RedCon1 founder Aaron Singerman enters plea agreement in Blackstone Labs case

Will PJ be getting sent down also?
PJ Braun was the last of the primary defendants to plead guilty. Robert DiMaggio pleaded guilty and agreed to cooperate almost immediately after the group was indicted in 2019. Singerman waited more than 2 years to plead and cooperate long after DiMaggio and most secondary co-defendants pleaded.

As the last primary to plead, Braun will almost certainly get more time than Singerman.

The first to plead and cooperate has the most to gain in terms of sentencing reduction. But when everyone else has already pleaded guilty and you wait until right before the trial to plead, you're chances of sentencing leniency are fucked.
 
Saddest part is those guys were both probably those younger guys who picked up a barbell one day and decided to improve themselves. Fast forward and you are going to prison over something that began as a hobby to get healthy and strong. You are drinking your ass off and going in a downward spiral because you know your decisions have fucked you up and you don’t know any other way to cope with it. Sometimes life pumps the brakes when we drift too far off the paved road
Singerman struggled with substance abuse and addiction earlier in his life. So he's already gone through the experience of spiraling out of control and hitting rock bottom. The weights and industry/business success were his salvation in may ways.

To your point about his life spiraling out of control again, I don't see this to be the case at all. For sure, the reality of being separated from his young family is setting in and it's probably been extremely difficult for him. He probably knew this day was inevitable several years ago. But to say that "drinking his ass off" was his only way to cope with it isn't accurate.

I've been following this case closely. This is what it looks like to me -->

Singerman is a smart man. He knew the feds had him when it came to Blackstone Labs several years ago. He methodically parlayed that initial business success into a purely legal enterprise RedCon1. He postponed his plea agreement as long as possible so that he could work on RedCon1. The new business was apparently structured with partners in a way that it and its current/future profits/assets would be legally untainted and untouchable by the Blackstone indictment.

RedCon1 provided him and his family with significant, legitimate wealth that could continue providing substantial income while he is incarcerated and provide an extremely soft landing when he is released.

The question is now that the day of reckoning is here: Will this work out as planned? Was it worth it for him? His family? Four years in federal prison? No one can say other than those involved and time will tell.
 
And that’s legitimate TRT, prescribed by a doctor, not self administered.
Yup the doctor administers it , sus 250 my mate was on it he used to go to medical every 3 weeks I'm sure it was every 3 weeks and there would be a couple other blokes there getting it too ..what ever your prescribed on the outside they have to give ya while in custody.
 
Singerman struggled with substance abuse and addiction earlier in his life. So he's already gone through the experience of spiraling out of control and hitting rock bottom. The weights and industry/business success were his salvation in may ways.

To your point about his life spiraling out of control again, I don't see this to be the case at all. For sure, the reality of being separated from his young family is setting in and it's probably been extremely difficult for him. He probably knew this day was inevitable several years ago. But to say that "drinking his ass off" was his only way to cope with it isn't accurate.

I've been following this case closely. This is what it looks like to me -->

Singerman is a smart man. He knew the feds had him when it came to Blackstone Labs several years ago. He methodically parlayed that initial business success into a purely legal enterprise RedCon1. He postponed his plea agreement as long as possible so that he could work on RedCon1. The new business was apparently structured with partners in a way that it and its current/future profits/assets would be legally untainted and untouchable by the Blackstone indictment.

RedCon1 provided him and his family with significant, legitimate wealth that could continue providing substantial income while he is incarcerated and provide an extremely soft landing when he is released.

The question is now that the day of reckoning is here: Will this work out as planned? Was it worth it for him? His family? Four years in federal prison? No one can say other than those involved and time will tell.
interesting, thanks for the insight
 
so 1,3 Dimethylbutylamine but what about 1,3 dimethylamylamine i took that shit like 7 years ago when i was 16 and i think it fucked me up some. prob too late for a lawsuit tho
 
I wonder how their hormones will be in jail. Will the prison allow trt?
Musclehead320 in an interview said he had his levels tested in prison and it came back as like 150 and they still wouldn’t give him trt.

Also, how the fuck do you crash a boat? How drunk do you gotta be? “Oh the shore came out of nowhere”
 
I've been following this case closely. This is what it looks like to me -->

Singerman is a smart man. He knew the feds had him when it came to Blackstone Labs several years ago. He methodically parlayed that initial business success into a purely legal enterprise RedCon1. He postponed his plea agreement as long as possible so that he could work on RedCon1. The new business was apparently structured with partners in a way that it and its current/future profits/assets would be legally untainted and untouchable by the Blackstone indictment.

