Evidence Record

IP HII EDVA 00483 Doc. 0178 Main

Pursuant to the Court's Orders dated February 11, 2026 and March 31, 2026 (Dkt. Entries 145, 158) and Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56, Fairwinds Technologies LLC ("Fairwinds"), through its undersigned counsel, hereby respectfully...

Type
document
Court
EDVA
Case
HII v. Cyberlux interpleader
Docket
3:25-cv-00483
Pages
11
Lines
295
SHA-256
a332954210d0

DISTIL analysis

DISTIL Run
Profile
Standard
Version
1
Doc Type
Legal Motion - Summary Judgment Memorandum
Total Nodes
29
Node Legend
Entity (ENT)
Event (EVT)
Claim (CLM)
Anchor (ANC)
Omission (OMI)
Tension (TEN)
Tell (TEL)
Inference (INF)
Hypothesis (HYP)
Stage 1
Index
Orientation · No nodes
Document Classification
Legal Motion - Summary Judgment Memorandum Fairwinds Technologies, LLC (counsel: Jones Walker LLP) Federal civil litigation - interpleader action involving disputed creditor claims to funds deposited with court 2022-10-03 to 2026-04-15
financial_distressfraud_allegationsmultiple_creditor_claimsbankruptcy_consideration
Analytical Frame
Contract enforcement and creditor priority dispute
Analytical Summary
Fairwinds Technologies LLC filed this summary judgment motion in an interpleader action seeking $2,348,542.40 from funds HII Mission Technologies deposited with the court. Fairwinds asserts an unsecured creditor claim against Cyberlux Corporation based on a June 2023 contract requiring Cyberlux to pay Fairwinds 8% commission on the first 1,000 Model K8 Aircraft (drones) delivered under a government contract. Cyberlux's CEO confirmed the amount owed via spreadsheet in July 2025. Fairwinds argues it stands equal with other unsecured creditors (Advanced Navigation, Thin Air Gear, ARG Group, Atlantic Wave Holdings, Receiver Berleth, and Maadarani), while only Legalist and the U.S. government claim perfected security interests. The motion additionally proposes federal receiver appointment due to fraud allegations, financial distress, and competing creditor claims suggesting Cyberlux may require bankruptcy protection.
Key Points
  • Fairwinds claims $2,348,542.40 from interpleaded funds based on 8% commission agreement with Cyberlux
  • Commission tied to first 1,000 drones delivered under HII government contract
  • Cyberlux CEO confirmed amount owed via July 2025 spreadsheet
  • Multiple unsecured creditors compete for same funds with equal priority
  • Only Legalist and U.S. government assert perfected security interests
  • Fairwinds proposes federal receiver appointment citing fraud allegations and financial distress
Stage 2
Core — Entities, Events, Claims
16 nodes
ENT-001
Entity
Fairwinds Technologies, LLC
Fairwinds Technologies LLC, the movant and interpleader defendant/claimant asserting unsecured creditor status against Cyberlux Corporation for commission payments under teaming and service contracts related to government drone sales.
Page 1 — Fairwinds Technologies LLC ("Fairwinds"), through its undersigned counsel, hereby respectfully submits this memorandum in support of its motion for summary judgment
ENT-002
Entity
Cyberlux Corporation
Cyberlux Corporation, debtor company that manufactures Model K8 Aircraft (drones) and is subject to multiple creditor claims in this interpleader action. The company faces fraud allegations, financial distress with $16M stockholders' equity deficiency, and litigation involving stock manipulation schemes.
Page 1, 9, 10 — Fairwinds became an unsecured creditor of Cyberlux initially through an October 3, 2022, Teaming Agreement (the "TA") entered into by the parties by which Fairwinds assisted Cyberlux in securing a contract vehicle award for the shipment of Cyberlux's Model K8 Aircraft ("Drones").
ENT-003
Entity
HII Mission Technologies Corp.
HII Mission Technologies Corp., the interpleader plaintiff who deposited $25,769,369.03 with the court on March 6, 2026, as the prime contractor awarded by the U.S. government for the drone contract.
Page 1, 2 — HII Mission Technologies Corp. ("HII") has deposited with the Court on March 6, 2026, as an unsecured creditor of Cyberlux Corporation ("Cyberlux"). [...] The U.S. government ultimately awarded the prime contract to HII.
ENT-004
Entity
Mark Schmidt
Mark Schmidt, CEO of Cyberlux Corporation who provided accounting calculations confirming $2,348,542.40 owed to Fairwinds via spreadsheet on July 8, 2025.
Page 2 — On July 8, 2025, Cyberlux's CEO, Mark Schmidt, sent Fairwinds a spreadsheet detailing the accounting breakdown of the value of the amount in commission owed to Fairwinds in connection with Cyberlux's sale of the Drones and valued the amount owed to Fairwinds as $2,348,542.40.
ENT-005
Entity
