iFraud Deep Dive

S2 E45 The War Over Words: Liakas Demand to iFraud Foundation

iFraud Foundation Season 2 Episode 45

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0:00 | 17:23

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What happens when a podcast discusses allegations contained in a newly filed federal lawsuit—and the subjects of that lawsuit push back?
In this episode of Deep Dive, we step away from the underlying fraud allegations and examine a different question entirely: Where is the line between reporting on a public court filing and making a defamatory statement?

Following our coverage of the AmTrust RICO lawsuit against Liakas Law and numerous medical providers, the iFraud Foundation received a formal demand letter challenging commentary made during the episode. The dispute raises important questions about public court records, reporting privilege, opinion versus fact, media responsibility, and the rights of organizations to discuss matters of public concern.

Join us as we explore the legal and practical realities of discussing allegations contained in public lawsuits, the role of commentary and criticism in public discourse, and why the battle over a single phrase may have broader implications for journalists, podcasters, advocacy organizations, and anyone who reports on litigation.

This episode is not about whether the allegations are true. It is about who gets to talk about them—and how.

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SPEAKER_00

Okay, let's unpack this because it is, I mean, it is absolute poetry in motion.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, it really is. It's incredibly meta.

SPEAKER_00

Right. Imagine you take this massive, just impenetrable court filing and you translate it. You know, you break it down so an everyday audience can actually understand the stakes.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, you do the heavy lifting for the listener.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. You hit publish, and then like just 48 hours later, bam, you are hit with this heavy-handed legal demand letter threatening your whole organization.

SPEAKER_01

All over what, two specific words?

SPEAKER_00

Two words. So today we are doing a deep dive into a legal demand letter that is actually regarding a previous deep dive.

SPEAKER_01

Which is just a fascinating look at the hidden gears of media law, honestly.

SPEAKER_00

It really exposes the friction between how normal people speak and how lawyers read. So for you, the listener, we've got a very specific stack of sources today to walk you through.

SPEAKER_01

Right. First up, we have an original transcript from a previous deep dive.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Specifically, that's season two, episode 43.

SPEAKER_00

And then we have the pushback. A June 5th, 2026 legal demand letter from an attorney, James Katterson. He's representing the Liacus Law Firm.

SPEAKER_01

And finally we have the response. That's a June 8th, 2026 letter from Damian Caldwell, who's the president of the iFraud Foundation.

SPEAKER_00

So the mission today is to examine this really delicate legal intersection. We're looking at public court allegations, the boundaries of um reporting privilege.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, which is a huge concept we'll get into.

SPEAKER_00

Right. And how the law handles hyperbole and commentary. We're going to look impartially at how lawyers deconstruct a single line of audio and how publishers defend it.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell But you know, before we really get into the weeds, we definitely need to establish a very strict disclaimer for you right up front.

SPEAKER_00

Yes, very important.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell The underlying lawsuit here, Amtrust versus Liacus, it contains unproven allegations. The defendants categorically deny these claims.

SPEAKER_00

Right. They are vigorously contesting them in court as we speak.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Exactly. We are not taking sides here. We are merely exploring the documents provided to understand the anatomy of a media law dispute.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Yeah, that distinction is super critical. We're looking at the mechanics of the conversation, not adjudicating the facts of the actual lawsuit.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell So to understand the legal demand, you first have to understand what that original deep dive was actually discussing, right?

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Yeah, you need the context. So in that previous session, the hosts were breaking down a civil complaint filed by Amtrust Financial.

SPEAKER_01

Trevor Burrus And they use this very vivid analogy to describe the plaintiff's claims. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_00

Right, an assembly line of insurance fraud. The complaint alleged this sprawling interconnected network.

SPEAKER_01

Trevor Burrus It had runners finding clients, personal injury lawyers, filing suits, gatekeeper clinics.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, prescribing treatments, surgeons performing procedures, all of them allegedly working together to just, you know, manufacture mathematically optimized insurance claims.

SPEAKER_01

But the part that triggered this entire legal firestorm centers on the financial engine of that alleged factory.

SPEAKER_00

The money.

SPEAKER_01

Always the money. The dispute comes down to the mechanics of litigation funding.

SPEAKER_00

Right. So the original transcript detailed allegations that vulnerable, often non-English speaking claimants were being targeted.

SPEAKER_01

According to the complaint, these claimants were pushed into unnecessary, highly lucrative spinal fusions just to inflate the insurance claims.

SPEAKER_00

Which is awful. And afterward, they were allegedly told they couldn't work while the lawsuit was pending.

