202514896 –
LEHMAN, ANDREW P vs. BLOGGER INC
(Court 215, NATHAN J. MILLIRON)
REPUBLISHED BY LIT: MAR 13, 2025
Stay tuned for LIT’s synopsis of this fraudulent case, where Texas Felon Andrew Lehman and his now Jailed co-Plaintiff Monica Riley were encouraged by Dishonorable Gail Killefer to pursue defamation claims in LASC in California (granting pauper application to Lehman), when all the parties live and reside in Texas.
The Sworn Affidavit Of Personal Service On Defendant Blogger, Inc D/B/A Lawsintexas.Com By Licensed Process Server Gilbert Valle Is Attacxhed [sic] Hereto.
The Indicted Felon, The Perjury, n’ Rush Fee by Lyin’ Pauper Lehman, who’s on probation in Texas, yet files a fraudulent lawsuit against Blogger Inc in Los Angeles Superior Court. Granted in forma pauperis (as usual). Then adds Convict Monica Riley now in a TX Jail for 5 yrs. 🔥 pic.twitter.com/EXGKOlaalu
— lawsinusa (@lawsinusa) March 13, 2025
Who was Tom Killefer, Dishonorable Gail Killefer’s Father (deceased)?
REPUBLISHED BY LIT: MAR 13, 2025
Tom Killefer, a banker, attorney and federal government official who served six years as chairman, president and chief executive officer of U.S. Trust Corp., has died.
He was 79.
Killefer, who retired as head of the New York-based investment firm in 1982 and left its board in 1989, died Sunday in Portola Valley, Calif., of cardiac arrest.
A Republican, Killefer was appointed by Democratic President John F. Kennedy in 1962 as executive director of the Inter-American Development Bank.
He also served on the U.S. Commission for Germany in the early 1950s, as an economic advisor to U.S. delegates to the United Nations and as representative of the U.S. Maritime Law Assn. at the 1958 Geneval conference on international sea law.
Born in Los Angeles and raised in Hermosa Beach, Killefer attended Stanford University, where he played varsity baseball and was elected student body president.
He earned his law degree at Harvard and was a Rhodes scholar at Oxford University in England.
A World War II hero, Killefer was a Navy pilot with the “Skull and Crossbones” fighter squadron and earned the Distinguished Flying Cross, the Navy Air Medal and a Purple Heart.
Before joining U.S. Trust, Killefer served as general counsel, chief financial officer and executive vice president of Chrysler Corp.
He also headed the board of directors of the Detroit branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and the board of Detroit’s Henry Ford Hospital.
Killefer served as a trustee of Stanford and the Naval Aviation Museum Foundation, and worked with the Atlantic Council of the United States, the National Council on Crime and Delinquency, the Lucille Packard Children’s Hospital and the Community Foundation of Santa Clara County.
He is survived by his wife, Carolyn, four children and four grandchildren.
IMPEACH “The Elephant in the Room”:
Outlaw n’ Democrat Gail Killefer
As she writes about in her article, titled:
Implicit bias in decision-making and mediation
Unconscious cultural bias – “social cognition” – and how it can affect decision-makinghttps://t.co/bxoM9A0DL8 https://t.co/vw0otRjQeO pic.twitter.com/m8gaWCWMUr— lawsinusa (@lawsinusa) March 13, 2025
Implicit bias in decision-making and mediation
Unconscious cultural bias – “social cognition” – and how it can affect decision-making
Gail Killefer
SEP, 2015 | REPUBLISHED BY LIT: MAR 13, 2025
In September 2014, the Honorable Jeremy Fogel, a United States District Judge and Director of the Federal Judicial Center (FJC), the federal judicial research and education arm, presented a training session entitled
Implicit Bias to panel mediators and judges of the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California.
The Central District offers advanced mediation training to members of the Court’s Mediation Panel in appreciation for their work and to enhance the quality of their services.
