
Purdue Pharma plan moves forward despite challenge from opioid victim
A New York bankruptcy judge approved a disclosure statement last week laying out Purdue Pharma's proposed reorganization plan – despite an objection alleging the disclosure omits information about the US government's plan to seize Purdue money that could be used to compensate prescription opioid victims under the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act instead.
It's been five years since Purdue Pharma pleaded guilty to charges of conspiracy in a New Jersey federal court, including for unlawfully dispensing opioid products without a legitimate medical purpose. In a press release at the time, the Department of Justice emphasized that the convictions were part of a strategy to defeat the opioid crisis.
But the plea agreement did not include restitution for opioid victims, reasoning that it would not be 'administratively feasible' to distribute the funds. Since then, opioid victims have been unable to seek settlements from Purdue, as the company's 2019 bankruptcy filing stayed civil lawsuits against the company, and will likely instead be settled in bankruptcy court as part of the reorganization plan.
Creighton Bloyd – a plaintiff in a class-action suit against Purdue demanding the company pay for prescription opioid victims' recovery treatment – objected to the disclosure statement in the bankruptcy court this month.
In his objection, he alleged that the disclosure statement omitted relevant information about US government plans to seize $225m that could instead go to prescription opioid victims under the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act (MVRA), which requires prosecutors to financially compensate victims of criminal cases.
Purdue agreed to forfeit $2bn for the value of 'misbranded' drugs that may have led patients to become addicted. Bloyd argued that $225m of that should go to opioid victims under the MVRA, because a federal attorney acknowledged these misbranded drugs harmed individuals.
Instead, the New Jersey plea deal gives that money to the Department of Justice, citing administrative hurdles to distributing the funds as restitution. Information about the MVRA and the possibility of using the $225m as restitution is not included in the bankruptcy disclosure statement.
Val Early III, an attorney representing personal injury claimants in the bankruptcy case, said the disclosure statement was a 'frustrating' read, because 'a lot of it was in brackets in the body of the document. Brackets, meaning 'to be determined', right?'
Despite the omission in the disclosure statement, a New York bankruptcy judge approved it on Friday, and set a September deadline for creditors, including personal injury claimants, to vote to approve or reject the plan.
'If you're asking me to vote on something, and you don't even know what you're asking me to vote on, then how can I possibly vote on it?' Early said.
Adam Zimmerman, a law professor at the University of Southern California, said it was unlikely that a judge would find the MVRA applies in this case, because there are 'a variety of exceptions' to the law, including for cases that are large or complex.
'We might call [Purdue's case] a 'mega mass tort', because of the size and scope of the problem it's trying to address here,' Zimmerman explained, adding: 'We're not dealing with a product that just affected a small group of people … We have not just private parties suing, but we have cities suing, Native American tribes suing. We have counties suing. We have states suing. We even have foreign countries that are suing.'
Zimmerman added that 'bankruptcy is a really powerful tool for defendants [such as Purdue]' because it allows them to reach what's called a global settlement with all the parties all at once, rather than litigating every claim separately in court. This also means that plaintiffs have fewer opportunities to negotiate individual settlements.
Frank Ozment, another lawyer representing personal injury claimants, disagrees that the case is too complex for the MVRA to apply. He says that, since all personal injury claimants had to file claims in the bankruptcy court by a specific deadline along with their names and addresses, it should be relatively simple to identify victims and compensate them.
Ozment also rejects the argument that it would be too administratively difficult to ensure prescription opioid victims use payouts for treatment and nothing else. He says the money could be distributed via reloadable payment cards, which allow victims and no one else to purchase medication and nothing else from a pharmacy located in the victim's zip code, similar to how people receive certain Medicaid and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (Snap) payouts.
Purdue Pharma and the Department of Justice did not respond to the Guardian's request for comment.
