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Bones TV show

Lights Camera Perjury: Judge Sarala Nagala exposes Christopher Ambrose’s false service claim against journalist Frank Parlato.

Lights Camera Perjury

    Christopher Ambrose’s latest legal stunt fell flat. The disgraced Hollywood writer-turned-litigator tried to convince a federal judge that he’d personally served investigative journalist Frank Parlato with a defamation lawsuit—but the proof didn’t match his claim. The deputy’s own notes showed no service was made. Judge Sarala Nagala swiftly denied Ambrose’s motion, keeping Parlato’s extended response deadline intact and refusing to make him pay Ambrose’s $40 “service fee.” For Ambrose—already infamous for plagiarizing a Bones script and losing his first lawsuit—it’s another credibility collapse in a saga defined by deceit, desperation, and bad process.

    The $405 Lie: Christopher Ambrose’s his psychopathy. His false affidavit proved Dr. Bandy X. Lee’s diagnosis in his own words.

    The $405 Lie: How a Fallen TV Writer Exposed His Own Psychopathy

      Hollywood screenwriter Christopher Ambrose, once a rising name behind Bones, fell from grace after a plagiarism scandal. Back in Connecticut with millions in assets but no job, he weaponized “parental alienation” to strip his ex-wife of their children. Psychiatrist Dr. Bandy X. Lee later diagnosed him as exhibiting “full-blown psychopathy,” warning of his danger. Ambrose’s response? Sue her—then lie under oath to save $405 in filing fees. His deceit-filled affidavit exposed everything: hidden wealth, fake hardship, and government benefits he’d already been collecting. In trying to prove he wasn’t a psychopath, Ambrose proved Dr. Lee right—in writing.