WASHINGTON, DC, May 29, 2026 /24-7PressRelease/ — Pro se petitioner Donnahue George announced today that the Supreme Court of the United States did not dismiss his pending petition involving allegations tied to the unequal application of mandatory federal procedural rules in litigation against major financial institutions, including Citadel Securities, Robinhood, DTCC, and FINRA.
Instead of terminating the matter at the initial filing stage, the Supreme Court permitted the case to proceed through the formal paid booklet-printing process required for full docketed consideration.
The petition arises from Donnahue George v. Ken Griffin, Citadel Securities, Robinhood, DTCC, and FINRA, stemming from proceedings in the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, Case No. 24-13718.
George argues the case presents nationally significant procedural questions involving the mandatory application of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, including whether federal courts may excuse missed deadlines and procedural requirements for powerful institutional defendants without the findings and motions expressly required by the rules.
“The issue before the Court is bigger than one case,” George stated. “If mandatory federal procedural rules are not applied equally to all litigants, it raises serious concerns about uniformity, predictability, and public confidence in the judicial system.”
The Supreme Court previously denied in forma pauperis status, but did not dismiss the petition itself. Instead, the Court allowed the matter to continue through the standard paid filing process used for formally printed Supreme Court booklets.
Legal observers note that denial of in forma pauperis status does not constitute a ruling on the merits of a petition. Petitioners may continue by submitting the required filing fee and printed booklets in compliance with Supreme Court Rules.
The petition asks the Supreme Court to address whether mandatory procedural rules can be bypassed without formal motions, findings, or compliance with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, particularly in cases involving large institutional parties.
George is also encouraging public interest organizations, legal ethics advocates, civil procedure scholars, and amici concerned with equal application of federal rules to review the petition once formally distributed.
The case has attracted growing public attention online because of its broader implications concerning procedural uniformity, transparency, and equal treatment within the federal court system.
Case Information: Donnahue George v. Ken Griffin, Citadel Securities, Robinhood, DTCC, and FINRAU.S. Supreme Court Case No. 25-7006 Eleventh Circuit Case No. 24-13718
Media Contact: Donnahue George Pro Se Petitioner
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