quote:
There goes that word "fraud" again. I don't think it means what he thinks it means.
Randolph already has proven that he doesn't understand the term. From his 2005 lawsuit against Pfizer, the courts stated the following about Randolph's argument:
The Court agrees with the Report's conclusion that {Randolph Duke's} allegation of fraud is nothing more than "an accusation that an adversary made unsupportable legal arguments." ... {Randolph Duke} mistakenly asserts that the Report acknowledged that Defendants had committed fraud. (Pl.'s Obj'n to Report 6, 8.) In fact, the Report concluded the opposite that no fraud had been committed. (see Report at 12-14.)And in that same lawsuit, the Court recognized the same thing that we have seen: That Randolph can become obsessed with an issue if he feels wronged. Again from that same lawsuit:
The Court hereby enjoins {Randolph Duke} from instituting any new action, in state or federal court, based on the acts complained of in this litigation...{Randolph Duke's} repeated instigation of litigation on these claims indicates that he is likely to continue litigating these claims unless he is enjoined from doing so....a district court's obligation to protect and preserve the sound and orderly administration of justice requires the court to shield federal litigants and their counsel from vexatious litigation in all courts, state and federal...Any violation of this injunction will be treated as a contempt of Court.The United States District Court not only dismissed every one of his points, but they found so little merit in his repeated arguments that they actually banned him from filing any more lawsuits related to the case! Well done, Randolph!
Note: I would love to provide a link to this final lawsuit. But since it theoretically gives away personal identifying information (even though we all know Duke's name anyway), I'll refrain from linking to the source document.