The Mediation Panel is composed of over 220 experienced attorney-mediators who are appointed by the Court.
Panel mediators meet strict qualification standards, including at least ten years’ legal practice experience and substantial experience with or knowledge of civil litigation in federal court.
They volunteer their preparation time and the first three hours of the mediation session.
Attorneys should be aware of this Court resource – and take advantage of the services offered by the panel.
In the September seminar, Judge Fogel addressed unconscious cultural bias and how it can affect both decision-making and the mediation process.
As individuals, we “know what we know” and our attitudes are directly impacted by that. Far more subtle is how we are influenced by “what we don’t know” – and even more deeply hidden is how we are impacted by “what we don’t know we don’t know.”
“Social cognition” – the way we process social information – can lead us to different conclusions.
Our life experiences shape the way we see other people.
Even though all decision-makers presumably want to arrive at an outcome that is legally correct and fair to all parties, different points of reference can lead to different decisions.
What is implicit bias?
After a short lecture, Judge Fogel asked the audience to complete several short exercises, which demonstrated how real – and how unconscious – the influence of our life experiences and culture can be on our decision-making.
Members of the audience were asked to step into a judge’s role and decide whether to allow a debtor in Chapter 13 bankruptcy to pay private school tuition for the debtor’s child.
The question was whether private school tuition was “reasonably necessary” for the maintenance or support of a dependent of a debtor.
(11 U.S.C. § 1325(b)(2)(A)(i).)
In the first scenario, the debtor worked for minimum wage and was a single father.
A year before, the debtor had lost his wife; she was the victim of a random shooting.
The family was Baptist.
The debtor’s 15-year-old daughter was a sophomore at a Jesuit parochial school with a high graduation rate.
The local public school had a poor graduation rate – and a history of violence on campus.
Members of the audience volunteered their opinions as to whether they found private tuition for the daughter “reasonably necessary.”
Judge Fogel inquired about the basis of these decisions.
Some audience members decided against the tuition, seeming to take the attitude that life is hard and a debt is a debt.
Others argued that the investment in tuition would produce a better return to society than paying off the creditors quickly.
Moreover, this latter school of thought argued, it was not the daughter’s fault the father went into bankruptcy; it would not be fair to deny the daughter a good education.
Judge Fogel then modified the scenario several times:
he changed the age and name of the child;
the safety, class size, or graduation rate of the local public school;
and the race or religion of the family.
He also changed the gender and employment of the surviving parent, and the cause of death of the deceased parent.
With each new scenario, Judge Fogel asked the audience:
Was private school tuition “reasonably necessary” for the maintenance or support of the debtor’s child?
The law remained the same, but the sympathies of the audience shifted with the altered facts.
When the child lived in a violent neighborhood, or when the child was raised by a single mother, sympathies changed in favor of allowing private school tuition.
Judge Fogel shared that, in other discussions, the number of those who favored allowing tuition payments increased when it was revealed the child’s father was a police officer killed in the line of duty.
Judge Fogel suggested that we don’t always know what makes us reach a certain decision:
What is “reasonable” to us is influenced by our life experiences, views, and pre-dispositions.
The varied reactions of the audience to the changing scenarios underscored the importance of social cognition to decision-making.
As readers of Advocate Magazine know, social cognition plays an important role in jury trials.
Trial lawyers strive to make their client and case “relatable” to a jury – for if the jury relates to a party, they will work harder to find in his or her favor.
An ancient concept
In 360 B.C., Plato described the same concept in Book VII of the Republic.
He wrote the Allegory of the Cave as a dialogue between Plato’s brother, Glaucon, and Socrates to show the nature of an education and the lack thereof.
Socrates described a group of men, prisoners, living in a cave.
Their legs and necks have been chained since childhood so they have always remained in the same place looking forward towards a blank wall, and unable to turn their heads.
A fire burns behind the prisoners, with people walking between the fire and the prisoners, carrying objects that they hold up so as to cast shadows in front of the prisoners.
