Showing posts with label Kathryn Lever. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kathryn Lever. Show all posts

Sunday, July 11, 2010

ACCESS DENIED: Fertitta Friendly Global Cash Access May Lose Arizona License

By: Rich Bergeron



Arizona's gaming authorities recently took a bold stand against a company called Global Cash Access by filing a notice of intent to deny state certification for the merchant services company, which has suspiciously tight connections with Station Casinos and Fertitta Enterprises. Most news reports about the Arizona developments barely scratch the surface and can't fully quantify the WHOLE REPORT.

The bottom line? This is a big domino to be falling at this moment in time and this juncture in the history of Station Casinos.

The timing couldn't be worse for the Fertitta family as their casino empire steams toward bankruptcy despite one extension after another given to the struggling company by the banks and lenders they owe. Now, it seems their friendly bedfellows from Global Cash Access (GCA) are in a heap of trouble, and more has been revealed through an intensive investigation into how the company was run under the control of Former GCA CEO Kirk Sanford, also a central figure in the Xyience bankruptcy scandal I have been writing about here.

I met with Kirk Sanford myself at a Times Square restaurant just prior to UFC 78 in Newark, NJ. At the time he was Co-CEO of Xyience and had just been ousted from Global Cash Access due to an emerging scandal related to casino payout discrepancies. He specifically used the term "scorched Earth" to describe his plan to bankrupt Xyience.



As it turns out from the timetable emerging in new documents, at the time of that meeting Sanford and GCA were allegedly involved in a massive mis-coding scandal as well as a scheme to defraud casinos of bonuses owed to them. Though the new paperwork does not reveal which particular casino properties GCA allegedly denied due bonuses to, clearly Fertitta Enterprises was impressed by these GCA converts for some reason, and Station Casinos extended their contract with GCA even after the scandal leaked out.

It would ultimately take a great deal of GCA Founder Karim Maskatiya's money and all of Former GCA CEO Kirk Sanford's cunning to perpetrate the Xyience bankruptcy. Karim Maskatiya's nephew Omer Sattar and former GCA executive Kathryn Lever (still with GCA to this day) also made the Xyience transition and played roles in the bankrupting of the company.

The big question I find myself asking over and over again is WHY did Fertitta Enterprises bring these GCA folks in to bankrupt Xyience? There are only two possible answers in my mind:

1.) Fertitta Enterprises officials may have been conscious of the GCA skimming operation and impressed by it, and they needed similar skills to bankrupt Xyience through the perfect group of scapegoats.

.....or.....

2.) Fertitta-owned Station Casinos was on the list of casinos GCA skimmed from, and company officials were so upset that they forced the GCA rejects to pay their penance through bankrupting Xyience for them.

Looking at the whole risk and reward setup, there's no other explanation in my mind for the GCA and Fertitta Enterprises partnership. If you go to my ENRON OF MMA PAGE you can read about why the UFC needed to keep Xyience viable long enough to get a huge loan package and create a middle of the mat bidding war for potential UFC sponsors. Yet, they also needed to make their involvement in Xyience as limited as possible so as not to raise conflict of interest eyebrows. This is why they needed a few devoted fall guys to take key positions, guys who would be really compelled to do this dirty work and take all the risks involved. Yet, why these fall guys? What made GCA so special, and why risk the backlash of hiring folks so fresh off a scandal?

Global Cash Access perhaps came to be tied to the UFC and Xyience because criminal minds think alike. Consider the fact that Frank Fertitta, Junior is the on-paper CEO of Fertitta Enterprises. Yet, Frank Junior has been kept away from Station Casinos operations by his associations in the past with known organized crime figures. The Nevada Gaming Commission would rather Frank Junior's unclean past stay buried. It is widely reported that Frank Fertitta Junior helped operate a massive Vegas skimming operation glorified in the movie "Casino."