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Coin Geek
10 minutes ago
- Coin Geek
SEC accused of fraud on court in explosive filings
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... Embattled digital asset influencer Reggie Middleton has accused the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) of fabricating evidence and lying to the courts in the regulator's securities case against his company, according to a series of bombshell legal filings. In what the filing calls a 'profound betrayal of the judicial process,' the SEC is accused of fabricating and concealing evidence to secure an asset freeze against Middleton's company Veritaseum—a freeze which ultimately forced Middleton to prematurely settle the case. Middleton, was originally sued by the SEC along with his firm Veritaseum in 2019 over their VERI coin offering, calling it an unregistered securities offering and based on false and misleading statements made to investors. Veritaseum's business accounts were frozen early in the litigation. Following the asset freeze, Middleton and Veritaseum settled with the SEC for $9.5 million in 2019. $7,891,600 of this was disgorged profits, which was then topped up by $582,535 in interest and a $1,000,000 penalty applied to Middleton personally. The court also granted a series of injunctions that practically banished Middleton from the digital asset industry. SEC lied to the court about money transfers That would have been the end of the matter, but now Middleton has asked the court to vacate the 2019 settlement on the basis that the SEC has 'committed fraud on the court through a calculated scheme that undermined judicial integrity.' When it initially took action against Middleton and Veritaseum, the SEC demonstrated the urgency of the case by claiming that Middleton was secretly dissipating investor assets to his personal accounts. According to Middleton's latest filings, this was a complete fabrication. At the freeze hearing following the SEC's initial enforcement action, SEC attorneys pointed to monetary transfers worth $2 million that were made by Middleton to what they said were personal accounts shortly after the SEC issued him with a Wells Notice (which notifies SEC targets of impending enforcement action). Middleton's attorneys said that these transfers were routine and had been occurring every six months for the past 18 months—something Middleton says the SEC knew but chose to dishonorably omit in its submissions to the court. Additionally, they said the accounts were not personal at all, but in the name of the company. Unfortunately for Middleton, the SEC was successful in persuading the Judge, who froze Veritaseum business assets. However, at a subsequent hearing, the SEC made further filings, which included additional evidence that Middleton now says corroborates his story about the payments. This includes a report filed by the SEC's blockchain expert Patrick Doody: buried at the bottom of a sworn statement canvassing VERI trading volumes, Doody admits that he was incorrect to previously characterize the destination accounts for the £2 million ($2.7 million) as belonging to Middleton when in fact the accounts were in the name of Veritaseum LLC. This allegedly never got the chance to come up to court at the time, as Middleton and Veritaseum reached a settlement agreement with the SEC shortly thereafter. According to Middleton's latest filing accusing the SEC of fraud on the court: 'Defendants contend this outcome was coerced by the SEC's misconduct before the Court, which froze Defendant's assets based on a lie, that rendered Defendants unable to afford to be able to proceed with legal fees to continue its fight. In effect, but for the SEC obtaining the asset freeze, Defendants would have been able to defend the allegations and proceed in the normal course of due process.' Further, Middleton accuses the SEC of fraudulently suppressing evidence in the case, including by intimidating witnesses who were willing to provide statements in support of Middleton and Veritsaeum. One Veritaseum community member and Youtuber, Michael Sheahan, was subpoenaed by the SEC after submitting an affidavit in support of Middleton. 'The session turned 'aggressive, abusive and threatening', with threats of felony charges for his support and YouTube activity, halting his public advocacy and costing him channel ownership.' The SEC also attempted to seize Sheahan's devices. Another supporter, Lloyd G. Cupp III, was approached by SEC attorneys and asked to testify against Veritsaeum. Cupp declined and insisted that VERI was a utility token and not a security. Middleton says the SEC then pressured Cupp to reconsider. 