The shadows on the wall are all that the prisoners have ever seen.
If the prisoners could speak, they would give names to the passing shadows.
If the passersby made noise, the prisoners would believe the sound came from the shadows in front of them.
Reality, for these prisoners, was what they heard and saw before them: the shadows.
Socrates describes how painful it would be for one of these prisoners to be freed:
If allowed above ground to see the sunlight, the sun would be blinding.
To see real people and other objects would, at first, be shocking, for it would all be new.
But to return to the cave would also be painful;
the darkness, once comfortable, would now be as blinding as the sun was just a day or two before.
And the other prisoners, upon seeing the returnee’s discomfort as he tried to see in the dark, might immediately conclude that life outside the cave was dangerous – and to be avoided at all costs.
Like the prisoners, we all project a reality through the lens of our experience.
This lens enables our brains to organize the information we receive; none of us is purely objective.
If we become aware there is another way to view the same information, our interpretation of that information might change radically as a result.
But if we are not aware that our view of reality is through a lens, and don’t consider the nature of that lens, our view is limited, like that of the prisoner.
Seeing the light
Judge Fogel distributed a factual scenario similar to a case once before him, and asked the audience to circle any words that revealed potential sources of implicit bias.
As members discussed their individual findings and compared them with the opinions of others, members of the audience seemed to become more aware of what they actually knew, what they thought they knew, and what assumptions they made about the case without a factual basis.
The room was full of intelligent people – and the variations in lenses became increasingly apparent.
Judge Fogel emphasized that none of us is a pure receptor of the facts.
We can feel passionate about an issue without knowing what is making us feel that way.
Thus the more we know what is in our lens, and what our blinders are, the better our fact-finding will be.
Why does this matter in mediation?
Why does Implicit Bias matter in mediation?
Most obviously, any evaluations offered by the mediator are affected by what the mediator believes the facts are.
If the mediator’s view of the facts is skewed or incomplete, the mediator’s opinion can be off-target, resulting in unintended consequences.
Implicit bias may, also, interfere with a good settlement when a mediator’s tendency is to “get it done” within a limited number of hours, or with the attitude that “when everyone is unhappy with a settlement, it must be a good settlement.”
When the mediator’s view of the facts hijacks a mediation, the parties may end up with a less than optimal settlement.
But, when a mediator is process-oriented and takes the time throughout the session to explore possible miscommunications and unexplored issues, the chances are better that the parties will see “more than the shadows on the wall” – and conclude with an agreement that each wants and understands.
One of the Panel Mediators asked, “Whose mediation is it – the parties’, the mediator’s or the judge’s?”
Judge Fogel quickly confirmed that a mediation belongs to the parties, but observed how the litigation culture has infiltrated mediation, making it less “alternative” and more “litigation light” than it was two decades ago.
Mediation began as a process that followed whatever path was necessary to get the parties to “yes;”
today’s mediations all too often provide a forum for attempting to score points at the other party’s expense.
Closing
In closing, Judge Fogel suggested that mediators create a space in their minds to consider what they do not know:
to slow down their thinking and question whether they are making a cultural assumption and need to look at the questions more carefully.
He referenced Daniel Kahneman’s book,
Thinking, Fast and Slow.
The author describes fast thinking as intuitive; slow thinking requires a more questioning approach.
Judge Fogel encouraged the audience of attorney-mediators to do whatever they need to do to obtain mental clarity – to take care of themselves by paying attention to exercise, possibly meditating, being well-rested, and eating healthily.
In making this point, he alluded to a study of parole outcomes that showed that judges were more likely to grant parole just after they had eaten – early in the morning and after lunch!
LIT: That’s total BS based on Killefer’s Outrageous $1.9M damages award to a Texas convicted felon (a Thug with a JD) using a post box in LA and LA Connect (Zoom) to attend her hearings, despite having received hard evidence from Blogger Inc that this was a sham and the pauper applications were fraud on the court, and the parties.
