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Peters' Bluster Brings a New Legal Challenge Worth $15,000 from Former Close Axanar Advisor

And now, from Iowa, comes another legal problem producer Alec Peters needs to deal with in the wake of his lawsuit against former Axanar director Robert Meyer Burnett.

  • Court documents. AxaMonitor has obtained court records filed Monday showing former Axanar PR director Mike Bawden, once Peters’ closest advisor, wants Peters to finish paying back a $30,000 loan.

See also: bawden_peters

  • Ignored warning. After Peters followed through on his threat to sue Burnett, Bawden warned Peters the lawsuit looks to end any possibility Bawden might forgive the debt.
  • Promissory note: Among the documents is a promissory note from Peters promising to repay the 2016 loan — right in the middle of the CBS/Paramount copyright lawsuit against Axanar — of $30,000 by December 31, 2016.
  • Short-term goes long: The loan was obviously meant to be short-term help during a time when Peters was bleeding money from his failed attempt to establish a commercial studio in California using donors’ money meant for producing Axanar.
  • Half repaid, interest compounding. Peters full repayment is almost three years late, though he paid $20,000 of the principal nearly two years late. The amount Peters still owes now includes 10 percent annual interest.
  • Props and costume collateral. According to the promissory note, Peters secured the loan by putting up his once-voluminous prop and and costume collection as collateral. If he fails to pay up, Bawden will own part of that collection.
  • Props possession ceded? Peters’ promissory note requires him to hand over the collateral if he fails to pay all he owes by December 2016, a date he’s already missed, or within 10 days of Bawden’s formal demand …

“The security [Peters’ props and costumes] will be immediately provided to the Lender [Bawden] and the Lender is granted all rights of repossession as a secured party.

  • Adding to the total Peters owes, now that a formal petition for repayment has been filed in Iowa District Court, will be attorneys’ fees and costs, something Peters agreed to in the promissory note. Those costs are now adding up.

The bottom line: Peters has 20 days from being served to respond or pay, or the court will enter a default judgment for the amount sought by Bawden, or the equivalent value from Peters’ props and costumes.

Why it matters: This legal action is the latest in the growing amount of litigation in which Peters is involved. Despite his bluster in the Burnett case, his attorney has yet to file an affidavit Burnett was even formally served Peters’ legal complaint, effectively stalling the suit indefinitely.

  • Leaving loyalists. This case also exemplifies the growing dissatisfaction now being publicly aired by former Axanar loyalists, a growing list including two directors, an editor, screenwriter and fulfillment director (also Peters’ former girlfriend), in addition to Bawden.
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