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Three Courts-Three Judges-Three Appeals-One Pattern: Are American Courts Sidestepping The Constitution When Citizens Stand Alone?
EntSun News/11087665
Raven v. NYSDEC • Raven v. Trump, Roberts — Parallel Appeals Expose a Pattern of Dismissal Without Merits Review
ALBANY, N.Y. - EntSun -- In an extraordinary convergence of events, artist and civil rights litigant Julian Raven has filed three simultaneous federal and state appeals after three separate courts dismissed three separate cases—each involving different facts, different defendants, and different legal frameworks.
What ties them together is not the subject matter. It is the method.
Across a federal constitutional case, a New York Article 78 proceeding, and a federal trust-law action involving the Smithsonian Institution, Raven alleges that each court employed the same playbook: reframe the claim, narrow the issue, and dismiss without reaching the merits.
The pattern is not theoretical—it is documented.
In the federal Second Circuit appeal (#26-601), the district court dismissed a civil rights claim by recasting ongoing governmental conduct through 2025 as a single event in 2017—effectively erasing years of alleged constitutional violations.
Rather than apply the required liberal construction for pro se pleadings under Haines v. Kerner, the court dismissed the case sua sponte without allowing amendment.
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In the New York Appellate Division appeal (#CV-26-0480), the court avoided the central statutory question—whether the DEC ever lawfully established a "significant threat" classification—by treating a registry listing as conclusive proof of legality.
The result: a dismissal grounded not in statutory compliance, but in assumption.
And in the D.C. Circuit appeal (#26-5081), the court dismissed a case raising unresolved constitutional and fiduciary questions about the Smithsonian Institution—while explicitly declining to determine its legal status as a "trust instrumentality" whose Regents owe "the highest possible fiduciary duty" to the American people.
Three courts. Three doctrines. One outcome: no court reached the merits.
Raven's filings argue that this is not coincidence—it is structural.
"When courts convert constitutional claims into procedural technicalities, they don't resolve disputes—they avoid them," Raven said. "And when that happens across multiple courts at once, it raises a far more serious question about the system itself."
The implications extend beyond one litigant.
Legal scholarship has long recognized that pro se litigants—particularly those challenging government action—face disproportionately high dismissal rates, often at the pleading stage. But rarely do three independent courts, in three separate jurisdictions, produce decisions that mirror each other so closely in structure and reasoning.
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At stake is more than individual relief.
If administrative actions can evade review through procedural reframing, if fiduciary duties owed to the public can be declared unenforceable without analysis, and if ongoing constitutional violations can be collapsed into expired claims, then a fundamental principle is in question:
Whether courts remain neutral arbiters—or have become institutional gatekeepers.
Full appellate briefs and supporting documentation are available here:
https://714baldwinstreet.com/appeals-raven-v-nysdec
https://smithsoninstitution.com/appeal-raven-v-trump
As these appeals move forward, they present not just legal questions—but a broader test of judicial accountability in an era of declining public trust.
Because when the referee starts shaping the game, the outcome is no longer justice—it's control.
What ties them together is not the subject matter. It is the method.
Across a federal constitutional case, a New York Article 78 proceeding, and a federal trust-law action involving the Smithsonian Institution, Raven alleges that each court employed the same playbook: reframe the claim, narrow the issue, and dismiss without reaching the merits.
The pattern is not theoretical—it is documented.
In the federal Second Circuit appeal (#26-601), the district court dismissed a civil rights claim by recasting ongoing governmental conduct through 2025 as a single event in 2017—effectively erasing years of alleged constitutional violations.
Rather than apply the required liberal construction for pro se pleadings under Haines v. Kerner, the court dismissed the case sua sponte without allowing amendment.
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In the New York Appellate Division appeal (#CV-26-0480), the court avoided the central statutory question—whether the DEC ever lawfully established a "significant threat" classification—by treating a registry listing as conclusive proof of legality.
The result: a dismissal grounded not in statutory compliance, but in assumption.
And in the D.C. Circuit appeal (#26-5081), the court dismissed a case raising unresolved constitutional and fiduciary questions about the Smithsonian Institution—while explicitly declining to determine its legal status as a "trust instrumentality" whose Regents owe "the highest possible fiduciary duty" to the American people.
Three courts. Three doctrines. One outcome: no court reached the merits.
Raven's filings argue that this is not coincidence—it is structural.
"When courts convert constitutional claims into procedural technicalities, they don't resolve disputes—they avoid them," Raven said. "And when that happens across multiple courts at once, it raises a far more serious question about the system itself."
The implications extend beyond one litigant.
Legal scholarship has long recognized that pro se litigants—particularly those challenging government action—face disproportionately high dismissal rates, often at the pleading stage. But rarely do three independent courts, in three separate jurisdictions, produce decisions that mirror each other so closely in structure and reasoning.
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At stake is more than individual relief.
If administrative actions can evade review through procedural reframing, if fiduciary duties owed to the public can be declared unenforceable without analysis, and if ongoing constitutional violations can be collapsed into expired claims, then a fundamental principle is in question:
Whether courts remain neutral arbiters—or have become institutional gatekeepers.
Full appellate briefs and supporting documentation are available here:
https://714baldwinstreet.com/appeals-raven-v-nysdec
https://smithsoninstitution.com/appeal-raven-v-trump
As these appeals move forward, they present not just legal questions—but a broader test of judicial accountability in an era of declining public trust.
Because when the referee starts shaping the game, the outcome is no longer justice—it's control.
Source: Julian Raven Artist
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