Remember this case? The four trumpet-playing brothers from Utah? Their case against hundreds of federal and other public officials ended up in the Supreme Court. We have posted several stories about the brothers and their case(s) in the past few years, eight of them to be specific, beginning November 29, 2022.
To find them and get the details and podcasts with Loy and the other brothers, click on the Search feature in the left column and just type in “Brunson. For readers in the Mighty Network, look at the second line from the top of the page, and where it’s labeled “Search blog,” type in “Brunson.”
“It’s not over yet” at the U. S. Supreme Court (SCOTUS). Juan O Savin had characterized it metaphorically as a “loaded gun” being held against hundreds of Congress persons and other federal officials.
Here are a few excerpts reporting the latest on the situation. The article’s author, Matthew Vadum, has also been published in The Epoch Times, but this one comes from the Daily Signal of Santa Clarita County, California, dated May 29, 2024. QUOTE:
In a rare move, all three liberal Supreme Court justices recused themselves on Tuesday from a case involving a lawsuit filed against them for rejecting a previous lawsuit that sought to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.
In the case, the Supreme Court turned away a longshot bid by Raland J. Brunson of Ogden, Utah, who has gained notoriety among Donald Trump supporters for his legal activism.
The case at hand is known as Brunson v. Sotomayor. The petitioner sued Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and Ketanji Brown Jackson in their official capacities for voting on Feb. 21, 2023, to deny the petition for certiorari, or review, in his previous lawsuit, Brunson v. Adams.
The three Democrat-appointed justices recused themselves, citing judicial disqualification mandates in the U.S. Code and the Code of Conduct for Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States, which the nation’s highest court adopted in November 2023.
The previous lawsuit was Brunson v. Adams, in which Brunson sued hundreds of members of Congress in 2021, claiming that they violated their oath of office by not investigating election fraud in the 2020 election and by certifying the election victory of then-challenger Joe Biden, over then-incumbent President Donald Trump in a vote that concluded in the early morning of Jan. 7, 2021, following the security breach at the U.S. Capitol. END QUOTE
The rest of the story is here.
Remember how Juan O Savin keeps singing the refrain, “2020, it’s not over yet…” (And he laughs uproariously each time, perhaps because he, deliberately or not, butchers the tune—or equally possible, he is enjoying a foretaste of the joy of the victory that is coming to America and our liberty.)
And for your musical enjoyment, here is a video of the Brunson brothers on Johnny Carson’s Tonight Show playing “The William Tell Overture” by Rossini (made even more popular as the theme song of the old TV western, “The Lone Ranger” decades ago). Here is a screen grab of the video.
We appreciate the first comment below the video which opined: “The 4 brothers who can save America surely just a coincidence they play the “Trumpet”
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