Gordon v. Greene

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Louisiana
DecidedMarch 29, 2023
Docket3:21-cv-00067
StatusUnknown

This text of Gordon v. Greene (Gordon v. Greene) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gordon v. Greene, (M.D. La. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

PAULA A. GORDON, individually and on CIVIL ACTION NO. behalf of her minor grandchild, REP

VERSUS 21-67-JWD-EWD

HUNTER V. GREENE, ET AL. RULING AND ORDER Before the Court is a “Motion for Third Extension of Time to File First Amended Complaint” (the “Fourth Motion for Extension” or “Motion”),1 filed by Paula Gordon (“Plaintiff”). Through the Motion, Plaintiff seeks what would actually be a fourth extension of time to file an amended complaint. The Motion was filed after Plaintiff’s last extension of time expired, and Plaintiff has not established excusable neglect (or good cause) under Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 6(b)(1) for another extension, so the request will be denied. Additionally, even if Plaintiff’s request were considered a motion for leave to amend under Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 15, because Plaintiff’s proposed Amended Complaint (the “Second Amended Complaint”),2 which was untimely filed, still fails to state a claim as to any Defendants, amendment would be denied. I. BACKGROUND A. General Factual Background Plaintiff filed this suit against the Original Defendants3 on January 25, 2021, opening a second front to the legal dispute involving the paternity and custody of Plaintiff’s granddaughter,

1 R. Doc. 46. Although Plaintiff titled this filing a “Motion for Third Extension of Time to File First Amended Complaint,” it is the fourth extension to file an amended complaint requested by Plaintiff. See R. Docs. 32, 35, 44, 46. 2 R. Doc. 47 3 The “Original Defendants” refer to those individuals named as defendants in Plaintiff’s original Complaint & Jury Demand (R. Doc. 1), which include the father of Plaintiff’s granddaughter, REP, Leslie Parker (“Parker”); Parker’s attorney in the state family court, Dennis Fitzgerald (“Fitzgerald”); the judge who primarily presided over the family court proceedings, Judge Hunter Greene (“Judge Greene”); the district court judge who signed the child support order, REP. This Court, and others, have written before about the facts giving rise to this dispute,4 which largely relate to proceedings in the Family Court in and for the Parish of East Baton Rouge (“Family Court”) concerning the paternity and custody of REP, among other things (collectively, the “Family Court Proceedings”).5 The facts set forth in the Court’s prior Reports and

Recommendations, Rulings, and Opinions are incorporated by reference and expounded on here only where necessary.6 In short, Plaintiff alleges that REP’s father, Parker; 7 Parker’s attorney, Fitzgerald; Judge Greene, the state court judge who primarily presided over the Family Court Proceedings; and others affiliated with those proceedings violated her civil rights and/or conspired to violate her civil rights (the “Conspiracy”). Plaintiff claims the Original Defendants’ actions ultimately resulted in her imprisonment for sixty (60) days for civil contempt for violating an Order issued by Judge Greene in the Family Court Proceedings.8 This Court dismissed Plaintiff’s claims against Judge Greene, Judge Johnson, Allain, and Zeigler, with prejudice, on May 10, 2021.9

