Ron Paul's increasingly unruly followers have found a new way to take on the establishment: litigation.

A group of Ron Paul supporters unafilliated with the campaign, calling themselves Lawyers for Ron Paul, have filed suit against the Republican National Committee in California's 9th Circuit Court.

Their main complaint: delegates bound to Romney — because voters in a given state voted for him — will have to vote for Romney at the Republican National Convention.

"Each person going to Tampa is a free agent entitled to vote however their conscience is," said Edward True, who described himself as a voters-rights activist and whose complaints about the Iowa caucuses gave "momentum" to Lawyers for Ron Paul, of which he is now a part, he said.

The group is "trying to get media accurate on the real delegate count," True said.

Lawyers for Ron Paul only includes two lawyers, according to True, as well as "a couple of paralegals and three or four legal analysts." True estimates that over 100 people have gotten involved in preparing the suit.

"Not all of us are lawyers but every one of us has been spending a lot of our time looking at specific cases," True said. True was an Iowa caucus worker who raised questions about his precinct's returns.

The group is suing over a number of incidents at state conventions this past spring where they say Paul supporters were harrassed or the victims of election fraud; they argue that delegates should be allowed to whomever they want at the national convention.

RNC rules do not legally require bound delegates to vote for the candidate to whom they're bound. However, some state party rules do include that requirement.

The group made a video explaining the lawsuit: