Court of Appeals shot in Pennsylvania man’s complaint that silence from the online video game (in this case, very likely RuneScape) has infringed his rights.
The Third Circuit Court of Appeals dismissed Amro Elansari's claim in the decision Jan. 22. Elansari, an analyst who has filed 15 criminal cases in the federal district court over the past five years, has sued Jagex, the manufacturer RuneScape after the last mutiny in July. Elansari said he had co-ordinated the 2,000 hours he invested in the game and his management had no reason to do so. His transfer to them was denied.
The judge of the federal district court immediately dismissed this outfit, which was handwritten in a form provided by the court. Elansari was accused of "Discrimination – Business – Public Space," "Free Speech / Interpretation / Culture" and "due process – bad action – breach of contract" as a constitutional reason to listen to his claim.
When his case was dismissed at the district level, Elansari took it to a panel of three judges, who thought little of it. In particular, the judges argued that those allegations of violation of the Fourteenth Amendment (equal protection under the law) could be brought only if "any married respondent is a state actor." Jagex is a UK-based company, and another plaintiff Elansari named, Shanghai Fukong Interactive Entertainment, is a Chinese multinational company that bought Jagex in 2016.
Elansari also argues that his claim is one of segregation of residential properties (that is, or that some private businesses may not discriminate against their customers). The Third Round panel didn't do that, either.
"Even in showing the irony of Elansari's appeal to raise a settlement claim (…) there is no (…) alleged that Elansari lost access to Jagex's online game due to discrimination for any reason protected by Title II (the Right). Human Rights Act of 1964), ”the court wrote. * Those reasons are race, color, religion, or national origin.
Patriot-News of Harrisburg, PA you have noticed the crazy history of Elsari; brought 10 suits in the last 18 months, four of them in July 2019 alone. His last appeal, also argued, was a Tinder-directed case claiming that his former acquaintances said they were all in favor of him.
Other accusers by Elansari since 2015 include the University of Pennsylvania, an apartment complex in West Chester, PA, and Altria, which is the parent company for many cigarette brands, for allegedly poisoning the city with cigarette smoke.