Showing posts with label Zyen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zyen. Show all posts

Sunday, July 11, 2010

THE LATEST XYIENCE LAWSUIT & OTHER XYIENCE DEVELOPMENTS

By: Rich Bergeron

Tonight, I found out the true meaning of "no good deed goes unpunished." After years of fighting to expose the truth behind the Xyience scandal I am now the last person in the bankruptcy process still fighting to get relief for burned shareholders. I try to send updates from time to time to all those with some connection to Xyience through past stock ownership and/or other affiliations. Every now and then someone asks to be removed from the list. Some people would just rather forget. Then there was tonight's message from a woman named Diane Frank:


from DIANE FRANK TEAM
to Rich Bergeron
date Thu, Jun 18, 2009 at 1:59 AM
subject Re: XYIENCE JUST GOT SUED AGAIN!
mailed-by yahoo.com
signed-by yahoo.com

hide details 1:59 AM (1 hour ago)


Reply

Follow up message
Rich
I dont give a fuck! I am a single mother with 4 children and you/YES you personally ruined Xyience. You and I both know the true facts. Please do not send me your ____ again.

Diane Frank

THE DIANE FRANK TEAM
Diane Frank (951) 727-0149
Office (951) 727-0200
Fax (951) 727-0232


It's nice to know you have the support of the people you are fighting for. I hope this is just misplaced anger or a misunderstanding, but it's hard to tell. Unfortunately nobody believes it when you try to help for no reason at all. It's just not the norm, and that's a shame.

At any rate, the reason I really wanted to write this article is to highlight how Xyience is being sued again.

R&R International, INC. Just filed action against Xyience in Florida on April 13, 2009 over a distribution agreement gone sour. The agreement, according to the complaint, contained the following clause: "Xyience hereby grants the exclusive right to distribute and sell the Xyience Energy Drink brand product lines to Accounts in the state of Florida except for the area listed below and the exclusive license to use the Trademarks solely in connection therewith, in each case subject to the remaining provisions of this agreement. All additional distribution opportunities outside of the above mentioned territories will have to be approved by Xyience."

Enter JP Beverage Distributors, requesting a significant order of Xyience product, the complaint explains. Under the first cause of action for breach of contract, R&R claims JP Beverage wound up buying the product shipment directly from Xyience after R&R already purchased everything to fill the same order from Xyience. Instead of cooperating with the agreement, it appears Xyience either intentionally or unintentionally breached it if the complaint's allegations are true. In true scamster style, this situation would have resulted in Xyience getting paid twice for the same order. What's worse is that the complaint also alleges Xyience stiffed R&R on an $8 commission for each case of Xenergy sold. Rather than confront the mess with integrity and professionalism, it seems the good folks at Xyience allegedly played hardball. The lawsuit paperwork also lays out how Xyience reportedly refused to duly credit R&R and then suddenly demanded payment on all outstanding invoices. This appears to be designed to back out of the contract the easy way if R&R could not pay and the contract were to go into default.

The complaint also adds a second breach of contract cause of action. This second claim details how Xyience's billing and invoicing was not up to snuff and goes into further detail about other failures of Xyience to meet their responsibilities as outlined in the distribution agreement. For a company trying to make major inroads with distributors this could be a red flag proving the company is not really in good hands as its newly crowned CEO will try to tell folks even while the same old stuff keeps happening behind the scenes.

This site, claiming to be the home page for R&R, still proudly boasts of the Xyience agreement with the company. While the lawsuit does not specify exactly how much damage R&R sustained financially as a result of the alleged Xyience breaches, the complaint request in excess of $75,000 in damages, attorney fees and court costs, and a jury trial.

The case is rife with evidence, which includes paperwork initialed MCC (Manchester Consolidated Corporation I'm guessing) where Xyience is supposed to initial. Manchester, which has at least two core former-Cott executives on staff (Cott makes Xenergy) bought Xyience last year out of bankruptcy for $15 million. Today, a company called Manzen is the official DBA (doing business as) of Xyience, indicating Zyen, LLC (A Fertitta Enterprises Company) is still playing an integral role in company management. It appears the purchase was a "rent to own" type agreement and not an outright cash for assets deal.

The next hearing in my own Xyience case comes on July 1, 2009 and will be in regards to sanctions Fertitta Enterprises attorneys have asked the judge to levy against me. This should be an interesting episode of the Xyience saga to say the least. Go to www.xyiencesucks.com to learn more.

