed to meet the bar of competency as defined by court rules, and is hereby Dismissed from this case, effective immediately. The Public Defender is also hereby held in Contempt of Court. They shall be fined $5,000 and imprisoned for 10 minutes.

The Court shall grant a stay of proceedings while a new Public Defender is appointed for this Court.

 

Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION TO DISMISS

The defense moves that the complaint in this case be dismissed, and in support thereof, respectfully alleges:

1. Rule 5.5 - Lack of Claim

DonTrillions is not liable for any damages arising from these claims (whether the claims are true or not), because all actions/inactions he is being sued for were performed under the umbrella of his role as FRB Governor.

As such, according to the precedent of [2022] FCR 91 - which the District Court cannot override as it was made by a superior court - and many other cases, the case against DonTrillions should be dismissed (however, the one against the FRB can continue as far as DonTrillions is concerned).

 
Permission to respond, your honor?
Permission granted, please have a response posted within 48 hours. Deadlines for the Co-Defendants Answer to Complaint will be tolled until this motion [and any further dispositive motion] is ruled upon.
 
Permission granted, please have a response posted within 48 hours. Deadlines for the Co-Defendants Answer to Complaint will be tolled until this motion [and any further dispositive motion] is ruled upon.
Your honor,

I believe the Prosecution has missed the deadline.

I can only assume they agree with the motion.
 
Seeing as I have been unable to check this case due to holiday matters, I believe it is only fair that the same gratitude be extended to counsel in this case. Your extension is granted. As you yourself have noted, though, this section of the trial has gone on for almost 20 days now. Please bring your response sooner, rather than later.
 

Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION TO DISMISS

The defense moves that the complaint in this case be dismissed, and in support thereof, respectfully alleges:

1. Rule 5.5 - Lack of Claim

DonTrillions is not liable for any damages arising from these claims (whether the claims are true or not), because all actions/inactions he is being sued for were performed under the umbrella of his role as FRB Governor.

As such, according to the precedent of [2022] FCR 91 - which the District Court cannot override as it was made by a superior court - and many other cases, the case against DonTrillions should be dismissed (however, the one against the FRB can continue as far as DonTrillions is concerned).

Response


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
RESPONSE TO MOTION TO DISMISS (Post No. 31)

Your Honor,

We begin by restating the relevant claim for relief in the complaint:

III.III.II The FRB, and its governor, are both direct parties to this case.​

III.III.II.I The FRB Governor may bear some personal liability for Failure to Respond to Freedom of Information
RCCA, Part XI, Section II notes that a person commits the violation of Failure to Respond to Freedom of Information, when that person "unreasonably delays or fails to respond to a valid Freedom of Information request within the time limits prescribed by law".

Plaintiff recognizes that, within Redmont, "it is well established that when a government department causes harm through its officers, liability attaches to the department itself" (YeetGlazer v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 76, Verdict, "Opinion and Analysis of the Court", "On Colour of Law and Institutional Liability", Par. 3). This liability need not solely arise "on a theory of respondeat superior, but on the independent ground that the Department's own policies, customs, and failures of supervision were the proximate cause of the Plaintiff's injuries. Where the policy of an institution is indifference to the rights of those subject to its authority, the institution bears responsibility for the foreseeable consequences of that indifference" (id., Par. 7). When an individual acts using the power of the underlying government institution, thus, that institution may be held liable.

This case may be different; the duty to handle Freedom of Information requests is imposed directly upon the "The FRB Governor" (CMA, Section 8(3)(d)). The liability for this violation, therefore, may lie (in whole, or in part) with the Governor himself.

As his personal rights may be implicated by the relief sought here, the FRB Governor must be listed as a direct party (see generally: MasterCaelen v. Hon. Magistrate Dr_Eksplosive [2026] FCR 14); he is thus included as a Defendant.

When relying upon rulings in prior cases, we must take into account the particular context of the case in which the ruling was made and how the underling law has changed since a ruling was issued.

The Plaintiff’s cited case, [2022] FCR 91, was fundamentally a dispute about two categories of claims: alleged constitutional violations (Poemhunter v FTGWop [2022] FCR 91, Compl. Sections III.1-5) and alleged slander (id., Section III.6). The Court dismissed the whole complaint, but permitted the slander allegation to be re-filed separately (id., Post No. 16, “The case for slander may be refiled against the Defendant separately, should the Plaintiff wish to pursue the issue”).

Why did it do this? The conclusion we draw is that the Court saw liability as attaching to different actors for the different allegations—constitutional violations to the Commonwealth, and slander to the individual defendant.

That ruling cited several cases ([2022] FCR 62, [2022] FCR 42, [2022] FCR 48, and [2022] FCR 36) as justification for its conclusion of what amounts to a kind of absolute immunity. Each of those cited cases, however, were not cases in which someone tried to sue an individual and the case was dismissed; rather, these were cases that established that one could sue the government directly when an agent acting on behalf of the government caused a harm. The citation chain, as such, is not as strong as it may appear.

Later cases have not accepted an absolute standard of immunity for Commonwealth officials. The Federal Court later applied a standard originally developed in the District Court “that conscious decision to ignore a self-stated rule despite clear evidence to the contrary is not mere negligence but willful misconduct, and that such conduct falls outside the protected sphere of administrative immunity” (YeetGlazer v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 76, Verdict, Section V.E, internal quotations omitted). The District Court case that created the rule quoted has also been used as an authority in Inknet v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 86 (Verdict) and Vendeka Inc. and Pepecuu v. Department of Commerce [2025] FCR 107 (Post No. 37).