Competing Creditors
Multiple unsecured creditors without perfected security interests: Advanced Navigation & Positioning Corporation, Thin Air Gear LLC, Robert W. Berleth (as Receiver), The ARG Group LLC, Atlantic Wave Holdings LLC, and Bilal Maadarani. Two parties claim perfected interests: Legalist and the United States government.
Page 6, 7 — By contrast, the remaining claimants-including Advanced Navigation & Positioning Corporation, Thin Air Gear, LLC, Robert W. Berleth (as Receiver), The ARG Group, LLC, Atlantic Wave Holdings, LLC, and Bilal Maadarani-have not demonstrated a perfected security interest or perfected lien that attaches to the funds deposited with the Court and are all unsecured creditors with the same priority. [...] Here, only two parties, Legalist and the United States government, assert facts that, if true, could constitute them having a perfected security interest in the funds interpleaded with the Court.
ENT-006
Entity
Brett Rosen and Deborah Rosen
Brett Rosen and Deborah Rosen were indicted by federal grand jury on January 21, 2026, on charges of securities fraud and money laundering through their investment business RB Capital Partners, Inc., with allegations of market manipulation involving Cyberlux Corporation stock.
Page 9 — On January 21, 2026, "Brett Rosen and Deborah Rosen were indicted by a federal grand jury on charges that they, through their joint investment business, RB Capital Partners, Inc., engaged in a years-long securities fraud and money laundering scheme." [...] The indictment alleges that the Rosens "engaged in a market manipulation scheme through financing, promoting, and selling the stock of . . . Cyberlux Corp."
EVT-001
Event
October 2022 Teaming Agreement
On October 3, 2022, Fairwinds and Cyberlux entered into a Teaming Agreement under which Fairwinds would assist Cyberlux in securing a government contract for Model K8 Aircraft. In exchange, Fairwinds would receive either the prime contractor role or 8% commission on the first 1,000 drones if another entity was selected as prime.
Page 1, 2 — Fairwinds became an unsecured creditor of Cyberlux initially through an October 3, 2022, Teaming Agreement (the "TA") entered into by the parties by which Fairwinds assisted Cyberlux in securing a contract vehicle award for the shipment of Cyberlux's Model K8 Aircraft ("Drones"). [...] The TA provided Fairwinds, in consideration for its services, either: (i) the opportunity to serve as prime contractor for any subsequent award; or, (ii) in the event that a party other than Fairwinds was chosen to serve as the prime contractor for the subsequent award, Fairwinds would receive eight percent (8%) of the contract value associated with the first one thousand (1,000) Drones delivered.
EVT-002
Event
HII Prime Contract Award
The U.S. government awarded the prime contract for the drone program to HII Mission Technologies Corp., triggering Fairwinds' right to an 8% commission under the Teaming Agreement rather than the prime contractor role.
Page 2 — The U.S. government ultimately awarded the prime contract to HII.
EVT-003
Event
June 2023 Service Contract
On June 7, 2023, Cyberlux and Fairwinds entered into a Strategic Business Development, Service and Supply Teaming contract formalizing Fairwinds' right to receive 8% of the value of the first 1,000 drones delivered in connection with services provided.
Page 2 — As a result, Cyberlux and Fairwinds entered into a valid and enforceable Strategic Business Development, Service and Supply Teaming contract (the "Contract") on June 7, 2023. [...] Under the Contract, Cyberlux and Fairwinds agreed that Cyberlux was to pay Fairwinds a fee of eight percent (8%) of the value of the first one thousand (1,000) Drones delivered in connection with the services provided by Fairwinds described in the Contract.
EVT-004
Event
July 2025 Commission Calculation
On July 8, 2025, Cyberlux CEO Mark Schmidt sent Fairwinds a spreadsheet calculating the commission owed as $2,348,542.40 based on amounts Cyberlux had invoiced HII for drone sales. Schmidt confirmed these were the same funds HII would deposit with the court and that Cyberlux would pay Fairwinds from those funds.
Page 2 — On July 8, 2025, Cyberlux's CEO, Mark Schmidt, sent Fairwinds a spreadsheet detailing the accounting breakdown of the value of the amount in commission owed to Fairwinds in connection with Cyberlux's sale of the Drones and valued the amount owed to Fairwinds as $2,348,542.40. [...] This was based upon amounts that Cyberlux had invoiced HII for the sale of the Drones, which Mr. Schmidt attached to his spreadsheet as support for his calculations. [...] That amount due to Cyberlux from HII listed on that spreadsheet, $25,769,369.03, was the same amount HII sought to deposit with the Court in its motion for interpleader deposit. [...] Mr. Schmidt confirmed that the funds due to Cyberlux from HII referenced in the spreadsheet were from the sale of the Drones referenced in the Contract and that Cyberlux would pay Fairwinds that amount from funds HII was to pay Cyberlux that ultimately were deposited with the Court.
