Introduction
Some judicial errors are hard to categorize because they involve judgment, discretion, or competing interpretations. This page is not about those cases.
This page concerns a narrower and more disturbing failure: plainly false findings, material mischaracterizations of the record, and omissions so severe that an order proceeds as if a central factual dispute was never raised.
In my experience, this is not an isolated anomaly. It is common enough that the pattern is better shown through multiple examples than through abstract discussion alone. That is why this page begins with three examples from the Chief Justice in Northern California and then turns to examples from Massachusetts state courts, with more examples to be added.
Example 1A “Clear → not clear” — the complaint was first treated as tied to a federal proceeding, then later described as not clearly tied to one.
One-sentence point: the dismissal order treated the complaint as based on conduct during a specific federal case, but reconsideration later said that federal tie was “not clear on the face of the Complaint.”
“Plaintiff has brought multiple prior actions against Defendants related to harassment, including a 2020 case in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts. See Waters v. Facebook Inc., No. 20-30168-MGM… Plaintiff’s claims here are based on Defendants’ conduct during the course of that litigation… [W]hile the case was pending before the First Circuit, Kearney conspired… to ‘deter or prevent [Plaintiff] from attending or testifying freely in federal court…’”
“Even if Plaintiff intends to challenge only conduct in his prior federal actions (a notion that was not clear on the face of the Complaint)…”
“On November 19th, 2021, … Kearney … conspired … in attempt to obstruct a First Circuit case, Waters v. Facebook, Inc., et al. (21-civil-01582)…”
“COUNT I: 42 U.S.C. § 1985(2) — Conspiracy to deter party/witness in Federal proceeding…”
“Kearney conspired to deter or prevent me from attending or testifying freely in federal court (First Circuit 21-1582)…”
More context
Example 1B “No reason alleged” — the order says the complaint does not allege why the harassment occurred, but the opening paragraphs already state the obstruction/deterrence theory.
One-sentence point: the dismissal order says the complaint does not allege a reason for the harassment, while the complaint’s opening paragraphs directly tie the conduct to obstruction and deterrence in identified federal proceedings.
“The complaint does not allege the reasons for the harassment.”
“It can be inferred that Kearney sent the November 19th, 2021, threats, because the conspiracy happened the same day he defaulted in the First Circuit, and there is a long documented pattern of Kearney sending threats and intimidating witnesses…”
“One of Kearney’s accomplices gave me screenshots indicating that Kearney orchestrated a conspiracy… As a result of Facebook’s refusal to investigate… Kearney threatened and extorted the witness…”
Facts Supporting Inference of Intent
Defendants Stated Reasons WARNING Graphic Excerpts
Example 1C “Only general awareness” — the order reduces Meta’s knowledge to generalized awareness, while the complaint alleges specific notice of the threats, notice through counsel, and failure to investigate after notice.
One-sentence point: the dismissal order characterizes Meta as alleged to know only Kearney’s activity “generally,” but the complaint alleges direct notice of the November 19 threats, notice through counsel, and a failure-to-prevent theory after notice.
“Regarding Meta’s involvement in this harassment, Plaintiff avers only that Meta was aware of Kearney’s activity on Facebook generally, that Kearney had posted content on Facebook that violated community standards, and that Kearney claimed in a book he wrote in 2018 that he had discussions with two Facebook employees about paying to have his content remain on Facebook.”
“Plaintiff has failed adequately to aver any element of his § 1985(2) claims. For example, he fails to allege that Meta was aware of Kearney’s intent to intimidate or interfere with Plaintiff’s participation in the litigation, let alone any facts showing a conspiracy to do so.”
“On November 19th, 2021, I emailed screenshots of the fake copy of my Facebook profile, and the fake threats to the lawyers that were representing Facebook in First Circuit case 21-1582, and I asked them to investigate ‘who created this account and sent these threats. I will contact US Marshalls as soon as possible.’ Facebook never responded.”
“Facebook filed an opposition to my motion for an investigation into the November 19th conspiracy when a 2-minute investigation would have uncovered the conspiracy.”
“Facebook was made legally aware of their codefendants’ toxic background and the details of the November 19th, 2021, and other 42 U.S.C. § 1985 conspiracies through their attorneys… With reasonable diligence Facebook could have uncovered the November 19th conspiracy and stopped its effects…”
Additional facts supporting Meta’s knowledge
Section 1986 note / relevant law
What these examples show
The same pattern repeats across multiple issues—federal-proceeding nexus, motive, and notice. When a court’s summary thins or reframes pleaded facts, the case can be dismissed without engaging the merits, and review becomes an argument over the court’s new description rather than the record itself.
For the full timeline and all filings: see the case file index.
Example 2A “No witnesses / no damages” — dismissal reasons later found incorrect on appeal
One-sentence point: the trial court dismissed the case citing “no witnesses” and inability to articulate damages; the Appeals Court later held those stated reasons were incorrect and that dismissal was an abuse of discretion.
“Mr. Waters indicated that he had ‘no witnesses’; and that he was unable to articulate his damages.”
“The judge’s stated reasons for the dismissal—that ‘Waters indicated that he had no witnesses’; and that he was ‘unable to articulate his damages’—were incorrect.”
“[D]efamation per se does not require proof of economic loss… In addition, the plaintiff’s affidavits set forth the testimony he could provide about the harm he allegedly suffered from the defendants’ conduct.”
Additional context (optional)
Example 2B “No witnesses on appeal” — protective-order request denied by treating it as already decided
One-sentence point: the court denied a protective-order motion by citing that an appeal has “no witnesses” and that the issues were “previously raised,” even though the motion sought prospective protection under the court’s inherent power to prevent harassment before oral argument and protect witnesses.
“DENIED… This matter is pending an appeal. There are no witnesses who will be appearing in the appellate proceedings. The issues raised in this motion have been previously raised, considered, and ruled upon…”
“I move for this court to use its inherent power to protect me… Without a protection order there is a clear and present danger that [Kearney] will harass me before oral arguments… and that he will harass other witnesses involved.”
“The established methods in the statutes and rules have so far failed to discourage obstructive misconduct.”
Affidavit details (optional)
Graphic content warning (optional)
Example 2C “Defendant has shown good cause” — default removed without stated factual basis
One-sentence point: without giving reasoning, the court declared that the defendant had shown good cause to remove a default, even though good cause ordinarily requires both a reason for not responding and a meritorious defense, and the later record acknowledged only a conclusory defense.
The court stated that the defendant had shown good cause to remove the default.
The court later acknowledged that the defendant stated only a conclusory defense rather than a developed meritorious defense.
Evidence showed that about a month earlier, the defendant spoke with the plaintiff and said he would not respond.
The plaintiff’s motion also asked the court to subpoena the defendant to appear.
The defendant’s affidavit asserted only that he had meritorious defenses, without supplying details.