Certified Collectibles Group Bolsters Claim for Unfair and Deceptive Trade Practices Against Globant
SARASOTA, Fla., April 30, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Certified Collectibles Group® (CCG®), which includes eight of the world's leading providers of authentication, grading and conservation services for coins, paper money, comic books, trading cards and other collectibles, announced today that it has filed a second amended complaint in its lawsuit charging international technology firm Globant S.A., along with its subsidiary Globant LLC, with breaches of contract and violations of the Florida Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act ("FDUTPA") arising out of Globant's failed software implementation at CCG.
The amended complaint, filed in federal court in Tampa in August 2019, adds a host of new allegations to CCG's ongoing lawsuit arising out of Globant's misconduct in botching the design and implementation of a new software system to run CCG's core operations. According to the lawsuit, CCG hired a consulting firm, which Globant subsequently acquired, to implement a new enterprise resource planning (ERP) software system. Even though Globant, and the firm it acquired, worked on the project for three years and collected millions of dollars in fees from CCG, it delivered nothing of value.
The new allegations stem in part from internal emails that Globant produced during the litigation. According to the amended complaint, those emails reveal that Globant consultants, executives and officers were aware of serious problems with Globant's performance but concealed them from CCG and its management team. For example, in an October 2018 email to his Globant colleagues, Globant executive and former Chief Financial Officer Alejandro Scannapieco joked about Globant's numerous performance failures, stating: "Ha, if we had to put together a book on how to do lots of things wrong … we won it!"
The amended complaint chronicles similar internal admissions in which Globant executives lamented their inability to deliver the ERP solution for CCG. Those internal emails include admissions that, because Globant had "lost a large number of US team members . . . . we are left with a massive skills, seniority, and knowledge gap that can't be improved with anything other than time." Globant consultants also acknowledged that they were "working on features we don't fully understand but with limited budget/time, which as you know, cannot work"; that there was "[b]ad distribution of the management team"; and that "nobody was working on a plan in order to place everything under control." One Globant consultant requested permission from her superiors to inform CCG of the status of the project, stating, "I would like to … tell them that we are implementing this plan instead of blowing smoke."
The lawsuit states that when Globant took over the project, it agreed to complete it by a firm deadline and for a fixed price. But after it pocketed the last payment from CCG, Globant issued ultimatums to CCG, threatening to abandon the project unless CCG paid fees in excess of the fixed price. Globant consultants are alleged to have discussed these threats internally, with one consultant instructing another "to go to [CCG] and say they have to pay $1m to finish the project and/or we will pull the ERP team Monday." According to the amended complaint, Globant consultants internally discussed their efforts to withhold the truth from CCG, with one executive stating, "I feel if we go with straight honesty and share what it will take to complete we are in a better position. Risky but he [CCG's CEO Steve Eichenbaum] has never been told the real deal."
The lawsuit alleges that had Globant told the truth from the outset and not engaged in a "bait-and-switch" strategy, CCG would have been able to avoid paying Globant millions of dollars for useless software.
"Globant strung us along with false assurances after taking over the project and committing to a fixed-price contract with a firm deadline," stated CCG's Chief Executive Officer, Steven Eichenbaum. "This is not the conduct we expect from our vendors, and we intend to pursue our claims aggressively to hold Globant accountable."
The lawsuit alleges that Globant's misconduct inflicted millions of dollars in damages on CCG.
CCG is represented by Mark P. Ressler, Thomas B. Kelly, and Maria Ruiz from the law firm Kasowitz Benson Torres LLP.
About Certified Collectibles Group® (CCG®)
CCG is the world's leading provider of expert, impartial and tech-enabled services that add value and liquidity to collectibles. The CCG companies include Numismatic Guaranty Corporation® (NGC®), Numismatic Conservation Services™ (NCS®), Paper Money Guaranty® (PMG®), Certified Guaranty Company® (CGC®), Classic Collectible Services® (CCS®), Certified Sports Guaranty™ (CSG™), Authenticated Stamp Guaranty® (ASG®) and Collectibles Authentication Guaranty® (CAG®). Since 1987, the CCG companies have certified more than 60 million coins, banknotes, comic books, trading cards, sports cards, stamps, estate items and related collectibles. Today, CCG serves the world of collectibles online and at its offices in the United States, United Kingdom, Germany and China. To learn more, visit collectiblesgroup.com.
© 2021 Certified Collectibles Group. All rights reserved.
CCG, NGC, NCS, PMG, CGC, CCS, CSG, ASG and CAG are the registered trademarks or unregistered trademarks of Certified Collectibles Group, and/or its related companies in the United States and/or other countries. All other names and marks referenced in this release are the trade names, trademarks, or service marks of their respective owners.
SOURCE The Certified Collectibles Group
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