Joseph Camp is tossing enough foreign paperwork at a Florida judge to start a bonfire. It’s a bold move for a guy who isn’t even part of the lawsuit.
The legal drama in Noshirvan v. Couture just got a lot weirder. Joseph Anthony Camp is a non-party in this fight. He decided to dump a pile of international documents into the court record anyway. Most of these papers have nothing to do with the actual case. It’s the classic “kitchen sink” strategy. He’s hoping if he throws enough at the wall something will stick.
The Colombian Order and the Self-Authentication Myth
Camp wants the Florida court to look at an order from a Bogotá court. He filed something called an Acción de Tutela against Danesh Noshirvan in March 2026. He acts like this is a massive win. It isn’t. The document is just a preliminary order. It says the court will hear the case. It also pulls in groups like Meta and the U.S. Embassy.
Camp claims the record is perfect because it has an electronic code. He says it’s self-authenticating because he grabbed it himself. That’s not how the law works. These foreign records don’t prove anything about the main case. The real fight is between Noshirvan and the Couture and Garramone defendants. Camp is just a big nasty mouth in the peanut gallery.
Criminal Allegations and the Missing Names
The filing gets aggressive about criminal charges in Colombia and Belize. The problem is the documents don’t back up the trash talk.
- Camp claims Noshirvan and James McGibney are both facing criminal charges in Colombia.
- The actual Colombian criminal complaint only names Danesh Noshirvan as the suspect.
- James McGibney isn’t even listed on the form.
- Camp says both men face immediate arrest and INTERPOL Red Notices.
- He later admits those notices haven’t actually been published yet.
A Background Check Disguised as Legal Evidence
Most of the filing is just a history lesson on Joey Camp himself. He included his own Colombian refugee papers. He has a safe-conduct pass valid through July 2026 while he waits for a refugee status decision.
He also shared his own FBI and Colorado criminal records. It’s an interesting choice. These records show a 2013 federal conviction for computer fraud and identity theft. They also list his past arrest in Colorado for stalking and intimidation and a criminal history that goes back to 2001. It’s a lot of personal baggage for a filing in a civil trial. Of course the judge rejected it.
The TL;DR: A professional meddler is flooding a Florida court with his own criminal history and Colombian paperwork to distract from a case he isn’t even part of.



