
When we began following Orly Taitz's Birther litigation back in September, we never thought we'd end up with her cell phone on speed dial.
Well, it turned out to be the beginning of a beautiful relationship. But the last year (OK, fine, half year) has been full of bumps and setbacks for the attorney/dentist who is the country's most prominent purveyor of the conspiracy theory that President Obama is not a natural born U.S. citizen.
Here, in chronological order, are some of the low points of Taitz's year:
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (4)A federal judge in Georgia has ordered the US Attorney to collect a $20,000 judgment against Orly Taitz after the Birther attorney failed to pay the fine -- which she appealed -- within 30 days.
Here's the full order from Judge Clay Land, of the US District Court in the Middle District Of Georgia:
"Orly Taitz has failed to pay the $20,000.00 sanction ordered by the Court on October 13, 2009. Accordingly, the Clerk is ordered to enter final judgment in favor of the United States of America and against Orly Taitz in the principal amount of $20,000.00. The United States Attorney is authorized and directed to collect the judgment as provided by law.
IT IS SO ORDERED, this 13th day of November, 2009. "
In a colorful eight-page filing, Birther attorney Orly Taitz declares that she will appeal a federal judge's $20,000 fine, which she was ordered to pay within 30 days last week.
In his lengthy order imposing the fine, Judge Clay Land promised to authorize the U.S. Attorney to "to commence collection proceedings" if Taitz did not pay the fine. So stay tuned -- we may be building up to some kind of climactic final showdown.
Here's a taste of Taitz's latest (bolded text in original):
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (6)Joy Behar hopped on the Orly Taitz train last night, interviewing the Birther attorney for her new show. Before sparring with Taitz about her conspiracy theories, Behar raised the issue of the $20,000 fine imposed by a judge on Taitz yesterday (which Taitz has refused to pay).
Noting the judge described Taitz as delusional, Behar asked Taitz to respond:
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)Finally fed up with Orly Taitz's repeated frivolous and conspiracy-ridden filings in a Birther lawsuit, the judge in the case has fined the crusading attorney $20,000.
Opening with a quote from Justice Cardozo on the privilege of bar membership, Judge Clay Land of the U.S. District Court in the Middle District Of Georgia goes on for some length -- the order is 43 pages -- explaining his reasoning:
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (4)Judge Clay Land today granted Birther attorney Orly Taitz's motion to withdraw as counsel for her ex-client, but said he was not authorizing any breach of attorney-client privilege, and reminded her that she still must respond to his threat of sanctions for frivolous filings.
Land, of the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Georgia, writes in the order today:
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (2)When we last checked in on the Birther lawsuit Attorney Orly Taitz is pursuing in federal court, Taitz's client, Army Capt. Connie Rhodes, was denouncing Taitz and threatening her with a bar complaint. And the judge had given Taitz until October 2 to explain why he shouldn't fine her $10,000 for repeated frivolous filings.
Now, in a new motion filed Saturday in U.S. district court in Georgia, Taitz "respectfully" requests that she be allowed to withdraw as Rhodes' counsel. (Rhodes, who has deployed to Iraq, already requested that Taitz no longer represent her.)
But here's the twist: Taitz says her motive for seeking to withdraw as counsel is to be able to divulge "privileged attorney-client communications" and to "offer evidence and call witnesses whose testimony will be adverse to her (former) client's most recently stated position in this case."
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)Oh sweet irony.
Birther attorney Orly Taitz tells TPMmuckraker she believes a letter sent by her now ex-client renouncing Taitz -- in a case alleging that Barack Obama's birth certificate is a forgery -- may itself be a forgery. It's worth noting that Taitz submitted as evidence in the original filing in the "birther soldier" case of Army Capt. Connie Rhodes a "Kenyan birth certificate" that is itself an obvious forgery.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (10)The Orly Taitz "birther soldier" case playing out in U.S. District Court in Georgia finally jumped the shark Friday.
The moment came when Army Capt. Connie Rhodes, the client of Birther agitator Taitz, sent a letter to the judge renouncing her ex-counsel and saying she intends to file a complaint against Taitz with the California bar.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (7)Orly Taitz must like the abuse.
Sometime between being thoroughly smacked down by a federal judge and threatened with sanctions Wednesday, then denouncing said judge to TPM as a corrupt puppet, then having a formal complaint filed against her by a fellow member of the California bar for her comments, self-appointed Birther leader Taitz filed a motion in the U.S. District Court of the Middle District of Georgia challenging the judge's order tossing her most recent case.
Now, the judge is threatening her with a fine to the tune of $10,000.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (4)
