
Resolves YES if Sokolowski v. Digital Currency Group, Inc., 4:25-cv-00001, (M.D. Penn.) survives defendants' motion to dismiss (e.g., 12(b)(6) or a bankruptcy related motion), In the event that such a motion is granted in part, I will resolve to a % based off of the number of defendants and claims remaining (e.g., a MTD which results in the dismissal of 2 of 3 parties will result in a 33% resolution).
Resolves NO if a motion is granted in full; or plaintiffs dismiss the suit with or without prejudice prior to the last deadline for defendants to file such a motion.
The docket can be found here (or on PACER here). A copy of the original complaint can be found here.
The MTD by defendants Silbert and DCG (ECF 16) is available here. (Mooted by amended complaint but should represent closely the pending brief on renewed MTD)
If you're suing individually over losses incurred through a company (CM LLC), that’s a major risk to your case.
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In other words, you're taking an uphill path. It’s not hopeless — but it’s far from a slam dunk.
When I run it through my AI, it says the case is gonna get dismissed. But, I haven't spent 410 hours on it. Just 4 minutes.
@KevinBlaw "The characteristics of the service Genesis provided become stark with the following statement: Had Plaintiffs merely wished to make loans, they could have sought direct counterparty relationships and undertaken the associated duediligence burden, accepting concentrated counterparty risk." = I would sanction this sentence.
@KevinBlaw defendants are equitably stopped from raising defenses. I stopped reading for the morning when I got to that whopper. It reads like the scribbling of an insane person that are purified through chatGPT
@KevinBlaw This is much worse than I thought it would be. It is difficult for me to believe that anyone could look at this and think it's good.
AI absolutely rekt.
Per Steve's twitter response should be on the docket circa 11:30pm. I'll pull it for courtlistener around then.
@kopecs Holy hell he attached 170 pages of unpublished opinions to it.
(In case anyone needed convincing that LexisNexis MCP would be a bad idea)
@Ziddletwix DCG et al did bad stuff (1). They also allegedly fraudulently transferred property when they knew they were about to go bankrupt (2) (presumably to hide it from the bankruptcy estate). The LOC (see https://www.genesisloc.com/faqs) was an entity formed as part of the bankruptcy proceeding to help manage expected suits and they're bringing claims for (1)---in Delaware and (2)---in SDNY.
(1) is sort of similar to what Steve wants to sue for, but from a quick skim of the press release the specific cause of action is conceptually different (Steve wants mainly to sue under a PA consumer protection statue, which is a bit dubious, though less so than some other issues with his suit).
@FrederickNorris Sadly it seems Steve asked for more time to do his homework (ECF 40, asking for an extension until May 27).