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| Alias Born | 11/16/2021 |
Monday, April 21, 2025 11:45:46 PM
Let’s set the record straight, once and for all, because the constant attempts to link unrelated external individuals or entities to HMBL are not only misleading, they’re irresponsible, defamatory, and outright false.
First and foremost, HMBL has no formal, legal, or operational ties to Jacob Fernane. There is zero evidence that he was ever a corporate officer, employee, executive, advisor, board member, or registered affiliate of HMBL. You won’t find evidence, because it doesn’t exist.
Let’s address the hyperbolic reference to “crime scene” and “HUMBL-a-CON.” This kind of language, while colorful, is not grounded in any legal precedent or regulatory action. HMBL has been, and continues to be, an SEC-reporting company. That means its financials, disclosures, business model, executive compensation, and insider trades are all publicly available and regulated under federal securities law. If any alleged financial misconduct had occurred, especially something involving “money bags” or illicit transfers, the SEC would have initiated a formal investigation or enforcement action. To date, there is no such action.
Now, let’s deal with the USPS and “feds on the wet dog doo doo” comment. If Jacob Fernane is under investigation or facing legal consequences in Florida for his own actions involving the postal service or other federal matters, that is his burden to bear, not HMBLs. The idea that his personal legal troubles somehow implicate HMBL is as absurd as blaming a bank for what a random account holder does after depositing a check. HMBL cannot control or be held liable for the behavior of unaffiliated third parties, especially ones not involved in the company in any official capacity.
The name-drops “Pacific Lion,” “Liqueous,” etc. are being used here as a smokescreen to imply shadowy financing or dark money without explaining how any of these entities actually harmed shareholders, broke laws, or even directly worked with HMBL. Pacific Lion Capital is a known investor in a number of small-cap companies and has been involved in financing arrangements like convertible notes. Those deals, while often criticized for their dilution impact, are not illegal, and they’re fully disclosed in SEC filings. So if you’re mad about dilution, be mad at the math, not at conspiracy theories.
And let’s not gloss over the fact that every microcap public company operating in high-risk, high-reward industries like blockchain, fintech, and tokenized assets has had to navigate complex financing landscapes, especially during capital crunch periods. HMBL is no different. But taking risks and pivoting as a startup does not equate to running a “crime scene.”
What HMBL has done:
• Built a regulated digital wallet.
• Partnered with legitimate vendors and platforms.
• Filed all required documentation with the SEC.
• Responded to changing market conditions and investor sentiment with strategic pivots.
If you’re upset about HMBLs performance as an investment, that’s your right. It’s a speculative play, and everyone knows that. But to take that frustration and redirect it into baseless accusations, factless finger-pointing, and online character assassinations is not only lazy, it’s counterproductive to any actual accountability.
So no, Jacob Fernane’s alleged activities, whatever they may be, have nothing to do with HUMBL the company, its executives, its filings, or its forward-looking initiatives. Let’s not conflate independent actors with corporate governance just because it makes for an exciting headline in a tweet.
Let’s deal in facts, not fiction. The market needs more of that.
First and foremost, HMBL has no formal, legal, or operational ties to Jacob Fernane. There is zero evidence that he was ever a corporate officer, employee, executive, advisor, board member, or registered affiliate of HMBL. You won’t find evidence, because it doesn’t exist.
Let’s address the hyperbolic reference to “crime scene” and “HUMBL-a-CON.” This kind of language, while colorful, is not grounded in any legal precedent or regulatory action. HMBL has been, and continues to be, an SEC-reporting company. That means its financials, disclosures, business model, executive compensation, and insider trades are all publicly available and regulated under federal securities law. If any alleged financial misconduct had occurred, especially something involving “money bags” or illicit transfers, the SEC would have initiated a formal investigation or enforcement action. To date, there is no such action.
Now, let’s deal with the USPS and “feds on the wet dog doo doo” comment. If Jacob Fernane is under investigation or facing legal consequences in Florida for his own actions involving the postal service or other federal matters, that is his burden to bear, not HMBLs. The idea that his personal legal troubles somehow implicate HMBL is as absurd as blaming a bank for what a random account holder does after depositing a check. HMBL cannot control or be held liable for the behavior of unaffiliated third parties, especially ones not involved in the company in any official capacity.
The name-drops “Pacific Lion,” “Liqueous,” etc. are being used here as a smokescreen to imply shadowy financing or dark money without explaining how any of these entities actually harmed shareholders, broke laws, or even directly worked with HMBL. Pacific Lion Capital is a known investor in a number of small-cap companies and has been involved in financing arrangements like convertible notes. Those deals, while often criticized for their dilution impact, are not illegal, and they’re fully disclosed in SEC filings. So if you’re mad about dilution, be mad at the math, not at conspiracy theories.
And let’s not gloss over the fact that every microcap public company operating in high-risk, high-reward industries like blockchain, fintech, and tokenized assets has had to navigate complex financing landscapes, especially during capital crunch periods. HMBL is no different. But taking risks and pivoting as a startup does not equate to running a “crime scene.”
What HMBL has done:
• Built a regulated digital wallet.
• Partnered with legitimate vendors and platforms.
• Filed all required documentation with the SEC.
• Responded to changing market conditions and investor sentiment with strategic pivots.
If you’re upset about HMBLs performance as an investment, that’s your right. It’s a speculative play, and everyone knows that. But to take that frustration and redirect it into baseless accusations, factless finger-pointing, and online character assassinations is not only lazy, it’s counterproductive to any actual accountability.
So no, Jacob Fernane’s alleged activities, whatever they may be, have nothing to do with HUMBL the company, its executives, its filings, or its forward-looking initiatives. Let’s not conflate independent actors with corporate governance just because it makes for an exciting headline in a tweet.
Let’s deal in facts, not fiction. The market needs more of that.
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