Lawsuit: Pending Social Democrat Party and Stanley582 v. Commonwealth Of Redmont [2026] FCR 28

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Case Filing


IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
CIVIL ACTION


Social Democrat Party and Stanley582
Plaintiffs

v.

Commonwealth Of Redmont
Defendant

COMPLAINT
The Plaintiff complains against the Defendant as follows:

WRITTEN STATEMENT FROM THE PLAINTIFF

On the 28th of March 2026, Commonwealth of Redmont v. Stanley582 [2026] FCR 23 was filed in the District Court of Redmont. The Commonwealth of Redmont brought this case on with the focus point of:

“This campaign advertisement made several claims, including the desire to abolish a sales tax, make the income tax progressive, provide free public healthcare, and exempting residential plots and town plots from the Auction Levy. Notably, each of these desires are already present in legislation, making it impossible for such promises to be fulfilled by the Defendants political party.”

On the 19th of March 2026, just two days after Stanley582’s Advertisement, Budgiebud posted a political advertisement with the following contents:

“Economic Prosperity: Slash unnecessary taxes and eliminate the waste.
Small Government: Defend town autonomy and stop central government overreach. You know how to run your life better than a politician does.
Law & Order: Full support and robust funding for the Police and Armed Forces. Security is the foundation of freedom.
Property Rights: Protect R-Plots and business owners from aggressive government seizure and high levies.
Active Community: Join a network of like-minded patriots who are passionate about the freedom cause.
Town Rights: Advocate maximum local control for Town Councils and the protection of local interests.“

This Statement includes some of the same features as Stanley582’s advertisement, which states “Exempt R-Plots … from the auction levy.” Similarly, Budgiebud posted the following in an advertisement: “Protect R-Plots … from aggressive government seizure and high levies” Both statements concern the imposition of levies on residential plots and communicate to voters that such levies will be reduced, removed, or prevented. There is no rational distinction between these two advertisements, particularly given the reasoning relied upon by the Commonwealth in that case. But the main difference between them is that one of them has been prosecuted, and one of them has been allowed to post freely.

The constitution clearly states in section V (35) (13):

“Every citizen is equal before and under the law and has the right to equal protection and equal benefit of the law without unfair discrimination and, in particular, without unfair discrimination based on political belief or social status.“

This case demonstrates that the commonwealth has treated two citizens differently based on political statements that they have made, which is a clear breach of this clause of the Constitution and constitutes a breach of Section V (35) (13) of the Constitution by the Commonwealth and the Department of Justice.

I. PARTIES
1. Social Democrat Party - Plaintiff
2. Stanley583 - Plaintiff
3. The Commonwealth of Redmont - Defendant
4. Budgiebud - Non-prosecuted Misleading Advertising
5. NovaKerbal - DOJ Prosecutor

II. FACTS
1. On the 17th of March 2026, Stanley582 posted an advertisement stating, “Exempt R-Plots … from the auction levy.” (P-01)
2. On the 19th of March 2026, Budgiebud posted an advertisement stating, “Protect R-Plots … from aggressive government seizure and high levies” (P-02)
3. On the 28th of March 2026, the Commonwealth of Redmont filed Commonwealth of Redmont v. Stanley582 [2026] FCR 23. (P-03)
4. Section V (35) (13) of the Constitution states, “Every citizen is equal before and under the law and has the right to equal protection and equal benefit of the law without unfair discrimination and, in particular, without unfair discrimination based on political belief or social status.“ (P-04)
5. Stanly582 is the Press Secretary for the Social Democrat Party (P-05)

III. CLAIMS FOR RELIEF
1. By initiating the prosecution of Stanly582 in the case Commonwealth of Redmont v. Stanley582 [2026] FCR 23 while failing to take action against other individuals, such as Budgiebud, engaging in similar conduct, has acted in a manner that is inconsistent and violates section V (35) (13) of the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Redmont.

There exists no rational basis for distinguishing between these two advertisements that have been shown for enforcement. As such, the defendant's actions show unequal treatment of two citizens under the law regarding political beliefs.

2. The Defendant chose to use its power to prosecute individuals selectively by choosing to only enforce their interpretation of the law against the Stanly582, while failing to enforce it on others, such as Budgiebud, engaging in comparable conduct.

Such selectiveness in choosing who they will enforce the law upon constitutes an abuse of governmental authority and demonstrates a disregard for fairness and consistency that underpin the rule of law. This constitutes further amounts of breach of the Defendant's duty to apply the law impartially.

IV. PRAYER FOR RELIEF
The Plaintiff seeks the following from the Defendant:
1. $7,500 In Nominal Damages
2. $80,000 In Punitive Damages
3. $20,000 paid to Stanly583 for emotional damages.
3. 30% off the value of the case or $6,000 which ever is higher.

(Attach evidence and a list of witnesses at the bottom if applicable)

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 15th day of April 2026

P-01
1776290358986.png

P-02

P-03

P-04

P-05

 
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Court Order


IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
Order to Show Cause - Standing



The Court, having reviewed the Complaint, raises the following concerns regarding the Plaintiffs' standing to bring this action and orders the Plaintiffs to show cause why this case should not be dismissed.



To maintain a civil action before this Court, a plaintiff must demonstrate a cognizable legal interest in the relief sought. The Complaint raises concerns on two fronts.


