Team Prenda Gets Hit Hard With Contempt Sanctions For Lying To Court
from the how-many-shoes-are-there-to-drop? dept
It looks like Team Prenda has been smacked around once again. This is in the Lightspeed case -- which is one of the rare earlier cases where they were actually representing a real third party, rather than a made up entity that they really owned themselves. This was the case where they tried to drag Comcast and AT&T into the lawsuit and it all failed terribly. If you don't recall, in late 2013, the district court smacked them around as judge Patrick Murphy clearly figured out what was going on: "The litigation smacked of bullying pretense." Yup, you got that right. The defendant, Anthony Sweet, represented by Prenda killers Booth Sweet, asked for attorneys' fees and got them at the end of 2013, with the court ordering Team Prenda to pay up $261k, saying that Team Prenda "flat-out lied" to the court.In response, Team Prenda pleaded poverty, saying they couldn't pay up, but the court found them in contempt, arguing that even the financial statements they had filed with the court appeared to be submitted with the intent to deceive the court. Following that, Booth Sweet issued subpoenas trying to reveal more information on how Team Prenda had been hiding their money, leading Prenda mastermind John Steele to tell various banks that the subpoenas had been quashed when they had not been. That, as you may imagine, is not a good idea.
So it was somewhat surprising, last November, when the court failed to add more sanctions, saying that while it didn't trust Team Prenda, Booth Sweet hadn't presented enough evidence to make its case, despite all of the issues uncovered previously. However, late last week, the court changed its mind. After seeing more evidence, it believes that Team Prenda, once again, lied to the court and obstructed the discovery process. Steele and Paul Hansmeier tried to defend themselves, but the court doesn't buy it. Paul Duffy didn't even bother to respond to the court, so it assumes that he was "intentionally obstructive."
First up, we have the bogus claims by Steele that the subpoenas about his financial info had been quashed:
This new information demonstrates that, on January 29, 2014, Steele informed JP Morgan he intended to file a motion to quash subpoenas issued by Smith requesting Lightspeed’s counsel’s financial records. The following day, Steele sent a copy of said motion to JP Morgan without a file stamp. Several days later, JP Morgan requested a file stamped copy from Duffy. Duffy finally supplied a file stamped copy of the motion to quash on March 3, 2014 - two weeks after the Court had denied the motion and allowed discovery to proceed. Without any defense from Duffy, the Court takes his actions as intentionally obstructive, as he had reason to know the motion to quash had been denied at the time he relayed it to the bank.Next up, a discussion of how Steele and Hansmeier insisted they had no assets at all and couldn't pay the sanctions... while at the same time Steele was doing tons of renovations on his home and claiming (in his divorce proceedings...) that he had assets of over $1 million.
Smith also points to communications in the record between Steele and Sabadell United Bank on April 16, 2014..., in which Steele said the subpoena matter was stayed on April 4, 2014. Just five days before, Steele acknowledged that the Court’s stay order did not pertain to the subpoenas, but rather a joint motion for contempt that had been filed by Smith weeks earlier. Steele agreed to resolve any misunderstandings about the subpoenas being withdrawn, but he clearly did not do so based on his April 16th email to Sabadell Bank. Despite Steele’s explicit knowledge that discovery of his financial records had not been stayed, he proceeded to inform the bank that a stay was in place. This demonstrates his knowing interference in Smith’s discovery efforts.
Based on the above, the Court finds that Duffy and Steele both engaged in unreasonable, willful obstruction of discovery in bad faith. As such, discovery sanctions are warranted as to Duffy and Steele.
Smith also provides the Court with newly discovered financial evidence to support his assertion that, despite their pleas of insolvency, Steele and Hansmeier had sufficient assets to satisfy the Fee Order. On January 29, 2014 Steele and Hansmeier both signed and filed memoranda claiming the Court’s sanction posed a “crippling financial liability” on them.... Similarly, at a hearing on February 13, 2014, they asked the Court for leave to show inability to pay....Then there's Hansmeyer. It appears that Booth Sweet figured out the shell company where he's been hiding his money as well:
With regard to Steele, new evidence reveals that, in the two months before he filed his memorandum on January 29, 2014, he deposited over $300,000 into a new bank account with Sabadell Bank.... Moreover, within a month of asking the Court for leave to show his insolvency, Steele wrote checks totaling nearly $200,000, some of which were written to himself, for expenses related to home renovations. Between April and September of that year, Steele had deposits in that account totaling over $100,000. Steele briefly held a second account with Sabadell between September and October, into which he deposited $50,000, most of which he paid out to himself. Smith additionally points out that the value of Steele’s home more than doubled from April 2013 (when he purchased it) to October 2014 (when it was on the market). Further, on November 12, 2014, Steele still pled insolvency. Yet, just one month later, he represented in his divorce proceeding that his assets approached $1.3 million
As to Hansmeier, Smith presents evidence that, in the years leading up to the judgment against him, Hansmeier had transferred nearly half a million dollars to a company called Monyet LLC..., of which Hansmeier was the sole member, manager, and signatory for its accounts .... In a debtor’s exam of a related proceeding in June 2014, Hansmeier admitted that Monyet, LLC was set up as a trust for his son for purposes of estate planning .... However, documents from Scotttrade, Inc. reveal that Monyet, LLC was not solely associated with estate planning, as the bulk of its assets went towards expenses such as payment of appellate bonds and attorney’s fees, investments in Liverwire Holdings, LLC, and loans to his Class Justice LLC law firm .... Said expenditures occurred throughout the 2013 year and up to May 2014, demonstrating that Hansmeier had access to the Monyet funds both before and after he pled insolvency to the court.Yup. At the same time that Hansmeier was pleading insolvency to the court, he was using his own shell company to give himself money to set up his big ADA trolling operation, financed with the funds he was hiding from his copyright trolling operation.