SPEAKER_01

Right. And because they had no income, a company called Jumpstart Funding LLC allegedly steps in. They offer them cash advances to survive.

SPEAKER_00

And here is the mechanical detail that really matters. The allegations state that these advances were offered a usurious 50% compounding interest rates.

SPEAKER_01

50%, which is wild.

SPEAKER_00

Let's just pause on that math for a second. I mean, if you take an advance to pay your rent while you can't work, and your lawsuit takes, say, three years to settle.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, a 50% compounding interest rate means that advance just balloons. It becomes this unpayable mountain of debt.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. The financial pressure on the claimant would be immense.

SPEAKER_01

Which brings us to the exact moment of contention. If you scroll to the 7.46 mark of that original transcript, the hosts are discussing this specific funding setup.

SPEAKER_00

Right.

SPEAKER_01

The original host notes that Amtrust alleges jumpstart funding is actually owned in part by the principals of the Liacus firm itself.

SPEAKER_00

And the other host confirms it. They say, that is the allegation, yes.

SPEAKER_01

And then comes the line. The original host says, quote, they're quite literally loan sharking their own clients to guarantee they never back out of the scheme. End quote.

SPEAKER_00

Boom. 14 words. I mean, they use a colloquial phrase.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, but because they use the specific words loan sharking.

SPEAKER_00

Which implies a literal criminal statute.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. The Lyaka's lawyers saw a legal wedge, and they drove that wedge right into a demand letter sent on June 5th.

SPEAKER_00

Because, you know, the legal mind processes language very differently than a general audience does.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, absolutely. The June 5th demand letter from Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman explicitly isolates that single sentence.

SPEAKER_00

Right. James Katterson, the attorney, he basically argues that the statement is categorically false and defamatory.

SPEAKER_01

His core argument is that the original Amtrust complaint never actually uses the phrase loan sharking.

SPEAKER_00

Or alleges a criminal offense bearing that specific name. But wait, let me stop you there for a second. If the complaint doesn't explicitly allege the crime of loan sharking, aren't the lawyers right? I mean, isn't inventing a criminal charge that doesn't exist in the source document, the textbook definition of defamation?

SPEAKER_01

Well, that is the exact tension we need to unpack here. The lawyers base their demand on a very specific legal framework.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, what's the framework?

SPEAKER_01

They cite New York Civil Rights Law Section 74 and a Second Circuit case called Kinsey versus New York Times Co.

SPEAKER_00

So, in plain English, what does that mean for publishers?

SPEAKER_01

In plain English, New York law has a specific shield for journalists, podcasters, commentators. It's called reporting privilege.

SPEAKER_00

Right, reporting privilege.

SPEAKER_01

This privilege means you can report on and discuss public court filings without being sued for defamation, even if the allegations in those filings eventually turn out to be completely false.

SPEAKER_00

Because I mean, if reporters could get sued for just quoting a lawsuit, no one would ever cover the courts.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. The public wouldn't know what was happening in their own justice system at all.

SPEAKER_00

The privilege exists because the public has a fundamental right to know what's going on.

SPEAKER_01

But think of reporting privilege like a like a protective fence drawn exactly around the borders of the court document.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, a face.

SPEAKER_01

As long as you stay inside that fence, meaning your summary is a fair and true report of the document, you cannot be sued.

SPEAKER_00

Ah, I see. So the lawyers for Liacas are arguing that the deep dive stepped one foot outside that fence.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. By using the word loan sharking, they argue the publisher crossed the line.

SPEAKER_00

They went from protected reporting of a civil contract dispute into unprotected, defamatory criminal accusation.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Ross Powell Right, because the original complaint talks about high interest funding loans, structured as advances and unlawful interest.

SPEAKER_00

It doesn't use the Hollywood mobster term.

SPEAKER_01

No, it doesn't. So the lawyers are essentially saying, you know, you added a crime to the summary, so you lose your shield.

SPEAKER_00

And they use a really fascinating procedural maneuver to demand an immediate fix.

SPEAKER_01

They really do. The demand letter sets a very aggressive timeline of seven days for a full retraction.

SPEAKER_00

Seven days is incredibly fast in legal time.

SPEAKER_01

It is. And to justify the speed, Katterson points out a unique detail. The original publisher, the iFraud Foundation, had previously stated under penalty of perjury in a separate matter that their deep dives can be generated in five to twenty minutes.

SPEAKER_00

Oh wow, that is a brilliant aggressive move.

SPEAKER_01

Right.

SPEAKER_00

They are using the publisher's own stated technological capabilities against them.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. They're essentially saying if your AI or your production team can build this educational audio in 20 minutes, you have zero excuse for needing weeks to issue a correction. Fix it now.

