Timothy L. Ashford, and Timothy L. Ashford, P.C.L.L.O. v. Google, Inc., Alphabet, Inc., Roses Roses, Go Gamers, John Does, 1-1000, and Jane Does, 1-1000

CourtDistrict Court, D. Nebraska
DecidedNovember 26, 2025
Docket8:25-cv-00095
StatusUnknown

This text of Timothy L. Ashford, and Timothy L. Ashford, P.C.L.L.O. v. Google, Inc., Alphabet, Inc., Roses Roses, Go Gamers, John Does, 1-1000, and Jane Does, 1-1000 (Timothy L. Ashford, and Timothy L. Ashford, P.C.L.L.O. v. Google, Inc., Alphabet, Inc., Roses Roses, Go Gamers, John Does, 1-1000, and Jane Does, 1-1000) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nebraska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Timothy L. Ashford, and Timothy L. Ashford, P.C.L.L.O. v. Google, Inc., Alphabet, Inc., Roses Roses, Go Gamers, John Does, 1-1000, and Jane Does, 1-1000, (D. Neb. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEBRASKA

TIMOTHY L. ASHFORD, and TIMOTHY L. ASHFORD, P.C.L.L.O.,

8:25CV95 Plaintiffs,

vs. ORDER

GOOGLE, INC., ALPHABET, INC., ROSES ROSES, GO GAMERS, JOHN DOES, 1-1000, and JANE DOES, 1-1000,

Defendants.