Since the Federal Court has given the underlying case verdict’s liability rules some authoritative weight, a fuller discussion of Reveille Legion v. BabySoga [2025] DCR 52‘s rules regarding liability are warranted here. In that case, a soccer team (Reveille Legion) personally sued BabySoga (a then-DPA employee), alleging that BabySoga had caused humiliation and emotional damages arising from BabySoga’s mismanagement of a soccer final in league run by the DPA. The Court found that emotional damages were unavailable, but found BabySoga personally liable for emotional damages.

The Court determined that “Where an employee’s conduct is so far removed from the “ordinary course” of their delegated duties, Commonwealth immunity no longer applies. The standard, therefore, is one of functional nexus: the conduct must bear a direct and legitimate connection to the employee’s official role. If the act is personal or executed outside the scope of any lawful authority granted by the Department, it ceases to be an act of the Commonwealth and becomes the act of the individual. In such circumstances, liability attaches to the actor, not the Commonwealth” (Reveille Legion v. BabySoga [2025] DCR 52, Verdict, Section II.2).

Why? The Court examined a recent Supreme Court ruling ([2025] FCR 78 - Appeal) and contrasted it with the behavior of BabySoga. The Court found that BabySoga was “not exercising a delegated governmental function within the bounds of policy or law” (Reveille Legion v. BabySoga [2025] DCR 52, Verdict, Section II.2), and that under recent Supreme Court precedent “such actions fall outside the protected sphere of administrative immunity” (id.).

The District Court, therefore, has understood the Supreme Court to have adopted a narrowed standard for immunity as time has gone on. If the Court were to find that failure to Respond to an FOI is “not exercising a delegated governmental function within the bounds of policy or law” (id.), liability may attach to DonTrillions personally.

Would the FCR ruling from 2022 override the more permissive DCR precedent? No, because the DCR relied upon a more recent Supreme Court precedent, and the Supreme Court is superior to the Federal Court. We needn’t wait for the Federal Court to take up a new case first before applying what the Supreme Court has established.

To conclude: the precedent cited by the Defendant has been weakened with time and with subsequent Supreme Court rulings; the shield is no longer as absolute as it once was. If the Court were to grant dismissal, it would essentially be judging that DonTrillions is immune and that the FRB would be fully liable for his actions. If not, the Court would preserve that question for final judgement, permit the FRB to create cross-claims against DonTrillions, and allow full argument on the matter after fact-finding. The Plaintiff believes the latter is more in line with the RCCA’s re-design of civil litigation and, noting the lack of absolute immunity, asks that dismissal for lack of claim be denied.

 

Court Order


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
Order - MOTION TO DISMISS
GRANTED

Co-Defendant DonTrillions may hold liability within this case, but for it to be held as personal liability, separated from the Commonwealth, further action must be taken in order to properly separate the Co-Defendant from the almighty shield of the Commonwealth.

Severance from the Commonwealth
Reveille Legion v. BabySoga, [2025] DCR 52, in its verdict held that

"Where an employee’s conduct is so far removed from the “ordinary course” of their delegated duties, Commonwealth immunity no longer applies."
in the case described above, the court finds that the line for separation lied wherein "a conscious decision to ignore a self-stated rule despite clear evidence to the contrary is not mere negligence but willful misconduct" & "If the act is personal or executed outside the scope of any lawful authority granted by the Department, it ceases to be an act of the Commonwealth and becomes the act of the individual.", as referenced by the Plaintiff in their response, this is then reinforced within the Federal Court (FCR 86 [2025], FCR 107 [2025]) Through the interpretation of this verdict, a clear standard for when government liability becomes personal is thereby created, where a party must both
1) Stray from the ordinary course of duties to a significant degree
This is potentially demonstrated by the plaintiff, with evidence showing the Co-Defendant's potential negligence in the performance (or lack thereof) of statutory duties.
2) The Act must be personal, or executed outside the scope of lawful authority.
This is not demonstrated by the Plaintiff insofar as there is no presented evidence for or against personal bias or action by the Co-Defendant.
Additionally, (DCR 52) in its verdict rendered the severance due to "...not mere negligence but willful misconduct". It is to note here that the facts presented in this case lean towards negligence by the Defendant, as the evidence presented relies on their inaction towards their statutory duties.


For this reason, the court does not see sufficient cause to sever Co-Defendant DonTrillions from the immunity afforded to him.

Direct Implication
The Plaintiff also brought forward in their initial complaint that the personal rights of the Co-Defendant might also be implicated
"As his personal rights may be implicated by the relief sought here, the FRB Governor must be listed as a direct party (see generally: MasterCaelen v. Hon. Magistrate Dr_Eksplosive [2026] FCR 14); he is thus included as a Defendant."
This is mentioned through the prayer listed by the Plaintiff;
"That FRB Governor Dontrillions committed Failure to Perform Statutory Duty in violation of RCCA, Part XI, Section 7, by failing to perform duties of the FRB Governor under CMA, Sections 8(2) and 8(5)(d)"
These duties are referenced by the Plaintiff;
"This case may be different; the duty to handle Freedom of Information requests is imposed directly upon the "The FRB Governor" (CMA, Section 8(3)(d)). The liability for this violation, therefore, may lie (in whole, or in part) with the Governor himself."
The court finds that through precedent set by higher courts, we cannot attribute the liability of Freedom of Information Requests falls upon the Governor himself, with the liability falling under the FRB itself, this precedent is set through cases such as juniperfig v. Commonwealth of Redmont, [2025] FCR 91, defining that for the Legislative body, despite the Classified Materials Act stating the responsibility for FOI Requests falls upon; "(b) The Presiding Officers of Congress in consensus for Congressional FOI requests;", Commonwealth Immunity applied in this instance, pulling liability from the Presiding Officers to the Commonwealth Proper, in accordance to how liability is shifted in other instances of Commonwealth Immunity. This aligns with the FRB's reliance on the governor for its FOI requests. Precedent dictates that Immunity of the individual still applies, and as such, the FRB itself shall be held liable in the case of FOI appeals.