SPEAKER_00

It compresses the traditional timeline for a legal remedy by weaponizing modern generation speeds. It's kind of wild.

SPEAKER_01

It is. But looking at the grievance itself, we really have to examine the defense. Did the deep dive actually step outside that protective fence?

SPEAKER_00

Because honestly, it feels like the lawyers are putting a single brick under a microscope to claim the entire house is structurally flawed. Right. They are completely ignoring the rest of the building. So how does the publisher defend against this strict literal reading of 14 words?

SPEAKER_01

Well, this leads us directly into the iFraud Foundation's June 8th response letter.

SPEAKER_00

The pushback.

SPEAKER_01

The Foundation, through its president Damian Caldwell, completely refuses to retract the statement.

SPEAKER_00

Good for them. What's their argument?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Their core defense is exactly what you just pointed out. Yeah. Context is everything.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, you can't just strip 14 words out of a 15-minute discussion.

SPEAKER_01

No, you drop them in a sterile legal vacuum and claim you're defamatory. It just doesn't work that way.

SPEAKER_00

If I remember correctly, the transcript shows they were very careful to frame the entire discussion as a breakdown of unproven claims, right?

SPEAKER_01

Absolutely. Right. Caldwell's letter unpacks the audio leading up to that exact line to prove that point. Right. A critical detail the lawyers ignored is that immediately prior to the loan sharking comment, the original hosts explicitly stated, Amtrust alleges that jumpstart funding.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, so they literally said the word alleges right before it.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. And they followed it with that is the allegation, yes.

SPEAKER_00

Wow.

SPEAKER_01

Furthermore, throughout the entire transcript, they repeatedly stated the enterprise was alleged. They called them allegations in a lawsuit, and expressly noted that the defendants deny the claims.

SPEAKER_00

So the foundation was clearly building the frame of a civil dispute, not like handing down a criminal conviction.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. They laid the groundwork for the listener that everything being discussed was just one side's claim in a lawsuit.

SPEAKER_00

But what about the word itself, though? How do they justify using loan sharking if it's literally not in the complaint?

SPEAKER_01

Well, the foundation's core legal defense centers on the idea of contextual hyperbole.

SPEAKER_00

Contextual hyperbole.

SPEAKER_01

And protecting commentary. They argue that loan sharking was never presented as a literal criminal adjudication.

SPEAKER_00

It's just a rhetorical device.

SPEAKER_01

Right. It was a hyperbolic characterization of the complaint's actual written allegations.

SPEAKER_00

They took the disclosed facts from the complaints, specifically those allegations of 50% compounding interest rates.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Combined with the alleged ownership overlaps between the law firm and the funding entity.

SPEAKER_00

Right. And they just gave it a descriptive label.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

I mean, if you were listening to that, hearing about a 50% compounding interest rate being pushed on vulnerable people who couldn't work, your brain probably makes the exact same leap. Of course it does. You don't think the hosts are reading from the penal code. You just recognize they are describing a predatory financial situation using a recognizable shorthand.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell And the legal system actually understands that cognitive leap.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, it does.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. Courts generally recognize that audiences are sophisticated enough to distinguish between a dry, literal recitation of a statute and colorful rhetorical hyperbole used in commentary.

SPEAKER_00

It's like how we use metaphors in everyday language. You know, if a sports team absolutely dominates another team, a commentator might say they massacred their opponents. Right. Nobody listening to the broadcast thinks the commentator is alleging actual literal homicide.

SPEAKER_01

That'd be ridiculous.

SPEAKER_00

We all understand it's a hyperbolic characterization of a factual event. It's just a very lopsided score.

SPEAKER_01

And the law protects that kind of colorful speech. If commentators were forced to only use the exact, sterile terminology of the source material, public discourse would be entirely unreadable.

SPEAKER_00

It would be so boring. No one would listen.

SPEAKER_01

The Foundation believes the deep dive fairly conveyed the substance of the lawsuit while providing relatable commentary on those really dense financial allegations.

SPEAKER_00

They argue that hyperbole, when it's clearly based on disclosed facts that the audience has just been given, is a fully protected form of speech.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. And they don't back down an inch in their response. The letter ends on a very definitive, almost defiant note.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, I love that. How do they wrap it up?

SPEAKER_01

The Foundation ends its letter by reserving all rights, privileges, and protections. They make no admission of error whatsoever regarding the phrase loan sharking.

SPEAKER_00

Wow, they're standing their ground.

