Gades said:
I Found this site (United States Court Archive) where it has the documents related to the Romine v Stanton lawsuit. [...]
https://www.unitedstatescourts.org/federal/azd/969057/
PS. Not all the documents are present.
It's not quite a free site. Well, sort of.
The way it seems to work is that the court documents are distributed electronically.
PacerMonitor let you view a limited number for free (as long as you sign up for their trial), then you need to pay.
Sites like Plainsite and UnitedStatesCourts need "someone" to pay. But once someone pays, the documents become available for everyone to view for free.
The documents that are present are the ones someone paid to unlock. The ones that are only on PacerMonitor haven't.
So PacerMonitor shows the documents immediately they get them, in the hope someone will put their hand in their pocket.
The other sites only show the documents that have been paid to be unlocked, so the impression is that they didn't get them as quickly as PacerMonitor when the reality is that they likely did, but it probably took someone noticing them on PacerMonitor and then paying to unlock them on the other site(s) for the likes of us to notice them there.
The other place to watch is http://www2.azd.uscourts.gov/azd/callive.nsf/searchresults/$searchForm
You can search the judge's name to see his upcoming schedule (He's John J Tuchi). Or you can search for the 5 digit case number which is 00604 (short for 2:16-cv-00604). Seeing "Romine vs Stanton" there might give some indication that something is going to happen. But at the moment, all of the court's work has been done by the clerks of the court. The judge is barely involved yet, beyond ruling on pre trial arguments.