Zuffa, UFC, Xyience Bankruptcy Scandal



UFC 81 OCTAGON DEVOID OF XYIENCE ADS & OTHER XYIENCE BANKRUPTCY NEWS

By: Rich Bergeron

It may just be all over for Xyience and the UFC. It appears that the company is fast-tracking a sale of the supplement and energy drink maker, and early indications reveal that anyone hoping to get a piece of the scandal-ridden company must have at least $50 million in assets. UFC 81 was the first event in years that had no Xyience advertising attached to it. Previously Xyience ads were bumped from the center of the mat to the post pads, but last Saturday those ads vanished.

Burned shareholders are still mounting a fight for the company, but the outlook is bleak. The company's reputation is shattered, and the whole debacle has also tarnished the image of one of the wealthiest families in Las Vegas. The Fertitta Enterprises role in the foreclosure has only recently been given front page press in "The City of Sin" despite our reports here on this site proclaiming knowledge of their investment plans as early as August of 2007.

The Fertitta Family and Zuffa officials have been strangely silent about their recent activities, leaving their appointed representatives at Xyience to do the public commenting. Meanwhile all kinds of allegations and rumors are swirling around the entire financial picture of the UFC. For the first time ever there is talk of the entire outfit following in Xyience's footsteps and declaring bankruptcy themselves. Zach Arnold and Judge Jeff Thaler both raised the possibility in their recent Xyience discussion on Fight Opinion Radio. There are even rumors that the UFC might be for sale, though Dana White did recently deny any formal sales negotiations coming anytime soon. He simply admitted that anything is for sale for the right price.

Yet, it seems there may be a very real possibility of rough waters ahead for the UFC as the Mixed Martial Arts boom shows no signs of slowing down and other outlets continue to make strides in the marketplace. One of the major roadblocks for the UFC in the future will be their overall treatment of their fighters. The Randy Couture departure may just be the tip of the iceberg.

The Xyience situation elucidates the problem perfectly. Once Fertitta Enterprises bought into Xyience the first transaction they made involved sponsorship of the UFC. Millions of dollars went into past-due payments and a whopping $15 million premium for the 2008 Xyience sponsorship that would see them taken off the mat. Meanwhile, nobody took the time to address the concerns of the fighters sponsored by Xyience with disputes over their payments. For one, pictures of disgruntled fighters are still on the site as if they are all in full support of the struggling supplement maker. According to Adam Swift of MMAPAYOUT.COM and SHERDOG.COM a group of high-profile UFC fighters is still owed a grand total of $112,666.66 by Xyience. Yet, the infusion of Fertitta capital went directly to the sponsorship of the organization rather than first addressing the less costly needs of the fighters that put the whole show on the map in the first place. They put payments for advertising on an inanimate object ahead of paying their own fighters who take the most risk for the least return.

Even worse, after the Xyience sponsorship extension came to pass, officials at Xyience made no serious moves to find any funding to continue any expansion of the brand. They told the public that’s what they were planning to do with the Fertitta money, but they didn’t come through and actually do that. They put the cart before the horse and paid for marketing before production and distribution of goods to the marketplace. These men know business. They have billions of dollars in deals under their belts. How could they honestly claim to be bankrupting the company because they couldn’t stretch over $20 million into an operating budget? They easily could have gone without the 2008 sponsorship if they truly wanted to keep the company in business.

Unfortunately, it now appears that the $25,000,000 lawsuit against me played a huge role in this latest chapter of the ongoing scandal. Without the court's injunction against me, the Fertittas may not have wanted to get involved. According to the initial complaint against me, there were certain investors who wanted to invest $15 million each, but only if my stories were removed from cyberspace. It's clear now that Xyience had no plan to actually try and win the case or prove the merits of it after that injunction came through.

Xyience has now burned through one lawyer and is working on racking up even more fees with their new lawyer that they might not be able to pay. All told, they now claim over $84,000 in legal fees fighting a guy who's representing himself. They have recently been trying to pursue what's called a default judgment, basically a win by technicality. However, they don't even meet the terms of that technicality. Two hearings loom ahead, and they should determine the final outcome of this litigation once and for all.

