The news buried in Alec Peters' latest post is that the judge
isn't holding a hearing on the motion to dismiss. He says he'll consider all the pleadings to date and rule from there. Same regarding the Klingon language amicus brief.
Some legal types are speculating that not holding a hearing doesn't bode well for the dismissal motion. Only time, and Judge Klausner, will tell, of course.
Also, one of the things a judge can do during a
scheduling conference, such as the one that will be held in this case on May 9 is dispose of pending motions, such as the dismissal.
The other bits of news Peters teases in this blog:
• News about the studio (wasn't it just a "warehouse"?) completion may refer to reaching terms on the asset transfer to the
secret private investors' group of which he refuses to confirm whether he's a member.
• The legal surprise Winston attorney Erin Ranahan appears nearly ready to pull out of her hat. Can't comment much about that since it would, by definition, have to be something truly novel. Possibly miraculous. I'll leave that to you. Of course, it could be something more prosaic, like finding some kind of discrepancy in the chain of ownership of Star Trek copyrights, which would be explosive (and a lot of attorneys would get fired LOL) and throw a big monkey wrench into the case.
However, at best, that would be a delaying tactic, since an ownership dispute wouldn't move Axanar any closer to production; the copyrights wouldn't fall into public domain, they'd merely transmogrify into a complicated set of legal knots that would have to be disentangled before this lawsuit could move forward.
Anyone else care to imagine the possibilities?