Posted on 12/15/2022 7:41:29 AM PST by CFW
Thomas More Society attorneys have secured a settlement of the lawsuit filed against David Daleiden and the University of Washington (“UW”) over Daleiden’s public records requests for documents relating to UW’s national clearinghouse for the fetal tissues and organs of aborted babies. The federal district court allowed the settlement yesterday, clearing the way to end a six-year legal battle that included three appeals to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. The lawsuit was originally brought by an anonymous group of abortion and aborted fetal tissue workers in August 2016, in response to Daleiden’s February 2016 request for documents about their taxpayer-funded programs at UW.
(Excerpt) Read more at lifenews.com ...
If any documents still exist. They had six years to shred them.
Thank God for this WIN!!
Of course, huge monetary amounts from the specific individuals who perpetrated the nonsense of withholding details should have been part of the settlement.
Persistence pays off ... to a degree. And of course, Thanks be to God.
The abortion industry thinks they own the politicians and the Courts and anyone speaking out against their atrocities should be the ones punished. They are shocked when someone has the gall to fight back.
THANK GOD!!!!
So, if I get this correctly, dude files a request for info, and instead of the info he gets a LAWSUIT?
That a case can be brought in anonymity by adults is one of the great flaws in our legal system.
Another is that many kinds of cases cannot be brought until someone has been harmed. Of course, any case advocating for Spotted Owls and such like are excluded.
These are among a few egregious errors that cripple the pursuit of actual Justice.
This is wonderful! Looking forward to his books and media appearances. He is truly a Life-supporter.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.