February 7th at 9:00 AM in Department 16 of the Clark County Courthouse, Judge Timothy Williams will oversee a hearing to determine whether I can actually get my chance to appear telephonically at a motion to dismiss hearing on February 14th at the same time and place. Xyience's latest lawyer is trying to block the hearing with bogus motions and affidavits trying to claim that the default prevents me from defending myself in this matter. Not only is the new lawyer claiming I have no standing to defend myself, she is also trying to get me to pay for her legal fees of over $14,000. I'm lucky if I can pay my $19 a month hosting fees these days, so I had a good laugh over that one.

The bottom line is I've had hundreds of hours of my life wasted trying to defend myself against these frivolous charges. Look back at my reporting and you will see it was entirely accurate every step of the way. I predicted the future time and time again. I raised an issue other people in the press have now taken up as their own. I fought for bloggers' rights, free speech, and victimized shareholders I've never even met even when I might have been better off walking away from UFC 78 with a $5,000 check and no case hanging over my head.

The saddest part of this whole situation is that I've had to put off a book project about a woman who desparately needs my help. Lucille Iacovelli, one of the stars of the HBO Documentary Plastic Disasters, is literally dying before her story can be told to the world to inspire someone to reach out to help alleviate her medical condition. Because of this case I have been unable to devote enough time to chronicling her experience with botched plastic surgery and the refusal of the medical establishment to address and fix her problems. I always wanted to help people with my writing, and her story was just the kind of work I've always enjoyed doing. Yet, there was always the threat of being hit with a $25 million judgment I'd spend the rest of my life paying off if I didn't devote enough time to defending myself in this Xyience case. Lucille's condition continues to deteriorate, and I'm still fighting this junk case against me.

I'm looking forward to finally putting all this behind me come February 14th, and I'm calling on everyone who believes in truth, justice, and freedom of speech to help spread the word. Stand up and be counted. If you are in the Las Vegas area and can make it to either one or both of my hearings this month, it would be a great help to me. It's time for the little guy to come out on top for once.

Xyience, Zuffa, Fertitta Enterprises, Zyen FULL DISCLOSURE Report

XYIENCE WOES CONTINUE: A “FERTITTAGATE” FULL DISCLOSURE REPORT

By: Rich Bergeron

It’s a story of a Forbes 500 family sunk deep into casino interests, the Ultimate Fighting Championship, and their parent company Zuffa, LLC. And that’s just the half of it. These billionaires have business interests and connections with all kinds of bustling financial institutions.

They wouldn’t engage in corporate bigwig bullshit with that kind of money on the line, not personally. They could have some friends do it for them, though. They could bring in criminal masterminds in tailored suits who were already experienced in manipulating the stock market. Those guys could tweak the numbers and set the stage for bankruptcy before bailing out the back door. That way, one roll of the dice could make them all fat and happy.

It’s a disgraceful and despicable mode of business that takes a company and puts it under the kind of assault Xyience has since suffered. Though the ones left holding the bag may ultimately bear the brunt of the most pointed criticism, this situation was created by a whole host of other interconnected players. Each and every one of them saw something they could steal from Xyience, and they capitalized on their opportunities without hesitation. They didn’t imagine how the stockholders would feel, how the public would ultimately judge their devious actions, or how they would later account for their insatiable greed. They just did it because they thought they could get away with it and because they knew it would make them a ton of money.

Left holding that final bag but not completely “owning it” Fertitta Enterprises and a few friends formed ZYEN, Inc. and a whole lot of UFC and Xyience business went down right after that. Company sales suffered, no further capital came in, and the usual suspects dismantled the whole operation piece by piece to promote huge profits for themselves through the process of setting the company up for a public April Fools Day auction.

There were Xyience layoffs during the holidays, stockholders were wiped out and it all became extremely ugly almost overnight. All the while Fertitta Enterprises and the new Xyience board of directors made a killing.

I had the great pleasure of attending UFC 78 on Xyience’s dime. I saw what I thought were better fights than the media gave them credit for, but more importantly I sat down with the CEOs beforehand. Spouting “Scorched Earth” and woe-is-me-no-hope attitudes, they had already planted the bankruptcy seed. A scant two months and a few weeks after Fertitta Enterprises invests in Xyience it’s going bankrupt all of a sudden? That’s no coincidence.

Why would anyone pump money into a company and then kill it? One reason would be the potential for contract defaults. Their goal is to wipe it all out and start free and clear. They want to be on the other end collecting the check when it’s over, passing the problem child to the highest bidder and getting everything they put in right back. If they can manage a tidy profit on top of that, the charade is a success in their eyes, no matter how many people they had to hurt in the process.