Frank Junior's history is fascinating, but his new hobby is even more intriguing. Fertitta Enterprises may not have all that much to do with Station Casinos, but it does healthy consulting work to help other casinos get started all over the country. No matter what controversy is stirred up, the folks behind Fertitta Enterprises seem to be able to squeak unwanted developments through on technicalities wherever they go.

The Fertitta family wields incredible power and influence in the Casino industry, and it shows. Even the Fertitta-led suggestions that a pre-packaged bankruptcy of Station Casinos would be the best way to go have been met by very little criticism, if any. It is my personal opinion that the Xyience bankruptcy was a trial run for the Station Casinos pre-packaged collapse. The Fertitta family has promised to put $244 million into the reorganization pot for Station Casinos, and despite the company's struggles, Frank Fertitta III just bought a $28 million home in Orange County, CA's Emerald Bay. Station Casinos just financed one of the largest 4th of July fireworks displays in Vegas history to boot.

Don't forget things are only so bad for Station Casinos because the Fertitta Brothers went on an overzealous expansion spree resulting in too much overhead and not enough income. Also, like a teenager with his first credit card, they hid the problem by pursuing loan after loan and credit facility after credit facility. The latest estimates put the company in debt more than $5 billion.

the Arizona investigation is mind blowing as far as the conclusions that could be drawn from the associations between GCA, Fertitta Enterprises, Xyience, the UFC, and Station Casinos. This latest GCA bombshell could be the straw that broke the camel's back with Station Casinos, and it could raise some regulator eyebrows in Nevada. Ironically enough, a witness to the Xyience collapse recently informed me that the scheme to bankrupt Xyience was primarily the work of "the two Franks." This report made a great deal of sense since Frank Junior and "Frankie Three Sticks" are really consumed in many ways by the Casino industry business and lifestyle. Meanwhile, Lorenzo Fertitta has over the years been more partial to his work with the UFC and recently left Station Casinos to help Dana White expand the UFC.

Having such intimate knowledge of the casino operations, "the two Franks" should have known it if the GCA Executives were bilking them. These are two men known for their shrewd business practices and sharp minds.

So how did this whole Xyience bankruptcy plan get hatched and why did all these folks end up working together? The exact manner in which all these "usual suspects" came together under a common banner is really an unknown at this point, but their basic motivations seem plain as day now that these new GCA documents have been revealed.

It seems to me we have a classic case of "like father, like son" going on here.

Frank Fertitta Junior never went to jail for his part in casino skimming or any other organized crime endeavor he took part in over the years. Like the "Teflon Don" John Gotti, nothing stuck to Frank Junior, and he was allowed to ride off into the sunset untainted by a prison record and able to buy his first casino for just a buck as the legend is told. Frank Junior's buddies rotted in jail while he built his fortune in gaming and created a dynasty he could pass onto his sons.

Frank Fertitta III had to take the reigns at an early age when his father had no other choice but to pass the buck. Like his father, maybe Frank III devised a new-wave skim with help from GCA, or maybe he and his father muscled in on the GCA scam and took a percentage.

Either way, even a tenuous association of the Fertitta family with what looks to be a massive and purposely designed and perpetrated electronic skimming operation executed by GCA is troubling to say the least. The fact that Fertitta Enterprises would provide ousted GCA officials immediate positions in the soon-to-be-bankrupted Xyience adds more fuel to the conspiracy fire. There are a great deal of whys to be asked in this context.

Looking from the outside in, there is only one logical conclusion as to why all these entities and individuals were perpetrating this massive fraud together. It was all about the money, of course, and while all the loosely associated businesses owned by these individuals were doing well on their own, they could do better conglomerated. They would do even better than that working together under the radar as if they were still being operated by completely separated and unrelated entities and/or individuals.

These culprits had to scatter the blame and obscure the ownership connections as much as they could, and the pattern emerging now shows that they were successful at getting away with these tactics for a long time. If you look closely you can see all the lines of connectivity between these businesses, but on paper and from a distance the names are all different and the associations are hidden. The casual observer doesn't pick up on it.

