Monthly Archives: December 2015

Houston Atty Files $6.5M Fraud Suit Against Movie Producers

Law360, New York (October 21, 2014,  8:02 PM ET) – Houston-based attorney Tony Buzbee sued Weathervane Productions Inc. and Hey Girl Entertainment LLC in Texas state court on Monday for $6.5 million, alleging the companies duped him into investing in a movie featuring Ryan Gosling and Justin Timberlake that never materialized.

Buzbee says the production companies, along with Jason Van Eman, James Allen Bradley and Gayle Dickie, who owns Hey Girl Entertainment, fraudulently induced him to invest $1.5 million in a movie titled “In Light of the Dance.” When the movie failed to go forward as promised,…

Former Player Sues Over Insurance Policy

A former Louisiana State University football player has filed suit against his ex-financial planner for allegedly obtaining an inadequate insurance policy meant to protect the athlete in the event of a career-ending injury during his final year of college football. Ciron Black, a standout offensive lineman who was projected as a first-round  draft pick, suffered such an injury against Alabama in his senior season in 2009. His claim under the policy was denied by the company. Black never played professional football.

The  against Benjamin McConley of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., filed in Baton Rouge state court, accuses McConley of breach of contract and “failing to provide competent services” as a financial planner and insurance broker. The suit alleges that McConley “actively searched out” Black, using the Internet and other contacts.

Black entered into a contract with McConley that called for McConley to provide the player with general financial planning advice and services. That would include obtaining and entering into a sports disability insurance policy to protect Black if he were to sustain a career-ending injury during his final season at LSU. The NCAA offers disability insurance to student-athletes who have professional potential to be selected in the first three rounds of the NFL draft, and Black was eligible for the program.

It was further alleged that these policies are “heavily policed, controlled, and monitored by the NCAA” and offered at zero percent financing of the premiums, thus providing the most reputable and financially sound source of such insurance policies. Rather than obtain this secure and reliable form of disability insurance, it’s claimed that McConley instead obtained an unmonitored and unnecessarily narrow third party disability insurance policy through Lloyd’s of London Underwriters. The complaint alleges the company subsequently denied Black’s claim after he suffered an injury that prevented him from playing football at a professional level.

 was reached in a federal civil suit filed by Black in 2010 against underwriters at Lloyd’s of London for failure to honor the policy. It was alleged in the suit that the policy’s premium of $14,758 was supposed to have provided the player with $2 million in coverage. The amount of that  is confidential, but the amount will be disclosed in the current lawsuit. Black, a member of LSU’s 2007 national championship team, is seeking the difference between the  and the $2 million he  he should have received. Bryan Fisher, a  from Baton Rouge, represents the Plaintiff in the case which has been assigned to state District Judge Kay Bates.

Source: Insurance Journal

The Buzbee Law Firm obtains a temporary restraining order against Gayle Dickie, James Allen Bradley & Jason Van Eman in Fraud Case

HOUSTON, Nov. 20, 2014 /PRNewswire/ – The Buzbee Law Firm has announced that the 234th District Court in Harris County has entered a temporary restraining order against Weathervane Productions, Inc., Hey Girl Hey Entertainment LLC, Forrest Capital Partners, Inc., First Clearing LLC, Gayle Dickie, James Allen Bradley and Jason Van Eman upon application by The Buzbee Law Firm in the matter of Buzbee v. Dickie, et al.

The suit alleges that film producers Gayle Dickie and James Allen Bradley colluded with film financier Jason Van Eman to fraudulently induce Anthony Buzbee into investing $1.5 million dollars in a film produced by Hey Girl Hey, LLC titled “In the Light of the Dance.” The suit alleges that Defendants claimed that the film was ready to enter production with international dance troupe, Burn the Floor, attached to the movie. The suit further alleges that this film production never materialized and that Buzbee was not refunded his original investment.

The Court’s entry of a temporary restraining order protects these funds while awaiting a future hearing by the Court.

Anthony Buzbee reports that the news of this filing has caused many industry investors to reveal their past and current dealings with the Defendants. “We are receiving almost daily calls from investors who say that they were offered similar investment opportunities. Many of them are thanking us for letting them know that their investment was in dire risk.”

The latest suit against Gayle Dickie follows a similar 2004 suit by Unity House Inc. and affiliate Hawaii Pacific Cinema Development Foundation alleging that Gayle Dickie refused to provide refunds to Plaintiffs following a $1 million investment into Dickie’s production company.

The plaintiff is represented by attorneys Tony Buzbee and Kyle Beckley of The Buzbee Law Firm, of Houston, Texas.

The case is “Anthony Buzbee v. Gayle Dickie., et al,” Cause No. 2014-60989 in the 234th Judicial District Court in Harris County.  The lawsuit seeks damages, injunctive relief, attorneys’ fees, and court costs.

SOURCE  The Buzbee Law Firm

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Ex-LSU Football Star Sues Over Insurance Policy

A former Louisiana State University football player is suing his ex-financial planner for allegedly obtaining an inadequate insurance policy meant to protect the athlete in the event of a career-ending injury during his final year of college football.