'Though not explicitly threatened, this coercion reflected the SEC's dishonourable attempt to shape testimony.' Is it enough to vacate the Middleton-Veritaseum ruling? Under U.S. civil procedure rules, a judgment obtained by fraud on the court can be vacated under Rule 60(d)(3). That wider section describes the court's authority to set aside previous judgments: critically, it says that any such request must be made within a reasonable time and no later than a year after the date of the judgment in order to be considered. However, what Rule60(d)(3) does is specify that nothing in those rules affect the court's ability to set aside a judgment for fraud on the court. Fraud on the court is a high bar to reach. Though no hard-and-fast definition exists, several U.S. cases have teased out the concept. SEC v ESM Government Securities Inc in 1981 analyzed Rule 60(d)(3) and ruled that for there to be fraud on the court, the misconduct must threaten the integrity of the judicial process itself and not just affect the merits of one party's case. Mere perjury or attorney misconduct is not by itself enough to qualify. U.S. v Buck in 2002 ruled that fraud in the court must include 1) a deliberate scheme to defraud the court, 2) with intention to deceive, and 3) which corrupts the impartial functions of the court. Middleton's latest filing argues that the SEC conducts satisfy all of these requirements. He says the conduct by SEC attorneys was intentional misconduct: they knew at the time of the asset freeze hearing that the destination of the fund transfers was a Veritaseum account rather than a Reggie Middleton account. This was done 'to create a sense of urgency to obtain the relief they desired – the asset freeze.' He also says that the conduct was such that it corrupted judicial integrity: the SEC attorney knew both that the information being presented at the freeze hearing was false and that the Judge was specifically relying on it in making her determination to freeze Veritaseum assets. The filing also points to the witness intimidation. This all pressured the defendants to settle: the frozen funds would have otherwise been used to mount a robust legal defense, but with the funds frozen, Middleton and Vertisaeum suffered fairly severe penalties due to his settlement with the SEC. In addition to the nearly $10 million worth of monetary penalties, he and his companies were barred from participating in virtually any securities-related activities, and Middleton was banned from serving as an officer or director of any securities issuer. Between those prohibitions, Middleton was practically frozen out of the digital asset industry. SEC's response The SEC filed their response to Middleton's motion to vacate last week. First, they deny any such fraud took place. They point out that at the time the Judge granted the asset freeze, she had explicitly noted that there was ongoing uncertainty regarding the distinction between Middleton's personal accounts and Veritaseum accounts and that the parties would have the opportunity to present arguments over this before the expiry of the freeze. There was no further argument, as the defendants chose to settle the case. Secondly, they say that in any case, there is no legal basis to vacate because case law shows that 'relief for fraud on the court is available only where the fraud was not known at the time of settlement or entry of judgment.' Quoting Philips Lighting Co v Schneider , the SEC argues that 'examples of conduct that reaches this high standard include bribery of a judge, jury tampering, or hiring an attorney for the sole purpose of improperly influencing the judge.' In this case, the SEC argues, that standard is clearly not met. Why target Middleton? Assuming all of what Middleton says is true, the SEC's conduct is flagrantly dishonest and appears to have influenced the ultimate course of the enforcement. If true, it does raise the question of why the SEC would go to such lengths to secure a successful outcome in the Veritaseum case. On the one hand, such aggressive pursuit wouldn't be out of the norm for the SEC. Indeed, Middleton's latest filing seems at least partly inspired by another recent case in which the SEC was sanctioned for misleading the court. In SEC v Dig Licensing, the SEC pursued a blockchain project called Debtbox. In attempting to freeze Debtbox assets, the SEC told the court that Debtbox had 1) closed 33 bank accounts in 48 hours, 2) liquidated $720,000 of investor funds, and 3) were moving operations outside of the U.S. to avoid regulators. On that basis, the court granted the freeze. However, after complaints by Debtbox, the court ruled that the SEC's representations to the court were materially false and misleading: in reality, only 13 of DebtBox's bank accounts had been closed and were, in fact, closed by the banks themselves. There was no evidence of the $720,000 withdrawals, and the contention that the company planned to flee the reach of U.S. regulators had been based on a statement taken completely out of context. The court was not impressed: it hit the SEC with sanctions worth $1.8 million. Still, as a target for SEC overreach, Middleton is an interesting one. Middleton is clearly not averse to making powerful enemies: in 2022, his firm sued Coinbase (NASDAQ: COIN) for $350 million, accusing the exchange of violating a Veritaseum patent for blockchain infrastructure services, specifically 'devices, systems and methods for facilitating low trust and zero trust value transfers.' Coinbase responded by challenging the relevant patent with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (UPTO), broadly