The Hais, Hais, & Goldberger, P.C. law firm is still advancing after COVID-19

At this time, most investors have been called into a meeting with management. If you don’t have anyone at the office or you have someone else you've depended upon for a long time, consider it important that you call them. You shouldn’t have an investor call you and then throw this new directive out there.
Is everyone keeping their nose clean and receiving critical information and instructions from their attorney?
Team members are communicating and keeping in touch with the operating company and its St. Louis divorce attorneys.

All of the attorneys are sending out their papers and presentations to the operating company and every team member is expecting to receive the same documents and language so they can educate their team members.
What can I do if I need more information or has something changed since I was last in office or at other times?
You can call your family law attorney St. Louis and see what the status of your issues and request that they follow up with you. You should receive updates at least quarterly
There is one other important thing you should do before we go to press:

Important thing to know about all of this:

As of today, your claims have not been paid. Remember that it has been two months since your last check or wire to ACH?
There is no recording of your last conversations with ACH. How could they possibly believe what you told them during those conversations they never heard? The non-payment mess we are facing today is not the result of bad times, but the result of timing of payments by a few parties inside ACH. These few people may be from your operating company, but plenty of other church and state entities also owe money to ACH. You should be calling the state/church entity and demanding that it reimburse you. Similarly, ACH is in a very tight financial place right now. They never should have allowed this much time without extraordinary cash reserves to operate. Now is not the time to cut consulting sentences!
So, here is what we recommend:
Multiple phone calls, if necessary, to the underwriters at ACH. You should call three of the underwriters at a time, informing them of your situation. Some of those underwriters have equity in an LLC or trust, but not in the operating company. So be sure to give the investors who have equity in another entity specific examples of what you are asking for and what you are willing to negotiate in order to receive their equitable interest back from the underwriter.
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[ST LOUIS, Mo.- APRIL 4, 2020--] The law firm of HAIS, HAIS & GOLDBERGER, P.C. is taking on a new and novel position in response to the developments with Governor Schneiderman’s indictment of ACLU affiliates and the Human Rights Campaign, through its sponsorship of “Robert First.” The firm will represent the state of Missouri and, in doing so, will take on the defense of the Governor and the state of Missouri.
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This case has been filed by a group of pro-life organizations in Maryland as a class action.
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In September 2020, the New York Times reported that Kevin Kruse, President and CEO of the conservative think tank his organization, the Heartland Institute, was among 218 politicians and nonprofits who signed the Olin Foundation’s pledge not to engage in “election-year advocacy” since the 2020 election. The pledge resurfaced in late October 2020 with House Banking Committee Chairman Kevin McCarthy of California announcing that 20 more organization had signed it.
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On October 19, 2020, the Federal Trade Commission announced it had settled a major antitrust case. The case involved AT&T, which agreed to pay nearly $9 billion for illegally using its position of power to force smaller competitors off the phone. Whitehouse hailed the agreement as “historic” and “historic” in a tweet, adding, “The FTC’s settlement finally makes clear that Big Tech ‘bribed’ & bullied law-abiding competitors out of the market place.”
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On October 31, 2020, the House Judiciary Committee passed four bills that would roll back internet privacy protections put in place by the Trump administration. The most damaging of the four is the Protecting the Freedom of Choice and Digital Security Act, which gives internet service providers the ability to sell our browsing data to unelected, unaccountable corporate bodies called “crown corporations.” As explained in TBI’s article, this bill would enable ISPs to sell “customer information, like browsing history — which can reveal far more about a person’s habits than what the companies themselves would know, to a brand new corporate rival, often called a “backlink.” And it would actually give these corporations a workable framework to fight against privacy and consumer rights in court, rather than rely on vague principles like honoring the internet’s “free speech” and “fair information practices.” During the hearing, Representative Ted Lieu of California criticized the bill for empowering huge corporations like Facebook “to ‘mislead Americans into thinking they’re doing something positive by associating their brands with privacy” and vowing to “vigorously defend the Consumer Privacy Act.

222 S. Central Ave, Suite. 600
Saint Louis, MO 63105
314.326.4885

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