He stressed that curiosity is a great virtue in the work of a mediator and a judge.
The desire to ask questions and wonder about things is important.
Assume nothing: an open mind can take one where one never expected to go.
To use the Buddhist phrase, a “beginner’s mind” is valuable in facing a new dispute.
Remember that for each case, this is the first and only time you have had these particular parties in this particular dispute before you.
Anything is possible.
The elephant in the room
The presentation on Implicit Bias shed light on the decision-making process of each mediation participant.
One panelist said he was persuaded by the presentation to look not just at the legal question, but to consider the human component of every dispute – including the unique background and perspective of each individual involved.
Another wrote that the presentation was “a timely reminder that the persons interacting with the justice system come to the process with deep-seated views, of which they are not always even conscious, which color their views on the facts and their decision making.”
The presentation instructed the audience of panel mediators to consider how the views of each mediation participant may be affected by their biases.
Equally, if not more, important, the presentation encouraged the audience to see the previously unseen elephant in the room:
the lens through which we, as mediators, view the dispute.
This sophisticated insight was well received by the experienced and thoughtful attorney-mediators on the Central District’s Mediation Panel, as it no doubt will be by participants in their future mediations.
ELDER ABUSE IS A CRIME
Y’all in Government may have deleted our images and brand messages, hacked servers, monitor our every movement, shadow-ban free speech, but the story will still be told. This message is true under Trump 47 as it was under Biden.
LET’s GO TO WAR IN 2025 pic.twitter.com/OSqivHubPh— lawsinusa (@lawsinusa) March 11, 2025
Other News about Dishonorable Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Gail Killefer
REPUBLISHED BY LIT: MAR 13, 2025
Looking out across the 405 from The Getty Center, it’s possible to see off in the distance what appears to be a vineyard.
No, your eyes are not playing tricks on you. It is indeed a vineyard.
It’s called Moraga Vineyards Estate in Bel-Air and sits on 16 acres.
In the 1930s and 1940s, the property was a horse ranch owned by film director Victor Fleming. Tom and Ruth Jones bought the property in 1959.
Media mogul Rupert Murdoch purchased the property in 2013 for almost $30 million.
The winemaking is overseen by Scott Rich.
I recently received an invitation to attend a tasting at the winery.
The winery has no public tours, so I was excited to take advantage of this rare opportunity, and took my wife, who’s more of a wine connoisseur than me.
Photos: Courtesy.
Winemaker Scott Rich, with Brentwood resident Gail Killefer, enjoying a glass of wine at the estate.
It was a terrific experience.
The setting is so quiet. Amidst the many acres of vines are huge oak trees, and a tasting facility that includes an underground cave for storing and aging the casks of wine.
It felt like we were visiting Los Angeles, circa 1880.
How amazing L.A. must have been prior to the freeways.
It isn’t a particularly large winery.
There are currently 6.3 planted acres so production is limited but if you join the wine club you’ll get early access to bottles and you can also visit the vineyard.
At the tasting event, staff quietly and politely poured samples of wine and passed around hors d’oeuvres.
Again, I’m not a connoisseur, but I could tell from all the “oohs” and “aahs” that fellow visitors thought both the reds (Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot) and the whites (Sauvignon Blanc) were pretty spectacular.
The wines are pricey – and for a reason.
The philosophy has been from day one to keep things simple and there is purity to the taste, according to those who write about wine.
If you’re interested in trying Moraga Estate wines, you can ask for them at the following local establishments:
Peppone, Divino, Toscana, Fig, Brentwood Country Club, Bel-Air Country Club, Beverly Hills Cheese Store, Bel-Air Bay Club, Georgio Baldi, Hotel Bel-Air, Bel-Air Restaurant, Nobu Malibu and Wolfgang’s Steakhouse in Beverly Hills.
