The big news in the A&O debacle last week was this Complaint that the A&O bankruptcy trustee Patrick Collins filed against Adley Abdulwahab, Brent Oncale, Russell Mackert, Christian Allmedinger, Shepard Capital Management (Mackert’s company) and A&O. The Complaint alleges that the defendants stole the A&O investors’ money. A while back I asked where did the investors’ money go and stated:
There, as in the bankruptcy proceeding, A&O and Mackert claim that Physician’s Trust LLC bought A&O, asked Mackert to manage it and then disappeared. Literally. The supposed owner of A&O paid millions for the company to Adley Wahab and his partners and then disappeared without a trace? And they can’t be found? That makes no sense and just defies all credibility. I don’t believe it. No one believes it. I suspect that one day the truth will emerge, and I can’t wait to hear it.
The Complaint alleges that the sale of A&O was an “illusion” in response to regulatory investigations in multiple states. “The sale was a sham” and Wahab, Oncale and Mackert maintained control over the A&O financial accounts. The Complaint alleges that at least $37 million was transfered to the A&O principals for their personal use. The Complaint seeks the recovery of these funds.
The Complaint refers to the sale of A&O to Physicians Trust and Blue Dymond as the purported sale of the A&O entities. The Complaint does not state whether Physicians Trust and Blue Dymond are legitimate companies separate and apart from Wahab et al. or whether RJ Stephenson is a real person. At this point, however, there is no credible evidence that Stephenson is a real person or that Physicians Trust and Blue Dymond are legitimate.
No observers of the A&O debacle are surprised by these new allegations. But the allegations raise new questions about the veracity of A&O front man Russell Mackert and whether he committed perjury in connection with affidavits that A&O filed in the Colson litigation in Mississippi.
In this affidavit Mackert testified that the A&O principles sold the company to Physicians Trust and Blue Dymond, whose principal was RJ Stephens. According the Mackert, Stephens then disappeared into thin air like Keyser Söze in the movie The Usual Suspects. As pointed out by wikepedia: “the… use of the name in popular culture is a shorthand reference to being fooled by the actual bad guy into believing in a bad guy that doesn’t exist.”
According to the trustees’ Complaint, the A&O sale was a sham—and Mackert knew it. If this allegation is true, then Mackert may have committed perjury in his affidavits filed in Mississippi.
Perjury is lying under oath in a judicial proceeding. An affidavit is sworn testimony under oath in a judicial proceeding. Was Mackert’s affidavit perjury? The United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Mississippi may want to know.