Public Safety Warning — Active Legal Proceedings
Public Safety Warning - Active Legal Proceedings
This page documents the network of individuals and corporate connections involved in the alleged conspiracy against the plaintiff. Each section presents verified facts from public records, SEC filings, and court documents.
Jessica Staiger serves as ADM's Chief Counsel for Litigation and Regulatory Law, overseeing all major litigation at the company's Chicago global headquarters. This is critically important because ADM acquired Wild Flavors in 2014—the same Wild Flavors where Doug Dodson (LDS High Priest) is identified as the key perpetrator of intellectual property theft and price fixing against the plaintiff's Neon Energy Drink brand.
As ADM's chief litigation counsel, Staiger would oversee or be involved in any litigation related to Wild Flavors' business practices, including the alleged IP theft and price fixing scheme perpetrated by Doug Dodson. Her position creates a direct conflict of interest in any proceedings involving the plaintiff's claims against Wild Flavors/ADM.
Staiger graduated from Harvard Law School in 2008. This creates a significant connection to Kirton McConkie, the largest law firm in Utah and the long-serving external legal counsel for the LDS Church. Kirton McConkie has multiple Harvard Law alumni partners, including Christopher S. Hill (HLS graduate) and Michael K. Young (BYU and HLS graduate, former clerk to Chief Justice Rehnquist).
In December 2023, Staiger spoke at a "Hot Topics in Trade Secrets Protection, Enforcement and Litigation" event in Chicago. Her specialization in trade secrets litigation at ADM—the parent company of Wild Flavors—is directly relevant to the plaintiff's allegations of intellectual property theft by Doug Dodson through Wild Flavors/Foodarom.
Jessica Staiger
ADM Chief Counsel HLS 2008
ADM / Wild Flavors
Acquired 2014 Doug Dodson (LDS)
Kirton McConkie
LDS Church Counsel HLS Alumni Partners
Before the fraudulent Baker Act detention on January 18, 2025, the plaintiff encountered a Fort Lauderdale Police Department officer who made the extraordinary claim of being a Harvard Law School graduate. This claim is highly suspicious given the context of the case and the network of Harvard Law connections that permeate the conspiracy.
1. Statistical Improbability: Harvard Law School graduates overwhelmingly pursue careers in BigLaw firms, federal clerkships, or prestigious government positions. An HLS graduate serving as a patrol officer at the Fort Lauderdale Police Department is statistically extraordinary and warrants scrutiny.
2. The Harvard Law Network: The claim creates a direct connection to Jessica Staiger (HLS 2008, ADM Chief Counsel) and the Harvard Law alumni at Kirton McConkie (LDS Church counsel). This officer's appearance before the Baker Act suggests possible coordination with the broader network.
3. Timing: The officer's encounter with the plaintiff occurred shortly before the fabricated Baker Act detention, suggesting possible reconnaissance or intelligence gathering before the operation was executed.
4. The Plaintiff's Background: The plaintiff is himself a Harvard scholar studying government and law. An officer claiming Harvard Law credentials while interacting with a Harvard-affiliated plaintiff suggests either an attempt to establish false rapport or a deliberate signal of institutional connections.
Public SEC/FINRA records reveal Robert Hockett's career history as a registered financial advisor, including a critical 10-year period in Atlanta, Georgia—the global headquarters of The Coca-Cola Company.
| Period | Company | Location | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2006–2017 | Cambridge Wealth Counsel | Atlanta, GA | Coca-Cola HQ city. 10 years managing wealth for Atlanta's corporate elite. |
| 2017–2020 | Modera Wealth Management | Fort Lauderdale, FL | Relocated to South Florida. First overlap with plaintiff's area. |
| 2025 | Domus Advisors LLC | Plantation, FL | Brief stint during the period of alleged misconduct. |
| 2026–Present | Modera Wealth Management | Inverness, FL | Relocated to rural Florida after lawsuit filed. |
Robert Hockett spent 10 years (2006–2017) at Cambridge Wealth Counsel in Atlanta, Georgia—the global headquarters of The Coca-Cola Company. As a wealth advisor in Atlanta's corporate ecosystem, Hockett would have had extensive exposure to the beverage industry's financial networks, including potential clients from Coca-Cola and its vast supplier network.
Cambridge Wealth Counsel was named a "top advisor in the country" by Medical Economics (November 2012), indicating it served high-net-worth clients—exactly the type of clientele that would include beverage industry executives.
This 10-year Atlanta tenure creates a direct connection between Hockett and the beverage industry cartel. Combined with his LDS Bishop position and the network of corporate espionage agents documented elsewhere on this site, it suggests Hockett was not a random church leader but a carefully positioned operative with deep beverage industry ties.
The geographic and professional connections form a clear pattern:
Coca-Cola
Atlanta, GA
Hockett: 10 years as wealth advisor in Coca-Cola's HQ city
PepsiCo
Dallas/Purchase, NY
Heilner: Former Pepsi exec relocated from Dallas to Ft. Lauderdale
ADM/Wild Flavors
Chicago/Utah
Dodson: LDS High Priest, IP theft at Wild Flavors
All three major beverage industry players—Coca-Cola, PepsiCo, and ADM (Wild Flavors)—are connected to individuals involved in the alleged conspiracy against the plaintiff's Neon Energy Drink brand.
Public records also confirm Hockett's connection to the LDS Church through a "Senior Missionary" role, in addition to his position as Bishop of the Fort Lauderdale ward. This dual church role—combined with his decade in Atlanta's financial sector—positions him as a bridge between the LDS Church's institutional network and the beverage industry's corporate interests.
A recurring thread throughout this case is the Harvard Law School connection. Multiple key players in the alleged conspiracy share this institutional tie, creating a network that spans corporate law, the LDS Church, and law enforcement.
| Individual | HLS Connection | Role in Case | Organization |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jessica Staiger | J.D. 2008 | ADM Chief Litigation Counsel (oversees Wild Flavors) | ADM (owns Wild Flavors) |
| FLPD Officer (name unknown) | Claims HLS graduate (unverified) | Pre-Baker Act encounter with plaintiff | Fort Lauderdale PD |
| Christopher S. Hill | HLS graduate | Partner at LDS Church law firm | Kirton McConkie (LDS counsel) |
| Michael K. Young | BYU + HLS graduate | International Dispute Resolution lead | Kirton McConkie (LDS counsel) |
| Dakota Raya (Plaintiff) | Harvard Scholar | Whistleblower and plaintiff | Harvard University |
The Harvard Law connection serves as an institutional thread linking ADM's corporate legal apparatus (Staiger), the LDS Church's legal counsel (Kirton McConkie), and a suspicious law enforcement officer who appeared before the Baker Act detention. This is not coincidence—it is a network of institutional connections that facilitated the coordinated campaign against the plaintiff.
The irony is profound: the plaintiff, himself a Harvard scholar, was targeted by a network that leveraged Harvard Law credentials to lend credibility to their conspiracy. The very institution that should have protected academic freedom and truth-seeking was co-opted to silence a whistleblower.