The Court finds, then, that under this immunity, Co-Defendant DonTrillions is not directly liable, and, as such, their personal rights shall not be implicated in the case at hand.

As the liability for the relief sought does not fall upon Co-Defendant DonTrillions, the Court sees no claim to hold them within this court. As such, they are dismissed from this matter. Proceedings shall continue against the remaining Defendant (The Federal Reserve Bank)



With the Co-Defendant Dismissed, the Public Defender is thanked for their time and dismissed accordingly.
Caption also modified to reflect the new parties at present.



With former Co-Defendant DonTrillions no longer a party to this case, we may proceed directly to Discovery, which shall be in place for 5 days.
(cc. @Franciscus, @Superwoops)
 
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Pursuant to Rule 4.6, the Plaintiff submits the following exhibits into evidence:

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Discord - Audit Logs Resource; see attached file "audit-log.zip" for archive

Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION TO COMPEL

Your Honor:

The Plaintiff seeks to compel the remaining defendant to produce the following information to this Court, and for the following reasons:

  1. Discord Audit Logs of the FRB Discord, from 25 February 2026 until the present.
    1. Reason:
      In short, an FRB Board Member and FRB employee have admitted publicly that the FRB deleted information plausibly related to the FOI request.

      ElysiaCrynn was confirmed as the Secretary of Commerce on 21 February (see: Exhibit P-019). In that capacity, she serves as an ex-officio member of the FRB's board (see: Exhibit P-018; FRA, Sections 3(6)(b), 5(1)(b), 5(1)(h)). Exhibits P-015, P-016, P-017 show a conversation in which ElysiaCrynn, without prompting by the Plaintiff, candidly admitted to the public that the Federal Reserve had deleted material relevant to the FOI request ("pretty sure i saw some stuff for it get deleted earlier as well").

      In that same conversation, FloorIsTired (an employee of the FRB who posted material relevant to the FOI request; see Exhibits P-001 and P-020) commented that "yeah they deleted the template" and "they deleted the announcement without consulting me".

      Discord Audit logs may contain certain information regarding the deletion of messages, including the individual who deleted the message using their moderator permissions (see: Exhibit P-021). According to Exhibit P-021, audit log items are preserved for 45 days. 45 days ago was Sunday, February 22, so these audit logs exist at the present moment, but must be preserved swiftly, in line with the emergency injunction requiring preservation of materials plausibly responsive to the FOI granted in Post No. 3.

      Given the admissions from FRB staff that info had been deleted, the Plaintiff would like to examine when they were deleted (before or after the FOI request was filed) and by whom they were deleted.
  2. Any messages on the FRB discord server regarding the FOI request described in Fact No. 5.
    1. Reason: The Plaintiff would like to interrogate the FRB's attempts to comply with the FOI request both prior to the filing of this suit and afterwards.

 

Attachments

Brief


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
SUBMISSION OF INTERROGATORIES

Your Honor:

The Plaintiff submits the following interrogatories pursuant to Rule 4.8, which the Defense (cc: Acting AG @Superwoops) must answer to the best of their ability within 48 hours of the interrogatories being asked.

  1. Which people had responsibility for receiving, reviewing, preserving, processing, responding to, and/or supervising responses to Plaintiff’s FOI request in ticket-96?
  2. What steps did the Defendant take to preserve potentially responsive records after receiving the FOI request in ticket-96?
The Plaintiff reserves the right to post further interrogatories.

 
Pursuant to Rule 4.6, the Plaintiff submits the following exhibits into evidence:

Discord - Audit Logs Resource; see attached file "audit-log.zip" for archive

Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION TO COMPEL

Your Honor:

The Plaintiff seeks to compel the remaining defendant to produce the following information to this Court, and for the following reasons:

  1. Discord Audit Logs of the FRB Discord, from 25 February 2026 until the present.
    1. Reason:
      In short, an FRB Board Member and FRB employee have admitted publicly that the FRB deleted information plausibly related to the FOI request.

      ElysiaCrynn was confirmed as the Secretary of Commerce on 21 February (see: Exhibit P-019). In that capacity, she serves as an ex-officio member of the FRB's board (see: Exhibit P-018; FRA, Sections 3(6)(b), 5(1)(b), 5(1)(h)). Exhibits P-015, P-016, P-017 show a conversation in which ElysiaCrynn, without prompting by the Plaintiff, candidly admitted to the public that the Federal Reserve had deleted material relevant to the FOI request ("pretty sure i saw some stuff for it get deleted earlier as well").

      In that same conversation, FloorIsTired (an employee of the FRB who posted material relevant to the FOI request; see Exhibits P-001 and P-020) commented that "yeah they deleted the template" and "they deleted the announcement without consulting me".

      Discord Audit logs may contain certain information regarding the deletion of messages, including the individual who deleted the message using their moderator permissions (see: Exhibit P-021). According to Exhibit P-021, audit log items are preserved for 45 days. 45 days ago was Sunday, February 22, so these audit logs exist at the present moment, but must be preserved swiftly, in line with the emergency injunction requiring preservation of materials plausibly responsive to the FOI granted in Post No. 3.

      Given the admissions from FRB staff that info had been deleted, the Plaintiff would like to examine when they were deleted (before or after the FOI request was filed) and by whom they were deleted.
  2. Any messages on the FRB discord server regarding the FOI request described in Fact No. 5.
    1. Reason: The Plaintiff would like to interrogate the FRB's attempts to comply with the FOI request both prior to the filing of this suit and afterwards.

