Bryan Tew files bogus lawsuit against Spain

This is a continuation of the discussion over in the comments of the previous story and I’m just creating a new discussion to hold any further updates on this.

If you kept up with Bryan, you know that he was in Spain for pretty much all of 2020, going in and out of various shelters and trying to apply for asylum multiple times. I’m too lazy to link in the highlights, you can just read most of the 2020 posts and comments to get a run down of what happened.

Basically, he wasn’t getting what he felt entitled to and had a few run-ins with shelter staff, street people, medical staff, and police officers. He’s given up on Spain (now currently in Stockholm, Sweden) and has decided to file a completely ridiculous lawsuit in American courts against the Spanish government.

He is using the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act which is a law that generally shields foreign governments from lawsuits but provides some limited exceptions in which the immunity can be waived and a lawsuit could proceed.

If you read his lawsuit (above), Bryan is claiming that the Spanish government engaged in acts of terrorism and hostage taking against him (these are some of the things the FSIA allows for waiving immunity from a lawsuit against a foreign government). Of course this is completely ridiculous because Bryan was never subject to being held hostage in Spain nor was the hostility he received from a taxi driver (that was a result of his own harassment) an example of terrorism.

The lawsuit will undoubtedly fail. I feel like Bryan knows this but is just filing the lawsuit anyway because he wants there to be, as he has said before, an “official record” of the “atrocities” he thinks is happening to him. So making a complete fool of himself in court on the world stage is how Bryan thinks he will bring the right kind of attention to his situation.

Here is a video Bryan made pleading with various law firms to represent him in his case.. Bryan says he can’t pay them and they will only get paid when (if?) he wins, which is hilarious.

64 thoughts on “Bryan Tew files bogus lawsuit against Spain”

  1. Looks like Bryan scored some more pills. The clinic diagnosed him with delusional disorder.

    FYI, Google says these are Catalan words, in case you’re trying to run it through translation.

    Reply
    • Nice to see he is being treated for the nutter that he is.
      Zyprexa sounds like a good start.
      Way long ago, I told him what he needed for many of his problems is Elavil. It’s what I take for both depression and interrupted sleep patterns. It is not a sleep aid, but helps people stay in deep sleep longer.
      But Zyprexa might help, too. If he takes it. Which I doubt. It would mean admitting to the fact he is mentally ill.
      I’ve not seen a TI yet who would admit that, though. If they get the delusions to go away, they are no longer the center of the universe.

      Reply
  2. Bryan is getting tired of having to beat his meat constantly so he’s got himself chemically castrated again. He thinks he is entitled to free doses of chemical castration for some reason, even though he has no legitimate medical need for it and likely isn’t eligible to receive socialized medicine in Spain (I’m not actually familiar with Spain’s healthcare system).

    Bryan doesn’t understand that even people who have insurance and/or eligibility to receive some kind of free or discounted healthcare do not automatically get whatever drugs and treatments they want; pretty much universally you have to prove an actual medical need. Otherwise people would be barging down to the pharmacy counter demanding free narcotics because they said so.

    “FORCED TO PAY OVERWHELMING PRICES FOR MEDICAL TREATMENT BECAUSE OF CONSTANT SCRIPTED GAMES OF CIA:DIA CONTRACTORS USING SPANISH GOVERNMENT TO DO THEIR DIRTY WORK

    Medical treatment and medication should be free. Constant games based on the mathematical model known as the Hyper Game Theory

    Taking shot of Lupron to stop remote neural attacks of lust. Cost of medication is €500.00 Euros or $605.00 USD”

    Reply
  3. So I just ran across this video. It’s from a dude in Frankfurt who works (or used to work) at a law office in Frankfurt dealing with immigration and asylum cases. He claims he took one of Tew’s frantic phone calls while Tew was in the Frankfurt airport a while back.

    Only thing is this dude is a bit of a nutter himself. Still entertaining nonetheless. The bit about Tew starts at about 6 minutes in if you want to skip the rest.

