Filed: Oct. 01, 2019
Latest Update: Oct. 01, 2019
Summary: MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER PAUL L. FRIEDMAN , District Judge . This matter is before the Court on Robert Cotner's pro se request for an investigation [Dkt. No. 6305]. In his motion, Mr. Cotner alleges that the State of Oklahoma stole 80% of the settlement funds in this case; used that money to fund other lawsuits, election campaigns, and other personal benefits to politicians; and paid several millions of dollars to a number of state officials. He argues other violations of the settlem
Summary: MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER PAUL L. FRIEDMAN , District Judge . This matter is before the Court on Robert Cotner's pro se request for an investigation [Dkt. No. 6305]. In his motion, Mr. Cotner alleges that the State of Oklahoma stole 80% of the settlement funds in this case; used that money to fund other lawsuits, election campaigns, and other personal benefits to politicians; and paid several millions of dollars to a number of state officials. He argues other violations of the settleme..
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MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
PAUL L. FRIEDMAN, District Judge.
This matter is before the Court on Robert Cotner's pro se request for an investigation [Dkt. No. 6305]. In his motion, Mr. Cotner alleges that the State of Oklahoma stole 80% of the settlement funds in this case; used that money to fund other lawsuits, election campaigns, and other personal benefits to politicians; and paid several millions of dollars to a number of state officials. He argues other violations of the settlement agreement, including the failure to pay members of the plaintiff class, and he argues that the settlement itself is "null and void" because the Oklahoma State Attorney General lacked standing to file the suit. Citing to other pending Oklahoma County cases he has brought, Mr. Cotner states that "85% of Oklahoma tax payers did not want the suit filed" and requests that the Court seize all tobacco settlement funds from the state of Oklahoma and return them to the defendants or put them in a trust to be "disposed of anyway this court sees fit to do."
Having reviewed the petition and the entire record in this case, the Court must deny the request. As the Court has explained previously, see Memorandum Opinion & Order [Dkt. No. 6268], Mr. Cotner's inclusion on the docket as an "interested party" does not make him a plaintiff or a class member in this case, nor has he asserted any valid grounds for intervention. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 24; In re Idaho Conservation League, 811 F.3d 502, 513-15 (D.C. Cir. 2016). As a result, he is not entitled to the relief he seeks. In so ruling, the Court does not decide the merits of Mr. Cotner's arguments. If Mr. Cotner does have meritorious claims, however, they must be resolved in a separate legal action, likely in a different forum — they are not appropriate for litigation in this case. Accordingly, it is hereby
ORDERED that Mr. Cotner's request for investigation [Dkt. No. 6305] is DENIED.
SO ORDERED.