This matter comes before the court on Plaintiffs’ Motion for Leave to File a Third Amended Complaint. (Filing No. 40). For the following reasons, the motion is denied. I. BACKGROUND Plaintiffs filed their complaint in this court on February 17, 2025 at Case No. 8:25- cv-95. (Filing No. 1). On the same day, Plaintiffs filed the same complaint in the Douglas County District Court for the State of Nebraska at CI 25-1226. Defendants removed that state court case on March 16, 2025, on the basis of diversity jurisdiction, and it was assigned Case No. 8:25cv284 (hereinafter the “removed state court case”). Once Defendants removed the state court matter to this court, the state district court was divested of jurisdiction. See Ward v. Resolution Trust Corp., 972 F.2d 196, 198 (8th Cir. 1992) (“The district court gained jurisdiction when [removing parties] properly removed the case to federal court . . . After removal, only the federal district court could restore jurisdiction to the state courts”). This court previously ruled that removal was proper and will not again address Plaintiffs’ arguments that the removal was fraudulent, dilatory, or made in bad faith. (See Filing No. 18, Filing No. 23, Filing No. 55). On May 14, 2025, Defendants filed a timely motion to dismiss the removed state court case as duplicative to the federal case. (Case No. 8:25-cv-284, Filing No. 15). On August 4, 2025, the court dismissed the removed state court case, holding: While the Court does not agree with Ashford that the removal of Case No. 8:25CV284 was wrongful, it does agree with him that it makes these matters duplicative. “[T]he rule against duplicative litigation seeks to promote judicial economy and to protect parties from vexatious and duplicative litigation over the same subject matter.” Kezhaya v. City of Belle Plaine, Minn., 78 F.4th 1045, 1050 (8th Cir. 2023). Dismissal of a subsequently filed action is usually appropriate “while the first action remains pending” if “the parties to the actions are the same and [] the claims arise from the same nucleus of operative fact.” Id. (Case No. 8:25-cv-284, Filing No. 34). The removed state court case was dismissed by the federal court, a judgment was entered, and Plaintiffs did not appeal that judgment, therefore the state court lacks jurisdiction, and no further action can be taken in this court at Case No. 8:25-cv-284 or the state court case at CI 25-1226. Although this has been the case since August 2025, Plaintiffs continue to argue that the removed state court case was fraudulently removed, and that CI 25-1226 remains open and “stayed” in state court. For the purposes of the claims asserted here, the only remaining open matter is the present one, Case No. 8:25-cv-95, in which Plaintiffs originated the action in federal court. On February 15, 2025, prior to serving any defendants, they filed an Amended Complaint as of right. (Filing No. 3). On May 14, 2025, Plaintiffs moved to amend (Filing No. 10), which was granted by the court. (Filing No. 18; see also Filing No. 23, Memorandum and Order adopting the undersigned’s recommendations). Plaintiffs did not file an amended pleading at the time and instead filed a motion to amend a second time on July 9, 2025. (Filing No. 21). Although that motion was granted, the district court noted that “Ashford asserts he seeks leave to file the present Second Amended Complaint to streamline his allegations and correct the names of the corporate defendants. At this stage, there is no obvious reason to prohibit Ashford from amending his complaint, though the Court has some reservations about the accuracy of his identification of the corporate defendants.” (Filing No. 23). Plaintiffs filed their Second Amended Complaint on August 17, 2025. (Filing No. 24). Notably, Plaintiffs specifically asserted grounds for diversity jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332 in their original Complaint and First Amended Complaint. (Filing No. 1, at para. 17-18, Filing No. 3, at para. 17-18) (asserting that Plaintiffs and Defendants are residents of different states and that the amount in controversy exceeds $75,000). In the Second Amended Complaint, however, Plaintiffs removed all reference to federal law and any mention of damages. On September 22, 2025, Plaintiffs again moved to amend, which was denied for failure to clearly identify the proposed amendments pursuant to this court’s local rules. (Filing No. 36, Filing No. 37). On September 30, 2025, Plaintiffs then refiled the motion in accordance with those rules and now seek leave to file a Third Amended Complaint. (Filing No. 40). First, Plaintiffs state they seek to change the name of Google, LLC to the correct name of Google LLC in the case caption. (Filing No. 40, at para. 8). Plaintiffs also seek to add the following paragraphs: 171. The Google self-serving terms of service are forced on Plaintiff. 172. Plaintiff does not want to participate in the Google Business Profile and he can not opt out. 173. Plaintiff is forced to participate in the Google Business Profile because the Plaintiff can not opt out of the Google Business Profile. 174. The Defendant’s disputed or disputable statement in a civil lawsuit is a question for the jury to decide. 175. The statement by Thompson is not a verifiable fact which is a disputable issue and a jury question. 176. Plaintiff seeks to block the Google Business Profile from profiling Plaintiff. 177. Plaintiff is not bound by the Google terms of service which have been breached by Google. 178. Google owes a duty to prevent criminal activity from taking place on their site which was the extortion attempt of the co-defendants. 179. Google removed the defamatory statement only after the significant damages caused by the Defendants Google LLC publishing the defamatory statement from non-client non-attorney Roses Roses aka Rose Thompson from 3/20/19 until sometime after 1/8/24 for a total of 1,755 days or 4 years, 9 months and 19 days. (Filing No. 40). Throughout the motion, Plaintiffs again takes issue with the court’s dismissal of the duplicate case filed at 8:25-cv-284 and asserts that the stay in the state court case will soon be lifted and again actively litigated. They also make several assertions that once the “stay” is lifted in state court, they intend to proceed in state court only and all proceedings in this court will be terminated. (Filing No. 40, at para. 36). Plaintiffs also generally argue that Defendants Google LLC and Alphabet Inc. were served five times and never filed an answer in either state court or this case. Finally, Plaintiffs argue that because the Second Amended Complaint does not specify an amount of damages over $75,000, this court now lacks subject matter jurisdiction. (Filing No. 40, at para. 4-7, 15). Beyond those allegations and their desire to amend the case caption, Plaintiffs provide little argument as to why a Third Amended Complaint is necessary. In fact, Plaintiffs only state in its motion that the “Third Amended Complaint, if necessary, will start at page 1 on the first page of the complaint… The additions to the Third Amended Complaint are in bold and underlined…The Plaintiff will request a Fourth Amended complaint if necessary.” (Filing No. 40, at p. 5). II. ANALYSIS Defendants oppose the motion for two reasons.

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Timothy L. Ashford, and Timothy L. Ashford, P.C.L.L.O. v. Google, Inc., Alphabet, Inc., Roses Roses, Go Gamers, John Does, 1-1000, and Jane Does, 1-1000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/timothy-l-ashford-and-timothy-l-ashford-pcllo-v-google-inc-ned-2025.