    Reply
  4. The law firm that Bryan hired to help him with his asylum interview in Spain and then Bryan subsequently threatened with a lawsuit for supposedly “corrupting” the legal process appears to have issued a DMCA / copyright takedown on one or more of Bryan’s videos that feature photos of that law firm’s lawyers.

    Edit: Replaced YT link with screen capture.

    Reply
    • Yeah, I had wondered if Bryan would get any blowback from the videos attacking his lawyers.

      It should be pretty self-evident that videos accusing lawyers you hired of taking part in a conspiracy against you aren’t generally the most wise thing to upload since, well, they’re *lawyers* and can easily do things like, for example, file lawsuits. Which is something Bryan also does but, unlike Bryan’s lawsuits, their lawsuits don’t get dismissed before they even go to trial.

      Reply
  5. Hot off the press. Bryan just had his asylum interview. Accuses his attorney of corrupting his asylum interview.

    No Bryan, you could have the best and brightest attorney in the world, you’d still lose your asylum bid because it’s obviously farcical.

    Posted an hour long audio recording (I haven’t listened), for anyone who wants to hear it: https://youtu.be/35U5Hq_LnFo

    Reply
    • I’m not sure if it’s the interview itself or just him talking to the attorney prior to the interview.

      The attorney’s going a mile a minute in Spanish at a rate much too fast for me to even begin to hope to understand. Like, I’m not from a part of the world where I would have studied Spanish in high school but I can generally get the gist of written Spanish (without using Google Translate) or people speaking Spanish when they’re speaking slowly because of its similarity to French (due to both languages having evolved from regional variants of Latin, obviously). However, English-speaking “fast-talking lawyers” have nothing on this guy’s speed.

      Reply
    • Now Bryan is threatening to sue the law firm that represented him. Hilarious!

      BRYAN TEW FILES LAWSUIT AGAINST LAW FIRM HIRED TO REPRESENT ASYLUM CLAIM & DELIBERATELY CORRUPTED

      Reply
  6. Bryan is whining that the mail box he had in San Diego is returning his mail as undeliverable. He put the mail box address as his return address in his correspondence to the court so his lawsuit may be in jeopardy and never get successfully filed.

    I know in the past he was using the address of a homeless shelter; I don’t know if he is still doing that or if he’s upgraded to one of those services that can receive, open, and scan your mail for you. Either the homeless shelter got tired of receiving all of his mail or he forgot to pay the bill. Bryan blamed the “hyper game theory”.

    Reply
      • Now he’s whining about, and filing suit against, his Spanish lawyers. And the Spanish government is doing things correctly and require an interpreter for his asylum, meeting. That he doesn’t recognize this as a good thing shows he is not thinking. His lawyer in Ecuador spoke perfect English, but did not translate everything said in the hearing test video. The audiologist (wrong type of expert, he should be seeing an ENT) said at least a paragraph, and the translation was a short sentence. Two translators guarantees he will be told everything, important for whatever agency /entity/people to know, too. Brushing off the government when they are trying to help is not a good tactic.

        Reply
  7. I know it’s not the region of Spain where Barcelona is but you have to presume that other Spanish regions may follow.

    https://www.thelocal.es/20210223/spains-galicia-to-make-covid-vaccine-compulsory-and-fine-those-who-refuse-it-up-to-60k

    Assuming Bryan’s not going to leave Spain again any time soon, it looks like he will be getting a quite-likely mandatory jab of one of the same vaccines he’s been spreading mind control conspiracy theories about.

    Reply
    • The funny thing will be most countries will end up mandating the vaccine in some way, especially for visitors and Bryan will not have much choice but to come back to the US.

      I’m sure there will be a few poorer countries that will tolerate the unvaccinated but he’ll have few options besides returning to the US.

      Reply
      • I just read that China is requiring all visitors to undergo COVID testing using an anal swab that China believes to be more sensitive / accurate than the typical nasal swab used in the west. It has already caused some international incidents after several diplomats were required to go through the procedure.

        Bryan might want to rethink his obsession with returning to China. Unless he’s really into ass play.

        Reply

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