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Oklahoma Lawyer Serves 93 Federal Lawsuit Summonses Against Bar Association

Federal courthouse filing of 2,000+ page lawsuit against Oklahoma Bar Association, Supreme Court justices, and state agencies. Live serving process with 93 summonses after officials tried hiding from accountability. Watch the dramatic confrontations unfold.

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A suspended Oklahoma attorney filed a massive federal civil rights lawsuit against the state's legal establishment, serving 93 summonses in a single day while streaming the process live. The 2,000-page complaint targets the Oklahoma Bar Association, Supreme Court justices, and multiple state agencies for allegedly violating his constitutional rights.

The attorney arrived at Tulsa's federal courthouse at 8:30 AM with what he called "the most important lawsuit" of his career. Unlike typical electronic filings, this case required hand delivery of physical documents. Court clerks spent an hour and a half just processing the 93 summonses, with the federal building's sweltering heat adding to the day's challenges.

The complaint seeks $2.5 million in damages and emergency injunctive relief to restore his suspended law license. He's demanding immediate hearings, claiming every day without his license causes "unquantifiable damages."

Bar Association Officials Try to Hide

Earlier communications revealed Bar Association members discussing how to "evade service" of the lawsuit papers. This backfired spectacularly when the attorney's process server arrived at their Lincoln Boulevard offices during a continuing education event.

A receptionist initially claimed several defendants weren't present, but when confronted with their official addresses listing that exact location, she quickly called supervisors. Within minutes, officials emerged to accept service rather than face the embarrassment of being served at their homes.

Supreme Court Justices Served at State Capitol

The Oklahoma Supreme Court, despite being named as defendants seeking emergency relief, had no clear protocol for accepting lawsuit papers. After being directed through multiple floors, staff eventually located the general counsel who accepted service for the court.

The irony wasn't lost that justices who regularly lecture others about legal procedure seemed unprepared for basic civil litigation against themselves.

State Agencies Accept Service Without Incident

At the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and the medical marijuana authority, officials accepted the lawsuit papers professionally. However, one defendant who had previously "pushed" the attorney during a public meeting seemed less pleased about being served, asking sarcastically "how that went" for him.

The State Fire Marshal's office had already closed by 4:15 PM, forcing service to be rescheduled.

Oklahoma City Hall Becomes Final Stop

Racing against the 5 PM deadline for serving government buildings, the process server reached Oklahoma City Hall with minutes to spare. The city clerk's office accepted papers for the municipality, police department, and a specific officer being sued individually.

The entire day netted service on approximately 30 defendants, with the most crucial parties now officially notified of the federal lawsuit.

What Happens Next Remains Unclear

The complaint seeks emergency hearings and immediate relief, but whether federal courts will fast-track this case against Oklahoma's legal establishment remains unknown. The attorney promises to "never stop" fighting what he calls systemic corruption in the state's judicial system.

Watch the complete 90-minute livestream to see every confrontation and court filing as this unprecedented legal battle unfolds.

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