G.R. SMITH, Magistrate Judge.
After the Eleventh Circuit remanded this case, doc. 18, the Court granted pro se plaintiff Carol Wilkerson additional time to amend her complaint "to add such parties-defendant as [she] choose[s] to name." Doc. 19 at 2 (quotes omitted). Her original "complaint facially alleged that two state employees used excessive force against her, either to detain her or while she was already detained. Such a claim is cognizable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983." Wilkerson v. State of Georgia, 618 F. App'x 610, 611 (11th Cir. 2015). Seeking the identities of those two state employees, Wilkerson successfully moved for two subpoenas, one to "the defendant's [sic] at the Bulloch County State Court to give her the name of Judge Gary Mikel's courtroom deputy who used excessive force against [her]," and the second "to command the Bulloch County Sheriff's Office to give the name[s]" of (1) the officer who took her to jail on December 17, 2013, and (2) the officer who "threatened plaintiff with a ta[ser] gun in court on December 19, 2013." Doc. 23 at 1-2 (citing doc. 20 at 1-2).
In granting that motion, the Court cautioned Wilkerson about following the procedural rules (particularly Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(b)(1), requiring her to tender witness fees and mileage and use personal, not by-mail, service and noted that it could not assist her. Doc. 23 at 5-6. It also gave her until November 13, 2015 to amend her Complaint. Id. at 6. That, the Court concluded, "gives her ample time to ascertain the identity of the parties she claims are liable to her, plus an additional month beyond that (until December 15, 2015) to serve them under Fed. R. Civ. P. 4." Doc. 23 at 6 n. 4. The Court also explained to plaintiff the difference between different subpoenas available to her.
In response, Wilkerson herself moved to quash her own subpoenas.
Doc. 26 at 1.
Wilkerson is right. Apparently, a deputy clerk ignored the Court's explicit instruction that she be furnished "with two Form AO 88B subpoenas" and instead sent her the wrong subpoena form. She thus wants two new subpoenas to try again. Id. ("Plaintiff request's two more correct Subpoenas AO 88B to produce documents, Information, or Objects, or to Permit Inspection of Premises"). The Court grants that request. The Clerk is directed to send her two
With the Court's November 13, 2015 complaint-amendment deadline looming, Wilkerson again moves to extend it — "due to false incarceration." Doc. 28 (filed Nov. 2, 2015). She insists that she has "been falsely incarcerated since October 14, 2015 without a bond" on trumped-up charges "because [the defendants] are trying to prevent her from subpoenaing the defendants so that she can't amend her complaint by November 13, 2015." Doc. 28 at 2. This motion is unopposed under Local Rule 7.5 because no response has been filed (not surprising, since there are no defendants in this case, only the subpoena targets who, as noted, moved to quash Wilkerson's first round of subpoenas). In any event, and as is often the case with pro se litigants, Wilkerson does not specify a new deadline in her extension motion.
Taking an educated guess as to the amount of time that Wilkerson seeks, the Court grants her extension motion. Doc. 28. She must file her amended Complaint by no later than the close of business on January 15, 2016. The Court also grants her implied motion to extend Rule 4(m)'s deadline until that date, too.
To summarize, the Court
Doc. 23 at 4-5 (footnote omitted). The "09/10/15" docket entry fails to indicate which form the Clerk sent to Wilkerson, but what Wilkerson did use suggests she was sent form AO-88, rather than form AO-88B — both of which, by the way, are publicly available at no cost:
The Court denies as frivolous Wilkerson's request for sanctions against her subpoena targets. Doc. 26 at 1-2. Wilkerson used not only the wrong subpoena form, but also served them by mail, doc. 25, which she cannot do. See Rule 45(b).