Collateral Damage
The Westminster judgment is already being weaponized.
The petition's Section III flagged the financial‑ruin and access‑to‑justice consequences of the decision below. Three downstream effects have already materialized in collateral cases — two of them resolved against Mr. Montgomery, and a third now actively being prosecuted, in real time, on the strength of the Westminster judgment — demonstrating both why the Supreme Court's review matters and why the Best Buy detention pattern itself is now beginning to look systematic.
The three collateral matters below are the downstream manifestations of the “lawsuit scammer” framing. The original, in‑case refutations — the briefing where the framing was first dismantled — live in the Westminster case itself; they are gathered, with deep links, in the From the Record Itself section above. The four cards below stack chronologically: the first highlights the current Westminster matter as the origin of the framing; the three cards beneath it then document what the Lakewood, Northglenn, and (a year later) second Westminster courts have done — or are now actively being asked to do — with the Westminster judgment downstream.
Best Buy I · Westminster
CURRENT CASE
Case No. 2023CV226 — the origin of the framing — and the most extensive in‑case refutation
The Westminster Best Buy detention of November 25, 2022 is the case the Colorado Court of Appeals affirmed and which is now before the Supreme Court on cert. It is also the first tribunal in the entire prior‑litigation history to deploy the “lawsuit scammer” frame — and the case in which Plaintiff has, to date, written by far the most extensive direct refutation of it.
Five separate filings in this case engage the framing head‑on: Plaintiff's Response to Defendant's MSJ (Sep. 2024), Plaintiff's Response to Defendant's Statement of Additional Material Facts, the MFR, § II (Dec. 2024 — six pages devoted entirely to the question), the Response to the Motion for Attorney Fees, § II (Jan. 2025), and the Appeal Reply Brief, § III (Sep. 2025). None of these passages has been engaged on the merits in any Opinion in this case.
Best Buy II · Lakewood
Case No. 2024CV242 — dismissed because of the Westminster judgment
A separate Best Buy detention at the Lakewood store, on November 24, 2023. Mr. Montgomery was a customer of that store, but the other three diametric distinctions still applied: no back registers, no plastic bags, no printed receipt. The trial court relied on the Westminster judgment as a basis for treating the new complaint as a "strategic misuse of litigation" — even though no court had previously found his prior cases frivolous and even though this case presented genuinely novel facts.
In response, Mr. Montgomery filed a 16‑page Motion to Reconsider that exhaustively walks the court through his entire Walmart litigation history and its diametric distinctions from Best Buy — the most complete contemporaneous statement of the record on the downstream prior‑litigation question, complementing (rather than duplicating) the in‑case refutation in the card above.
Best Buy III · Northglenn
Case No. 2024CV132 — indigent filing status revoked based on the Westminster judgment
A separate Best Buy detention at the Northglenn store, on November 24, 2023, in which Mr. Montgomery additionally sued the responding police officers under state law (a claim for which qualified immunity is unavailable). The trial court revoked his SNAP‑based indigent filing status, citing the prior Westminster judgment and the same "lawsuit scammer" framing — despite the new complaint including claims of first impression against the officers and despite his good‑faith service of the complaint.
The Combined Motion to Reconsider in that case — also linked below — addresses the IFP revocation at length and contains the "He just buys things, leaves, and says 'no'" passage that has since become a touchstone of the record.
Best Buy IV · Westminster (Iron Spear)
ACTIVE ATTACK
Case No. 2024CV241 — defense counsel actively wielding the Panel's affirmance to demand dismissal
A separate Best Buy detention at the Westminster store, on November 24, 2023 — almost exactly one year after the November 25, 2022 detention at the same store that produced this cert petition. This time the loss‑prevention encounter was conducted by employees of Iron Spear Protection Group, LLC, with the Westminster police summoned to the scene; Mr. Montgomery sued Iron Spear and Best Buy together for false imprisonment, defamation per se, and false arrest.
On May 12, 2026 — barely two weeks before this cert petition was due to be filed — Iron Spear's counsel filed a Motion to Dismiss that openly weaponizes the Panel's affirmance, asserting that “Plaintiff has repeatedly lost in the trial courts, the Courts of Appeals, and the Colorado Supreme Court has refused to take up any of his claims.” That sentence is precisely the kind of downstream bootstrapping the cert petition warned about: an unpublished procedural affirmance treated, in another case, as if it were a merits ruling on the underlying detention claim.
A pattern is forming — and it is Best Buy's, not the Plaintiff's.
Four Best Buy detentions, at three different Best Buy stores (Westminster repeated almost exactly one year apart), by the chain's employees and its contracted loss‑prevention security, all sharing certain features: the detentions occur outside the store or at the exit; the employees and guards never identify any specific item allegedly taken; police are claimed to have been called when no such call was made; and after‑the‑fact paperwork is generated to retroactively justify the encounter. None of these detentions involves any of the Walmart factors. The pattern, viewed across all four cases, is the opposite of a "scammer" pattern. It is a pattern of cookie‑cutter retail false imprisonment by a single chain.