In light of the above facts, the Court finds Steele and Hansmeier in contempt. The Court finds that the newly discovered evidence directly contradicts their claims of insolvency.
Given all of this flat out deceit, it's actually a bit anti-climactic that the court then orders sanctions of just $65,263 against Steele and Hansmeier for contempt of court over the lies. As for the obstruction of discovery, the court orders Duffy and Steele to pay Booth Sweet's costs, which the lawyers are told to submit. Some people (including us...) are still reasonably wondering why none of this pattern of deceit, lying and abusing the court system still have not resulted in anything more serious. However, these court records are likely to be useful for those facing either Steele or Hansmeier in their new careers as ADA trolls...
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Filed Under: contempt, john steele, paul duffy, paul hansmeyer
Companies: lightspeed, prenda, prenda law
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Surely /this/ time they won't ignore it, right?
Hope neither the judge nor Sweet are expecting anything to actually happen other than the Prendateers to ignore yet another court order, as by this point it's clear the judges in these cases are either spineless or powerless to actually punish these parasites, and they clearly know it.
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Re: Surely /this/ time they won't ignore it, right?
1 - Plead insolvency.
2 - Get caught lying.
3 - Be found in contempt.
4 - Go to 1.
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Re: Re: Surely /this/ time they won't ignore it, right?
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Re: Re: Re: Surely /this/ time they won't ignore it, right?
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I can't imagine why a group of lawyers and former lawyers don't want to create a precedent that holds lawyers accountable for their actions...
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Now imagine one of them is drunk. So it's even more ponderous, but also much more dangerous.
Hence, the 'drunk hippo' school of legal action; the wheels move ponderously, but their presence is unmistakable for anything else.
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Remember, judges are usually lawyers
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Damn takers don't care about the makers.
/s
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The only two sure ways to get a permanent ban? Non -co-oporation in a disciplinary hearing, and co-mingling client funds with your own. (F. Lee baily)
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I'm not sure if you're being ironic, or if the IP industry has trained chickens to peck Copy & Paste buttons every time a new topic appears on Techdirt.
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"[...] they also found records of payments to McCullough Sparks. The latter is an "asset protection law firm" that specializes in the "541 Trust," which "removes assets from your personal ownership and from any disclosure... It is a private document and it cannot be discovered through any public records."
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1. You give the "541 Trust" your money.
2. When subpoenaed, you can honestly say you have no money.
3. The end.
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If you can go to a company and make a withdrawal of funds, even if the funds aren't technically yours anymore, for all practical purposes those are your funds, and should therefor be counted as assets you own.
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The wheels of Justice are slowly, very so fscking slowly, threatening to get up to speed...and yet no accused Doe has been made whole.
We haven't even STARTED to have a hearing about this entire extortionate scheme, so that the courts can - in 4 or 5 years - finally reach that point where they notice that the emperor is naked. The money will not be found, it will not go back to the people who were ripped off with the court system being a willing cog in the shakedown. After the verdict, it will be another 4 or 5 years until the appeals are finally exhausted and they might finally pay something for their crimes. And the Does will be left exactly where they are today, out a bunch of cash wondering how the system could look the other way for so very long.
With liberty and justice for some... but not you little people you aren't worthy of it.
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The longest running soap opera...
The SCO v IBM case is still ongoing, with 5 new filings last week.
SCO no longer exists, but the case still goes on. And on. And on. And ...
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Re: The longest running soap opera...
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Lawyers don't get punished. Why?
Just as cops don't get punished (part of the rewards of being in the enforcing class, is that you're immune from most enforcement yourself), lawyers don't ever really get punished.
"Social Media" and having a movie camera in every pocket or purse seems to be changing the "cops don't get punished" thing. Since lawyer's misbehavior is a lot less photogenic, it might take awhile for text representation of crimes and gross misbehavior to catch fire (metaphorically). But maybe it will happen.
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The Prenda crew will then put ducks on their heads and sue the entire planet.
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Hit Hard?
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The judge found their argument of poverty unconvincing, but it doesn't mean they actually paid.
They started making themselves 'judgement-proof' years ago. I expect that it will be difficult or impossible to access the money, even when it can be found.
Would you move to Florida to hide ill-gotten gains? Divorce your wife, putting most of the money in her name? Set up trusts for children? Set up trusts for unborn (and not yet conceived) children? They have done all of that, and likely much more that we don't know about.
These are lawyers that spent years learning about how to game the system. Combined with stalling for time and making every step as painful as possible, they are likely to get away with most of the money. (Well, Steele, and perhaps Hansmeier. Duffy appears to be just a sad sack lawyer that was played. He turned most of the early money over the S&H, thinking that he would get a slice of the revenue later.)
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The Sanctions Get Worse If They Foot Drag
The Court finds John Steele and Paul Hansmeier in contempt. Accordingly,
the court awards sanctions against John Steele and Paul Hansmeier in the
amount of $65,263.00. for their contemptuous statements in court. One might
recognize that the amount of the sanction is twenty-five percent of Judge Murphy’s
original sanction and that the last sanction from the undersigned was ten percent.
A pattern is purposely developing whereby the contemnors could find their way
back to the full sanction Judge Murphy ordered for their original wrongdoing if
they continue their misdeeds before this Court. The current sanction, including
the costs addressed above, shall be paid on or before July 15, 2015.
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