VICTOR MARRERO, District Judge.
Plaintiffs Michael Ebewo, Joanne Hart, Julianne Polito, Thomasina Robinson and Brandi Scheiner (collectively, "Plaintiffs") filed the instant motion seeking recusal of
The Court regards Plaintiffs' motion as a lawyer's version of shift the blame and shoot the messenger. Plaintiffs no doubt have a grievance that the Court senses is deeply and genuinely felt. But they refuse to accept a message repeatedly conveyed them by Magistrate Judge Peck and this Court from day one until the present. However intensely held may be their conviction that they have been gravely wronged, there are sufficient reasons grounded in law that explain why their claims do not give rise to violations of the Constitution or other federal law. Some of these reasons are of Plaintiffs' own making.
First, Plaintiffs may have been misguided and perhaps prejudiced by the deficient lawyering and excesses committed by the now disbarred attorney who first represented the plaintiffs in Teachers 4 Action.
Next, Plaintiffs' inartful attempts to proceed pro se into the subsequent rounds of pleading exceedingly complex constitutional and statutory claims, though understandably woeful on that account, nonetheless were legally defective. Prior to that phase of the litigation, Magistrate Judge Peck provided Plaintiffs with thorough directions explaining the flaws in their pleadings as well as detailed guidance on how to cure them. In preparing their second and third amended complaints. Plaintiffs substantially ignored many of Magistrate Judge Peck's instructions. Finally, represented by new counsel in the most recent round of this litigation, the latest repleading Plaintiffs were permitted in essence does little more than reshuffle and redeal unviable claims previously dismissed, or inject new allegations and polemics
Plaintiffs, with some justification, take exception to the pungent words that accompanied of some of Magistrate Judge Peck's rulings, to which they point as evidence of bias or other improper hostility to their case that induced the errors of law they ascribe to the Magistrate Judge. But legal reality is no less real because it is spoken with a caustic tongue. Insofar as Magistrate Judge Peck may have injected some sharp points and stinging edges into his rulings in this litigation, this Court is inclined to read his severe language not as undisguised bias, but rather as venting of proportionately mounting frustration over Plaintiffs' repetition of groundless claims, disregard for clear explanations of why the complaint had been dismissed in the first instance, and determination to plow ahead with pleadings that even the passage of time and the aid of counsel failed to improve more than minimally. Under these circumstances, the Court finds no grounds justifying Plaintiffs' motion for recusal.
For the reasons stated above, it is hereby