First, as to the Social Democrat Party: the Complaint does not establish that the Party itself suffered a legally cognizable injury. The conduct alleged, namely the prosecution of Stanley582, was directed at an individual. A political party does not possess a generalized right to contest prosecutorial decisions made against its members, officers, or affiliates merely by virtue of that association. The Party must identify a distinct injury to itself, not to the individuals it represents.

Second, as to Stanley582: the relief sought is not the dismissal of the pending prosecution in Commonwealth of Redmont v. Stanley582 [2026] FCR 23, nor any remedy personal to Stanley582 in that proceeding. Instead, the Complaint asks this Court to find that the Commonwealth violated the equal protection guarantee of R. Const 35(13) by declining to prosecute a third party. The Plaintiffs are effectively seeking to compel or second-guess a prosecutorial decision regarding an individual, Budgiebud, who is not a party to this action and against whom no charge has been brought. This Court must consider whether a private plaintiff possesses standing to demand enforcement of criminal or regulatory law against another citizen.

With respect to the Constitution
The prosecution of laws is a core executive function vested in the Commonwealth under the Constitution. The decision of whether, when, and against whom to bring charges is an exercise of prosecutorial discretion that flows directly from the Executive's constitutional mandate to enforce the law. As this Court recognized in Justice Compass, Ltd. v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 98, liability does not attach to the Commonwealth for good-faith exercises of constitutionally granted powers. Compelling the Executive to prosecute a specific individual, or penalizing it for declining to do so, would constitute an extraordinary intrusion by the Judiciary into the core functions of the Executive branch.

THEREFORE, the Federal Court orders Plaintiffs to SHOW CAUSE as to why this action does not effectively seek judicial supervision of prosecutorial discretion, and why such relief would not violate the separation of powers, and as to why this action should not be dismissed.


So ordered,
Judge Mug






@dodrio3 Please respond in 72 Hours.
 

Brief



IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT

I. STANDING OF THE SOCIAL DEMOCRAT PARTY
The Court expresses concern that the Social Democrat Party (SDP) has not suffered a cognizable injury. The Plaintiffs contend that the SDP has suffered an Injury. By selectively prosecuting the SDP’s Press Secretary for campaign contents that are ignored when spoken by others, the Commonwealth is effectively penalising the SDP. This directly affects the Party’s constitutional right to political expression. If the Executive branch can selectively silence a party's officers through targeted litigation, the Party itself is hindered in its primary functions.

II. STANDING OF STANLEY582
Regarding Stanley582, the injury is not merely the failure to prosecute a third party (Budgiebud), but the Discriminatory Enforcement against the Plaintiff.
1. Under Section V (35)(13) of the Constitution, a citizen has the right to "equal protection."
2. When two individuals commit the same act, but only the one who is advertising a specific party is prosecuted, the injury is the unconstitutional application of the law itself.
3. The relief sought is intended to remedy the harm caused by this discriminatory action.

III. SEPARATION OF POWERS AND PROSECUTORIAL DISCRETION
The Court cites Justice Compass, Ltd. v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] regarding good-faith exercises of power. However, the Plaintiffs allege that this was NOT a good-faith exercise, but a "Bad Faith" or "Discriminatory" exercise of power.

The Judiciary has a mandate to act as a check on the Executive when constitutional rights are violated. While the Court cannot usually compel a prosecution, it absolutely has the authority to:
1. Provide a remedy when an individual’s rights are violated by selective enforcement.
2. To declare a specific instance of prosecution unconstitutional if it is based on unfair discrimination of political belief.

If the Court holds that prosecutorial discretion is absolute even in the face of blatant discrimination, then Section V (35)(13) of the Constitution becomes unenforceable and redundant.

 

Brief



IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT

I. STANDING OF THE SOCIAL DEMOCRAT PARTY
The Court expresses concern that the Social Democrat Party (SDP) has not suffered a cognizable injury. The Plaintiffs contend that the SDP has suffered an Injury. By selectively prosecuting the SDP’s Press Secretary for campaign contents that are ignored when spoken by others, the Commonwealth is effectively penalising the SDP. This directly affects the Party’s constitutional right to political expression. If the Executive branch can selectively silence a party's officers through targeted litigation, the Party itself is hindered in its primary functions.

II. STANDING OF STANLEY582
Regarding Stanley582, the injury is not merely the failure to prosecute a third party (Budgiebud), but the Discriminatory Enforcement against the Plaintiff.
1. Under Section V (35)(13) of the Constitution, a citizen has the right to "equal protection."
2. When two individuals commit the same act, but only the one who is advertising a specific party is prosecuted, the injury is the unconstitutional application of the law itself.
3. The relief sought is intended to remedy the harm caused by this discriminatory action.

III. SEPARATION OF POWERS AND PROSECUTORIAL DISCRETION
The Court cites Justice Compass, Ltd. v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] regarding good-faith exercises of power. However, the Plaintiffs allege that this was NOT a good-faith exercise, but a "Bad Faith" or "Discriminatory" exercise of power.

The Judiciary has a mandate to act as a check on the Executive when constitutional rights are violated. While the Court cannot usually compel a prosecution, it absolutely has the authority to:
1. Provide a remedy when an individual’s rights are violated by selective enforcement.
2. To declare a specific instance of prosecution unconstitutional if it is based on unfair discrimination of political belief.

If the Court holds that prosecutorial discretion is absolute even in the face of blatant discrimination, then Section V (35)(13) of the Constitution becomes unenforceable and redundant.


Counselor, your argument for standing for SDP isn't present in the Complaint.
 
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