Setting the Record Straight: The Thomas Richards Walking Dead Lawsuit - By Lisa Weingarten Richards


                                                                             Artwork by Thomas Richards


The Independent recently published an article about the federal lawsuit I filed on behalf of my husband, Thomas Richards, against Robert Kirkman and the entities behind "The Walking Dead" franchise. Richards v. Kirkman, 5:25-cv-00089 – CourtListener.com While the article covers some basic facts, it omits crucial legal context and mischaracterizes both the strength of our case and the professionalism behind it. Even the title of the article is false (“The Walking Dead turned his life upside down when it used his name”). In fact, we were laughing at times when we spoke with the reporter. https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/walking-dead-lawsuit-name-kirkman-b2821196.html

What This Case Is Really About

The real story begins with years of frustration over censorship and Google alerts. My husband has been dealing with systematic suppression of his religious content across platforms, while simultaneously receiving frequent Google alert emails about a fictional psychopathic killer who shares his exact name.

For quite some time, instead of getting alerts about his own biblical ministry work, Tommy has been bombarded with notifications about this violent character. It is disturbing and demoralizing. No one would enjoy repeatedly seeing their name on the internet associated with descriptions of murder, dismemberment, and depravity rather than informing about their work.

This is what actually sparked the case - not some abstract legal theory, but the real, ongoing harm my husband experiences which is compounded by the censorship he experiences across all platform, whereas he used to be very popular online. (We have described this in other blog posts including SpirituallySmart.Com's Blog: You're Not Just a "Conspiracy Theorist" When There's a Real Conspiracy - By Lisa W Richards & Artificial Intelligence.) As his attorney and wife, I worked to translate this genuine grievance into something actionable within our legal system's framework, identifying specific laws and violations that courts address.

We explained this core motivation to the reporter during our interview. The case is fundamentally about protecting someone's ability to minister online without having their identity systematically contaminated by association with fictional violence. But this human element - the actual reason we filed suit - was absent from his article.

Instead, the reporter chose to dehumanize my husband by labeling him a "conspiracy theorist" and inventing terms like "Vatican truther" - language that appears designed to make readers malign him or dismiss him rather than recognize him as someone experiencing genuine harm to his religious ministry. This kind of character assassination serves no legitimate journalistic purpose. It simply serves to generate clicks (and more ad revenue) at the expense of human dignity.

How This Case Actually Developed

I told the reporter exactly how this case came about. My husband showed me the Google Alerts he'd been receiving and asked if we could do something about this situation. I said basically “let me see" and began researching what Kirkman had said in various interviews and articles.

What I found was astounding. With each detail I uncovered, it became exponentially less likely that this was coincidental naming.

During our conversation, the reporter seemed to understand this progression - how the accumulating evidence transforms what might initially appear coincidental into something far more deliberate. Yet none of this investigative process or the significance of Kirkman's naming patterns made it into his article.

The published article stripped away precisely the context that makes this case legally compelling. Worse, it contains basic factual errors and a misleading headline that further distorts public understanding of our legal arguments.

The Independent benefits when articles generate controversy and strong reactions. By misrepresenting our case as resting solely on name commonality - while omitting Kirkman's documented naming patterns that make coincidence statistically implausible - the article transforms serious legal arguments into what appears to be frivolous litigation.

This appears to be a deliberate editorial choice to create clickbait rather than provide balanced reporting. This kind of journalism does a disservice to legal discourse and public understanding of legitimate civil rights issues.

 

The Statistical Foundation The Independent Ignored

The Independent suggests this lawsuit rests on the coincidence of a common name. This demonstrates a fundamental misunderstanding of both the legal theory and the statistical evidence.

"Thomas Richards" IS a common name. If our case were simply claiming "creator used a common name for a villain," it would indeed be frivolous. But that's precisely why The Independent's omissions are so problematic - they stripped away the statistical foundation that transforms what would otherwise be a weak case against the Walking Dead franchise into compelling evidence of intentional targeting.

