Italian version Director Dr. Anthony Fauci testifies during a Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health, and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies hearing, on Capitol Hill in Washington on May 17, 2022. (Shawn Thew/Pool/AFP via Getty Images)
The attorneys general of Louisiana and Missouri and other plaintiffs asked a U.S. court in a recent motion to allow them to depose,
They also want to question five other officials, including Carol Crawford, chief of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) Digital Media Branch.
While emails and other documents uncovered in discovery have revealed an "enormous and far-reaching" censorship enterprise, the discovery,
Fauci, for instance, communicated in a long-shielded phone call with some scientists who went on to write a paper castigating others who were open to the theory that the COVID-19 virus came from a laboratory in Wuhan, China, where the first COVID-19 cases were detected.
Fauci was also in touch with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, although the content of oral communications between the two "is yet to be revealed," the new filing, dated Oct. 14, says.
Fauci hasn't made any statements under oath about his communications with big tech firms such as Facebook, despite that the judge overseeing the case ordered the government to provide answers from Fauci to questions, plaintiffs said.
Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt and Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry, the lead plaintiffs and both Republicans, announced recently they planned to seek depositions but hadn't identified any officials who they would seek to depose.
Proposed Schedule
Plaintiffs want U.S. District Judge Terry Doughty, a Trump appointee overseeing the case, to greenlight the 10 requested depositions.
That led to the production of hundreds of pages of documents, which bolstered plaintiff claims of Big Tech-government collusion.
In that order, Doughty said plaintiffs could alert defendants to any depositions plaintiffs wished to take, and that the parties would then meet to confer on any deposition requests.
If the parties didn't agree on the depositions, a joint statement would be submitted to outline their differences.
Doughty has seven days to rule on the new filing, which included objections from the government.
Department of Justice lawyers said that plaintiffs usually take no more than 10 depositions during normal discovery, and taking that many during expedited discovery would be too burdensome.
If any depositions are authorized, Doughty should exclude officials who weren't originally served with discovery requests, high-ranking officials, and certain other officials, the government lawyers said.
Plaintiffs said the arguments in opposition are meritless and should be rejected.
The descriptions of some officials as too "high-level" to be deposed is outweighed by the officials all having firsthand knowledge of the matter and the information they hold can't be obtained elsewhere, plaintiffs said, referring to a ruling in a separate case, United States v. Newman.
Even if the arguments had merit, Psaki is the only person who would fit the "high-level" designation, and she no longer holds an administration position, the plaintiffs said.
10 Others
Plaintiffs originally wanted to depose 20 current and former officials, but after discussions, pared their request to 10.
The initial request had included,
Also included were,
Plaintiffs still want to depose four others in addition to Fauci, Chan, Psaki, Murthy, Flaherty, and Crawford.
They are,
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