4 See, e.g., R. Docs. 13, 24, 29, 41, 80; Parker v. Finch, Nos. 2019-1473/2019-1514, 2021 WL 2251624, at **1-3 (La. App. 1. Cir. 6/3/21), writ denied, 324 So.3d 624 (La. 9/27/21) (explaining the relationship between Plaintiff, Parker, Plaintiff’s daughter, and REP). 5 See R. Doc. 47, intro. & ¶¶ 3-34, 102-204; see also R. Doc. 1, ¶¶ 1-2. 6 R. Docs. 13, 24, 29, 41, 80. 7 Although Plaintiff repeatedly takes exception to this Court’s references to Parker as REP’s father, Plaintiff has submitted a Stipulation between Parker and Plaintiff’s daughter, which establishes that Parker is REP’s father as a matter of law. R. Doc. 47-5, pp. 65 (Written Stipulation regarding paternity of REP dated March 12, 2018 and signed by Parker and Plaintiff’s daughter). See also R. Doc. 47-5, pp. 66-67 (“Parker is hereby determined to be the natural father of the minor child, [REP],” based on the Stipulation); R. Doc. 47-2, p. 46, lns. 18-27 (Judge Greene “render[ing] judgment in accordance with the Stipulation”); R. Doc. 47-4, pp. 86-87 (Plaintiff testifying on cross-examination in the Family Court Proceedings that “Parker is listed as the father on the birth certificate,” and that she has “refer[red] to [Parker] as the child’s father.”). Certainly, a determination of paternity, which is part of the relief Plaintiff requests (see, R. Doc. 47, p. 48, ¶ l), even if she were entitled to it, would not be appropriate in this Court. Congleton v. Holy Cross Child Placement Agency, Inc., 919 F.2d 1077 (5th Cir.1990) (“As a general rule, federal courts refuse to hear suits for divorce and alimony, child custody actions, disputes over visitation rights, suits to establish paternity and to obtain child support, and actions to enforce separation or divorce decrees still subject to state court modification”). 8 See, e.g., R. Doc. 47, intro. & ¶ 223 (alleging Plaintiff was “imprisoned in retaliation” for exercising her “protected First Amendment right to petition her government” and “imprisoned in order to usurp custody of a little girl and gain control over her mother for illicit purposes…”); ¶ 13 (alleging that Judge Greene and the Original Defendants “caused [Plaintiff] to be unlawfully seized and to serve a sixty (60) sentence in East Baton Rouge Parish Prison”); ¶ 150 (alleging that [Allain] sign[ed] the bench warrant causing [Plaintiff] to serve a sixty (60) day sentence”); ¶ 161 (alleging that Parker, Fitzgerald, and Judge Greene “tried and convicted [Plaintiff] of criminal contempt, for violating a judgment issued in the Family Court proceedings that she was not a party to and did not have an opportunity to be Plaintiff’s federal claims against the remaining Original Defendants—Parker and Fitzgerald— were dismissed on March 29, 2022 but Plaintiff was given thirty (30) days to file an amended complaint alleging sufficient facts to establish her claims against Parker and/or Fitzgerald, if possible.10

Between the dismissal of Plaintiff’s original Complaint and the date of this Ruling, the Conspiracy has grown beyond Parker, Fitzgerald, Judge Greene, and the Family Court Proceedings. According to Plaintiff’s Second Amended Complaint, Parker, Fitzgerald, and Judge Greene are participants in a Parish-wide, if not State-wide, conspiracy involving judges in the state trial courts;11 Judge Walter Lanier (“Judge Lanier”), a judge on the Louisiana First Circuit Court of Appeal; Doug Welborn (“Welborn”), the Clerk of Court for East Baton Rouge Parish; Marketa Walters (“Walters”), the former Secretary of the Louisiana Department of Children and Family Services (“DCFS”), and Jeff Landry (“AG Landry”), the Louisiana Attorney General (Judge Lanier, Welborn, Walters, and AG Landry are collectively the “New Defendants”). Plaintiff claims the New Defendants work in concert to “procure judgments” of “filiation” to and/or “custody” in

favor of “men seeking…girls,” which, in turn, creates a “highway [used by these] human traffickers to exploit women, children, the courts, and the state by claiming paternity for children they are not related to; gain[ing] possession of those children and control of their mothers; and keep[ing] the courts in business with protective parents (and grandparents) fighting to get those women and children back into their rightful families.” Deciphering Plaintiff’s allegations as best the Court can, the Conspiracy works as follows: Men like Parker hire “favored attorneys” to file suits seeking “filiation” to and/or “custody” over unrelated “girls.” Once filed, these attorneys

10 R. Docs. 29 & 31. The Court also declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1367

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Gordon v. Greene, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-greene-lamd-2023.