Global Cash Access made recent moves to further distance itself from GCA Co-Founders Karim Maskatiya and Robert Cucinotta, both having emerged in recent months as suspects playing integral roles in the massive conspiracy run through the company and other offshoots owned by Cucinotta and Maskatiya. The most involved scheme allegedly netted in excess of $26 million based on fraudulent fee rigging by the company. The Arizona license denial paperwork claims GCA officers were not only conscious of the fraud but actively worked to conceal it, knowing that the fine would be minimal if caught in the act.

BREAKING DOWN THE DOCUMENTS

The Arizona Notice leaves room for Global Cash Access to contest the conditions for denial and prove that they are a new and improved entity, but the sheer weight of the allegations included in the document are staggering and might possibly be insurmountable.

In a release issued by GCA officials about the notice, the language is purposely vague:

"The notice summarizes the basis for the department's intention and alleges that GCA, its founding stockholders and certain of GCA's management undertook actions that demonstrate that GCA is not suitable under the department's standards to act as a provider of gaming services to Native American tribes conducting gaming in Arizona," Global Cash said in the 8-K regulatory filing.

The company also harps on the stipulations that make this move by Arizona gaming regulators a preliminary one and not really a final say, explaining that they will fight for their state certification:

"The notice provides GCA with the right to an informal settlement conference as well as a formal hearing before an administrative law judge in Arizona. GCA intends to seek the holding of the informal settlement conference prior to July 15, and the holding of the formal hearing, if necessary, as soon as possible thereafter. In the meantime, absent further action by the department that prohibits GCA from doing so, GCA intends to continue its operations in Arizona in the ordinary course of business," Global Cash said.

"GCA takes the notice and the allegations made therein very seriously. GCA believes that it has taken appropriate actions during the prior 20 months that will permit GCA to fully demonstrate that it should be considered suitable for certification by the department. Many of these actions involve the termination of GCA's relationships with certain affiliated parties and have been previously publicly communicated and provide the basis for GCA's belief that GCA is in fact suitable to act as a provider of gaming services to Native American tribes conducting gaming in Arizona," the release further explains.

The Arizona report goes beyond the alleged actions involved in the perpetration of the skimming operation. Regulators also allege a conscious plan to deceive gaming regulators in Michigan in 2004 and in Arizona in 2005 by not disclosing all the required information about the mis-coding issues:

"GCA deprived a regulatory agency of material information needed to make an informed suitability determination," the Arizona report said of the Global Cash case in Michigan. Company founders Karim Maskatiya and Robert Cucinotta "both attempted to mislead the investigators to hide GCA's interchange fee fraud and their involvement in it," the Arizona report says.

Above all other allegations, charges of Maskatiya and Cuccinotta failing to disclose their questioning in the murder of Maskatiya's wife are most shocking. Here is the text of an Oakland Tribune article printed at the time of the Maskatiya murder:

=====================================

Oakland Tribune March 24, 1982

Police rule out burglary as motive in murder

Fremont- Police said Tues the fatal shooting of Laila Maskatiya was not the result of a burglary in her home because there were no signs of forced entry and nothing was taken.

Detective Dan Fuller said no motive has been established in the slaying, and there is no suspect.

Maskatiya's husband, Karim, told police he arrived home from work at 7:30 Monday evening and found his 29 year old wife in the bedroom in their $350,000 home on Guadalupe Terrace.

She had been shot twice in the head with a hand gun and several empty cartridges were found near the body. Police said the couple's 4 year old son slept through the shooting.

============================================

The Arizona documents say, "Police detectives questioned both Maskatiya and Cucinotta regarding the murder. Both were read their Miranda rights. The detectives felt that Maskatiya and Cucinotta gave inconsistent statements and did not cooperate with the investigation. They also felt that Maskatiya knew, but would not reveal, the identity of the murderer," the Arizona report said.