The Mathematical Reality of Compounding Probabilities

Here's the framework The Independent completely ignored:

The documented data points:

1.       Kirkman avoids last names generally - Calls them "never interesting" - "I just think it's funny to not give characters last names because, I don't know, it's interesting to me... when I'm at home and I'm writing, I'm like, 'I'm not doing this,' because you gotta come up with a list of names and then pick one and it's never interesting." https://www.cinemablend.com/television/2313771/why-the-walking-deads-robert-kirkman-never-gave-negan-a-last-name

 

2.       Prisoners in Walking Dead have no last names - Thomas Richards is the only exception (This is similar to in real prisons, where prisoners are not generally called by a first and last name)

 

3.       When Kirkman uses full names, he targets specific real people - Earl Sutton named after "a close friend of mine whose father is a blacksmith,"  https://screenrant.com/walking-dead-real-person-earl-sutton-factoid/  

 

4.       On using real people as inspiration: When asked if another villain was based on a real person, Kirkman coyly responded: "Was Gregory based on someone real? The world will never know." Entertainment journalists have written articles titled "Is This Walking Dead Villain Meant to Insult a Real-Life Jerk?" acknowledging this pattern: https://screenrant.com/walking-dead-gregory-villain-real-person-factoid/

 

5.       Kirkman cares deeply about names - Named his own son "Peter Parker Kirkman" https://walkingdead.fandom.com/wiki/Robert_Kirkman (referenced in Comics Journal #289)


6.       Tax fraud connection - Matches Tommy’s documented Tony Alamo association https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/tony-alamo-4224/

 

7.       Kirkman admits targeting real people for villains - "I'll go through people I remember" and specifically about Phillip: "The school bully of Breckenridge Elementary...was a boy named Phillip. So that's usually my shorthand for sh*tty characters. I will never name a good character Phillip. They will always be a villain to some degree." https://comicbook.com/the-walking-dead/news/the-walking-dead-the-governor-name-robert-kirkman-bully/

 

The pattern is unmistakable: when Kirkman uses full names, he's always referencing a specific individual. "Thomas Richards" clearly follows this same deliberate pattern.

Using conservative estimates where each factor reduces coincidence probability by 90%:

  • One factor: 10% chance of coincidence
  • Two factors: 1% chance of coincidence
  • Three factors: 0.1% chance of coincidence
  • Six factors: 0.000001% chance of coincidence

Take these six data points together and the conclusion becomes obvious - this was not coincidental naming.

The Legal Standards The Independent Missed

This case operates under established Virginia defamation law and Va. Code § 8.01-40. The "of and concerning" test doesn't require the plaintiff's name to be unusual - it requires identifying characteristics that connect the fictional character to the real person.

As cited in paragraph 65 of our complaint, Virginia courts apply the standard from Rush v. Worrell Enterprises: "the test is not whom the story intends to name, but who a part of the audience may reasonably think is named—not who is meant but who is hit." I did tell the reporter this information. He simply chose not to include it.

On using real people as inspiration: We’ve given you Kirkman’s own words here in this post. Readers can examine the evidence and look at the links and decide for themselves whether this represents a pattern of deliberate naming that makes the "Thomas Richards" choice statistically implausible to be coincidental.

Professional Standards and Legal Merit

The Independent's characterization of this case as the work of a "conspiracy theorist" and his lawyer wife misses the substantial legal research and precedent behind our claims. This lawsuit raises legitimate questions about:

  • Identity rights in the digital age
  • The limits of creative expression when creators admit to targeting real people
  • Statutory protections under Virginia law
  • The intersection of First Amendment protections and defamation law

The Remedies We're Seeking

Contrary to any implication that we're seeking to censor creative expression, our complaint offers reasonable remedies. We provide defendants two options:

  1. Character Redemption: Transform the character into a heroic figure, undoing negative associations
  2. Character Renaming: Change the character's name and issue a public clarification

Both options include technical measures to address search engine contamination - a legitimate concern in the digital age where search algorithms can amplify harm to real individuals.

Setting the Record Straight

This case presents serious legal questions that deserve serious analysis, not sensationalized coverage that omits crucial evidence.

My husband and I deserve to have those claims evaluated based on complete information rather than coverage designed to generate clicks at the expense of accuracy.

As an attorney with 15 years of experience, I stand behind both the legal research and the strategic approach reflected in this complaint. The case raises important questions about accountability in entertainment media and protection of individual rights in the digital age - questions that deserve thoughtful consideration, not tabloid treatment.


Lisa Weingarten Richards practices law in Virginia and New York. Richards v. Kirkman et al., Case No. 5:25-cv-00089, Richards v. Kirkman, 5:25-cv-00089 – CourtListener.com was filed in the Western District of Virginia on September 4, 2025. 

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Setting the Record Straight: The Thomas Richards Walking Dead Lawsuit - By Lisa Weingarten Richards

                                                                                                Artwork by Thomas Richards The Independent r...