You can also buy Moraga Estates wines directly at Wally’s in Westwood.
If you call Moraga at 310.471.8560, you can place an order and pick it up from Moraga Estate’s office located at 650 North Sepulveda Blvd.
For more information visit, www.moragavineyards.com.
Robin Ellis of Poldark fame gave a recent talk about healthy cooking at Chevalier’s Books in Larchmont Village.
Robin Ellis signs a copy of Mediterranean Cooking for Diabetics: Delicious Dishes to Control or Avoid Diabetes.
Ellis is mostly known for his role as Captain Ross Poldark in “Poldark”, a popular BBC television series that showed in the 1970s that has now been remade.
The new Poldark series, which is about to start its second season this September 25, stars Aidan Turner.
The setting is in Cornwall in the years just after the Revolutionary War, which saw England withdraw from the colonies in defeat.
Robin Ellis as Poldark.
Conditions in the English countryside are tough enough with the battered post-war economy, but broken hearts, treachery and family intrigue all compound the difficulties Poldark encounters upon his return from America.
Ellis plays the very stern Reverend Halse in the new series.
Rev. Halse oversees a trial in which the new Poldark, Aidan Turner, must defend himself against difficult odds.
The Poldark television series are based on a series of historical novels by Winston Graham.
But it’s cookbooks, and not historic novels about a swashbuckling soldier turned tin miner, that now occupy much of Ellis’s time.
Meredith Wheeler took over 250 photos that appeared in the cookbook.
Ellis was diagnosed with Type II Diabetes in the late nineties and decided to champion the cause of healthy eating.
His new cookbook – his third – is called Mediterranean Cooking for Diabetics: Delicious Dishes to Control or Avoid Diabetes.
One doesn’t need to be a diabetic to use or enjoy these cookbooks – the dishes are tasty, wholesome and can be enjoyed by all.
Switching to this diet now can help prevent health issues among currently healthy individuals.
Ellis’s wife, Meredith Wheeler, is a former television news writer and producer.
She helped round up the audience that attended the book-signing at Chevalier’s, one of several book signings taking place around the U.S.
Ellis and Wheeler, who now live in France where they grow many of their own vegetables and shop the local farmers’ markets, have family and friends in Los Angeles and several turned out to hear about both the cookbook, the new Poldark series – and tales of Poldark past.
Writer Joe Cabello, book purchaser and attorney Gail Killefer and actor Andi Bradley at the book signing, held at Chevalier’s Books on Larchmont.
Wheeler took over 250 photos that appear in the new book.
Robert Lloyd, TV critic at the Los Angeles Times, asked Ellis a serious of questions that helped connect the dots regarding how Ellis shifted from TV acting to theater to voiceovers to writing cookbooks.
One member of the audience asked Ellis if the timing of the new Poldark series helped boost cookbook sales.
Ellis said the timing was indeed amazing and that he felt very lucky.
“It’s like I’ve been resurrected, 40 years later.”
When the event was over, Ellis and friends jaywalked across Larchmont Boulevard – it’s a good thing Reverend Halse wasn’t looking – and enjoyed a healthy Mediterranean meal at Le Petit Greek Estiatorio.
Gail Killefer, 65, of Los Angeles, has been appointed to a judgeship in the Los Angeles County Superior Court.
Killefer has served as director of the Alternative Dispute Resolution Program at the U.S. District Court, Central District of California, since 2010.
She was a sole practitioner and adjunct professor at the University of California, Hastings College of the Law from 2001 to 2010.
Killefer was an Assistant U.S. Attorney at the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Northern District of California, from 1989 to 2001, where she served as chief and deputy chief of the Civil Division.
She served as a trial attorney at the U.S. Department of Justice, Torts Branch, Civil Division from 1982 to 1989 and as a law clerk for the Honorable Barrington D. Parker at the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia from 1981 to 1982.
Killefer was an associate at Verner, Liipfert, Bernhard and McPherson in 1981.
