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The Lawsuit - Alardin Plaintiffs' 3rd Amended Petition
Dallas, Texas - April 14, 2008 - Court Order
Judge Jim Jordan let stand the recommendations of the jury verdict in the business litigation case between Tony Alardin of Remote Monitoring Technologies and Gregg Hoss of Hoss Equipment.
Gregg M. Hoss posts $3.25m Supersedeas Bond to appeal jury verdict - August 14, 2008
5th District Texas Court of Appeals Docket sheet for Case Number: 05-08-01192-CV Hoss Equipment, Gregg and Angela Hoss v. Anthony Alardin, d/b/a SiteWatch LLC, et al.
June 2010 update: 5th District Texas Court of Appeals - Links to eDocuments on case
At this time the case is ongoing. In the News Irving, Texas - August 11, 2006 - Hoss, SiteWatch involved in dueling suits - Dallas Business Journal
Hoss Equipment Co. and SiteWatch L.L.C. are suing each other in Dallas County civil court for losses related to video surveillance equipment that's piqued military interest. The long-range, wireless, remotely accessible system, developed by Tony Alardin in 2000, according to court documents, lets customers monitor work sites via Web-based video and audio software. Alardin's company, then called Remote Monitoring Technologies, and Hoss Equipment formed a SiteWatch partnership in September 2001, after Hoss bought three camera systems to sell, according to court records.
Dallas, Texas – February 19, 2008 - Press Release
Michael Heygood of The Law Offices of Heygood, Orr, Reyes, Pearson & Bartolomei announced the February 15th jury verdict in the amount of $3 million for their client, Tony Alardin, in a partnership dispute regarding the development, manufacture and sale of wireless video surveillance trailer systems.
In 2001, Mr. Alardin, along with his company Remote Monitoring Technologies, entered into a partnership with Dallas businessman Gregg Hoss and his company, Hoss Equipment Company, to perfect the technology and further develop and market wireless video surveillance trailer systems. more
Dallas, Texas – March 20, 2008 - Friends worked well together - until lines became too blurred - Dallas Morning News
Tony Alardin was sure he could turn his wireless surveillance system idea into a viable business. And as a first-time entrepreneur, he welcomed the advice – and, later, the money – of a close friend who already had his own business.
That friend, Gregg Hoss, chief executive of Hoss Equipment Co. in Irving, had run the business since 1990, selling heavy construction and mining equipment all over the world. The two men's wives had been best friends, and the couples socialized often.
"Gregg Hoss was my best man in our wedding and my wife, Kathryn Alardin, and his wife, Angela Livingston Hoss, were like sisters," he said.
Bedford, Texas - May 16, 2009
May 16, 2009 - 3 am drive-by harassment of Alardin.
The patience for karma.
In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of
our friends.
It is easier to forgive an enemy than to forgive a friend.
It takes your enemy and your friend, working
together, to hurt you: the one to slander you, and the other to bring the news
to you.
The reason why great men meet with so little pity
or attachment in adversity, would seem to be this: the friends of a great man
were made by his fortune, his enemies by himself, and revenge is a much more
punctual paymaster than gratitude. |
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