The Fertittas have billions of dollars at stake as operating partners of Station Casinos, and they know how to make business deals work to their advantage. This was not some sloppy oversight on the part of Fertitta Enterprises GM Bill Bullard and the leadership plants they put in place to be the fall guys. This was an orchestrated collapse meant to line the pockets of the principal players and ruin the lives of the rest of the folks who helped put Xyience on the map. Click here for my motion to suspend the bankruptcy and all THE EVIDENCE.

UFC 78 was ironically dubbed “Validation.” That strikes me funny in so many ways since it was the last event in which the UFC used the Xyience logo in the middle of the cage floor. Over the course of the next few months the full extent of the fraud that took place at Xyience would be validated by my own stories and the follow up articles of other independent MMA media outlets.

My Xyience junket to New York City marked the first time I met officially with any representatives of Xyience, and they sold me a bill of goods I couldn’t stomach. What made matters worse for me was the trip back to the airport. Sitting in the back seat of a huge SUV coach service car, I watched New York City’s hustle and bustle go past and couldn’t help but think about how many everyday working people would be screwed by the final Xyience accounting if the bankruptcy did go through as planned. I then caught a glimpse of one of the saddest sights I’ve ever witnessed.

A haggard, aging black woman with a few missing teeth and virtually no meat on her bones sat leaning against a lamp post on a random corner with a tiny blanket wrapped around her. Sobbing and carrying on, she appealed to passers by and received nothing but cold stares and glances of disapproval. I was really dismayed by that dose of hard reality. Here were thousands of people milling about, and none of them bothered to do anything to alleviate this woman’s suffering. Too busy making their way to their favorite restaurant, bar, shopping outlet, or entertainment venue, New Yorkers and tourists alike passed this woman by like she was nothing more than a scattered piece of trash.

This is the all too familiar climate created by capitalism at its worst in this country. The wealth is concentrated and conglomerated under the people and profitable businesses that could easily go without it if they had to. Yet, the poor and downtrodden, the “huddled masses” the inscription on the Statue of Liberty calls to our shores, and all of us working class public citizens slaving to maintain our day jobs are left listlessly wandering the world with no real purpose or direction. One day it may be one of us on that street corner, wailing away in despair, rattling a few pennies around in a paper cup.

This is the kind of suffering my "Enron of MMA" story series puts in perspective. Xyience was never the kind of company that would ever be in the same league as the famous energy trader corporation gone bust, but there are parallels. The situation in which Xyience was raped and left for dead by a few of the prime players at the top was almost a mirror image of the Enron scandal on so many levels. The basic structure of the fraud, the motivating factors for it, and the power of sheer greed to corrupt the whole process was nearly identical in both situations.

The only investment the Fertitta-led investment group made in Xyience was supposed to go right back to the Fertittas through the UFC sponsorship. Any leftovers would later be set aside for acquiring the assets and remaining product while trying to account for none of the other debt. Maintaining a marketing agreement alone was crucial to being able to sell all the cans of Xenergy with the UFC logo already printed on them. Yet, the Xyience brass set up a situation in which Xyience’s first major transaction under Fertitta control was a multi-million dollar title sponsorship deal Zuffa would later default on. That deal would leave nothing in the way of any capital behind to actually purchase product to promote any cash flow whatsoever.

It appears that Xenergy product is now key. It seems to any honest observer that paying for that product should have been the first priority. While in a position to call the shots at Zuffa at the same time they were de facto owners of Xyience, Fertitta Enterprises should have been able to hammer out a workable and affordable deal that would have satisfied both parties as far as the product licensing. However, they instead chose to enrich themselves with a much larger sponsorship than Xyience could afford.

That all makes sense until you consider the true facts. First of all, a marketing agreement is a much different animal than a title sponsorship. If all that was needed was a simple marketing agreement, the octagon advertising portion of the deal should have been set aside. The multi-million dollar fiasco of the UFC/Xyience 3-year contract extension was just smoke and mirrors designed to create a domino effect of other potential post-Xyience sponsors paying above and beyond Xyience’s going rate to get their businesses in the middle of the UFC mat. It was a shrewd way of creating a bidding war for the space. The problem with the process is that it was all built off the back of a bogus, over-inflated company.