RedCon1 provided him and his family with significant, legitimate wealth that could continue providing substantial income while he is incarcerated and provide an extremely soft landing when he is released.

The question is now that the day of reckoning is here: Will this work out as planned? Was it worth it for him? His family? Four years in federal prison? No one can say other than those involved and time will tell.
Singerman was probably surprised by the lengthy sentence. His attorneys asked for 5-year PROBATION and at most home confinement and requirement to do PSAs encouraging supplement companies to follow the law.

Singerman parlayed his financial success from the illegality of Blackstone Labs into an even bigger success with 100% legal by-the-books RedCon1.

His attorneys argued that his RedCon1 success was proof that he learned his lesson:

Mr. Singerman’s departure from Blackstone Labs was an inflection point for him, bending the arc of his life away from the crimes at issue in this case. His actions during the nearly six subsequent years provide context and guidance for this Court with respect to the person that Mr. Singerman is and has grown to be. After departing Blackstone Labs in April 2016, Mr. Singerman founded his own company, RedCon1. RedCon1 quickly became the fastest growing sport supplement company in history, and it currently employs over 100 people in south Florida and nearly 200 people nationwide. The entire staff of RedCon1 was continuously employed throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, due in no small part to Mr. Singerman refusing a personal salary from the business and redirecting those funds to RedCon1’s employees.​
From the outset, Mr. Singerman’s goal at RedCon1 was to create safe, legal products appealing to a broad range of consumers. [...]​
In stark contrast to Blackstone Labs, RedCon1 has never received any FDA warning letters, has never been cited or sued for marketing unapproved dietary supplements, and has never to its knowledge been the target or subject of any government investigation. Within a year of RedCon1’s founding, Mr. Singerman obtained a personal certification in current good manufacturing practices and later encouraged RedCon1’s president, most of its executive team, and numerous employees to do the same. Mr. Singerman hired professionals in the fields of regulatory law and compliance at RedCon1, and those individuals – still with the company – confirm that their marching orders from Mr. Singerman were to make sure that RedCon1’s products and processes fell well within all of the law’s requirements.​
As RedCon1’s Chief Legal Officer puts it, “there is zero chance that what​
occurred at Blackstone Labs will occur at Redcon1” because of Mr. Singerman’s focus and attention to regulatory compliance. (Letter of J. Manfre.) Before Mr. Manfre ever agreed to work for Mr. Singerman and RedCon1 as their Chief Legal Officer, he demanded “assurance that no products would be sold . . . without being reviewed and approved by [him] beforehand,” that “[he] would be provided with the resources necessary to ensure that Redcon1 was not only meeting, but exceeding, its regulatory requirements,” and that “Redcon1 would never put profits before compliance.” (Id.) Mr. Singerman readily agreed to those terms, and he gave free rein to Mr. Manfre and Redcon1’s sophisticated regulatory team to develop, modify, and, if necessary, veto all aspects of RedCon1’s manufacturing and marketing operations. (Id.) Mr. Singerman told Mr. Manfre, and Mr. Singerman’s actions have since borne out, that “he wanted Redcon1 to be the ‘gold standard in regulatory compliance.’” (Id.) RedCon1’s Compliance Officer sees the company’s standards as “uncommon in the industry” and “only possible when the starting point, the DNA of the company, [is] compliance and ethics, and that in turn is established through tone at the top, starting with [Mr. Singerman].” (Letter of A. Connors.) Mr. Singerman “has built a company with compliance policies and procedures that are second to none in the industry.” (Id.)​
One significant failure at Blackstone Labs during the course of the conspiracy was the failure to treat seriously any reports by customers of potential adverse reactions to that company’s products. As a result of Mr. Singerman’s leadership at Redcon1, every employee there with potential customer contact is “trained (and retrained) on how to handle incoming health complaints,” and every such complaint is investigated, tracked, followed up, and reported to Redcon1’s Chief Legal Officer regardless of its perceived severity. (Letter of J. Manfre.) An independent third-party safety group with on-staff physicians reviews every complaint of this sort received by anyone at RedCon1, and that independent group determines whether and how to report that event to the FDA. This process well exceeds regulatory requirements established by the FDA and imposes significant additional costs on the RedCon1 business. But Mr. Singerman “approved these costs without hesitation,” just as he has “always approved granting more resources to quality control [and] safety and compliance” at RedCon1 and “continues to reinvest into these most important areas as [RedCon1] continues to grow.”​
Mr. Singerman’s involvement in RedCon1 illustrates that he long ago turned away from the criminality at the heart of this case. He could have left Blackstone Labs after his disagreements with Defendant Braun and attempted to replicate the illegal conduct occurring there in his own business, but he followed a different path. He has demonstrated over and over again during the last six years that he is committed to participating in the supplement industry legitimately, lawfully, and with a focused eye on consumer safety. He is a demonstrably different businessman and person today than he was nearly six years ago, and his purposeful actions in creating RedCon1 show a public and intentional repudiation of the kind of criminal conduct that led to his indictment in this case.​
 
