9th April 2025
The Price of Justice: $2 a Page?
Yesterday, we received an unusual orange envelope from the Office of the Register in Chancery, Court of Chancery, Leonard L. Williams Justice Center, Wilmington, Delaware. Inside was what appears to be a demand: a $2.00 per-page fee to submit documents intended to correct judicial errors. No online payment link was included, nor was a case number provided—though in prior correspondence, one was clearly referenced:
Twitter, Inc. v. Elon R. Musk, X Holdings I, Inc., and X Holdings II, Inc. (Case No. 2022-0613-KSJM).
It seems that if you identify errors in a U.S. court proceeding, you’re now expected to pay—to fix someone else’s mistake.
As previously stated in my communication, there has been no accessible method of electronic filing offered by the court DEPID# 02-02-10 / SLC# N210C. I was therefore forced to incur international postage charges to send these documents by Royal Mail Tracked Delivery (RN844103513GB). This is because X Corp and X (formerly Twitter) provide no human contact, no technical support, and no assistance for addressing legal or procedural failures on their platform.
According to this packet it cost 8.41 $ USD to send it to me > Does anyone else not thing this would have been cost effective to file it .
When access to justice becomes a paid privilege, billed per page, without even a digital filing route or response mechanism, what kind of justice is that?

But it gets worse.
Previously, we attempted to file these materials through the official portal: Home – File & ServeXpress. Initially, this seemed promising—an accessible online route to deliver time-sensitive correspondence. However, immediately after submitting the letter, our account was abruptly terminated without explanation, replaced with a message stating:
“Cannot sign in: suspended user #34162563047821.”
No contact. No reason. No recourse.
We were then left with no option but to incur international shipping costs to submit the same documents via Royal Mail Tracked Delivery (RN844103513GB)—a cost currently standing at £10.75 GBP (~$13.52 USD). These charges now form a debt owed by the institution, as this correspondence remains unacknowledged and unregistered.
This is the state of what is now called American Justice.
A system that offers no email, no technical support, no recourse—and a $2 price tag per page to correct their own errors.
We ask again: What kind of justice system charges the public to fix its own mistakes, and then blocks access without cause?
- Investigating Local Authority Failures in Child Care
- FOIA Request for Investigations on Little St James and Texas Ranch
- Re: Notification of Assessment Outcome – CASE-20246844 [SEC=OFFICIAL]
- Alleged Deletion of Specific Email Evidence
- Clarifying eGov’s History and Missing Video Insight
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