All the while, even Zuffa’s own fighters, the guys who fought and LITERALLY shed blood all those years over that Xyience logo, got screwed out of their Xyience money. We're talking guys who literally wore the Xyience logo on their sleeves, over their hearts, or on their shorts, and they got shafted. Chuck Liddell had one-million shares of Xyience stock according to 2005 and 2006 audit numbers from A.J. Robbins. Creditors in the Xyience bankruptcy case include: Travis Lutter; Rich Franklin, Inc.; Matt Serra; Heath Herring; Evan Shoman; and Anderson Silva Enterprises, Incorporated. Bankruptcy paperwork lists several other UFC fighters with Xyience financial issues. The company says they "may be in payment default" in regards to: Michael Bisping ($2,000); BJ Penn ($25,000); Forrest Griffin ($43,333.35); Matt Hughes ($49,999.98); Rich Franklin ($21,000); Josh Koscheck ($21,666.68); Chuck Liddell ($165,000); and Mike Swick ($28,083.35). Other MMA personalities sponsored by Xyience have also been hung out to dry. Payments have also been neglected for: Cung Le ($40,664) and Xyience Model Rachelle "Leah" ($50,000).

The list of Xyience's 280-plus creditors filed in the bankruptcy case covers every letter of the alphabet, except two coincidental characters of the English language: X AND Y. They owe everyone from AC NIELSEN to ZYEN, LLC. Xyience even owes their cleaning staff (3D Janitorial). Some big names on the list: State of Nevada DMV; T Mobile USA, Inc.; The Fight Network, Inc.; United Parcel Service; USA TODAY; Professional Bull Riders, Inc.; MTV Networks; Nevada Department of Taxation; OFFICE DEPOT; Pitney Bowes; MDK MOTORSPORTS, LLC; Missouri Department of Revenue; MMA Training Centers, Inc.; L.A. STARS, LLC; Howard Hughes Properties, IV; Fedex Freight, Internal Revenue Service; Dymatize; Cott Corporation; Dell, Inc.; Discovery Communications; Verizon Wireless; Washington State Department of Revenue; World Poker Tour Enterprises, Inc; and Zuffa Marketing, LLC..

Now that the company is in bankruptcy, acquiring the Xenergy product is such a seriously high priority that the licensing fee imposed by Zuffa to facilitate the Xenergy product recovery is being imposed as a matter of paramount importance.


So why is it that now a smart deal gets hammered out post-bankruptcy when the best time to make this happen was the moment Fertitta Enterprises pumped in $12 million in capital? The answer to that question will surely emerge during the discovery process, but it’s easy to see that a conflict of interest created this whole dilemma. When you have a company like Xyience in the hands of the principal owners of a company Xyience sponsors, you’re bound to have situations in which the controlling players want to make sure their original company makes out a whole lot better than the new company. Add to the conundrum the evidence of all this being part of the grand fraud of the Fertittas buying Xyience specifically to bankrupt it, and what you have is all the explanation you need.

As if it weren’t bad enough that they used their own money to sponsor their own company, they initiated the whole scheme to get more sponsors signed and to make it appear as if the covenants of their $350 million financing package for Zuffa were not in breach at all.

Now embroiled in tons of controversy revolving around some of the details of this shady, raw deal, Xyience bankruptcy documents seem to point to clear damage control methods now being employed by Fertitta Enterprises and their new Xyience board of directors. Now, all of a sudden they’ve justified that huge sponsorship deal as a necessity of doing business.


The first bidder to make a play for the company is connected to Cott through two former Cott executives. Cott is the maker of the stockpile of Xenergy stamped with the UFC logo, as mentioned above.

The UFC defaulted on Xyience’s big sponsorship package in December. Officially, Xyience has no sponsorship interest beyond the UFC logo on the Cott cans from the way it appears. The bankruptcy filings are seriously troubling. Since I am now facing bankruptcy attorneys I’ve waded into their world, and it makes me shudder. The paperwork I’ve compiled has the kind of dirt in it that makes you want to take a shower after you read it.

So, let’s go back in time to the big money 3-year-deal Xyience did with the UFC that went out to press with the numbers all laid out for all to see. Didn’t that set the stage for the domino-effect advertising add-ons of Lumber Liquidators, Harley Davidson, and Bud Light? Didn’t Zuffa have only Xyience as a big-time “real-deal” sponsor at the time they applied for their $350 million loan and credit package? Why did everything Zuffa’s financiers touch turn to shit all of a sudden? PRIDE fell apart, Station Casino workers are up in arms over payment disputes, Randy Couture left the UFC, Tito Ortiz is leaving, Free Agent Fedor ain’t touching the octagon with a ten foot pole. Yet, they are still hyping this thing as the big leagues by touting the big names of Bud Light and Harley Davidson, who had their sponsorships negotiated after the Xyience kickback came in. Like a stack of money at the end of a yo-yo string, Fertitta Enterprises put the capital through the back channel to pay their own sponsorship through investing in Xyience. The only creditor they thought they owed anything to was their own organization.

