MARCH 3, 2019| UPDATED MARCH 9, 2019 | 4 MIN READ
CBS lawyers’ delays are making it tough to find connections between Discovery creators and videogame
Lawyers in the Tardigrades lawsuit appeared to have resolved their disagreements by the March 8 deadline set by U.S. District Judge Lorna G. Schofield.
Attorneys for game developer Anas Abdin had complained to Schofield that CBS lawyers were not complying with her order to allow Abdin’s lawyers to gather evidence.
Abdin seeks a connection between Star Trek: Discovery and his videogame on the Steam platform. He alleges Discovery‘s creators must have stolen ideas from Tardigrades in 2015.
Meanwhile the lawyers on both sides asked the judge to cancel the March 12 status report she wanted.
Faced with a looming March 19 deadline for game developer Anas Abdin to show a connection between Star Trek: Discovery‘s creators and the videogame from which he says they stole his ideas, his lawyer asked the judge to intervene.
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In that February 27, 2019, letter to Schofield, attorney John Johnson accused defendant CBS’ lawyers of stalling in turning over evidence to meet that deadline.
Schofield admonished all the lawyers to follow her court’s rules: You better confer in good faith over discovery disputes.
In a March 4 statement, Schofield ordered them to talk it out by March 6. If that didn’t work then CBS was to give her a written explanation by March 8.
READ THE LETTER from Tardigrades attorney John Johnson to the judge asking her to intervene in CBS stalling tactics.
Attachments:
• Email exchange between the two lawyers.
• What the plaintiffs are looking for.
CBS believes Abdin’s lawyers are going on a fishing expedition in a desperate attempt to show Discovery‘s creators stole from the game developer. Abdin’s attorney says the judge allowed them to investigate and has told CBS it had better cough up the goods.
Either way, Schofield orderd the attorneys to appear before her on March 12 to report on the case status.
Abdin’s lawyers were trying to find CBS employees who were also members of the Steam platform who also developed Discovery, and who also voted in Steam's Greenlight program for his Tardigrades game.
Johnson hoped the judge would force CBS to provide the evidence he wanted:
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