one lie becomes two

When one lie becomes two, the house of cards collapses.

This morning, I filed updates to both the Security Exchange Commission complaint and an ARDC: Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission of the Supreme Court of Illinois filing against the legal team representing nuEra Cannabis. What did I find? Perjury—in their own words.

Here’s the breakdown:
Perjury in Sworn Filings (Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois):
June 2024: nuEra’s attorneys denied withholding financials under oath.
December 2024: The same attorneys admitted the financials were delivered September 2024(only 2023 tax filings nothing from 2020-2022 message Internal Revenue Service), directly contradicting their earlier sworn statement.
Law Violated: Rule 3.3 – Candor Toward the Tribunal. Submitting false statements under oath is perjury—plain and simple.

Fraudulent Conveyance and Hidden Litigation (DuPage County):
While nuEra is being sued for fraud in Cook County, they quietly transferred asset contracts and 100% of profits of certain assets to Man-Sing LLC—during active litigation.
They then filed a new lawsuit against Man-Sing LLC in DuPage County (Case No. 2024CH000313) without disclosing it to stakeholders or the court.
Law Violated: Fiduciary Duty to Stakeholders and SEC reporting obligations.

When you see a pattern of fraud, concealment, and perjury, it isn’t a mistake. It’s a strategy that’s been exposed—and one that regulators, courts, and disciplinary boards will have to address.

I don’t need discovery to prove this—nuEra handed me the evidence in their own filings.

I’ll be watching as the ARDC investigates attorney conduct and the SEC escalates its investigation into fraudulent conveyance and misrepresentations.

The house of cards is falling.

You can lie under oath once, but when you contradict yourself, it’s game over.

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