ExtortionLetterInfo Forums

ELI Forums => Higbee Associates Letter & Lawsuits Forum => Topic started by: icepick on October 11, 2017, 08:29:42 AM

Title: Are The Judges on to Higbee? (docs inside)
Post by: icepick on October 11, 2017, 08:29:42 AM
I was doing some more research on my favorite guy, Higbee. I came across a couple of very interesting documents connected with some kind of settlement conference as part of his rampant case filings.

Here is the first summary from the defendant's attorney. The thing that jumped off the page to me is the statement that each side taking nothing is what the judge mentioned. He didn't say the judge recommended it, but it was clearly on the judge's mind to mention it. I don't know what the defense attorney had on Higbee to leverage this but I wish I did. Here is the link https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B6ZBMFkSS0ADS2R1Slc2elRGMzA

Here is Higbee's summary of that same conference and it contains actual numbers! The case settled a few months after this back and forth, no idea what the outcome was. So yeah, he definitely goes for the low hanging fruit and backs off his $5k demands pretty quick when pushed and forced to explain it to a judge. Here is the link https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B6ZBMFkSS0ADSG9Wd3g3QVE0cXM

I don't know, Higbee's attempts at covering things up with confidentiality clauses aren't going to work when documents like these keep showing up in case records for everyone to see.
Title: Re: Are The Judges on to Higbee? (docs inside)
Post by: clist on October 11, 2017, 03:20:48 PM
"Each side take its lumps and move on down the road..."

 :o

The fact that this was stated in the settlement letter tells me that all that was accomplished in this extortion attempt was both parties losing money..

Part of me cant help but wonder if the Higbee Extortion crew is exploiting their clients by providing misleading scenarios which entail taking these cases on initially with the "personal injury lawyer" marketing ploy and then either bailing when it gets pricey or rolling over the actual costs onto the client when things get expensive.

#fail