Hello (Good Morning?

) I think you will find the answer you're looking for (in depth) on the "hearing thread" that has yesterday's date on it.
But in short, here is the info I garnered: He didn't have to memorize them all, he just had to know specifically what he was looking for, or look until he found it, and mark it, THEN ask the judge if he can copy the specific documents relating to what he tabbed...(if I understand that correctly) because the judge is not going to just throw the names of private citizens, and all of their info, out there on a whim of Baez.
It is not at all uncommon for this to happen-for an attorney to have to go through those docs, and request specifics. In fact, apparently it usually happens that way. I personally don't think it will hurt the case or be cause for appeal, because it's not like it was out of ordinary. It's quite common practice, as I understand it. (It's just that Baez hasn't apparently practiced it often. Maybe because it's that legal-y stuff? heh.)
Also consider the fact that instead of wasting his time filing TWO motions about basically the SAME thing and spending time "preparing" (and I use the term loosely) the motions and "preparing" his arguments for court, he could have used those hours wisely-moseyed on over and looked at the documents himself.
In short, if I understand this all correctly, he deliberately ignored the first order, then argued for the same thing the judge denied in the first place....But instead he wasted everyone's time, including his own, then complained that he HAD no time.
Bottom line is, if the docs are SOOOO important to Casey's defense, and he wants everyone to take this "capital case" seriously, then HE needs to start taking it seriously- and review the information immediately, if he thinks it can help his client.
Don't mean to derail this thread, sorry
HTH