She earned a Juris Doctor degree from Vermont Law School and a Bachelor of Arts degree from Stanford University.
She fills the vacancy created by the elevation of Judge Frank J. Menetrez to the Court of Appeal.
Killefer is a Democrat.
Who is Dishonorable Gail Killefer’s Dad (deceased)?
Tom Killefer, fmr chairman and CEO of the U.S. Trust Co., (@BofA_News), and fmr CFO Chrysler Corp. He graduated from Harvard Law School, a roommate of Joseph Kennedy Jr., the President’s brother.
https://t.co/vC4dt6QOa4 pic.twitter.com/HBupFuz0YP— lawsinusa (@lawsinusa) March 13, 2025
Composer Danny Elfman Appeals ANTISLAPP Denial
January 9, 2025
REPUBLISHED BY LIT: MAR 13, 2025
Danny Elfman has filed notice that he is appealing a judge’s denial of the “Beetlejuice” composer’s motion to dismiss a pianist’s defamation lawsuit against him, in which the plaintiff disputed Elfman’s arguments that her case infringed on his First Amendment rights.
Nomi Abadi’s Los Angeles Superior Court complaint against Elfman pertains to remarks he made during a July 2023 Rolling Stone interview.
Elfman’s denials of Abadi’s allegations of repeated sexual harassment and misconduct were included in an investigative piece about a settlement he made with his former mentee.
In a final ruling issued Christmas Eve, Judge Gail Killefer rejected Elfman’s anti-SLAPP motion, which cited the litigation privilege.
The state’s anti-SLAPP — Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation — law is intended to prevent people from using courts, and potential threats of a lawsuit, to intimidate those who are exercising their First Amendment rights.
“By authorizing Rolling Stone to publish statements attributed to Elfman … (he) sought to shield his actions from liability by hiding behind the litigation privilege,”
the judge wrote, adding that she was finding that the litigation privilege does not apply to the statements published in the article.
Elfman, 71, is represented by attorney Camille M. Vasquez, who was Johnny Depp’s lawyer in his dueling lawsuits with former spouse Amber Heard.
Vasquez filed the notice of appeal on Monday.
“The motion should be granted and this harassing and outrageous complaint dismissed,”
Vasquez argued in her court papers in favor of the anti-SLAPP motion.
But in court papers previously filed, Abadi stated in a sworn declaration that her claims are well-founded.
“My five years of hard work building a career in film composing has been destroyed as a result of Mr. Elfman’s blatantly false statements about me in the Rolling Stone article,”
Abadi says.
“His actions have forced me to abandon my dreams of film scoring to pursue other opportunities.”
The 35-year-old Abadi, who contends Elfman had a fetish about nudity that included driving without clothing, says she suffers from severe emotional distress.
“I have been diagnosed with anxiety and depression and the humiliation, stress and fear for my personal safety have compounded these feelings, which collectively have had a profoundly negative impact on my personal life,”
Abadi further contends.
Abadi’s application to the Association of Women Film Composers mentorship program was denied with no explanation after the publication of the magazine article, according to the plaintiff, who further maintains that exclusion from the program resulted in the loss for her of more composing opportunities.
According to Vasquez’s court papers, the intermittent friendship between Elfman and Abadi ended in political disagreements related to the 2016 presidential elections when Abadi insisted that voter fraud gave Hillary Clinton the Democratic nomination over Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.
In an attempt at humor, and partly to defuse their disagreement with a joke, Elfman in August 2016 filled a cocktail glass with various cleaning products from his bathroom counter, including the facial cleanser Cetaphil, to mimic a cocktail full of nasal drainage, all intended to be a joke about a cocktail he would like to serve then-President Trump, according to Vasquez’s pleadings.
Once Abadi’s romantic aspirations were dashed, the plaintiff turned on Elfman and made up a story that he had “behaved inappropriately around her,” according to Vasquez’s court papers.