Yet, both men answered 'no' when asked by Arizona regulators if they had ever been questioned by a law enforcement agency, the report went on to explain.

The Arizona Gaming Department said Maskatiya and Cucinotta were on the GCA board of directors until June 2008, but resigned six weeks after being interviewed by the department. It says they continue to hold more than 25 percent of the company's stock. However, an SEC filing dated July 7, 2009 indicates Cucinotta holds no voting rights and seemingly has no control or major stock value anymore in regard to GCA.

In February, 2009 documents filed with the SEC, Maskatiya and Cucinotta both still retained more than 9 million shares in GCA. Yet, while it appears that Cucinotta may be on his way to being completely muscled out of the company he co-founded, Maskatiya unloaded 2,768,800 of his own company shares at a rate of $6.25 each as recently as a month ago (6/10/09).

In a section of the report called "ongoing matters of concern," the Arizona regulators say:

==> Global Cash Access has never acknowledged or taken any action in regard to its wrongdoing.

==> Global Cash Access has continued contacts with people and companies involved in the Visa fee fraud.

==> The former Global Cash Access principals failed to disclose information about the murder investigation to regulators in Arizona and Mississippi.

==> Cucinotta and Maskatiya failed to disclose other information including their ownership of various companies.

==> Global Cash continues to have problems with payments of fees to casinos and with payments to casino patrons.

==> Global Cash principals had contact with gaming regulators that created an appearance of impropriety.

"GCA has committed a theft, fraud and concealment," the Arizona report alleges. "It has conspired in these actions with (related company) USA Payment Systems. It has demonstrated a willful disregard for compliance with gaming regulatory authorities and has misrepresented and concealed material facts, documents and information in its dealings with the department and others."

"Casino vendors providing electronic fund access must be reputable, honest, diligent and effective. GCA has proven itself to be none of these," the report said. "Allowing GCA's continued participation in gaming in Arizona damages the public's trust in Arizona casinos and casino regulators. Casinos cannot properly operate where patrons continually suspect or assume they are being cheated, and regulators are assumed to be either involved or incompetent."

In other words: Who wants to play a game everyone knows is rigged? It seems fitting that Arizona has the designation AZ, because for Global Cash Access Arizona could be the first on an A to Z list of officials and operations who may soon 'Just Say No' to the type of underhanded tactics GCA is generating a reputation for.

It is a new era in America as the recession revealed some of the worst fraudulent transgressions against honest taxpayers and shareholders. Bernie Madoff might be the biggest of all the frauds, but he was certainly not the only massive con man involved in the economic collapse. He was not the only one making money off misrepresenting his business practices. GCA appears to be a company that grew fat off the same spirit of fraudulent activity, never worrying about getting nailed with the petty fine. They jobbed the system and got away with it, but they still expect to hold the public's trust. Arizona may only represent a small percentage of GCA's worldwide business operations, but this kind of taint could make lots of other dominoes fall.

Taking a closer look at current operations at GCA, it is clear that even if the company ousts Maskatiya and Cuccinotta from direct public roles with the company, GCA will still be intimate with the other companies these accused frauds also run and/or retain principal positions in. Consider the full text of another SEC filing from earlier this year, indicating some possible behind-the-scenes infighting going on at the company:

Item 1.02. Termination of a Material Definitive Agreement.

On February 13, 2009, Global Cash Access Holdings, Inc. (the “Company”) received written notice from USA Payments of the termination of the Amended and Restated Agreement for Electronic Payment Processing, dated as of March 10, 2004, by and among Global Cash Access, Inc., USA Payments and USA Payment Systems (the “Agreement”). The Company disputes the alleged breaches of the Agreement upon which the notice of termination was based, as well as the right of USA Payments to terminate the Agreement.