alleging that the subject matter of the patent was not patentable. The UPTO denied Coinbase's attempt. The Middleton lawsuit was voluntarily dismissed in 2023, suggesting an out-of-court settlement. Indeed, Middleton has been something of a champion of intellectual property protections in the digital asset industry. He went on record to say that BSV is undervalued, pointing to the massive blockchain patent portfolio held by nChain. Middleton would know: he revealed in 2024 that 74% of the patents cited by his company come from nChain: 74% of our patent's cites come from @nChainGlobal – a testament to the prolific nature of nChain's IP program. This makes me think that #BSV may have significantly more value than many are realizing since nChain is stating that BSV users will be licensed through its use. Others… — Reggie Middleton US11196566 US11895246 US12231579 (@ReggieMiddleton) March 6, 2024 Further emphasizing the importance of the IP to the BSV proposition, Middleton said this when asked about the well-publicized delisting attacks aimed at BSV in the past: That shouldn't matter. Which is more valuable, IP packets traded on exchanges or the ownership of the Internet, itself. Prudent investors, owners and operators are best served by keeping their eyes on the prize. — Reggie Middleton US11196566 US11895246 US12231579 (@ReggieMiddleton) March 6, 2024 Depending on how far Middleton's case gets, we may be given more context around the SEC's handling of the case via discovery. For now, the SEC has asked that the request be denied. Watch: Breaking down solutions to blockchain regulation hurdles title="YouTube video player" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" referrerpolicy="strict-origin-when-cross-origin" allowfullscreen="">


Daily Mail
16 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE My 'asset' got me into Diddy's freak offs... here's the details the jury weren't told by 'Jane' once the baby oil went on
He was slathered in baby oil, having wild sex with a beautiful woman, and earning mountains of cash. And if her famous rapper boyfriend wanted to meticulously choreograph and film the action to satisfy his private appetites, that was all part of the VIP service. Diddy 's 'freak off' parties were just another lucrative porn gig for Anton Harden, a male escort and OnlyFans star known for being enormously well-endowed. That was until the woman involved told the hip hop mogul's sex trafficking trial she was coerced into taking part in their drug-fueled romps lasting up to six hours. 'I thought I was just there for a good time with consenting adults,' Harden, 31, told in an exclusive interview. 'If she was putting on an act, through coercion, that's super f****d up and terrible. It almost feels like blood money now.' Harden was one of multiple adult entertainers hired for sex parties variously referred to as 'hotel nights' or 'freak offs', involving oil, lube, ketamine, cocaine, and ecstasy. Diddy – real name Sean Combs – would bully girlfriends into taking part in the marathon trysts as he recorded on video and masturbated, according to federal court testimony. His alleged victims include a curvaceous former flame who has given evidence anonymously as 'Jane' to say she was blackmailed, plied with drugs, and tossed about like a 'whore.' She claims the billionaire Bad Boy Records founder threatened to cut off her $10,000-per-month rent payments if she refused to play along. Diddy, 55, a triple Grammy winner and the once-untouchable kingpin of east coast rap music, denies racketeering and sex trafficking. He claims his female accusers were all willing participants. North Carolina-native Harden was familiar with hit songs like, I'll be Missing You, and It's All About the Benjamins, when he came into Diddy's orbit in October 2022. But he knew nothing about the musician's prolific sex life when Jane messaged him via social media – where Harden goes by the handle 'Unholy Meat Obelisk' – to ask if he was single. She proposed that the pair should make love in front of her wealthy husband, without disclosing his identity. 'I said yes, but I told her it's my job, I normally get paid for this,' Harden told He arrived at a swish LA hotel expecting Jane's partner to be a rich, old sugar daddy whose gorgeous younger babe would do anything to please. 'I get there and Diddy opens the door and says, come on in,' Harden revealed. Evidence photos submitted in the trial show various personal images of Diddy, who is seen in this undated photo, where he appears to be under red lighting 'I'm a fan of black music and culture so I obviously knew who it was. Honestly, I'm thinking at this point, am I on an episode of Punk'd?' The room was bathed in red light, the bed covered in towels, and a camera phone was attached to a tripod. The two men smoked a blunt, sipped DeLeon tequila and made small talk before Jane emerged from the bathroom wearing just a robe. 'It was almost like being on an adult film set,' Harden said. 'Diddy would tell you where to stand, at which angle, what to do. Go slower, go faster, oral or intercourse. 