ORDER
Complainant, a pro se litigant, filed a misconduct complaint against a magistrate judge. Instead of filing a statement of facts, complainant attached over a hundred pages of material including what appear to be documents from his underlying civil rights case, various motions purportedly made before the “executive branch, et al,” two copies of a letter from a financial specialist, seven photocopies of envelopes, a copy of three receipts, an automated email from PACER and two local court rules. Complainant also attached a filing in which the defendants accused him of “harassment” because he filed “217 pages of [attachments” to his motion and filed another motion “consisting of 335 pages.”
Under our rules, a judicial misconduct complaint “must contain a concise statement that details the specific facts on which the claim of misconduct or disability
A complaint of judicial misconduct is a court filing and is therefore subject to the normal constraints on such filings, including the requirement that it conform to procedural rules governing format and content. See In re Complaint of Judicial Misconduct,
Although complainants may attach exhibits to their complaint, the exhibits must directly support the allegations of misconduct or disability in the statement of facts. Cf. Tenth Cir. Misconduct Rule 6.2 (“[Tjhe complainant should take care to include only documentation that is required to support the specific facts alleged[, while excluding ejxcess or irrelevant documentation.... ”). In a complaint alleging prejudice or bias, for example, excerpts of a trial transcript in which the judge allegedly made racist comments would be appropriate; the entire record would not. See In re Complaint of Judicial Misconduct,
The Judicial Council receives hundreds of complaints every year, which it must review with limited staff. Rule 6(b)’s requirement that the complaint contain a short and plain statement of the alleged misconduct is designed to focus the review process, conserve resources and ensure that all complaints are reviewed in a timely manner. These goals can’t be achieved if the Judicial Council and staff must weed through hundreds of pages of materials looking for something that could possibly amount to misconduct. See In re Complaint of Judicial Misconduct,
As noted, the complaint here contains no statement of facts at all, much less a short and plain one. Without that statement to explain the relevance of the exhibits, the exhibits will be disregarded. Because the complaint makes no allegation of misconduct, it is dismissed.
DISMISSED.
