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Righthaven has attempted to secure a bond as required by the district court to stay the Judgment pending appeal. To date, Righthaven has been unable to secure a bond. The terms required by the bonding companies that Righthaven's counsel has investigated and/or contacted are an impediment to meeting the district court's stay requirement. The bonding companies are requiring what amounts to a full cash bond. In sum, the bonding companies ask for full cash payment, certain forms of collateral held by the company or irrevocable letters of credit be posted to obtain a bond in the amount requested. To date, Righthaven has been unable to satisfactorily meet these requirements in a manner acceptable to a bonding company. Due to the pending appeals and the stay of certain active litigation matters, Righthaven's operating capital is being utilized to service its monthly operating expenses. As such, it is presently unable to allocate more than $34,000 toward the bond required by the district court to stay the Judgment pending appeal.
The Randazza Legal Group wasted little time in responding and pointing out the interesting choice of language by Righthaven. It's not that Righthaven says it can't pay, but it seems to suggest it would prefer to use that money towards appeals.
The filing calls into question Righthaven's claim that it cannot put forth $34,000, noting that it's either lying, or isn't going to be able to pay for the appeals it has filed. The suggestion is that Righthaven is trying to use up its remaining funds to avoid paying anyone else:
Righthaven has provided no statement of its operating expenses, and it appears that Righthaven's sole expenses are paying its CEO, who hatched and profited from this illegal scheme, and paying its attorneys in order to file frivolous motions and avoid paying lawful judgments. It is clear that Righthaven's plan is to consume its remaining capital by transferring money to those who least deserve it, exhausting its funds until it is in a state of bankruptcy. The courts, thus far, have been unwittingly complicit in this scheme by their failure to take a definitive and stand against the ongoing fraudulent transfers. It must stop here.
Furthermore, the filing notes that Righthaven (in typical fashion) has failed to file the opening brief of its first appeal, even thought it was due nearly a month ago:
The propriety of Righthaven's appeals is in serious doubt. Righthaven's opening brief in its first appeal, Realty One Group, Inc., Case No. 11-15714, was due to this Court on September 19, 2011 and has yet to be filed. This appeal appears to be another stall tactic for Righthaven to deny the defendant in that case, and the First Amendment principles its fair use victory embraces, any finality. This leaves two possibilities explaining Righthaven's financial condition: Either it has $34,000 that it can use to post a bond and it prefers not to, or it is absolutely broke and pursuing its appeals in bad faith, in order to deny prevailing defendants finality - and extract a settlement from them still.
This is like watching a train wreck in excruciatingly slow motion.
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