After the ex-president of a company that provided computer services for the government changed his name to Jimmy Carter, he lost his federal security clearance, his corporate position and now a lawsuit by the company in which he defended himself with "nonsensical" pleadings, a Delaware state court judge has ruled.
Vice Chancellor Stephen Lamb imposed a seldom-employed sanction of default judgment against the ex-officer and major shareholder of Technology Development Corp., who had represented himself in TDC's declaratory judgment suit against him.
The vice chancellor said Alfred Olympus von Ronsdorf — the name the ex-officer adopted after abandoning the Jimmy Carter alias — "openly suggested," without any proof, that TDC's counsel was "paying bribes to the court." . . .
[V]ice Chancellor Lamb said von Ronsdorf's filings were not only "insulting," "disrespectful," "baseless" and "nonsensical," but were in bad faith and repeatedly unresponsive to the court's directives.
Alfred Olympus von Ronsdorf?? Details here from Andrews Publications via Findlaw.com.