'He would direct her to apply the baby oil on herself or on me. Everything was very orchestrated by him. It was his show.' Harden hadn't been booked for his boyish good looks or acting talent. He's renowned in the porn industry for having an extraordinarily large manhood that he claims is nearly 12 inches long. 'I was there for my penis. That's what I'm known for. She called him daddy and I was her gift, or something like that,' Harden said. 'He wanted you to exaggerate. He directed it like it was his own homemade porno.' A steady supply of weed, cocaine, and ketamine was on hand throughout the wild encounter, according to Harden. Diddy would sometimes join in, take turns or sub in while the 'talent' took a break. He seemed to be aroused by Harden's size but there was 'never any gay stuff,' according to the adult entertainer, who claims to have bedded 500 women and made a million dollars from porn. That was the first of 10 or so sessions Jane and Diddy booked with him prior to the producer's arrest on September 16, 2024. He would pocket up to $7,000 each time in bundles of bills – but had to work hard for his money. 'Actually, it was performance based,' he explained. 'How long the night goes, how many times I would climax, how good he thought it was.' The couple required him to wear figure-hugging PSD boxers which are popular with hip-hop stars and professional athletes. 'Sometimes they would say we're done and tell me to go home and literally as I'm pulling into my driveway they'd be calling and asking me to come back,' Harden added. The alleged arrangement eventually unraveled over what appeared to be a simple misunderstanding over payment. Harden said he was summoned to Jane's home in June 2024 where she performed oral sex on him as Diddy watched. Afterwards she put $4,000 in a package and dispatched it to his home via Uber. When Harden contacted Jane to verify how much money he'd been sent, Diddy rang back and accused him of upsetting her. It was a year later when he read Jane's court testimony and realized exactly what he had stumbled into that day. Jane told United States v. Combs that the rapper had choked, slapped, and punched her during a brutal fight prior to Harden's arrival. Diddy had also read her texts to Harden and spotted something he didn't like. Months earlier the pair had innocently bumped into one another at a Las Vegas party hosted by another big-name rapper and had exchanged messages about it afterwards. Jealous Diddy knew nothing about the event and angrily accused Jane of attending another man's 'freak off.' But he didn't cancel the evening's entertainment: he ordered Jane to apply makeup and arrange her hair to hide the 'golf ball shaped' welts on her forehead, it's alleged. 'If I had known about the violence I would have turned around and left the minute I got there,' Harden told 'But Jane was very inviting, she was all hugs and smiles, she made me a smoothie. I didn't notice any bruising or damage to her apartment, honestly.' By then Diddy was facing a barrage of civil lawsuits alleging physical abuse, rape, and sexual assault on victims including Cassandra Ventura, another ex-girlfriend. He was also the subject of jeering internet memes suggesting he was gay or bisexual. 'Diddy was going off about that. He didn't like people saying that he was gay,' recalled Harden. 'I had heard a little about the Cassie stuff but wasn't really aware of the details. His love life was none of my business, I was there to do a job.' Diddy's ongoing trial was to yield more sobering surprises for Harden, who gave up his dream of becoming a software engineer to get into porn four years ago. Jane told the court that during one 'freak off' Harden was the last of three male escorts she had allegedly been forced to sleep with. She was in the bathroom when he arrived because she had been throwing up and felt 'absolutely terrible,' the trial heard. Jane had also texted Diddy numerous times during their three-year relationship begging him to stop using her as a sexual plaything. 'I don't want to be used and locked in a room to fulfill your fantasies,' she wrote in one message. 'I'm not a porn star. I'm not an animal,' she pleaded in another. Harden was contacted by federal agents in March and asked to present his laptop and phone for examination. He was told he might be subpoenaed to give evidence but neither prosecutors, nor defense lawyers, followed up. 'I was like, f**k, I'm kind of an accomplice to a crime,' said Harden, who bitterly regrets ever getting involved with Diddy. 'There was one part in the court documents where Jane said I came over and afterwards she felt disgusted. 'I'm not here to make anyone feel that way. I feel disgusted in myself just reading that.' Diddy has pleaded not guilty to racketeering, two counts of sexual trafficking by force, fraud or coercion and two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution. He faces a possible life sentence if convicted. 'I'm not the judge. I don't know anything about the racketeering side of things', added Harden. 'But hitting and manipulating women, if he's guilty of that, is f****d up. I'm embarrassed to say that I was the third party in that situation.'


