John Rittenour, the man who wrote a letter in June on behalf of his "employee" Robert Buckhannon, is starting to look like just another garden variety con man.
Rittenour's letter was instrumental in a judge's decision to ease Buckhannon's pretrial restrictions, allowing him to travel the continental U. S. and Hawaii in search of "liquid gold" for Nevada-based Clinical Testing Corp.
The company was founded in Nevada on October 28, 2014, but when its website launched shortly after, Clinical Testing Corp, LLC was already boasting that it had "provided outsourced services to thousands of customers from most healthcare disciplines, including nearly all of the largest pharmaceutical, biopharmaceutical, and chemical companies in the world."
Just how much time can Rittenour devote to Clinical Testing Corp when he's riding herd over nearly a dozen other companies?
OK, that was a rhetorical question.
Rittenour's letter was instrumental in a judge's decision to ease Buckhannon's pretrial restrictions, allowing him to travel the continental U. S. and Hawaii in search of "liquid gold" for Nevada-based Clinical Testing Corp.
The company was founded in Nevada on October 28, 2014, but when its website launched shortly after, Clinical Testing Corp, LLC was already boasting that it had "provided outsourced services to thousands of customers from most healthcare disciplines, including nearly all of the largest pharmaceutical, biopharmaceutical, and chemical companies in the world."
Just how much time can Rittenour devote to Clinical Testing Corp when he's riding herd over nearly a dozen other companies?
OK, that was a rhetorical question.