To the Company’s knowledge, Karim Maskatiya and Robert Cucinotta directly or indirectly hold significant ownership interests in, and serve on the boards of directors of, USA Payment Systems and USA Payments. Messrs. Maskatiya and Cucinotta are former members of the board of directors of the Company, and to the Company’s knowledge, they collectively hold approximately 23.6% of the Company’s outstanding common stock. At the time that the Company entered into the Agreement, Messrs. Maskatiya and Cucinotta were members of the Company’s board of directors and controlled a majority of the outstanding equity interests in the Company.

Pursuant to the Agreement, USA Payments and USA Payment Systems performed for the Company electronic payment processing services relating to credit card cash advances, point-of-sale debit card transactions and ATM withdrawal transactions, including transmitting authorization requests to the relevant networks or gateways, forwarding transaction approvals or denials to the Company, and facilitating the settlement of all funds in connection with approved and consummated transactions. Pursuant to the Agreement, USA Payments and/or USA Payment Systems were subject to a service level guarantee; were required to enter into agreements with card associations, networks, gateways and financial institution sponsors necessary to provide services to the Company; were entitled to fixed monthly fees plus volume-based transaction fees; and, subject to limited exceptions, were prohibited from providing similar services to third parties in the gaming industry.

This Agreement was to expire according to its terms on March 10, 2014. In its notice of termination, USA Payments alleged that the Company breached the Agreement due to two technology issues involving one of the Company’s other business partners. The Company has worked diligently and closely with the affected business partner to ensure that all necessary technology remediation has been performed. USA Payment Systems and USA Payments have acknowledged their obligation pursuant to the Agreement to continue to provide services to the Company during a 180-day transition period. The Company disputes the right of USA Payments to terminate the Agreement. If this dispute is resolved with the mutual agreement of the Company and USA Payments, the Company may continue to receive services under the Agreement or a successor agreement with USA Payments or USA Payment Systems. If the Company and USA are unable to resolve the dispute, the Company will transition to another provider of electronic payment processing services in the 180-day transition period. To prepare for the potential need to transition to a new provider, the Company is already engaged in discussions with an alternate provider.


So it seems USA Payment Systems sought to separate from GCA rather than the other way around. Perhaps this was a tit for tat response to the company trying to shut out Cucinotta. At any RATE (pun intended), whatever decision Arizona ultimately makes regarding GCA could completely transform the merchant services industry. If the appropriate attention is paid to this disaster, the needed regulation and oversight to prevent a repeat of this behavior could save billions of dollars in bogus fees in the long run.

To learn more about the GCA, Fertitta, Zuffa, & Xyience scandal you can check out XYIENCESUCKS.COM or my other stories here.

THE USUAL SUSPECTS: GCA Holdings, Kirk Sanford, Kathryn Lever, Karim Maskatiya, Omer Sattar, Fertitta Enterprises All Collude in BK





From Left to right: Omer Sattar, Kirk Sanford, Adam Frank, Frank Fertitta III, Lorenzo Fertitta


BY: Rich Bergeron

Even after a sale of the company’s assets free and clear of liens, new evidence is emerging tying together all the parties that made the ongoing bankruptcy of Xyience possible in a fraudulent scheme reeking of potential RICO Act violations. Revelations released in two separate derivative complaints brought against Global Cash Access (GCA) Holdings illustrate what the company’s own internal investigation failed to report about shady activity that led to a ¾ depreciation of the company’s overall stock value in November of last year.

The plunge in company stock closely followed the departure of GCA employees Kirk Sanford and Kathryn Lever to pursue opportunities made available at Xyience under Fertitta Enterprises funding. Karim Maskatiya, who is the founder of GCA, also reportedly invested about $5 million in Xyience. Fertitta Enterprises, GCA, and Xyience are not only related by financial ties, they also share a similar pattern and history of fraudulent behavior. However, a closer look at that history related to GCA’s actions puts their transgressions in a whole new category since there is no record that Xyience or Fertitta Enterprises have yet been sued for previous RICO Act violations.