Ciron Black, a standout offensive lineman who was projected as a first-round NFL draft pick, suffered such an injury against Alabama in his senior season in 2009, and his claim under the policy was denied.

Black never played professional football.

According to the Advocate, Black’s lawsuit against Benjamin McConley of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., which was filed in Baton Rouge state court, accuses McConley, of breach of contract and “failing to provide competent services” as a financial planner and insurance broker.

The suit claims McConley “actively searched out” Black, using the Internet and other contacts.

“He did hook Ciron. Ben solicited Ciron on Facebook,” Black’s attorney, Bryan Fisher, said Thursday. “He took advantage of a really nice but naive family.”

Attempts to reach McConley for comment at several telephone numbers were unsuccessful.

Black entered into a contract with McConley that called for McConley to provide Black with general financial planning advice and services, including obtaining and entering into a sports disability insurance policy to protect Black if he were to sustain a career-ending injury during his final season at LSU, the suit states.

The NCAA offers disability insurance to student-athletes who have professional potential to be selected in the first three rounds of the NFL draft, and Black was eligible for the program, the suit says.

Those policies are “heavily policed, controlled, and monitored by the NCAA and offered at zero percent financing of the premiums, thus providing the most reputable and financially sound source of such insurance policies,” the suit adds.

“Rather than obtain this secure and reliable form of disability insurance, (McConley) instead obtained an unmonitored and unnecessarily narrow third party disability insurance policy through Lloyd’s of London Underwriters, who subsequently denied (Black’s) claim after he suffered an injury that prevented him from playing football at a professional level,” the suit alleges.

Fisher called the policy “inferior” and said it was financed at a “substantial interest rate.”

A federal civil suit that Black filed in 2010 against underwriters at Lloyd’s of London for alleged failure to honor the policy said the policy’s premium of $14,758 was supposed to have provided Black with $2 million.

Fisher said the federal suit was resolved but he could not disclose the details at this time.

“The amount of the settlement will come out in this lawsuit,” he said.

Black, a member of LSU’s 2007 national championship team, is seeking the difference between the settlement and the $2 million he claims he should have received, Fisher said.

The suit has been assigned to state District Judge Kay Bates.

Attorney Claims Bogus Filmmakers Duped Him

LOS ANGELES (CN) – A well-known Houston attorney claims in court that an aspiring actor and two filmmakers bilked him of $1.5 million in a Ponzi scam involving a movie that never happened.
Attorney Anthony Buzbee sued Gayle Dickie and three other people, Weathervane Productions and five other film companies , and Wells Fargo Advisors, on Oct. 31 in Superior Court.
Buzbee represented many plaintiffs after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill disaster.
He claims in the lawsuit that defendants Gayle Dickie, his company Hey Girl Hey Entertainment, James Allen Bradley and aspiring actor Jason Van Eman approached him this year and asked him to invest $1.5 million in a project called “In Light of the Dance.”
Entertainment industry website IMDb Pro lists “In Light of the Dance” as in development, crediting Bradley as director, Dickie as co-writer and Buzbee as executive producer.
Buzbee claims that three men told him that Ryan Gosling, Justin Timberlake, and a well-known dance troupe were interested in joining the film. Neither Gosling nor Timberlake are parties to the lawsuit.
Buzbee claims that Dickie, Bradley and Vaneman told him that half the $3 million budget was already in place, that Lloyd’s of London had insured the film, and that Lionsgate would distribute it. He claims that the three men told him that if he invested another $1.5 million the movie could start shooting in August 2014.
Buzbee claims he wired the $1.5 million, which was held in a Wells Fargo bank account, then was told that conflicts in Timberlake’s schedule had delayed the project until April 2015.
He says the three men persuaded him to move his money to another project that was to start shooting immediately.
Buzbee says he did not know when he in invested in the project that the defendants’ claims were “utterly false.”
“Plaintiff’s monies were actually being used as security, and not for a movie investment. Defendants are operating what is in essence a Ponzi scheme,” the complaint states.
Buzbee says he discovered the film was not legitimate when he learned that investors had sued two of the individual defendants for breach of contract in Hawaii.
“There was no agreement with the international dance troupe. There was no ongoing negotiation with Justin Timberlake. There was no production schedule. The reason defendants wanted to move the monies was so they could control the monies themselves, and extricate themselves from the writer of ‘In Light of the Dance,’” the 10-page complaint states.
Buzbee says that when he asked for his money back, the defendants sent him a settlement agreement which he had never seen before. He says he asked the defendants to return his money but has not seen a dime.
Seeking $6.5 million in damages, and $250,000 in attorney fees for fraud, fraud in the inducement and conversion, Buzbee wants the court to void the settlement agreement.
Named as defendants are Dickie, Bradley, Vaneman, executive producer Ben McConley, Weathervane Productions, Forrest Capital Partners, ILOTD Movie, Red Jupiter/3Way Films, Hey Girl Hey Entertainment/3Way Films, and Wells Fargo Advisors.
3 Way Films did not immediately respond to a request for comment.