And the pattern extends well beyond Best Buy. Aggressive receipt‑checking and door‑stop detentions at major retail chains have been a documented source of false‑imprisonment claims nationwide for over a decade. Walmart's practices in particular have drawn academic scrutiny — most notably Victoria S. Salzmann, Big‑Box Bullies Bust Benign Buyer Behavior: Wal‑Mart, Get Your Hands Off My Receipt!, 4 Fla. A&M U. L. Rev. (2009), which catalogues the structural incentives that drive these encounters. The article's central legal conclusion, published thirteen years before the November 25, 2022 detention at issue here, describes Mr. Montgomery's case with uncomfortable precision:
“Without particularized facts to reasonably justify a stop, systematic detention of most or all customers may implicate false imprisonment. Because receipt‑checking is not related to any fact of theft other than presence in the store, detention for failure to give consent does not create an adequate basis for invoking the privilege.”
— Salzmann, Big‑Box Bullies, 4 Fla. A&M U. L. Rev. at 26.
The article's elements track this case directly. The Best Buy employees who detained Mr. Montgomery never identified any specific item allegedly taken; they never articulated a theft observation in any document filed before MSJ reply; and they detained him without articulating any particularized fact suggesting theft. Salzmann's diagnosis — written in 2009 — is that detentions of this kind, even where consent is technically given, cannot rest on the shopkeeper's privilege.
This conclusion has particular force in Colorado. Colorado's shopkeeper's privilege statute — C.R.S. § 18‑4‑407 — is among the more demanding versions of the privilege in the country: it requires not the lower “reasonable suspicion” standard some states permit, but probable cause that goods have been unlawfully taken. The reply‑only manager affidavit and reply‑only receipt cannot satisfy that standard when (a) the body camera shows Plaintiff standing outside the store at the time of the alleged purchase, (b) the receipt timestamp is one minute after the detention had already begun, and (c) the manager's affidavit was not even solicited until 1 year, 10 months, and 13 days after the incident.
The Salzmann article also catalogues the precise authorities that defeat a shopkeeper's‑privilege defense in cases just like this one. Crase v. Highland Village Value Plus Pharmacy, 374 N.E.2d 58 (Ind. App. 1978), holds that the privilege requires probable cause to believe both that a theft occurred and that this specific person committed it — a generalized presence‑in‑the‑store inference is not enough. Mullins v. Friend, 449 S.E.2d 227 (N.C. App. 1994), rejects profile‑based stops as a basis for the privilege. West v. Wal‑Mart Stores, Inc., 539 So.2d 1258 (La. App. 1989), holds that even a brief, apologetic detention to make a shoplifting inquiry is unreasonable false imprisonment when there is no corroborating evidence of theft. Williams v. F.W. Woolworth Co., 242 So.2d 16 (La. 1970), holds that the moment a customer refuses to consent to a search, “legal justification for the detention ended.” And the United States Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, in United States v. Carter, 985 F.2d 1095 (D.C. Cir. 1993), holds the corollary directly: “The constitutional right to withdraw one's consent to a search would be of little value if the very fact of choosing to exercise that right could serve as any part of the basis for finding the reasonable suspicion that makes consent unnecessary.”
The fact pattern is also not novel in any meaningful sense. The Salzmann article opens with the case of Michael Righi, who refused to show his receipt at a Cleveland Circuit City in 2007, was physically blocked at his car door by a manager, was arrested by police who agreed with the store that it had the right to inspect his receipt, and was eventually exonerated of any theft. The article quotes Righi at the time: “I've always taken the stance that retail stores shouldn't treat their loyal customers as criminals and that customers shouldn't so willingly give up their rights along with their money.” What happened to Mr. Righi in 2007 is, structurally, what happened to Mr. Montgomery in 2022. The article's commentary on Righi applies word‑for‑word here: “Police officers are not guilty of false imprisonment if they reasonably rely on a storeowner's assertion that theft may have taken place. But when local law enforcement upholds illegal detentions, it does not cure the underlying illegality.”
And contemporary news coverage has chronicled the same problem continuously across multiple jurisdictions: local reports of unprovoked customer detentions, industry analysis of the legal exposure created by dragnet‑style door checks, and consumer‑rights commentary on the recurrence of these incidents at major chains nationwide. [Record Exhibit: Collected News Articles]
What was once primarily a Walmart problem has now bled into other major retailers in near‑identical form. The four Best Buy detentions of Mr. Montgomery are the local Colorado manifestation of a national retail‑policy issue — one that the academic and trade literature has been documenting for years. The receipt‑at‑the‑door practice that produced this litigation is not a Plaintiff problem; it is a retail‑industry policy problem now spreading from chain to chain.
The cert petition focuses, by design, on the procedural questions in the Westminster case alone. But amici should be aware that the consequences of this Court's denial would not be hypothetical: two collateral cases have already been resolved against Mr. Montgomery on the strength of the Westminster judgment, a third is now actively under attack on the same theory, and the rules the Panel announced will produce identical outcomes for every other plaintiff who finds himself in a similar posture — in any chain, in any store, in any Colorado court.
The Salzmann article closes with a sentence that — sixteen years after publication — reads as an answer to the Court of Appeals' “lawsuit scammer” footnote: “Litigation may not prevent unlawful detentions related to receipt‑checking, but enough consumers complaining just might.” Mr. Montgomery is one of those consumers. The academic literature, fifteen years before this case was filed, identified what he is doing as the only known mechanism for changing the policy. He is not a lawsuit scammer. He is, in the article's own words, the corrective.