Other than a load of credibility, and possibly the money spent on filing a lawsuit that I suspect may be lost due to lack of meaningful evidence, what loss are you referring to? Your written acceptance of the turtles, despite finding upon receipt that their sizes were inaccurate, makes the size aspect a non-issue. You state repeatedly that the turtles you received are
definitely the very same ones that he'd posted for sale several months earlier, yet I don't recall seeing anything more than simple speculation to prove that. You seem to be good at throwing

against the wall, but you're horrible at managing to make it stick.
If you actually had these recorded admissions of guilt, it's nearly inconceivable that they won't amount to a kill shot. If these recordings existed, I don't doubt for a second that you'd have long since rubbed them in our faces. Despite your insistence to the contrary, your posts here are telling me that you know you can't come close to proving that the genetics were misrepresented; so I think you're desperately hoping someone here will tell you that the size discrepancies will be enough to win your case.
Considering that you've completely failed to prove your case to a forum full of people who'd actively love having a new scammer's name to add to The List - people who actually understand the herp-specific aspects of the situation - I can't help suspecting that you're feeling a sense of impending dread about the prospect of convincing a judge who likely knows nothing about reptiles. If I'm right about you not having the damning proof you claim, it seems a real likelihood that the judge will have to fall back on the written contractual aspects to render a decision. Sadly, they don't seem to favor your case much at all.