SPEAKER_01

Completely. The only commitment they make is to continue their practice of transparency with the audience.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, so they assure the lawyers that future discussions will continue to make clear that the litigation remains contested.

SPEAKER_01

Right, that the descendants vigorously deny the claims, and the matter is entirely unadjudicated.

SPEAKER_00

Essentially, they're telling the lawyers, we will remind people this is just a lawsuit, but we stand firmly by our characterization of the document.

SPEAKER_01

Pretty much. So we have this intense legal standoff.

SPEAKER_00

On one side, the lawyers are demanding a retraction based on a strict, microscopic, literal reading of a single sentence.

SPEAKER_01

And on the other side, the publisher is flatly refusing, citing the protective bubble of surrounding context, reporting privilege, and the legal allowance for hyperbole.

SPEAKER_00

Which brings us to the ultimate question for you, the listener. Why should you care about a legal squabble over two words between a New York law firm and a media foundation?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Ross Powell You should care because this dispute highlights a massive ongoing tension regarding your daily media consumption.

SPEAKER_00

It's really about the public's right to understand dense, complex information versus the strict frameworks utilized by lawyers to defend their clients' reputations.

SPEAKER_01

Think about how difficult it is to read a 100-page federal court filing.

SPEAKER_00

It's impossible. It's full of archaic jargon, endless citations, and just impenetrable legal syntax.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. To the average person, a federal complaint is basically written in a foreign language.

SPEAKER_00

You need a translator to understand what your own legal system is doing.

SPEAKER_01

And the public relies entirely on accessible conversational commentary to translate those filings. We rely on analogies, metaphors, and, yes, sometimes hyperbole to grasp the sheer scale or severity of an allegation.

SPEAKER_00

Because if publishers are terrified that using a colloquial term like loan sharking to describe a 50% interest rate will result in an immediate crushing defamation lawsuit, it creates a massive chilling effect.

SPEAKER_01

A huge one. If the threat of litigation is that high over a single colorful phrase, journalists and podcasters will just stop translating it.

SPEAKER_00

They will just read the dry text or honestly just ignore the story altogether.

SPEAKER_01

It threatens the media's ability to use relatable language. It is fundamentally about your access to information.

SPEAKER_00

If every summary of a public controversy has to be vetted by a legal team to ensure it doesn't deviate a single syllable from the source document, public discourse becomes incredibly constrained.

SPEAKER_01

It leaves the public in the dark about vital civic matters simply because the language required to explain them is just too risky to use.

SPEAKER_00

But you know, to be fair to the Lyaka's lawyers, they are arguing the flip side of that coin.

SPEAKER_01

True. In an era where a 15-minute audio summary can be published and shared globally in seconds, defendants deserve protection too.

SPEAKER_00

They are arguing that commentators shouldn't be allowed to escalate a civil contract dispute into a perceived criminal enterprise just for the sake of an entertaining broadcast.

SPEAKER_01

Right, because a careless metaphor can ruin a reputation instantly.

SPEAKER_00

It is a very delicate balancing act. The courts really have to weigh the absolute necessity of a free expressive press against the real damage that can be done when public figures or businesses are unfairly maligned by loose language.

SPEAKER_01

And what makes this specific case so fascinating is the speed at which this balancing act is now happening.

SPEAKER_00

Which leads me to a final provocative thought for you to mull over. We talked earlier about how the demand letter specifically pointed out that modern educational audio deep dives, exactly like this one, can be generated in five to twenty minutes.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, that is the reality of the modern media landscape.

SPEAKER_00

The speed of synthesizing, analyzing, and publishing complex public information is accelerating to near real time.

SPEAKER_01

Meanwhile, the legal frameworks dealing with defamation, reporting privilege, and the nuances of human speech were built centuries ago.

SPEAKER_00

Right. Largely for the era of the printing press and the daily newspaper.

SPEAKER_01

And the law is notoriously slow to adapt to technological shifts.

SPEAKER_00

So as generation speeds increase from weeks to minutes, how will the traditionally slow, rigid frameworks of defamation law adapt?

SPEAKER_01

It's a great question. Will the sheer volume and speed of modern media force the legal system to broaden its understanding of hyperbole in context in the digital age?

SPEAKER_00

Will courts accept that audiences are smart enough to recognize a metaphor moving at the speed of the internet?

SPEAKER_01

Or, alternatively, will the constant threat of instant legal demands force all modern media to strip away the color, the analogies, and the conversation?

SPEAKER_00

It makes you wonder if the legal system forces us to put every single brushstroke under a microscope, do we eventually lose the ability to paint the picture at all?