Your honour, may the Commonwealth respond to this motion?
 
Your Honor,

Pursuant to Rule 4.6, the Plaintiff submits the following into evidence:

See attached PDF "Exhibit P-022 - FOI Ticket.pdf"
See attached file "Exhibit P-023 FRB-Compliant_Channel_Transcript.txt"
Discord - Message Resource; see attached ZIP file beginning with "Exhibit P-024" for archive
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Brief


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
SUBMISSION OF AMENDMENT TO COMPLAINT

Your Honor:

The Plaintiff hereby declares and explains our amendment to complaint in Sections I, II, and III herein, in line with the Court Rules:

At anytime during the course of discovery, the plaintiff (or prosecution) may amend their Complaint to change the following:

  1. Parties
  2. Facts
  3. Claims for Relief
  4. Prayer for Relief
Amendments to the complaint must be declared and explained to the presiding judge. Afterwards, the plaintiff (or prosecution) may edit the post containing their complaint.
(Rule 3.3).

I. Amendment to Facts​

The following facts, which arise from discovery submissions and help to support the new claim for relief, are appended to the facts section:

21. On 7 March, ElysiaCrynn and FloorIsTired (among others) conversed in #economics about this lawsuit (Exhibits P-015, P-016, and P-017).
22. In the conversation described within Fact 21, Ex-Officio FRB Board Member ElysiaCrynn publicly expressed that she was "pretty sure [she] saw some stuff for it get deleted" (Exhibit P-016).
23. In the conversation described within Fact 21, FRB Employee FloorIsTired publicly expressed that "they deleted the template" and "they deleted the announcement without consulting me" (Exhibit P-016).
24. After receiving the freedom of information request in Ticket-96, and before responding to it, the FRB or its agents deleted messages potentially responsive to that FOI request (Exhibits P-015, P-016, and P-017).

II. Amendment to Claim for Relief​

The following claim(s) for relief, arising from additional information regarding the deletion of information sought in the FOI, is appended to Section III of the Complaint:

III.IV Abuse of Power and Misfeasance in Public Office​

Plaintiff alleges that Defendant (or Defendant's agents) caused the Plaintiff harm and violated:
  1. The Criminal Code Act's prohibition on abuse of power. Plaintiff alleges that the Defendant unlawfully deleted messages sought in the Plaintiff's FOI, with knowledge of or reckless disregard as to whether those deletions were lawful.
  2. The Redmont Civil Code Act's prohibition of misfeasance in public office. Plaintiff alleges that Defendant, or a director thereof, unlawfully and intentionally deleted messages, that this deletion caused harm to the Plaintiff inasmuch as it frustrated recovery of the information through FOI, and that one knew or ought to have known that deleting such messages after an FOI request was filed would be illegal.
Under the Criminal Code Act, a person commits abuse of power when that person:
(a) exercises any power, function, or duty vested in them by virtue of their position as members of the Executive, Legislative, or Judicial branches, or employee of a government agency, in contravention of the law; and
(b) either:
(i) knows that the exercise of power is unlawful; or
(ii) acts with reckless disregard as to whether the exercise of power is lawful.
(CCA, Part II, Section 2).

Under the Redmont Civil Code Act, a person commits misfeasance in public office when that person:
(a) being a public official, intentionally misuses their power; and
(b) the misuse causes harm to the plaintiff; and
(c) the official knew or ought to have known that the conduct was unlawful.
(RCCA, Part XI, Section 3).

When an action that harms a Plaintiff would constitute crime under the Criminal Code and a violation of the RCCA, a Plaintiff may "pursue both, provided that there is no double recovery for the same loss" (RCCA, Part II, Section 4(3)(c). The Plaintiff sees that these two laws prohibit very similar things, and chooses to pursue both as it pertains to the deletion of messages.

III.IV.I The FRB has a lawful duty to transparency under the Federal Reserve Act​

The Federal Reserve Bank has a statutory duty to "be transparent about its operations, only limited by the reasonable adverse effects of this transparency" (FRA, Section 4(2)(c)). The powers and duties of the FRB as a whole vest in its Board; "[a]ny authority or power given to the FRB as a whole shall be regarded as given to the Federal Reserve Board" (FRA, Section 5(1)(d)). The composition of the FRB's Board is "4 seats for Sitting Board Members and additionally 1 ex officio seat for the Secretary of the Department of Commerce" (FRA, Section 5(1)(c)).

III.IV.II The FRB is obligated to comply with FOI requests to the fullest extent possible​

The Classified Materials Act establishes that "[t]he Government is obligated to comply with all reasonable FOI requests to the fullest extent possible, including through partial releases, redactions, or summaries where full disclosure would be unlawful or harmful" (Classified Materials Act, Section 8(6)). The FRB is included in this obligation of the "Government"; it a governmental entity (LEA, Part II, Section 1(5)(d)) created directly by a statute (Federal Reserve Act).

III.IV.III Deletion of messages sent by another is an exercise of power granted by one's role​

Deletion of another's message is a privileged administrative function (see: Exhibits P-021 and P-024). Permissions required to delete another's message in the FRB are not available to everyone (see: Exhibit P-025). Roles in the server are set up in a way that aligns with one's relationship with the FRB (see: Exhibit P-026); Reserve Members, the Reserve Governor, FRB employees, and FI reps are given different roles from ordinary people. The Plaintiff understands that certain people have the ability to delete messages sent by others (see: Exhibit P-016, FloorIsTired saying "they deleted the announcement"; Exhibit P-001, for FloorIsTired's announcement).

