Federal dockets, 2025–2026: appeal pending at the First Circuit (No. 26-1346); a sixth SCOTUS petition forthcoming, fee-paid. Each card carries the full filing history, questions presented, and a status timeline. All documents link to filed PDFs.
Inside any open All filings list: j/k to navigate, Enter to open the highlighted PDF.
SCOTUS
U.S. Supreme Court
No. 25-6878
Petition for writ of certiorari raising sovereign immunity, the "double protection" theory, and the structural conditions imposed on indigent pro se litigants in the Commonwealth.
Dismissed under Rule 39.8
QUESTION 1
Does sovereign immunity apply to a Commonwealth when federal funds subsidize the forceful separation of American children from their parents?
QUESTION 2
Does "double protecting" some citizens waive Constitutional protections for all others?
Emergency Motion for Injunction Pending Appeal under Fed. R. App. P. 8(a)(2) + All Writs Act (Doc 00118445745) — bundled with the cross-filed § 1746 Affidavit on Public-Service Efforts and the Public Donation Drive (Doc 00118445747)
Status Affidavit — Commonwealth’s non-response to the 5/18/2026 appellees’-brief deadline; the 5/19/2026 Mass. Appeals Court Rule 23.0 decision expressly directing Appellant to the U.S. Supreme Court; planned sixth petition for a writ of certiorari
Status Affidavit — the never-impounded 389-page evidence compendium stamped "RECEIVED MAY 21 2026" by the Mass. Appeals Court; the 5/21/2026 same-day reversals of the Family Court’s e-filing rules; the 6/11/2026 return-to-sender Registry mailing (Doc 00118461230)
Supplemental Status Affidavit on Public-Service Efforts and the Public Donation Drive — reports the 6/16/2026 RMV identification refusal and the civil-rights complaint filed with, and now pending before, the Attorney General’s Civil Rights Division; the affidavit states the identification bar forecloses lawful employment and every lawful means of receiving money; preservational, no relief sought (Doc 00118463451)
Massachusetts Attorney General — Civil Rights Division
Civil Rights Division — identification complaint
Civil-rights complaint to the Attorney General’s Civil Rights Division: Massachusetts will not issue a state ID without a residential address, and bars a P.O. Box in that field — but a homeless shelter resident’s only deliverable address is a U.S. Postal Service P.O. Box. The result is a closed loop: no residential address → no ID → no lawful employment → no income → no way to leave the shelter, and no lawful means of receiving money.
Filed with the Civil Rights Division; pending
QUESTION 1
May a State condition identification — and, through it, employment and the ability to receive money — on a residential address that a person living in a shelter cannot lawfully provide?
2026-06
2026-06
All filings (2)
Date
Kind
Document
Complaint
Civil Rights Complaint — the state-ID / P.O.-Box catch-22 (7 pp)