It is difficult to tell if he is lying, stupid or both in most situations. The judge ruled on one thing. A motion to quash a subpoena. That's it. The ruling took section 230 into account and of course Krinsky, as that applies specifically to California. As a corollary to the quash was 1987.2(c) which are the
mandatory sanctions.
The only place that this applies to defamation was showing that the petitioner himself commited defamation. Not that there was no defamation, not anything else. I realize since one subpeona ended up costing 150,000 it seems like there was more to it. There wasn't. The judge ruled that there was not a prima facie showing of defamation
by the petitioner.
It doesn't maTTer what the pro tem said. It doesn't matter if his dead dog told him to rule a certain way. It doesn't matter what Schulman said during the hearing unless it was in his ruling.
The ruling is one page. By Schulman. That's it. Stein has no authority. Nothing else matters related to this. The case in Wisconsin was withdrawn so nothing was "ruled" there either.
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