III.IV.IV The FRB unlawfully deleted records plausibly related to the Plaintiff's FOI request after the request was filed​

ElysiaCrynn, at all times relevant, held a position a member of the Reserve Board as an ex-officio member in her capacity as Secretary of Commerce (Exhibits P-018 P-019; FRA, Sections 3(6)(b), 5(1)(b), 5(1)(h)). FloorIsTired, meanwhile, has served as an employee of the FRB at all times relevant (Exhibit P-001 through P-003, P-020).

In discovery, the Plaintiff submitted additional information relating to the deletion of information that was potentially responsive to the Plaintiff's FOI request. Among these were candid admissions by ElysiaCrynn and FloorIsTired that relevant information was deleted (Exhibits P-015, P-016, and P-017). Indeed, the public statements "stand[] unrebutted, uncontradicted, and unimpeached. It is a confession from within the walls of the Department itself" (YeetGlazer v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 76, Order of the Court, Section V.B, Par. 4). While the Plaintiff has shown one specific instance of deletion in the Emergency Injunction request within Post No. 2, admissions in a public forum thus show that more was deleted.

On balance of probabilities, a privileged actor in the FRB deleted messages that were sent by others. After all, FloorIsTired publicly stated that "they deleted the template" and "they deleted the announcement without consulting me" (Exhibit P-016). From the context of the conversation, "they" refers plainly to the Board of the FRB itself.

As shown Sections III.I, III.II, III.IV.I and III.IV.II, the FRB has obligations under the law to be transparent and fulfil FOI requests to the fullest extent possible. Deletion of material violates both of these lawful obligations.

As deletion here was "committed by government agents wielding powers available to them solely by virtue of their offices" (YeetGlazer v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 76, Verdict, Opionion and Analysis of the Court, On Colour of Law and Institutional Liability, Par. 1) and as "it is well established that when a government department causes harm through its officers, liability attaches to the department itself" (id., Par. 2), the FRB is ultimately responsible for these deletions.

III.IV.V The Plaintiff was harmed by deletions​

The FOI returns provided by the FRB did not appear to contain the information that the FRB's employees had said was deleted (see: Exhibits P-022 and P-023). The returns did not appear to contain any sort of "draft" that ElysiaCrynn and FloorIsTired publicly discussed as having been deleted (see: Exhibit P-016), nor the "template" publicly mentioned as deleted by FloorIsTired (id.). The deletion of these documents caused harm to the Plaintiff inasmuch as they frustrated the Plaintiff's ability to obtain them via FOI.

III.IV.VI The FRB knew, or ought to have known, that deleting material sought in a reasonable FOI request would be illegal; the deletion occurred with (at minimum) reckless disregard for the law​

In Ticket No. 96, in which the FOI request was filed, present were then-FRB Board members DonTrillions, jJoshuaTheGreat, and xSyncx (see: Exhibit P-002). Each of them were pinged by role when the ticket was opened (Exhibit P-027). As "[a]ny authority or power given to the FRB as a whole shall be regarded as given to the Federal Reserve Board" (FRA, Section 5(1)(d)), the FRB knew (or should have known) that an FOI was pending - the FOI was requested a mere two minutes after the ticket was opened (Exhibit P-003). It should be plainly obvious that deleting information sought in that FOI request would be illegal for the FRB to do, given its mandate of transparency and its obligations to fulfil FOIs.

At minimum, deleting relevant information after having been informed of a pending FOI constitutes reckless disregard for the law. The FRB, in deleting related content (as described in Exhibits P-015, P-016, and P-017) did this.

III.IV.VII FRB Board Members hold public office​

Public office is "Any position to which a person may be elected or nominated to" (Const. 54).

There are two types of board members on the FRB: "Sitting Board Member is a Member of the Board who was confirmed into the position. ... Ex Officio Board Member is a member who holds the seat by virtue of being Department of Commerce Secretary" (FRA, Section 3(6)(a)-(b)). Sitting board members are nominated to the role: "Sitting Board Members shall be nominated by the House of Representatives with a majority, and confirmed by the Senate with a supermajority" (FRA, section 5(1)(i)). The ex officio member is a Cabinet Secretary, who must be nominated and confirmed by the Senate before sitting in office (Const. 4(4)). As such, all FRB Board members, including the ex officio member, hold the position as a result of being in public office.

III.IV.VIII No exceptions under the law saves the FRB​

The Abuse of Power definition provides possible defenses: (1) that a good-faith mistake was made as to legality; and (2) that the action was performed on advice of counsel (CCA, Part II, Section 1(c)-(d)). The former is not plausible here - one cannot make a good faith mistake as to legality by deleting information plausibly resonsive to an FOI request after seeing the FOI request come in. The latter is also unlikely: the Defense has not demonstrated that these deletions were on advice of counsel, and the Department of Justice seems to have heard crickets from the FRB at the relevant times (Exhibit P-006).

III. Amendment to Prayer for Relief​

The following prayers are inserted as Nos. 1.5 and 1.6 of the Prayers for Relief:
  • 5. That the FRB, through its agents, caused harm to the Plaintiff arising from Abuse of Power, in violation of CCA, Part II, Section 1.
  • 6. That the FRB, through its agents, caused harm to the Platintiff arising from Misfeasance in Public Office, in violation of RCCA, Part XI, Section 3.
The following prayer is inserted as No. 3.2 of the Prayers for Relief, and subsequent prayers renumbered:
  • 2. Punitive damages. Deleting information sought in an FOI request after such a request has been filed is plainly outrageous. For violations of the Criminal Code Act's prohibition on Abuse of Power and the Redmont Civil Code Act's prohibition of Misfeasance in Public Office, punitive damages in the amount of $25,000 are sought, in line with RCCA, Part III, Section 3.