They might tell you that only means they created their own destiny. They did what they had to do. They came in acting like they cared, wanted to set things straight, and wanted to give so that someday all the stockholders could receive a better day down the line. That’s what they were squawking when they put up the $12 million. They then negotiated a sinister, easy to back out of deal, and they kept Xyience propped up only long enough to engage in the sponsorship deal. All the while they had to know Xyience was on its last legs before they put anything into it. They saw a way they could exploit a bankruptcy, and they took advantage of it. They dropped a “Roofie” in Xyience’s drink and had their way with her.

As long as big business can continue to operate in this selfish, twisted manner without being held accountable, everyone suffers. I only hope that my case in the hands of the bankruptcy courts will result in justice for all, not just the ones with the deepest pockets.

MORE RELATED DOCUMENTS:

ZUFFA CONFIDENTIALITY AGREEMENT

ZYEN/XYIENCE/FERTITTA ENTERPRISES WARRANT AGREEMENT

ZYEN/XYIENCE/FERTITTA ENTERPRISES SECURITY AGREEMENT

XYIENCE PRESIDENT OMER SATTAR FIRST DECLARATION (JANUARY)

OMER SATTAR FINAL DECLARATION (FEBRUARY)

AMENDED SHAREHOLDER COMPLAINT NAMING FERTITTA ENTERPRISES AS DEFENDANTS(PART ONE)

AMENDED SHAREHOLDER COMPLAINT NAMING FERTITTA ENTERPRISES AS DEFENDANTS(PART TWO)












XYIENCE, ZUFFA, THE UFC, FERTITTA ENTERPRISES, AND ZYEN SITUATION SET TO IMPLODE, STORY AT 11

Judge Jeff Thaler and Fight Opinion Radio's Zach Arnold discuss the Rich Bergeron vs. Xyience lawsuit in depth and kick off the "ENRON OF MMA" discussion.



FIGHT OPINION RADIO TAKES UP THE XYIENCE VS. RICH BERGERON LAWSUIT ON THEIR SHOW


Rich Bergeron coined the phrase "THE ENRON OF MAA" with this article: XYIENCE: "THE ENRON OF MMA" XYIENCE, ZUFFA, THE UFC, FERTITTA ENTERPRISES, AND ZYEN SITUATION SET TO IMPLODE, STORY AT 11

Xyience Temporarily Taps Out

XYIENCE FILES FOR BANKRUPTCY

By: Rich Bergeron


Over a month before it became official, Fight News Unlimited reported that bankruptcy was imminent for Xyience. Our article entitled THE ENRON OF MMA exposed some of the reasons why the company is in such dire straits, but the Las Vegas Review Journal dug a little deeper this week and examined the actual voluntary bankruptcy filing Xyience went forward with last Friday.

The official filing comes after an involuntary bankruptcy petition was filed on behalf of several investors tied into a lawsuit against the current Xyience regime. The petition, filed January 3rd, calls into question the Fertitta Enterprises loan and would essentially block any attempted foreclosure by the current controlling interests, and place all the assets under the court's discretion until the fight over the company is finally decided. Zyen, LLC, the company designed by Fertitta Enterprises to handle the $12,000,000 loan given to Xyience last year, filed a NOTICE OF STRICT FORECLOSURE late last year that allowed for only a 90 day window for investors to mount a fight for the company.

The LVRJ Xyience Bankruptcy article, now being circulated across the on-line MMA news landscape, dropped some major bombshells. Yet, there were some major inconsistencies that went to press in the piece, and the overall tone was extremely favorable to the current regime that is attempting to lock out hundreds of the company's initial investors.

One of the most outrageous misrepresentations of the facts reported include the following passage in the article:

"Sattar said the bankruptcy became necessary when the company was unable to raise $7.5 million more from shareholders."