The extensive record of past litigation against GCA lists one 1999 California case that does not include any electronic records of filings but does display the glaring charges brought under U.S. Code 18:1961’s Racketeering (RICO) Act against GCA's Kirk Sanford and Karim Maskatiya. Click here for Findlaw’s definition of what the RICO charge entails. Attempts to appeal the judgment in the racketeering case failed. Records show no further activity on the claim exists after 2003.

Another case with interesting and telling allegations came before The Superior Court of California in Sonoma County about a year ago. Allegations by a GCA employee alleged sexual and gender bias in treatment of employees along with even more egregious charges. Mary Lynn Scillacci (a former GCA employee who worked at an on-site cash access booth on the gaming floor at the River Rock Casino in Geyserville, California) filed suit against GCA for Wrongful Termination, Defamation, Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress, Violations of the California Labor Code, Interference with Economic Advantage, and Violation of Business and Professions Code Section 17200. Scillacci claimed to have lost her job after weathering the adverse conditions imposed by male management staff at the casino until GCA allegedly fired her for raising issues regarding a failure to audit records.

Scillacci’s whistle blowing betrayed a nonchalance of GCA officials regarding proper accounting of cash transactions at the casino booth. Her superiors attempted to blame Scillacci herself for the auditing oversight despite her claims that she had no responsibility to audit the booth in question. Rather than being rewarded for calling attention to the problem, Scillacci was suspended by the company until an internal investigation exonerated her according to her complaint. The suit further explains that Scillacci’s previous job performance was so extraordinary that her superior recommended her for the highest possible raise that resulted in two promotions in the period of one year. She subsequently became a senior customer service representative at the casino around the time of October of 2003.

The complaint starts by outlining some of GCA’s qualities and responsibilities as a company.

Scillacci goes on to detail exactly what went wrong with the company’s accounting and what happened to her when she exposed the situation of her being blamed improperly (click on thumbnail to see larger pic):





The case closed in September of 2007 without a public disclosure of how the final settlement played out.

There is also a lengthy criminal case related to Global Cash Access regarding the alleged embezzlement and money laundering of Defendant Mark Steven Miller. By a sheer ironic twist, the same day of Xyience’s public “auction” date (April Fools Day), Miller agreed to forfeit some of his family’s property and pay $30,000 in penalties with a re-sentencing hearing scheduled for May 5, 2008. The case originated on February 1, 2002.

GCA’s extensive litigation history culminates with the recent filing of two nearly identical derivative shareholder complaints against a contingent of GCA insiders including Sanford and Maskatiya as well as a class action suit filed this past Friday. Again the problem details issues with accounting and auditing. When Kirk Sanford left GCA along with Kathryn Lever to join Xyience last November, the stock took a mid-November nosedive it never recovered from. Though there was another internal investigation and earnings reports were delayed as a result, none of the findings of that investigation resulted in any culpability or accountability on the part of any company employee.

The two derivative lawsuits (#1, #2) detail accounts of possible insider trading, fraudulent activity regarding under-reporting of damaging news, failure to provide millions of dollars in deserved commissions to clients, and breach of fiduciary duty charges.

The Las Vegas Review Journal reported on the class action case and pointed to issues with commission computing errors contributing to a “false and misleading” 2005 prospectus for a GCA public offering.

Compared to the similar litigation history of Fertitta Enterprises and their representatives, particularly with respect to the Station Casinos merger, the groundwork is there for a Civil RICO complaint against all involved parties in the Xyience bankruptcy. The GCA group and Fertitta Enterprises officials have all demonstrated an intricate pattern of fraudulent activity that they have for the most part been able to get away with thus far. Though civil penalties and legal fees might have slightly injured both groups of related individuals and their businesses in the past, criminal prosecution has never been pursued.