 

Attachments

Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION FOR EMERGENCY INJUNCTION

Your Honor,

The Plaintiff is seeking the audit log of the FRB discord server in discovery. Relevant records would stretch back to no later than 25 February, the day on which the FOI was filed.

It has been 42 days since 25 February. Exhibit P-021 states that "When an administrative action is performed in a guild, an entry is added to its audit log... All audit log entries are stored for 45 days". As quoted below, Your Honor has given 48 hours for the Defendant to respond to the motion to compel (Post No. 43); we are dangerously close to the window of automatic erasure.

Granted, within 48 hours, please.

As such, and in order to preserve potential evidence in this case, the Plaintiff asks the Court to order that the Defendant fully preserve all audit log records, including timestamps and associated metadata, which may be relevant to this case's subject.

 

Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION TO COMPEL

Your Honor,

Pursuant to Rule 4.7, the Plaintiff seeks to compel the defendant to produce the roles and channel access lists on the FRB's discord server, as well as any configurations related to each role, channel, or category. This includes general role permissions, role membership lists, channel permissions, and category permissions.

This information is sought to provide more evidence around the Complaint, Section III.IV.III and third paragraph of Section III.IV.IV of the Complaint. In short, the Plaintiff wants to know who has powers to delete messages sent by others, and where those people have those powers.

 

Objection


IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
OBJECTION - BREACH OF PROCEDURE, SPECULATION

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Your honour,
Both parties meaningfully involved in these pieces of evidence, ElysiaCrynn and FloorIsTired, are witnesses in this case. Inclusion of this out-of-court testimony is not only improper (as they will have the chance to be examined by the Plaintiff), but ElysiaCrynn also attached the words "pretty sure" to her remarks, signaling she did not experience the deletion of said content firsthand and is therefore speculating.

 

Objection


IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
OBJECTION - BREACH OF PROCEDURE, SPECULATION

Your honour,
Both parties meaningfully involved in these pieces of evidence, ElysiaCrynn and FloorIsTired, are witnesses in this case. Inclusion of this out-of-court testimony is not only improper (as they will have the chance to be examined by the Plaintiff), but ElysiaCrynn also attached the words "pretty sure" to her remarks, signaling she did not experience the deletion of said content firsthand and is therefore speculating.

Response


Your Honor,

The Plaintiff is confused here by the Defendant's motion; these sorts of out-of-court statements by members of a governmental organization being the subject of a lawsuit have been regarded as admissible evidence. For example, in YeetGlazer v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 76, the Federal Court within Section V.B of its Order of the Court utilized an Exhibit containing out-of-court statements from MysticPhunky (a then-DCT employee). The sixth finding of fact in that case was, indeed, that "MysticPhunky made contemporaneous statements implicating Dearev in self-dealing."

The Court thus has understood that contemporaneous statements may be brought into Court as evidence. The individuals who are quoted in this may be invited to testify (as MysticPhunky was in [2025] FCR 76), but that does not eliminate the admissibility of the prior public statements.

Moving to the cited reasons for the objection itself: regarding Breach of Procedure, the movant has cited no rule, law, or other procedure that is allegedly broken. This is not a cognizable objection ground as pleaded.

As to speculation, this objection fails to take account of the whole conversation. Examining P-016 as a whole, Elysia expressed that she was "pretty sure", FloorIsTired responded with an emotive response, Elysia then specified that she was referring to "the draft" and stated that she had looked for a specific document on the FRB server and could not find it, FloorIsTired stated "oh wow your right i didn't even catch that" and then himself stated "they deleted the template".

What the exhibits show, at face value, is that Elysia concluded that an item had been deleted after she was unable to find it, then FloorIsTired confirmed that "yeah they deleted the template". That's pertinent evidence to the matter of deletion inasmuch as a Board Member of the FRB and an FRB employee publicly talked about the deletion they'd seen.

The two will be asked about this conversation on direct examination by the Plaintiff, but that their public statements should be excluded at this time does not follow from this. Striking the screenshot of the public admission because of the flow of conversation is simply not warranted.

 

Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION FOR EMERGENCY INJUNCTION

Your Honor,

The Plaintiff is seeking the audit log of the FRB discord server in discovery. Relevant records would stretch back to no later than 25 February, the day on which the FOI was filed.

It has been 42 days since 25 February. Exhibit P-021 states that "When an administrative action is performed in a guild, an entry is added to its audit log... All audit log entries are stored for 45 days". As quoted below, Your Honor has given 48 hours for the Defendant to respond to the motion to compel (Post No. 43); we are dangerously close to the window of automatic erasure.



As such, and in order to preserve potential evidence in this case, the Plaintiff asks the Court to order that the Defendant fully preserve all audit log records, including timestamps and associated metadata, which may be relevant to this case's subject.

Granted
 

Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION TO COMPEL

Your Honor,

The Plaintiff seeks to compel the following information from FloorIsTired and ElysiaCrynn (the “named individuals”) to the extent that any of the following is in their possession or may be accessed by them:

  1. Any copies in their possession of the “draft” or “template” mentioned by named individuals within the conversation depicted in Exhibit P-016.
  2. Any written or electronic communications between or involving both the FRB and one or both of the named individuals regarding the Plaintiff’s FOI request;
  3. Any written or electronic communications between or involving both the FRB and one or both of the named individuals regarding the deletion of material on the FRB server;
  4. Any written or electronic communications between or involving both the FRB and one or both of the named individuals regarding the ability of ElysiaCrynn to access channels following her confirmation by the Senate;
  5. For purposes of this request, “FRB” shall encompass the FRB Board, its members, and employees of the FRB performing duties related to that working capacity.
The Plaintiff believes that obtaining a copy of this draft or template, should one be available, would assist in ascertaining the precise relevance to the FOI request. It would also help to establish whether a copy was kept off-server and simply not provided to the Plaintiff. Both ElysiaCrynn and FloorIsTired, having mentioned the document publicly, may have possession of this document. We also seek written or electronic communications in order to better document and establish awareness, timeline, and potential breaches of duty of care as it pertains to the FRB’s handling of the FOI request.

