JTR Enterprises, LLC v. An Unknown Quantity

93 F. Supp. 3d 1331, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 31883, 2015 WL 1208666
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedMarch 16, 2015
DocketCase No. 11-CV-10074
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 93 F. Supp. 3d 1331 (JTR Enterprises, LLC v. An Unknown Quantity) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
JTR Enterprises, LLC v. An Unknown Quantity, 93 F. Supp. 3d 1331, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 31883, 2015 WL 1208666 (S.D. Fla. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER DENYING SANCTIONS

JAMES LAWRENCE KING, District Judge.

One of the greatest transgressions that can be committed against a federal court is to knowingly perpetrate a fraud and to commandeer and manipulate the legal processes to do so. This case involves just such a fraud. What this Court described as the “legal finale to a three-year opera with a stunning libretto” more than two years ago has come back for an even more stunning-encore.

Motivation, Inc. seeks to invoke this Court’s inherent power to sanction bad-faith litigation conduct one of the alleged perpetrators or enablers of the fraud, Plaintiff JTR’s outside general counsel, attorney Bruce L. Silverstein.1

[1334]*1334I. Background

This case involves a criminal conspiracy against the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida, which began with the filing of a completely fabricated admiralty case falsely alleging a fictitious discovery of lost treasure from an 18th century Spanish galleon.

The corrupt intent of the criminally inspired conspiracy of faking a discovery of lost Spanish treasure of thousands of junk emeralds previously planted on the bottom of the ocean to be later “discovered” as newly discovered res, subject to the admiralty jurisdiction of the United States District Court, was to obtain a judicial decree awarding the conspirators not only title to the previously planted emeralds, but also an injunctive order preserving to the criminals the exclusive right to continue, searching the fake, imaginary site of the “discovery,” thus preserving the opportunity to continue to “salt” the site with junk treasure for sale to innocent victims (purchasers and investors) who had been misled into believing the discovery was true and genuine based on the Court’s admiralty decree.

Although the future victims of the conspirators would have been the purchasers of the fake gems and the investors who were expected to invest in the continued salvage operations of the fake discovery, the immediate victim was the United States District Court and the American system of justice. The entry of a final decree as sought by Plaintiff would have lended credence to the conspirators’ outrageously false claims of a new discovery.

The corrupt criminal conspiracy of the false discovery of an eighteenth century Spanish treasure galleon and the filing of a totally false, fictitious admiralty case quickly gained a number of supporters willing to believe the incredible lies of the originators of the fraud, Jay Misc.vich and Steve Elsehlepp (the divers who reported the discovery of the previously planted junk emeralds). Among these supporters who enthusiastically commenced to promote the fraud were family members and their business associates, private investors, large corporate law firms, local and national media sources, including the CBS program “60 Minutes,” the Smithsonian Institute, and elected officials of the Colombian government.

The involvement of all of these individuals and corporate entities produced, in some instances, astounding results. The record indicates that a more than three million dollar investment was made in furtherance of the criminal enterprise. The record further indicates that various law firms have invested legal services (some paid, some unpaid) of several million dollars in attorneys’ fees and costs of litigation. The case has additionally spawned hundreds of hours of judicial labor in the three trials that have thus far been conducted.2

The numerous parties and entities are listed in the foregoing paragraphs. Some are innocent, some are not. Some can be proven as knowing members of a criminal conspiracy to deceive and defraud the United States Court of the Southern District of Florida, and some are not so provable by the high requirements of the governing standard of proof for sanctionable conduct. This is the issue of this part (the third trial) of what appears to be a never-ending series of trials and evidentiary [1335]*1335hearings flowing out from the original admiralty case.3 Who knew? What did they know? When did they know? Did they participate with the knowledge and intent to commit a criminal fraud on the court and innocent victims or were they dupes and unknowing aids to the original criminal conspirators who were fully aware of the fraud on the court?

As a secondary issue in determining proof of sanctionable conduct, are the persons who cannot be proven to have had direct knowledge of participating in the planting of emeralds in the ocean subject to sanctions for deliberately closing their eyes to the fraud being committed in deliberate indifference to the harm their activities were causing? Is the proof in this record substantial enough to prove by clear and convincing evidence that such individuals (if any) are to be sanctioned? Is it a legal offense for such an individual to defend on a basis that “I never knew that the conspirators purchased fake emeralds and planted them on the bottom of the ocean since they never told me that”? Should they, if the evidence is clear and convincing that Jay and Steve were obviously lying about making a discovery of lost treasure, haye withdrawn from the conspiracy at the time it became known to them or made the facts of the fraud known to the court?

This, the Amended Motion for Sanctions by Claimant Motivation, Inc., raises a plethora of legal issues not at issue in this Court’s order of January 25, 2013, or Judge Moore’s Order of June 19, 2014: Legal issues pertaining to sanctions of persons and entities not parties to the original admiralty action; the legal standard for burden of proof, i.e., clear and convincing evidence; the elements of deliberate ignorance; the inherent authority of a court to impose sanctions; and the Court’s jurisdiction to sanction parties who have not personally been served or appeared in litigation pending before the Court prior to sanctions being sought against that person or entity.

A combination of this Court’s January 25, 2013, Opinion and Final Order (DE # 199) (the “Admiralty Order”) and the Honorable United States District Judge K. Michael Moore’s June 19, 2014, Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law (DE # 445) (“Judge Moore’s Sanctions Order”) adequately details the procedural and factual background of this tale, and the relevant portions of each will be reproduced verbatim herein. As Judge Moore succinctly put it, “[t]he factual narrative in this matter has two versions: the tall tale and the truth.” Judge Moore’s Sanctions Order, DE # 445 at 2.

A. The Tall Tale — The Admiralty Trial

This story — as far as the Court knew on January 25, 2013, when it entered its Admiralty Order — begins with the alleged discovery by two treasure hunters of a cache of jewels on the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico off of Key West, Florida:

On or about January 11, 2010, friends and dive partners Jay Miscovich (“Jay”) and Steve Elchlepp (“Steve”) retrieved a handful of green stones from the floor of the Gulf of Mexico, some 30 miles North [1336]*1336of Key West. As they continued to dive the site, the handful turned into a heap of stones which Steve testified now weighs between 100 and 250 pounds. Jay and Steve were not searching the area by happenstance.

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93 F. Supp. 3d 1331, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 31883, 2015 WL 1208666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jtr-enterprises-llc-v-an-unknown-quantity-flsd-2015.