This quote, coming from the lips of the company's newly-crowned president Omer Sattar, is a blatant misrepresentation of the actual situation that gave rise to the bankruptcy. Before Fertitta Enterprises provided loan capital to Xyience, a letter went out by email to a large group of shareholders telling them that if the deal was not ratified the company would go bankrupt. Once the deal was approved by less than half the shareholders, much of the Fertitta investment went right back into a hefty three-year sponsorship extension with the UFC and also helped to pay off past due sponsorship fees of approximately $6.5 million. According to the Las Vegas Review Journal the Fertittas put almost $18 million in total capital into Xyience, and a hefty chunk of that money came out of one pocket only to go right back into another, since the Fertittas are 90% owners of the UFC. Essentially, Xyience would have had double what they needed to stay in operation if they opted not to be a UFC sponsor this year to the tune of $15 million. Even with the extension in place the latest UFC sponsor (Harley Davidson) bumped Xyience from the center of the mat, and now it appears the company paid an absolutely ridiculous price to have their name on a couple cornerpads of the octagon.

The Las Vegas Review Journal is either guilty of extreme bias or sloppy reporting. Don't expect any follow up stories to question any move the Fertittas make. First of all, the Las Vegas Review Journal is partnered with The Las Vegas Sun, which is owned by the Greenspun Family. The Fertittas' Station Casinos partnered with the Greenspun Family on some notable casino developments. Aliante Station and Green Valley Ranch are both joint operations put together by these two major Vegas movers and shakers.

The Las Vegas Review Journal appears to be providing aid and comfort to their business partners in their latest struggle to save face on Xyience. The LVRJ even quoted Sattar's claims of death threats issued to Xyience officials without even contacting either of the men who reportedly made those threats in order to get a response. Ric Klingenberg was accused of making the threats along with his brother David Bergstrom. The dispute arose over a payment owed to Klingenberg's elderly mother, and both brothers were reportedly given the run around while trying to secure a check for $20,000. Reached by phone recently, Klingenberg categorically denied the description of the events Sattar presented in the voluntary bankruptcy filings.

"I went to that office, that part's true, but we didn't storm in there," said Klingenberg. "And we didn't threaten anybody's lives. We did go in and close the door, because, isn't that what you do when you have a meeting?" Klingenberg said Xyience CFO Michael Levy promised him his mother would get paid when the Fertitta Enterprises loan came through. He also said he left Levy a phone message telling him when he would be there to collect the check. Levy reportedly told Klingenberg his mother "was going to have a Merry Christmas" in late December.

"Voices were raised, and everyone was talking at once," said Klingenberg. "We were told to go find Adam Frank, because he was the only one who could authorize a check." He was later told he'd need to get an attorney in order to collect the funds.

Klingenberg also claims that Sattar lied as far as the bankruptcy. "They didn't file bankruptcy, we did," he said. Klingenberg's family trust is the main plaintiff in the investor suit under which the involuntary bankruptcy petition was filed. He explained that the company's hand was forced by their initial filing.

In the aftermath of the bankruptcy announcement, it now appears the bad press and the legal battles mounting have forced the company to now explore the possibility of selling the whole operation. A follow up article in the LVRJ reports that financing has been approved to help position the company for a sale even while the legal battles for control of Xyience rage on.

The Fertittas have not provided any published comment on their tactics regarding Xyience, leaving President Omer Sattar to provide the company's perspective to the public. Sattar is part of a group that came in to run Xyience from a company called Global Cash Access. Questions surrounding insider trading charges and a late filing of GCA's third-quarter report for 2007 followed the departure of the GCA contingent that is now operating Xyience. GCA's stock plummeted in November of 2007 and has yet to completely recover. Station Casinos was one of GCA's largest accounts, so it appears that the partnership between former GCA employees and Fertitta Enterprises stems from that initial connection.

Although the UFC continues to operate as the top dog in the Mixed Martial Arts industry, this latest debacle with Xyience and some other recent developments point to a rocky future for the pioneers of the sport. While other leagues are constantly looking for ways to co-promote major events, the UFC continues to refuse to even acknowledge that any other league competes with them. Their lawsuit against Randy Couture is also looming as a large distraction. On top of that, Tito Ortiz is planning to leave the organization after his next fight according to mmapayout.com. While Ortiz has never been one to hold his tongue about his frustrations with Dana White, he has also never been as popular as he is now with MMA fans. As the boyfriend of Pornstar Jenna Jameson and a contestant on the celebrity edition of the Apprentice, Ortiz is at the height of his fame right now. Wherever he goes from here, that league is sure to benefit from his star status while other UFC fighters will take note and might decide to follow his lead when their own contracts run out.