 
Your honour,
For time's sake I request to respond to all current and future motions to compel filed by the Plaintiff while in discovery.
Granted, you will have 48 hours from the posting of the motion to render a response sua sponte, please keep other court procedures in mind, though. One response per motion.




Objection


IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
OBJECTION - BREACH OF PROCEDURE, SPECULATION

Your honour,
Both parties meaningfully involved in these pieces of evidence, ElysiaCrynn and FloorIsTired, are witnesses in this case. Inclusion of this out-of-court testimony is not only improper (as they will have the chance to be examined by the Plaintiff), but ElysiaCrynn also attached the words "pretty sure" to her remarks, signaling she did not experience the deletion of said content firsthand and is therefore speculating.

Overruled


Your Honor:

Pursuant to Rule 4.9, the Plaintiff hereby adds the following individuals to its witness list:
  • ElysiaCrynn
  • EATB
  • EmmDubz
Your Honor,

Pursuant to Rule 4.6, the Plaintiff submits the following into evidence:

See attached PDF "Exhibit P-022 - FOI Ticket.pdf"
See attached file "Exhibit P-023 FRB-Compliant_Channel_Transcript.txt"
Discord - Message Resource; see attached ZIP file beginning with "Exhibit P-024" for archive

Brief


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
SUBMISSION OF AMENDMENT TO COMPLAINT

Your Honor:

The Plaintiff hereby declares and explains our amendment to complaint in Sections I, II, and III herein, in line with the Court Rules:

(Rule 3.3).

I. Amendment to Facts​

The following facts, which arise from discovery submissions and help to support the new claim for relief, are appended to the facts section:



II. Amendment to Claim for Relief​

The following claim(s) for relief, arising from additional information regarding the deletion of information sought in the FOI, is appended to Section III of the Complaint:

III.IV Abuse of Power and Misfeasance in Public Office​

Plaintiff alleges that Defendant (or Defendant's agents) caused the Plaintiff harm and violated:
  1. The Criminal Code Act's prohibition on abuse of power. Plaintiff alleges that the Defendant unlawfully deleted messages sought in the Plaintiff's FOI, with knowledge of or reckless disregard as to whether those deletions were lawful.
  2. The Redmont Civil Code Act's prohibition of misfeasance in public office. Plaintiff alleges that Defendant, or a director thereof, unlawfully and intentionally deleted messages, that this deletion caused harm to the Plaintiff inasmuch as it frustrated recovery of the information through FOI, and that one knew or ought to have known that deleting such messages after an FOI request was filed would be illegal.
Under the Criminal Code Act, a person commits abuse of power when that person:

(CCA, Part II, Section 2).

Under the Redmont Civil Code Act, a person commits misfeasance in public office when that person:

(RCCA, Part XI, Section 3).

When an action that harms a Plaintiff would constitute crime under the Criminal Code and a violation of the RCCA, a Plaintiff may "pursue both, provided that there is no double recovery for the same loss" (RCCA, Part II, Section 4(3)(c). The Plaintiff sees that these two laws prohibit very similar things, and chooses to pursue both as it pertains to the deletion of messages.

III.IV.I The FRB has a lawful duty to transparency under the Federal Reserve Act​

The Federal Reserve Bank has a statutory duty to "be transparent about its operations, only limited by the reasonable adverse effects of this transparency" (FRA, Section 4(2)(c)). The powers and duties of the FRB as a whole vest in its Board; "[a]ny authority or power given to the FRB as a whole shall be regarded as given to the Federal Reserve Board" (FRA, Section 5(1)(d)). The composition of the FRB's Board is "4 seats for Sitting Board Members and additionally 1 ex officio seat for the Secretary of the Department of Commerce" (FRA, Section 5(1)(c)).

III.IV.II The FRB is obligated to comply with FOI requests to the fullest extent possible​

The Classified Materials Act establishes that "[t]he Government is obligated to comply with all reasonable FOI requests to the fullest extent possible, including through partial releases, redactions, or summaries where full disclosure would be unlawful or harmful" (Classified Materials Act, Section 8(6)). The FRB is included in this obligation of the "Government"; it a governmental entity (LEA, Part II, Section 1(5)(d)) created directly by a statute (Federal Reserve Act).

III.IV.III Deletion of messages sent by another is an exercise of power granted by one's role​

Deletion of another's message is a privileged administrative function (see: Exhibits P-021 and P-024). Permissions required to delete another's message in the FRB are not available to everyone (see: Exhibit P-025). Roles in the server are set up in a way that aligns with one's relationship with the FRB (see: Exhibit P-026); Reserve Members, the Reserve Governor, FRB employees, and FI reps are given different roles from ordinary people. The Plaintiff understands that certain people have the ability to delete messages sent by others (see: Exhibit P-016, FloorIsTired saying "they deleted the announcement"; Exhibit P-001, for FloorIsTired's announcement).

