Entrepreneur seeks to examine FBI’s role in shuttering of cancer research lab after lawsuit survives motion to dismiss
Throughout that time, few people believed Daughertyâs narrativeâuntil December 2019, when an 11th Circuit appeals court panel agreed he was the victim of an FTC-enabled shakedown scheme.
Armed with that judgment, the scorned business owner is now aiming to discover the FBIâs role in his labâs destruction.
To that end, Daugherty said one of his lawsuits survived a motion to dismiss last week in Florida. The case is now in the discovery stage, giving Daugherty the ability to issue subpoenas and take depositions about the FBIâs role in the scandal, he said.
âItâs 2022, so people think this is over,â he told The Epoch Times. âIn a big way, everything is just beginning.â
For its part, the cybersecurity firm tied to the scandalâTiversa and its founder Robert Bobackâhave repeatedly denied allegations of wrongdoing. According to Boback, Daugherty has been hounding him for years with false accusations, including about his firmâs use of FBI software.
âFortunately, the courts require facts, not narratives, and recognize that Daugherty has marketed a book about his version of the story,â Boback said. âI have no doubt that the Florida courts will see the same.â
The FTC and FBI declined to comment to The Epoch Times.
Tiversa, the FBI, and LabMD
Daugherty never intended to spend his career uncovering a government scandal. In 2008, he had a thriving cancer research center serving more than 700,000 patients.
The same year, another business was on the rise…
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