Unfortunately, the feds summarily rejected Singerman's argument that he learned his lesson and shouldn't be punished due to his success with a completely legitimate and lawful company at RedCon1:

The defendant’s sentencing memorandum, ECF No. 636, discusses the defendant’s current business, an even larger dietary supplement company, as a reason why he is unlikely to reoffend and incarceration would be unnecessary. At least in part, the defendant’s argument boils down to a claim he should not be punished because he is now extremely successful in conducting a business that was literally built upon the lessons, reputation, and connections gained from years of criminal activity. The government rejects this point of view. Although the defendant may currently enjoy business success, this success does not wash away the stains of his lengthy and significant criminal conduct. Thus, the government respectfully urges the Court to impose a significant prison sentence within the Guidelines range as a necessary way to promote respect for the law, and to deter future criminal conduct by this defendant and others in the dietary supplements industry.​

feds-reject-lesson-learned-argument.jpg
 
Singerman's spent over 5 years trying to prove he learned his lesson, showed remorse, regretted his illegal behavior, and was a model citizen. And he did an excellent job.

But within a matter of weeks in December 2021, he really fucked up and undid any good will he may have had with the courts. The feds highlighted these mistakes in court documents.

The government originally agreed to recommend a TWO-LEVEL reduction for ACCEPTANCE OF RESPONSIBILITY if Singerman complied with certain requirements.

However, the feds withdrew this recommendation during sentencing due to two things Singerman did:

(1) Singerman was arrested and admitted violating state law by operating a boat under the influence of alcohol.
singerman-boating-accident.jpg

(2) Singerman was captured on video during a holiday party suggesting he didn't regret any of illegal past behavior stating "The truth is I wouldn't change anything. I wouldn't do anything differently.
singerman-holiday party.jpg

References:

1. FEDCON1: Aaron Singerman Nearly 3 Times Legal Limit After Crashing Boat Multiple Times
2. Felon Aaron Singerman, RedCon1 Founder, Makes Stunning Comment At Mar-A-Lago Party
 
Singerman's spent over 5 years trying to prove he learned his lesson, showed remorse, regretted his illegal behavior, and was a model citizen. And he did an excellent job.

But within a matter of weeks in December 2021, he really fucked up and undid any good will he may have had with the courts. The feds highlighted these mistakes in court documents.

The government originally agreed to recommend a TWO-LEVEL reduction for ACCEPTANCE OF RESPONSIBILITY if Singerman complied with certain requirements.

However, the feds withdrew this recommendation during sentencing due to two things Singerman did:

(1) Singerman was arrested and admitted violating state law by operating a boat under the influence of alcohol.
View attachment 160809

(2) Singerman was captured on video during a holiday party suggesting he didn't regret any of illegal past behavior stating "The truth is I wouldn't change anything. I wouldn't do anything differently.
View attachment 160810

References:

1. FEDCON1: Aaron Singerman Nearly 3 Times Legal Limit After Crashing Boat Multiple Times
2. Felon Aaron Singerman, RedCon1 Founder, Makes Stunning Comment At Mar-A-Lago Party
Whoops
 
Singerman's spent over 5 years trying to prove he learned his lesson, showed remorse, regretted his illegal behavior, and was a model citizen. And he did an excellent job.

But within a matter of weeks in December 2021, he really fucked up and undid any good will he may have had with the courts. The feds highlighted these mistakes in court documents.

The government originally agreed to recommend a TWO-LEVEL reduction for ACCEPTANCE OF RESPONSIBILITY if Singerman complied with certain requirements.

However, the feds withdrew this recommendation during sentencing due to two things Singerman did:

(1) Singerman was arrested and admitted violating state law by operating a boat under the influence of alcohol.
View attachment 160809

(2) Singerman was captured on video during a holiday party suggesting he didn't regret any of illegal past behavior stating "The truth is I wouldn't change anything. I wouldn't do anything differently.
View attachment 160810

References:

1. FEDCON1: Aaron Singerman Nearly 3 Times Legal Limit After Crashing Boat Multiple Times
2. Felon Aaron Singerman, RedCon1 Founder, Makes Stunning Comment At Mar-A-Lago Party


Sooooo . . . he's not very good at figuring out the consequences of his decisions and whether they are even related.
 
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