Daily Mail
24 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Dying dad howls after espresso martini-fueled teen crashed into him at 87mph
A dying father was heard crying out in pain after his car was struck by a speeding teenage joyrider who also left a seven year-old girl with a broken spine. Eglin Manuel Castro Alvarez's howls were captured on bodycam footage filmed in Oak Lawn, Illinois, in Chicago on January 7 after Peter Swenson, 19, crashed into him. Swenson, a medical student, was filmed telling police he'd had two espresso martinis and gone for a 'joyride' to let off steam while caring for his father, who has stage four liver cancer. He allegedly ran a red light in Oak Lawn and crashed into Alvarez, 27, and his seven-year-old daughter, only slowing to 87mph upon impact. The bodycam footage, obtained earlier this week by BodyCam Edition, also picked up the screams of Alvarez's seven year-old daughter, who has not been named. Neither could be seen on camera. Alvarez had just finished work and was picking his daughter up from her babysitter when the horror crash happened. Officers managed to get the girl out and rush her to hospital, but it took half an hour for firefighters to cut off both driver's side doors to free the man. Alvarez was pronounced dead at the hospital three hours after the crash. His daughter survived with seven spinal fractures, broken ribs, and bruised lungs. Swenson who was filmed wearing an expensive Canada Goose jacket, told police after the crash that he was out for 'a little joyride' with his girlfriend after the stress of his father's cancer battle. His girlfriend told police, in the bodycam footage, they drank two or three espresso martinis at his house three or four hours earlier. Swenson failed a field sobriety test and refused a breathalyzer without a lawyer or his father. Tests allegedly showed he had a blood alcohol level of 0.154, close to twice the legal limit. A man who helped Swenson and his girlfriend out of the car told police 'he's lit, bro'. Police initially didn't know there was another car involved and were more casual and friendly when talking to the teen after being called to the crash. Swenson's red Lincoln SUV came to a stop at a vacant oil change business, while Alvarez's Honda SUV was some distance farther up the road. Swenson explained that he tried to brake at a yellow light but 'I didn't make the light, unfortunately' and collided with another car coming through. 'We were just out on a little joyride and when I was stepping on the brakes it was a little bit too late and... it was a mistake,' he told police on the bodycam footage. 'I'm so sorry, I can't believe that this happened, this is genuinely unbelievable.' Swenson said his father worked at the Illinois Office of Comptroller Chicago and was battling cancer. 'He recently was diagnosed with stage four liver cancer so the only reason her and I went out was just because of... recently there was a lot of stress,' he said. 'He only has a couple of cycles left and so I just wanted to get away from it all.' Dashcam footage from a witness allegedly showed his car traveling dangerously fast, and CCTV from a gas station caught it zooming through the red light. After police saw the dashcam footage and became aware of Alvarez's condition, their attitude towards Swenson changed. 'He's flying past her (the witness), blows through the red light, smokes this guy,' one policeman explained to another who hadn't yet seen the dashcam video. Swenson again protested 'it was an honest mistake, I can't believe that this happened', which caused one officer to lose his cool. 'I can believe it, I just watched how you were f**king driving,' he yelled at the teenager. Swenson responded by asking for his name and badge number, prompting the officer to walk away in disbelief. Over the course of the incident, he asked many times for names and badge numbers of the officers involved, or if they would at least be included in the report. Swenson was arrested after failing the field sobriety test and refusing the breathalyzer and put in the back of a police car. He was later charged with reckless homicide, aggravated driving under the influence and driving under the influence causing death. Swenson was released on bail but banned from driving or drinking alcohol, and ordered to stay home from 6pm to 6am every day. He must submit to random alcohol and drug testing, and even if he was later allowed to drive, the vehicle must have a breath alcohol ignition interlock device.