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Newly unsealed documents in the Reditus lawsuits point to a federal investigation that’s still very much active – and that former CEO Aaron Rossi’s business partners accuse him of stealing or squandering over $100 million in company money as profits soared during the pandemic.
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Former Reditus Labs CEO Aaron Rossi faces new legal jeopardy Thursday as he returns to federal court, with prosecutors alleging he broke the terms of his bond by doing meth and violated an order by using confidential documents from his criminal case in a civil lawsuit.
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Former Reditus Labs CEO Aaron Rossi invoked his Fifth Amendment against self-incrimination 10 times in a row on Tuesday to avoid answering questions in a long-running civil dispute.
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A Tazewell County judge says a lawsuit against former Reditus Labs executive Aaron Rossi will move forward, despite a reported federal investigation into the firm's business practices.
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The U.S. Department of Justice is conducting “criminal and civil investigations” into Reditus Labs’ billing and contracting practices and also presumably former CEO Aaron Rossi, according to a new court filing that suggests a broadening probe into the COVID-19 testing giant.
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Reditus will cease all testing as of this Friday. The company was placed into receivership in April.
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According to court documents, the Bloomington man tested positive for marijuana on Sept. 7, which was a violation of his conditions for pretrial release. He was arrested Friday morning and booked at the Knox County jail.
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Federal prosecutors are expanding their criminal case against Aaron Rossi, adding several charges that accuse the Reditus Labs CEO of lying about being a physician and stealing from his former employer.
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New fillings in a lawsuit against Reditus Labs CEO Aaron Rossi claim Rossi paid millions of dollars to settle a lawsuit against a former business partner partly to conceal offensive text messages.
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Reditus Labs CEO Aaron Rossi wants to sell two condo units he owns in Peoria as he awaits trial on federal tax fraud charges, and he’s seeking a judge’s permission.