Well, he might’ve been hired as a local attorney, and decided to embellish his resume to say he was instrumental in Amaya’s multi-billion dollar growth just because he worked as an assistant on some M&A cases — however brief his involvement may have been he decided to use it. It’s not the first time I’ve seen that happen.
Just like he allegedly misrepresented himself to Quintana that his father was founder of the Perry Ellis brand with access to unlimited funds, and he also founded the Ticket Clinic. They lie to gain access. Overwhelming majority of these introductory PR’s are embellished and severely overstated, and a typical OTC investor rarely does a deep dive, so they get away with it.
What’s telling is who in their right mind with any legit stature would risk their name and reputation and get involved with notorious scammers in a stinky pink? That’s where the whole story falls apart and starts look like total BS.
If Feldenkrais had anything worth value here (he doesn’t), and had no idea who he was getting in bed with (he did) and just happened to be the dumbest mfer this side of the Mississippi who according to him could vet multi-billion dollar deals but managed to do zero vetting of this shell and somehow got himself conned — as any good attorney would’ve advised, if your hands are clean, then file a petition to back out of the public deal immediately when he was first questioned by the FBI, so he wouldn’t lose $12M in assets. The fact that he didn’t is very telling, that he likely knew who he was making deals with, and that there are no assets worth even a minute fraction of that amount, and the risk was worth the reward.
He’s sitting on 500M shares, and the shareholders still owe him $10M in shares that will blow up the OS when it’s all said and done. Not a bad deal for him. He’ll RM out of the ticker at some point and walk into the sunset with a boatload of free trading shares that he can dump into the market and finance his next venture. Rinse and repeat.