“Guerilla Publishing” Ron Durbin went live again Wednesday night with announcements related to his pending lawsuit against the Bar of Oklahoma, as he was unable to file his federal civil rights lawsuit earlier in the day.
Durbin announced that he would be filing his federal civil rights lawsuit on Thursday and had his process server standing by to serve the 67 people who were named in it. He had planned to livestream “all day” on Thursday to film the service of each person on the list.
As he files his federal civil rights lawsuit, he is also asking for an emergency hearing as he wants both his license to practice law in Oklahoma back and he’s asking for the disbanding of the Oklahoma Bar Association in its entirety.
Durbin claims that he is being tried by the Oklahoma Bar Association in absentia as they are holding hearings on days he can’t be there and will not allow him to appear via electronic means, nor will they allow him electronic devices to use when he does appear in court.
The disgraced lawyer said that while the Oklahoma Bar Association is allowed to put on witnesses in the case, he has opted not to cross examine those witnesses, instead relying on the ability to call those witnesses as part of his defense. He claimed that ability was now stripped as punishment for not taking part in the trial from the start.
Durbin added other things to his lawsuit, which he claims all arise from his efforts as a lawyer. This includes Oklahoma’s 7% excise tax on marijuana, and the requirements for marijuana businesses to buy bonds from the state to protect those businesses.
He pledged that he’d take the case all the way to the Supreme Court, if need be, and had named all of his enemies in the lawsuit as well to punish them for “taking shots” at him while his license was suspended.
Durbin went on to claim that his license was suspended as he was using his rights as an American to criticize the police and that he was being punished for leaving a letter in the Oklahoma Governor’s office telling the Governor to “fuck off.” He said that he did not give up his rights to freedom of speech or freedom of the press when he became a member of the bar.
The YouTuber had yet to go live as of press time.