The clerk's memo just says a status conference, which seems pretty standard for a newly transferred case, regardless of what else is out there, though, so any prior filings aside, is there a reason to think this is not just SOP "OK, get me up to speed on this case and why you are here"?
I'd imagine Hardin is going to suggest the court apply 28 U.S.C. § 1915(e)(2) even though it probably won't apply, unless he can present some argument that Russ is faking poverty or that notwithstanding the Tenth's opinion, the case is frivolous. In addition, he should renew complaints about Russhole's procedural shenanigans. Those might be moot as having been violations of another court's rulings, but it would at least bring the court up to speed on the position the case was in in the last court, and the court may be less tolerant of deliberately pulling shenanigans and then trying to plead dumb pro se litigant blundering. He is dumb, but he's dumb for deliberately pulling this shit.
He also won't be able to claim he didn't show up because he thought saying he was appealing in the Tenth or whatever automatically stayed the case. He just got his willy whacked with a ruler for that stunt which is exactly why the case is in Florida now.
And pro se plaintiff or not, I think it should be gloves off from now on for deliberate, inexcusable procedural defaults.
And of course Russhole could pull a Stupid Russ Trick and do something like openly refuse the order of the court and say he refuses to litigate in Florida. That'd turn out well.
I assume Hardin will also give a brief heads-up on the general direction he'll be taking, probably a renewed motion to dismiss both on the original grounds (despite this being unlikely to be allowed to be relitigated) as well as on separate grounds, such as failing to reply to the (I believe four) motions in the original Utah court, which should also be renewed here.
Because of the rather bizarre procedural posture (change of venue after a trip to appeals court after being dismissed by the original trial court), the Florida court is unlikely just to throw the case out instantly, but may be willing to entertain a default on the grounds of procedural shenanigans just to have an alternative to addressing the res judicata issues.
Ordinarily, you couldn't just file serial motions to dismiss, but in this case, the reason for dismissal arose after the original motion.
If he continues pulling shenanigans like in the previous court, I doubt the Eleventh Circuit will have much interest in someone who deliberately and repeatedly defaulted, especially considering outrageous nonsense like continuing to maintain that an address on a street that doesn't even exist is absolutely correct. That's just an insult to everyone's intelligence and even his own for being such a colossal dimwit he thinks lying about something like that is a good idea.
I mean I'm kinda forced to be patient, the court system is seeing to that. I've just never seen such a idiot as Greer. Intelligent enough to work the court system to a rudimentary degree, but too dumb to know when to stop and cut his losses. It just hurts to watch, so much.
Because of his greasy gimp face, he looks more mentally retarded than he actually is, so gets cut slack for things he did on purpose out of malice.