The UFC seems to be having enough growing pains without their principal owners getting heavily involved in a company with such a horrible reputation. Much of the mainstream MMA press reporting on this story of Xyience going bankrupt have just now started asking questions about what's really going on. The question on everyone's mind seems to be: "Why would the Fertittas want to buy into their own sponsor?" We're talking about a huge , profit-driven company here. Fertitta Enterprises is not the kind of outfit you'd expect to touch Xyience with a ten-foot pole. Yet, here they are up to their necks in debt and tied in to the point where they seem to be more willing to cut their losses than actually rebuild the brand. So, what's the motive. Well, you simply have to go back in time a bit to find the answer. We put together an in-depth report over a month ago that outlined how this day would come.

The truth is, the Fertittas never intended to restore the dignity of the company and save the day for the shareholders who built Xyience. If that was their plan, they'd be front and center in the press talking about it. Instead, they're hiding behind straws put in place to act as the fall guys. If they really wanted to clean the slate and keep the company in full operation, they would have tried to secure more financing a long time ago. They would have put the company first. Instead, they immediately signed a contract extension with the UFC as soon as they put their money in. The whole thing just stinks.

This whole bankruptcy fiasco has nothing to do with not having the money to prevent it. If they don't have it, they can certainly get it. The real reason they decided to file bankruptcy is so they can lock out an estimated 380 shareholders who built and sustained this brand even while fraud and corruption were tearing the company apart from within. Just when these folks were told their payday was on the horizon and there could be an IPO as early as this month, these investors are now forced to reclaim their interest in the company through litigation that could last years. Some of them have lost their life savings.

I have run into a lot of MMA fans who read my stories and other stories about Xyience's issues and ask, "Who cares?" They wonder why it's a story at all and who's the victim. The Enron, Tyco, and Worldcom scandals have tempered the American public to such an extent that we seem to expect this kind of back room underhandedness and duplicity. In one case I found a thread where one fan actually praised the Fertittas for the way they rigged their own loan by investing in Xyience.

Yet, there is so much about this story that people should care about. Let's just go back in time again to when Xyience was at the height of its popularity. All kinds of fighters were raking in big sponsorships. GNC agreed to take on a wide array of Xyience products. The Xyience commercials were a viral video hit because of the sexy models drinking Xenergy in them. Hundreds of investors had the feeling that they could depend on this thing becoming really big. Xyience was a big ticket sponsor at a time when fighters were getting paid chump change compared to boxers. Most fighters are still reliant on sponsors, and they will be until the sport gets sanctioned in more states and becomes more of a mainstream draw. In the wake of this huge scandal that now enters Chapter 11 (pun intended), it's clear there's no other sponsor that's going to equal what Xyience was doing in the beginning. Harley Davidson is not out sponsoring all kinds of fighters. You won't find the Lumber Liquidators logo on any fighter's shorts.

The bottom line is a lot of people got screwed so the Fertittas and Dana White could get themselves a fat dividend check. They laid waste to PRIDE first, and now they're focused on Xyience. Every step of the way they've lied to the public about what they were going to do. They said they were going to keep PRIDE going only to let it completely dissolve with no hope for ressurection. Investors in Xyience were told that the Fertitta deal was the only option and they had to do the deal or watch the company go bankrupt. They did the deal, and the company is still going bankrupt. The Xyience mouthpieces working on behalf of the Fertittas said they were going to reorganize Xyience and keep the brand going only to now come out and announce plans to sell it. It's sad that some people out there are willing to chalk all that up as good business sense.

In the end UFC fighters continue to get paid a fraction of what they should for the risks they take. Some great organizations rose and fell because of greed. Honest investors were shafted because the rich wanted to get richer. And we wonder why the economy is in shambles. Look around. People constantly get away with this kind of shady behavior simply because so many of us shrug our shoulders and say, "Who cares?"

As for who's the victim here, it's anybody and everybody who thinks there's nothing wrong with this picture. It's all the folks who choose to look the other way because great fights are still getting made. It's all the legions of brainwashed sheep who refuse to open their minds to the possibility that they're being lied to. It's all the screwed investors and all the fighters being used while their bosses are raking in all the big money. If this kind of behavior is allowed to go on unchecked, everyone loses.