Jason A. Fulton v. Stephanie Smith, et al.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedMarch 5, 2026
Docket5:26-cv-03039
StatusUnknown

This text of Jason A. Fulton v. Stephanie Smith, et al. (Jason A. Fulton v. Stephanie Smith, et al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jason A. Fulton v. Stephanie Smith, et al., (D. Kan. 2026).

Opinion

District of Kansa 03/05/2026 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT Clerk, U.S. District ¢ FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS By:_SND Deputy Ci JASON A. FULTON, Petitioner,

v. CASE NO. 26-3039-JWL STEPHANIE SMITH, et al., Respondents,

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE Plaintiff Jason A. Fulton is hereby required to show good cause, in writing to the undersigned, why this matter should not be dismissed without prejudice under the Younger abstention doctrine. I. Nature of the Matter before the Court Plaintiff filed this pro se Complaint for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1343, 2201-2202. (Doc. 1, at 2.) Plaintiff is incarcerated at the Lansing Correctional Facility in Lansing, Kansas. Plaintiff alleges that he is bringing this action “to address a present-tense Record-Custody and auditability dispute arising from a newly appearing back-dated ‘09/22/1998 — Minutes’ line in the certified Register of Actions for State v. Fulton, Case No. 97-CR-2353.” /d. Plaintiff claims that the entry corresponds to a proceeding (apparently a hearing on a Motion for New Trial) that occurred in late September 1998 but was not properly documented on the docket at that time. /d. Plaintiff claims that the entry was displayed on the docket for the first time in December 2025. Jd. at 9. Plaintiff alleges that although the hearing on his post-trial Motion for New Trial was held on September 22, 1998, and although a Court Reporter transcribed the hearing (producing a certified transcript on January 13, 1999), nothing was noted on the docket at that time to reflect

the minutes or to acknowledge the transcript. /d. at9. Plaintiff alleges that the lack of a record for the proceeding “impair[ed] meaningful appellate and post-conviction review of that hearing.” Id. at 10. Plaintiff claims that the “authority-bridge” for the hearing was not documented. /d. He claims that the judge originally assigned to his case (Hon. Charles E. Andrews, Jr.) did not preside over Plaintiff's Motion for New Trail Hearing and instead testified as a witness. Jd. A different judge—Hon. James P. Buchele—conducted the hearing with nothing in the record to explain the substitution or a recusal by the original judge. /d. Plaintiff claims that on August 26, 2009, Shawnee County’s Managing Court Reporter, Dorothey J. Seel, informed Plaintiff in writing that a check of the court’s computer system showed “no record of any hearing on 09/22/1998.” Id. at 10-11. Plaintiff claims that Judge C. William Ossmann ruled in 2025 that Judge Andrews properly recused so that he could testify. /d. Plaintiff claims that the “lawfulness of the 09/22 hearing depended on a contemporaneous recusal/reassignment act,” and the lack thereof created a missing authority bridge. /d. Plaintiff claims that the entry added later as reflected on a December 5, 2025 docket line, “was evidently generated from the 1998 minutes sheet that Plaintiff provided (Appendix 10).” /d. at 13. Plaintiff claims that the entry was added “without any corresponding notation about Judge Andrews’s recusal or Judge Buchele’s assignment, and without linking or cross-referencing the actual Motion for New Trial transcript from that date (Appendix 5 remains unmentioned in the ROA).” /d. at 14. Plaintiff claims that “[t]he appearance of a back-dated September 1998 entry in a 2025-certified record therefore raises obvious red flags about how the data was inserted and whether normal docketing protocols were bypassed.” Jd. Plaintiff states that he is not seeking any ruling on the ultimate merits of his underlying case, nor asking the Court to vacate any State-court judgment or to otherwise intervene in the State proceedings. /d. at 4. Plaintiff states that he “seeks orders that preserve the status quo of the

certified Register of Actions, prevent further unlogged edits or republishing that could overwrite custody evidence, and require preservation/production of the audit metadata and system records necessary to determine when, how, and by what custody mechanism the back-dated ‘09/22/1998

— Minutes’ entry first appeared in certified output.” /d. at 3. Plaintiff claims that for purposes of jurisdiction under § 1983, the underlying constitutional violation in this case is the deprivation of his Fourteenth Amendment rights “through the maintenance of an inconsistent and altered Court record under Color of State Law.” Jd. at 5. Plaintiff claims that this Court also has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1343(a)(3) (Civil Rights) and 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201-2202 (Declaratory Judgments). /d. at 5. Plaintiff claims that he is subjected to accelerated State appellate briefing deadlines in KCOA Case No. 24-128,328-A, with a brief due March 4, 2026. /d. at 18. Plaintiff claims that meaningful appellate review or post-conviction review depends on a record that is accurate, stable, and adequate to present claimed error. /d. at 19. Plaintiff claims that the back-dated entry impedes his right of access to the courts by obstructing his ability to litigate the missing authority- bridge on appeal and in post-conviction proceedings. /d. Plaintiff claims that it was inserted without notifying Plaintiff or any court, depriving him of any chance to challenge or inquire into the change and violating basic procedural due process protections. /d. Plaintiff claims that the record still does not reflect the corresponding transcript from the hearing. /d. at 20. Plaintiff argues that without something in the record reflecting the auditable bridge—transfer of judges or recusal—there is nothing to argue and nothing for any court to review. /d. at 22. Plaintiff also alleges that he submitted various filings in an attempt to invoke preservation relief, yet the Kansas Appellate Courts created no transparent received/returned/refused footprint (no docket entry and no file-stamp) sufficient to preserve a reviewable record. /d. at 22-23. Plaintiff names as defendants: Stephanie Smith, Judicial Administrator, Kansas Office of

Judicial Administration (““OJA”); Alex Wong, OJA Chief Information Technology Officer; Lisa Taylor, Public Information Director (Judicial Branch KORA Records Custodian); Douglas T. Shima, Clerk of the Kansas Appellate Courts; Anthony T. Bukaty, Chief Deputy Clerk of the Kansas Appellate Courts; Stacy Pletcher, Clerk of the District Court of Shawnee County, Kansas; (fnu) Does 1-10, Kansas OJA CMS/Portal Operators. Plaintiff sues all Defendants in their official capacities. II. Statutory Screening The Court is required to screen complaints brought by prisoners seeking relief against a governmental entity or an officer or an employee of a governmental entity. 28 U.S.C. § 1915A(a). The Court must dismiss a complaint or portion thereof if a plaintiff has raised claims that are legally frivolous or malicious, that fail to state a claim upon which relief may be granted, or that seek monetary relief from a defendant who is immune from such relief. 28 U.S.C. § 1915A(b)(1)- (2); see also Jenkins v. Trammell, 2015 WL 10529346, *1 (W. D. Okla. Oct. 29, 2015) (applying § 1915A screening standards to petition for writ of mandamus) (citing cf Green v. Nottingham, 90 F.3d 415, 417-18 (10th Cir. 1996) (“[P]etitions for writ of mandamus are included within the meaning of the term ‘civil action’ as used in § 1915.”)).

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Jason A. Fulton v. Stephanie Smith, et al., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jason-a-fulton-v-stephanie-smith-et-al-ksd-2026.