—
However since they’re now facing a Class Action suit — maybe their Scam didn’t work so well, afterall?
[...]
The company, World Patent Marketing, promised to help inventors get patents.
Whitaker was named as an advisory board member in October 2014 and Federal Election Commission filings showed the company's owner donated $2,600 to Whitaker's campaign when he was running for the US Senate. A payment record also shows Whitaker was paid at least $9,375 by the company from October 2014 to February 2016, and was due to be paid an additional $7,500 in 2016 and 2017, but it is unclear whether he received that money.
According to a World Patent Marketing
press release announcing
Whitaker's position on the board, Whitaker was quoted as saying, "
World Patent Marketing has become a trusted partner to many inventors that believe in the American Dream," and "I have always admired World Patent Marketing and its innovative products and dynamic leadership team."
Here is one would-be inventor that fell for the sales pitch, from the scammers at World Patent Marketing. A company that was lent it “credibility” by Whitaker’s questionably padded resume.
Class action lawsuit targets World Patent Marketing for scamming customers with invention ideas
ABC15 Arizona — Published on May 9, 2018
Here’s are some of the highlights from that Arizona local news report:
No wonder, Don-the-Con likes Matt-the-Hack so much — they are both cut from the same cloth:
Both con-artists with nothing to offer, but their own “nonexistent and useless BS”.
— —
from quaoar's post on the topic:
And what was Whitaker’s involvement with the company?
Mr. Whitaker was paid a total of $9,375 to serve as an advisory-board member of the company, according to court documents, and appeared in at least two promotional videos the firm posted on its website. He also wrote a 2015 email on the company’s behalf to an unhappy customer, citing his background as a former U.S. Attorney and threatening the customer with “serious civil and criminal consequences,” the documents show.
So he tried to intimidate an unhappy customer with threats of legal action.
Nice, huh? Take their money, and threaten to sue them, their “Marks.”
Trump must have thought that Whitaker was the perfect guy for the Job,
— the Job of rigging the DOJ for him, as the Robert Mueller investigative hammer is about to come down.
Afterall it takes a Scam artist — to understand and protect, another Scam artist.
...
Funny though, how the Law does eventually catch up with them.
If not the Law, then Karma and a Blue Wave will ultimately catch up with them too.