III.IV.IV The FRB unlawfully deleted records plausibly related to the Plaintiff's FOI request after the request was filed​

ElysiaCrynn, at all times relevant, held a position a member of the Reserve Board as an ex-officio member in her capacity as Secretary of Commerce (Exhibits P-018 P-019; FRA, Sections 3(6)(b), 5(1)(b), 5(1)(h)). FloorIsTired, meanwhile, has served as an employee of the FRB at all times relevant (Exhibit P-001 through P-003, P-020).

In discovery, the Plaintiff submitted additional information relating to the deletion of information that was potentially responsive to the Plaintiff's FOI request. Among these were candid admissions by ElysiaCrynn and FloorIsTired that relevant information was deleted (Exhibits P-015, P-016, and P-017). Indeed, the public statements "stand[] unrebutted, uncontradicted, and unimpeached. It is a confession from within the walls of the Department itself" (YeetGlazer v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 76, Order of the Court, Section V.B, Par. 4). While the Plaintiff has shown one specific instance of deletion in the Emergency Injunction request within Post No. 2, admissions in a public forum thus show that more was deleted.

On balance of probabilities, a privileged actor in the FRB deleted messages that were sent by others. After all, FloorIsTired publicly stated that "they deleted the template" and "they deleted the announcement without consulting me" (Exhibit P-016). From the context of the conversation, "they" refers plainly to the Board of the FRB itself.

As shown Sections III.I, III.II, III.IV.I and III.IV.II, the FRB has obligations under the law to be transparent and fulfil FOI requests to the fullest extent possible. Deletion of material violates both of these lawful obligations.

As deletion here was "committed by government agents wielding powers available to them solely by virtue of their offices" (YeetGlazer v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 76, Verdict, Opionion and Analysis of the Court, On Colour of Law and Institutional Liability, Par. 1) and as "it is well established that when a government department causes harm through its officers, liability attaches to the department itself" (id., Par. 2), the FRB is ultimately responsible for these deletions.

III.IV.V The Plaintiff was harmed by deletions​

The FOI returns provided by the FRB did not appear to contain the information that the FRB's employees had said was deleted (see: Exhibits P-022 and P-023). The returns did not appear to contain any sort of "draft" that ElysiaCrynn and FloorIsTired publicly discussed as having been deleted (see: Exhibit P-016), nor the "template" publicly mentioned as deleted by FloorIsTired (id.). The deletion of these documents caused harm to the Plaintiff inasmuch as they frustrated the Plaintiff's ability to obtain them via FOI.

III.IV.VI The FRB knew, or ought to have known, that deleting material sought in a reasonable FOI request would be illegal; the deletion occurred with (at minimum) reckless disregard for the law​

In Ticket No. 96, in which the FOI request was filed, present were then-FRB Board members DonTrillions, jJoshuaTheGreat, and xSyncx (see: Exhibit P-002). Each of them were pinged by role when the ticket was opened (Exhibit P-027). As "[a]ny authority or power given to the FRB as a whole shall be regarded as given to the Federal Reserve Board" (FRA, Section 5(1)(d)), the FRB knew (or should have known) that an FOI was pending - the FOI was requested a mere two minutes after the ticket was opened (Exhibit P-003). It should be plainly obvious that deleting information sought in that FOI request would be illegal for the FRB to do, given its mandate of transparency and its obligations to fulfil FOIs.

At minimum, deleting relevant information after having been informed of a pending FOI constitutes reckless disregard for the law. The FRB, in deleting related content (as described in Exhibits P-015, P-016, and P-017) did this.

III.IV.VII FRB Board Members hold public office​

Public office is "Any position to which a person may be elected or nominated to" (Const. 54).

There are two types of board members on the FRB: "Sitting Board Member is a Member of the Board who was confirmed into the position. ... Ex Officio Board Member is a member who holds the seat by virtue of being Department of Commerce Secretary" (FRA, Section 3(6)(a)-(b)). Sitting board members are nominated to the role: "Sitting Board Members shall be nominated by the House of Representatives with a majority, and confirmed by the Senate with a supermajority" (FRA, section 5(1)(i)). The ex officio member is a Cabinet Secretary, who must be nominated and confirmed by the Senate before sitting in office (Const. 4(4)). As such, all FRB Board members, including the ex officio member, hold the position as a result of being in public office.

III.IV.VIII No exceptions under the law saves the FRB​

The Abuse of Power definition provides possible defenses: (1) that a good-faith mistake was made as to legality; and (2) that the action was performed on advice of counsel (CCA, Part II, Section 1(c)-(d)). The former is not plausible here - one cannot make a good faith mistake as to legality by deleting information plausibly resonsive to an FOI request after seeing the FOI request come in. The latter is also unlikely: the Defense has not demonstrated that these deletions were on advice of counsel, and the Department of Justice seems to have heard crickets from the FRB at the relevant times (Exhibit P-006).

III. Amendment to Prayer for Relief​

The following prayers are inserted as Nos. 1.5 and 1.6 of the Prayers for Relief:
  • 5. That the FRB, through its agents, caused harm to the Plaintiff arising from Abuse of Power, in violation of CCA, Part II, Section 1.
  • 6. That the FRB, through its agents, caused harm to the Platintiff arising from Misfeasance in Public Office, in violation of RCCA, Part XI, Section 3.
The following prayer is inserted as No. 3.2 of the Prayers for Relief, and subsequent prayers renumbered:
  • 2. Punitive damages. Deleting information sought in an FOI request after such a request has been filed is plainly outrageous. For violations of the Criminal Code Act's prohibition on Abuse of Power and the Redmont Civil Code Act's prohibition of Misfeasance in Public Office, punitive damages in the amount of $25,000 are sought, in line with RCCA, Part III, Section 3.

Pursuant to Rule 3.3 and Rule 4.9, these have both been noted.
 
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