G.R. SMITH, Magistrate Judge.
In this employment discrimination case removed from state court, pro se inmate Alvin Moore complains that Georgia-Pacific (GP) racially discriminated against him in 2008 (doc. 1-1 at 25); created a hostile work environment in violation of Title VII (id. at 26); retaliated against him for "attempting to protect and vindicate" his Title VII rights (id. at 29); denied him due compensation, possibly (his complaint is nothing if not inscrutable) in the form of worker's compensation benefits (id. at 28); and instituted a "fraudulent claim denial" in state court before removing his complaint to this Court. Id. at 30. Since removal, Moore has moved to remand (doc. 4); strike GP's notices, motions, statements, and responses (doc. 12); and for declaratory judgment. Doc. 14. GP moves to dismiss. Doc. 5.
Moore is no stranger to this Court. Beyond bank robbery charges and several associated habeas corpus petitions,
The Court agreed and ordered Moore to pay the bond before allowing this case to proceed. Doc. 19 (citing In re Duroser, 2015 WL 4068243 at * 1 n. 2 (N.D. Ga. July 2, 2015) (bankruptcy debtor's appeal dismissed as frivolous because she refused to pay filing fee after court previously disallowed her IFP status as a sanction for filing multiple frivolous cases and appeals); Crooker v. Global Tel Link, 2012 WL 651644 at * 2 (D.R.I. Jan. 6, 2012) (to avoid the Prison Litigation Reform Act's three-strikes rule and filing fees, prisoner filed complaints in state court asserting federal claims against out-of-state defendants, thus assuring removal; court required prisoner to pay full civil case filing fees, or reimburse defendants for removal fees, in order "to prevent Plaintiff from circumventing" the PLRA and court-imposed filing restrictions)).
Instead of timely paying the bond, Moore has filed another flurry of frivolous motions. See docs. 21 (motion for recusal of the undersigned); 22 (motion to compel discovery and for Fed. R. Civ. P. 37 sanctions against GP); 23 (another motion to compel); 24 (motion to un-refer motions from the undersigned); 27 (motion for Rule 11 sanctions against GP). None have any merit.
Because Moore still has not paid the required $100 frivolity bond, his Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(a) objection (doc. 20)
Finally, his motion for sanctions (doc. 27) complains about a letter sent by defense counsel graciously offering to confer with Moore about discovery even though the Court had effectively stayed discovery pending decision on GP's motion to dismiss. See doc. 27-1 at 1. There's nothing offensive about that, much less anything that warrants sanctions. This motion therefore is