Why This Case Is Here
Corporate fraud against a Texas business is one of the hardest crimes to prove without paper. Books can be cooked. Ownership documents can be backdated. Loans can be drawn on a company's credit without its officers' knowledge. The only defense against any of that is the same thing that exposes it — a meticulous, time-stamped reconstruction of the paper trail.
This case file documents what Faretta Legal has surfaced about Wholesale Universe, Inc. — a Longview, Texas business — its reported fraudulent transfers, unauthorized debt obligations, and the open investigation filed with the Longview Police Department under Incident #260630230 and Case #26-2746.
Case Overview
A formal report has been filed with the Longview Police Department alleging fraudulent transfer of corporate control and unauthorized debt obligations against Wholesale Universe, Inc. The matter is currently classified as Monitoring — meaning active law-enforcement review is underway, public record developments are being tracked as they become available, and Faretta Legal is compiling the supporting documentation under open-records law.
What's Alleged — At the Framework Level
The allegations fall into three categories under Texas law:
- Fraudulent transfer of corporate control. Allegations that authority over Wholesale Universe, Inc. was shifted without proper documentation, authorization, or disclosure. Governed in Texas by the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act at Tex. Bus. & Com. Code ch. 24.
- Unauthorized debt. Allegations that debt obligations were incurred in the company's name without the knowledge or authorization of its officers. Governed by Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code § 21.401 (authority of directors) and the common law of corporate fraud.
- False statements to obtain property or credit. Conduct that, if proven, falls within Tex. Penal Code § 32.32 (false statement to obtain property or credit) and Tex. Penal Code § 32.46 (fraudulent securing of document execution).
The claims above describe a legal framework. They are not adjudications. Any determination of fact rests with law enforcement, the courts, and the eventual adjudicative process — not with this case file.
The Longview PD Narrative
A detailed narrative request for investigation has been submitted to the Longview Police Department alongside the formal incident report. The narrative documents:
- The chronology of events as Ryan Nichols personally observed them
- The corporate records that are relevant to the ownership and authority questions
- The financial paper trail that supports the unauthorized-debt allegations
- The witnesses and third parties whose knowledge is material to the investigation
A downloadable copy of the Longview PD investigation narrative will be linked here shortly once document hosting is finalized.
Procedural Posture
- Incident Report Filed with Longview PD — Incident #260630230, Case #26-2746
- Investigation Narrative Submitted as a supplemental filing to the police report
- Public Information Act Requests pending with relevant Texas agencies under Tex. Gov't Code § 552.001 et seq.
- Corporate Records Review ongoing — Texas Secretary of State filings, assumed-name certificates, and franchise-tax records being aggregated
- Financial Records Review ongoing — available bank statements, P&L records, and loan documentation being catalogued as exhibits
The Legal Framework That Governs This Matter
- Tex. Bus. & Com. Code ch. 24 — Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act. The Texas statute governing transfers made with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud any creditor.
- Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code § 21.401 — Authority of directors; sets the baseline for what corporate acts are authorized.
- Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code § 21.415 — Liability of directors for unauthorized acts.
- Tex. Penal Code § 32.32 — False statement to obtain property or credit.
- Tex. Penal Code § 32.46 — Fraudulent securing of document execution.
- Tex. Penal Code § 32.45 — Misapplication of fiduciary property (when ownership or control is held in a fiduciary capacity).
- Tex. Gov't Code § 552.001 et seq. — Texas Public Information Act. The basis on which Faretta Legal is requesting public agency records related to the investigation.
Public Documents
This case file will be updated as public-record developments occur. Everything on this page is sourced from a publicly-filed police report, from open-records responses, and from corporate filings available through the Texas Secretary of State.
Copies of the Longview PD narrative and the supporting corporate records compilation are available on request. Downloadable versions will be linked here shortly once document hosting is finalized.
What Faretta Legal Is Providing
- Case documentation and public records aggregation. Every filing, every report, every official communication goes into one organized binder.
- Timeline preparation. A clean one-page chronology that any investigator, prosecutor, or attorney can read in 90 seconds.
- Public Information Act requests on every relevant agency record, tracked by agency and request date.
- Investigative journalism and public-record reporting. When a case like this develops, the public has a right to see what's on the record.
This is investigative journalism and case documentation work. It is not a legal services engagement. Criminal matters require law enforcement and licensed criminal-defense counsel.
Why This Work Matters
When corporate fraud hits a Texas business, the people who get hurt are almost never the ones running the fraud — they're the employees, the vendors, and the partners who trusted the company's word. Documenting what happened is the first step toward anyone being held accountable for it. The Longview PD report is the opening move. Everything on this page is in support of that investigation.