Our initial “Enron of MMA” report lays out exactly how the GCA contingent and Xyience cooperated and colluded with Fertitta Enterprises to bankrupt Xyience after setting up a huge UFC sponsorship deal. Since that report that predicted the bankruptcy long before it happened the nephew of GCA’s Founder Karim Maskatiya has taken the reigns of Xyience and made several declarations in bankruptcy court. Omer Sattar is now pretty much the only remaining GCA face representing the Xyience bankruptcy in the public eye. Kirk Sanford has since resigned from Xyience along with fellow Co-CEO Adam Frank. Maskatiya and Kathryn Lever have not offered any published comments on the subject.

Though Sanford and Frank were both said to be working for free in the Bankruptcy documents detailing their resignation, records show they were both actually paid hundreds of thousands of dollars as a direct result of the Fertitta funding of Xyience.

Frank, who was one of the longest standing Xyience board members when he resigned, signed a declaration that is the cornerstone of Xyience’s $25 million defamation case against me. A hearing to strike that affidavit as perjured testimony based on a contradictory recording of Frank I made last year (see below player) has been delayed multiple times by Xyience attorneys. Our Xyience page also includes copies of both the Frank affidavit and the recording of a brief, but incriminating conversation I had with Frank and Sanford prior to meeting both men during a UFC 78 junket paid for by Xyience:




Get Music Tracks! Make Your Own!


Former Xyience investors claimed recently that Frank and Sanford resigned from Xyience in order to participate in their own separate bid for the company. Some sources pointed to both former Co-CEOs possibly becoming involved with Manchester Consolidated Corporation, which is the parent firm of “NEWCO,” the entity which will apparently take ownership of Xyience due to a recent approval of the sale of the company free and clear of liens.

Details of the sale process are still emerging, mostly through depositions regarding an attempt to delay the sale. Objections to the sale levied by legal representatives of the Bankruptcy case’s committee of unsecured creditors point to a possible conflict of interest in the deal. Manchester Consolidated is the only company known to have met with Xyience officials regarding a sale prior to the bankruptcy proceedings. Officers of Manchester which make up almost half of the entire company’s employees are also directly connected to Cott through their former high level employment there. Cott is the bottling plant that manufactured the stockpile of Xenergy purportedly worth $8 million that is at the heart of the bankruptcy proceedings.

Manchester representatives had at least three discussions with Xyience representatives, namely Frank and Sanford, prior to making their bid to buy the brand. Depositions in the bankruptcy also revealed that they met with Fertitta Enterprises GM Bill Bullard before the bankruptcy, too. A deposition of Sierra Consulting Group’s Ted Burr outlines other provisions of the company’s attempts to market the sale to other potential buyers. Though it seems there was a significant campaign to put the word out on the sale, Burr’s deposition does seem to indicate that more time might have been helpful in securing a better, less compromised, and more beneficial sale of the brand.

The recent revelations involving all the parties responsible for the bankruptcy betray the great potential for Civil RICO claims to be brought against the co-conspirators in defrauding and bankrupting Xyience to enrich themselves. The smoking gun of such a case would be the documents outlining the financing contract regarding Zuffa, LLC’s $350 million senior secured credit facility that three institutions provided the company last summer based on covenants that most likely falsely represented Xyience as a healthy and prosperous sponsorship partner. That financing note has taken a huge hit on trading block ever since, suffering from low ratings and declining value, which will eventually result in Zuffa having to pay much higher interest rates on the note than they initially anticipated.

On a side note, the sale of the company resulted in the local Las Vegas police being called to Xyience headquarters not long after the purchase became official. Police described the problem as a domestic disturbance, and no arrests were made. Also, a former investor reported seeing a giant dumpster in the parking lot of the building in recent days. Apparently the container was needed to dispose of a stockpile of expired inventory including old Xenergy product. The investor reported seeing some of the product leaking through the cracks in the dumpster.

As more details emerge in the bankruptcy case, and as my own case moves closer to hearings at the end of this month, I will keep putting together reports that outline the facts and back them up with documentation. The next blog on the subject will focus specifically on the bankruptcy case and what the approval of the company’s sale really means for the future of the brand.