Friday, July 17, 2026

Chronicles of Twatrick: I have no idea ...

Apparently, Patrick Ross has decided to relive his "victory" rather than concentrate on the daunting Rule 4.33-related task ahead of him:

 


 

I will have more to say about this later, but rest assured this tweet (and others like it) will be placed before the Court to demonstrate Patrick's contempt for the legal system, and to discredit him when he starts up with his perpetual, "Oh, woe is me, I'm depressed and don't have the energy and my parents passed away and ... blah blah blah."

Stay tuned. 

P.S. If Patrick had not already accepted service of my Rule 4.33 filing, the above tweet would constitute admission that he received the documents. Patrick is not the sharpest sandwich in the picnic basket. 

P.P.S. I predict that Patrick, having researched Alberta's Rule 4.33 and wildly misinterpreted it, will think he's found a loophole. I will go even further and predict what I think that loophole is.

As we all know, the Rule makes it clear that the Plaintiff must have, in the preceding three years, effected some "significant advance" in the civil action in question. I'm willing to bet that Patrick will argue that his tweeting about me with respect to that lawsuit falls under the category of "significant advancement."

I am not joking -- I predict that Patrick will point at some of his most vacuous and meaningless social media publications and insist that those constitute a significant advance in the case.

Let's watch. 

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

And there I was figuring Twatsy saw your recent blogs about Rule 43.3 and was "being smart" (in his mind anyway) by not mentioning it. Dude can't help himself. He just keeps digging his own holes. August 20th can't come soon enough

Anonymous said...

Oops rule 4.33 (my mistake)

CC said...

Anon @ 10:17 AM: It wouldn't have mattered if Patrick had studiously looked the other way and pretended he hadn't seen all these posts. As I understand it, because Patrick supplied his email address on his original lawsuit back in 2022, he was (according to Alberta rules) implicitly accepting proper and legal service by email, which is why my filing was accepted immediately and given a court date. He was then emailed all of the relevant documents, so service is now complete and the Court expects him to attend that hearing on August 20.

Anonymous said...

Excellent!!!