Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Friday, May 1, 2009
Marvel Entertainment Sued for 50% of Its Trademarked Name
In a new development in the monumental legal battle over ownership of ALL of Stan Lee's creator's rights to everything he ever created between Stan Lee Media Inc shareholders and Marvel Entertainment and Stan Lee, raging in Federal Courts in New York and Californian simultaneously since 2007, additional claims were made by SLM Thursday, April 30, to co-ownership of the trademark Marvel itself (created by Stan Lee of course).
The eminent 200 year old Park Avenue firm of Eaton and Van Winkle has joined in the epic battle on the side of Stan Lee Media shareholders, now working with Super Lawyer and legal icon Martin Garbus as lead counsel in the multi-state litigation.
The pitched legal battle of courtroom titans is now shaping up between the lawyers for shareholders of Stan Lee Media, whose company was looted and subverted for tens if not hundreds of millions in rights and claims, by Stan Lee and Marvel Entertainment, and the firms employed by Lee and Marvel.
Interestingly, after almost $10 million has been spent by both sides in legal jockeying for position, the only substantive ruling has come from Judge Wilson in California Federal Court who ruled in a Partial Summary Judgment that Stan Lee and his new public company, POW Entertainment, has illegally attempted to transfer ownership and US Copyrights to character properties including The Accuser and The Drifter to his new public company, POW! Entertainment without the knowledge and consent of the Bankruptcy court administering by Stan Lee Media.
The ramifications of this January 20, 2009 ruling which was never appealed by Lee or POW, could well support criminal action against Lee, his lawyer partner Lieberman and former SLM COO and current POW Entertainment COO Gil Champion, for defrauding the Bankruoptcy court in Stan Lee Media's Chapter 11 proceedings from 2001-2006, and for filing false statements with the US Copyright Office in attempting to illegally assign copyrights belonging to Stan Lee Media to POW Entertainment (POWN:BB)
Monday, April 13, 2009
New Federal Shareholder Suit To Confirm Stan Lee's Rights Assignment Of His Name, Likeness and Marvel Creations to Stan Lee Media
Those rights were used by Stan Lee to capitalize his new dot com, Stan Lee Media, so that it could attain a market capitalization of $350 million as a NASDQ company, SLEE, in February, 2000.
When Stan Lee Media became insolvent with the dot com meltdown of December, 2000, Stan Lee, as Chairman and largest shareholder, placed the company in Chapter 11 Debtor in Possession Bankruptcy protection where he controlled it until its dismissal in November, 2006- the first time the shareholders were restored the ability to control the company since 2000.
Days before Lee directed the bankruptcy filings on February 11, 2001, his lawyer and business partner Arthur Lieberman wrote a letter to SLM stating Lee was terminating his Employment Contract with SLM which had the Rights Assignment attached to it. The principal asset of Stan Lee Media is now the subject of a legal wrangling the likes of which even Hollywood has never seen. Its estimated that since December, 2006 Stan Lee, Marvel Entertainment and Stan Lee Media shareholders have spent more than $7 million in litigation fees and expenses before reaching the discovery phase of the litigation! That unprecedented pre-discovery amount indicates the stakes involved.
The New York, Colorado and California litigation over Stan Lee's creator's rights has now been augmented by a new shareholder's action filed in Los Angeles Federal Court in April, 2009, by Investment Banker Jose Abadin (see below).
After Federal Judge Stephen Wilson ruled on January 20, 2009, that Stan Lee and his new public company POW/QED Entertainment illegally took character properties from the Estate of Stan Lee Media, and then notified the US Copyright Office of the illegal copyright assignments, Jose Abadin stepped in on behalf of all Stan Lee Media Inc shareholders to judicially determine the continued validity of Stan Lee's Rights Assignment to Stan Lee Media in October, 1998, a month before Stan Lee signed a new Rights Assignment with Marvel Entertainment.
The suit filed by Abadin will judicially determine who owns Stan Lee's name, likeness and all co-creator's rights he ever owned as of October 15, 1998.
Jose Abadin (On Behalf of All Stan Lee Media Inc Shareholders) vs. Stan Lee
Abadin v. Stan Lee Complaint
Monday, April 6, 2009
Federal Judge's Ruling On Illegal Transfer of The Accuser and Drifter by Stan Lee to POW Entertainment Triggers New Federal Suit Against Lee
Stan Lee Assigned His Name and All His Creations as of October 15, 1998 in SLM Contracts
Thursday, March 19, 2009
Martin Garbus Esq Leads Stan Lee Media Shareholder Suit in Charge Against Marvel Entertainment and Stan Lee
First Amendment Icon, Super Lawyer Martin Garbus, presented a global webcast press conference on January 27, 2009 from the offices of Burson Marsteller to announce his representation of shareholders of Stan Lee Media Inc in a new $ 1 billion plus suit for 50% of the profits of Spider Man and other Stan Lee creations for Marvel.
Martin Garbus, named one of the top five lawyers in the US and the world by Time, Fortune, The London Observer, filed a billion dollar civil suit in Manhattan Federal Court on January 27, 2009, on behalf of SLMI shareholders against Marvel Entertainment, Marvel Chairman Emeritus and former Stan Lee Media Chairman Stan Lee and current Marvel Chairman Izaak Perlmutter for damages and future profits from Spider Man, X-Men, Ironman, among others.
The latest law suit follows a suit filed by King and Spalding IP lawyer Ethan Horowitz in Manhattan Federal Court in 2007 on behalf of Stan Lee Media Inc against Marvel Entertainment exclusively.
Stan Lee has used his 28% share holdings in Stan Lee Media to block the Colorado incorporated company's shareholders from electing a new Board of Directors to pursue its claims against him ever since SLM's Debtor in Possession Chapter 11 proceedings were dismissed for cause in December, 2006.
On January 20, 2009 a Federal Judge in Los Angeles ruled that Stan Lee and his new public company, POW Entertainment, transferred assets through the US Copyright Office illegally from Stan Lee Media to his new company after Lee placed Stan Lee Media into Chapter 11 Bankruptcy protection.
CBS Sunday Morning, February 2000 Debuted Stan Lee Media Studio
Tuesday, February 3, 2009
When Stan Lee Joined With Michael Jackson To Buy Marvel
When Stan Lee Media Was Riding the Dot Com Wave, March, 2000
Stan Lee Hosts Michael Jackson At the New Stan Lee Media Studio