United States of America and The State of Illinois ex rel. Lorine Lagatta v. Reditus Laboratories, LLC; Tri-County Anesthesia SC; Myriad Genetics Laboratories, Inc.; Midwest Urological Group, Ltd.; Aaron Rossi; Joseph Banno; Lawrence Rossi; AJR Diagnostics, LLC; AJR MD Consulting, LLC; RLL Aviation, LLC; PR Manufacturing Enterprises, LLC; Bryan Zowin; MDXHealth, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, C.D. Illinois
DecidedJanuary 30, 2026
Docket1:22-cv-01203
StatusUnknown

This text of United States of America and The State of Illinois ex rel. Lorine Lagatta v. Reditus Laboratories, LLC; Tri-County Anesthesia SC; Myriad Genetics Laboratories, Inc.; Midwest Urological Group, Ltd.; Aaron Rossi; Joseph Banno; Lawrence Rossi; AJR Diagnostics, LLC; AJR MD Consulting, LLC; RLL Aviation, LLC; PR Manufacturing Enterprises, LLC; Bryan Zowin; MDXHealth, Inc. (United States of America and The State of Illinois ex rel. Lorine Lagatta v. Reditus Laboratories, LLC; Tri-County Anesthesia SC; Myriad Genetics Laboratories, Inc.; Midwest Urological Group, Ltd.; Aaron Rossi; Joseph Banno; Lawrence Rossi; AJR Diagnostics, LLC; AJR MD Consulting, LLC; RLL Aviation, LLC; PR Manufacturing Enterprises, LLC; Bryan Zowin; MDXHealth, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, C.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States of America and The State of Illinois ex rel. Lorine Lagatta v. Reditus Laboratories, LLC; Tri-County Anesthesia SC; Myriad Genetics Laboratories, Inc.; Midwest Urological Group, Ltd.; Aaron Rossi; Joseph Banno; Lawrence Rossi; AJR Diagnostics, LLC; AJR MD Consulting, LLC; RLL Aviation, LLC; PR Manufacturing Enterprises, LLC; Bryan Zowin; MDXHealth, Inc., (C.D. Ill. 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT CENTRAL DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS PEORIA DIVISION UNITED STATES OF AMERICA and THE STATE OF ILLINOIS ex rel. LORINE LAGATTA, Plaintiff, v. REDITUS LABORATORIES, LLC; TRI-COUNTY ANESTHESIA SC; MYRIAD GENETICS LABORATORIES, INC.; MIDWEST UROLOGICAL GROUP, LTD.; AARON ROSSI; JOSEPH BANNO; LAWRENCE ROSSI; AJR Case No. 1:22-cv-01203-SLD-RLH DIAGNOSTICS, LLC; AJR MD CONSULTING, LLC; RLL AVIATION, LLC; PR MANUFACTURING ENTERPRISES, LLC; BRYAN ZOWIN; MDXHEALTH, INC., Defendants,

v.

ROBIN POTTER; ROBIN POTTER & ASSOCIATES, P.C.,

Interested Parties.

ORDER & OPINION Attorneys, no less than judges, promise to uphold the rule of law. But they also must earn a living. To do so, they charge clients in various ways—from contingency fees to fixed hourly rates. And to maximize efficiency, they join firms that divide labor and specialize. Sometimes those arrangements work out; other times, they fracture. When they do, clients and courts are left holding the briefcase. The fee dispute here offers an example. When Plaintiff Lorine LaGatta filed this qui tam action in 2022, she was

represented by David Fish and Robin Potter—then both members of the firm Fish, Potter, Bolaños. Potter resigned, and Fish continued to represent LaGatta. When Potter learned that LaGatta had reached a putative settlement with nine defendants, she filed several attorney’s liens against LaGatta’s anticipated recovery. Deeply troubled by the impact of those liens on the settlement process, LaGatta moved to declare them invalid. (Doc. 115.) This Order resolves that motion, along with Potter’s

Motion to Stay. (Doc. 145.) Potter asks the Court to hold off on LaGatta’s motion because she and Fish are involved in a separate mediation. But the mediation is no reason to wait, so Potter’s motion to stay, (Doc. 145), will be denied. As to the merits, attorney’s liens are a creature of state law, so the validity of Potter’s liens turns on the application of Illinois law. But the Illinois Attorney’s Liens Act did not authorize Potter’s liens, nor do equitable or common-law principles supply an alternative basis for them. The liens

fail, so LaGatta’s motion to declare them invalid, (Doc. 115), will be granted. BACKGROUND To say LaGatta’s motion to adjudicate liens has been over-litigated would be generous. In the two dozen or so filings since August 2025, LaGatta and Potter have fought tooth-and-nail over almost every aspect of their dispute. But until recently, they agreed on one thing: This Court can and should resolve it. Now, they don’t agree on even that proposition. To frame the dispute, the Court details who Robin Potter is before turning to her involvement with David Fish, his firm, and this lawsuit. The Court then recounts Potter’s resignation, her attorney’s liens, and their effect on this proceeding.

A. Factual Background Robin Potter is a lawyer who began working for the firm, Fish Potter Bolaños P.C., in September 2021. (Doc. 115-4 at 2.) Under her contract, she was to be “a Shareholder . . . and an independent contractor non-employee of the firm.” (Doc. 115- 4 at 2.) Rather than draw a salary, Potter’s compensation was to be calculated by multiplying the number of hours she worked on any of the firm’s cases by her lodestar

rate—i.e., $700 per hour or “such other agreed upon amount.” (Doc. 115-4 at 3.) The agreement was freely terminable by either party upon thirty days’ notice. (Doc. 115- 4 at 4.) After termination, Potter was entitled to payment “for work and referral fees earned prior to the termination date,” meaning that her right to compensation would survive her relationship with the firm. (Doc. 115-4 at 4.) The agreement also provided for mediation and—if unsuccessful—binding arbitration of “any disputes between” the parties.1 (Doc. 115-4 at 4.)

Fast forward to June 2022, when LaGatta filed her complaint. (Doc. 1.) It was signed by David J. Fish, who was then—and remains today—lead counsel for LaGatta and a member of Fish Potter Bolaños.2 (Doc. 1 at 35.) Potter also appeared in the case

1 The Agreement was signed by Robin Potter, on the one hand, and “M. Nieves Bolanos,” the firm’s president, on the other. (Doc. 115-4 at 5.) 2 The Fish Potter Bolaños firm was renamed in June 2024 to “Workplace Law Partners, P.C.” but otherwise remained the same entity. (Doc. 93.) For consistency, the Court will refer to the firm as Fish Potter Bolaños throughout this Order. as counsel for LaGatta. (Doc. 9.) Sometime during these proceedings, Potter’s relationship with Fish Potter Bolaños soured. It officially ended on May 31, 2024, when Potter tendered a resignation letter to Fish. (Doc. 115-5.) Upon her departure,

Potter executed a separation agreement that established the parties’ respective post-employment obligations. (See Doc. 119-3 at 1–6.) As relevant here, the agreement clarified which cases would stay with the firm and which ones would follow Potter. (Doc. 119-3 at 6.) LaGatta’s case was among those that would remain with Fish and the firm. (Doc. 119-3 at 6.) But if LaGatta ultimately prevailed (via settlement, a judgment, or otherwise), Potter would “receive[] her proportional

lodestar for her work performed on the case as a non-originating attorney.”3 (Doc. 119-3 at 6.) The Court had no knowledge of Potter’s resignation until over a year later when, in July 2025, Potter moved to withdraw as counsel, stating that she was “no longer employed or affiliated with Workplace Law Partners, P.C. (f/k/a Fish Potter Bolaños, P.C.).” (Doc. 113.) In short, Potter was a member of the firm when the case began, appeared on LaGatta’s behalf, worked on the matter, and resigned while the case was ongoing. At

first blush, this appears to be precisely the situation contemplated by the agreement’s termination provision—that is, Potter performed billable work on one of the firm’s

3 The separation agreement also requires the parties to “keep each other reasonably updated on the status of the matters that they are working on and for which the other Party has an interest and to cooperate to support fee requests as necessary.” (Doc. 119-3 at 4.) Potter directs much of her effort to attacking Fish for failing to honor this provision. But as outlined below, that question is beyond the scope of LaGatta’s motion to adjudicate and thus irrelevant. cases,4 and then left before the case was over and any attorney’s fees were collected. Under Potter’s original compensation agreement—and the separation agreement she signed later—she would appear to have a contractual right to be paid for her work on

LaGatta’s case. So what’s the problem? What happened in the year between Potter’s resignation and the onset of the current dispute? From what the Court can gather, Potter got wind that LaGatta’s case was on the brink of reaching a settlement. (Doc. 115 at 3.) So she demanded that Fish turn over billing records and a copy of the settlement agreements (presumably to calculate the money she was owed under the

separation agreement). (Doc. 119-1 at 6.) Fish refused, and Potter threatened to file attorneys’ liens against Potter’s recovery. (Doc. 115 at 3.) Fish met Potter’s threat with one of his own: He emailed Potter to “memorialize the controlling case law that prohibits” Potter “from asserting an attorney’s lien under the present circumstances.” (Doc. 115-8 at 2.) The email also cautioned Potter that “any attempt to assert a lien at this stage would constitute a false representation of [her] legal rights” and potentially “expose [her] to liability.” (Doc. 115-8 at 2.)

Undeterred, Potter served (at least) four notices of attorney’s liens on the United States, (Doc. 115-6 at 2), Defendant Reditus Laboratories, (Doc. 115-6 at 4), Defendant Myriad Genetic Laboratories, Inc., (Doc. 142-1 at 2), and David Fish

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United States of America and The State of Illinois ex rel. Lorine Lagatta v. Reditus Laboratories, LLC; Tri-County Anesthesia SC; Myriad Genetics Laboratories, Inc.; Midwest Urological Group, Ltd.; Aaron Rossi; Joseph Banno; Lawrence Rossi; AJR Diagnostics, LLC; AJR MD Consulting, LLC; RLL Aviation, LLC; PR Manufacturing Enterprises, LLC; Bryan Zowin; MDXHealth, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-of-america-and-the-state-of-illinois-ex-rel-lorine-lagatta-ilcd-2026.