EVT-005
Event
July 2025 Fairwinds Invoice
On July 9, 2025, Fairwinds submitted an invoice to Cyberlux for $2,348,542.40, reflecting the amount listed in the CEO's spreadsheet from the previous day.
Page 2 — On July 9, 2025, Fairwinds submitted an invoice for $2,348,542.40 to Cyberlux reflecting the amount listed in the spreadsheet.
EVT-006
Event
March 2026 Interpleader Deposit
HII Mission Technologies deposited $25,769,369.03 with the court on March 6, 2026, as interpleader plaintiff, placing funds at issue among competing creditor claimants.
Page 1 — HII Mission Technologies Corp. ("HII") has deposited with the Court on March 6, 2026
EVT-007
Event
January 2026 Rosen Indictment
On January 21, 2026, Brett Rosen and Deborah Rosen were indicted by federal grand jury on securities fraud and money laundering charges related to their investment business RB Capital Partners, with allegations specifically naming market manipulation of Cyberlux Corporation stock.
Page 9 — On January 21, 2026, "Brett Rosen and Deborah Rosen were indicted by a federal grand jury on charges that they, through their joint investment business, RB Capital Partners, Inc., engaged in a years-long securities fraud and money laundering scheme." [...] The indictment alleges that the Rosens "engaged in a market manipulation scheme through financing, promoting, and selling the stock of . . . Cyberlux Corp."
CLM-001
Claim
Fairwinds $2.3M Commission Entitlement
Fairwinds asserts a valid and enforceable contractual right to $2,348,542.40 (8% of $25,769,369.03) from the interpleaded funds based on the June 2023 contract, with amount confirmed by Cyberlux CEO's July 2025 spreadsheet calculation.
Page 4, 5 — There can be no dispute that Fairwinds has a valid and enforceable interest, equaling $2,348,542.40 in the funds deposited with the Court by HII. [...] Accordingly, the Court should grant summary judgment in favor of Fairwinds that it is an unsecured creditor of Cyberlux's owed $2,348,542.40 by Cyberlux in connection with the HII transaction.
CLM-002
Claim
Unsecured Creditor Parity
Fairwinds argues that all creditors without perfected security interests stand in pari passu (equal footing) with respect to the interpleaded funds, with no priority among unsecured claimants under Virginia law and bankruptcy principles.
Page 5, 7 — Accordingly, those parties, including Fairwinds, are unsecured creditors standing in pari passu with one another with respect to the funds deposited with the Court and take no priority over each other. [...] By contrast, where a claimant cannot demonstrate a perfected interest in the interpleaded property, that claimant stands as an unsecured creditor as to that property, and unsecured claimants share on equal footing absent a proven basis for priority.
CLM-003
Claim
Judgment Liens Not Perfected in Funds
Fairwinds claims that judgment liens held by Advanced Navigation, Thin Air Gear, and Atlantic Wave Holdings cannot be converted to perfected interests in the interpleaded funds because Virginia law requires judgment liens to be recorded and only attach to real property, not intangible moveable property.
Page 6 — Judgment liens, however, in and of themselves are not perfected interests. [...] In order to convert that judgment lien into a perfected interest in property, a judgment creditor must record the lien in the judgment lien docket book in the office of the county or city where the property is situated. [...] The recorded lien though may only attach to real property located in the county or city where the lien was recorded - any intangible, moveable property is excluded.
Stage 3
In Situ — Quotations, Tells, Tensions, Questions
8 nodes
QUO-001
Quotation
Wright & Miller Receiver Factors
Legal treatise Wright & Miller identifies factors for receiver appointment: fraudulent conduct by defendant; imminent danger of property being lost, concealed, injured, diminished in value, or squandered; inadequacy of available legal remedies; probability that harm to plaintiff by denial would be greater than injury to opposing parties; and plaintiff's probable success and possibility of irreparable injury.
Page 8 — fraudulent conduct on the part of defendant; the imminent danger of the property being lost, concealed, injured, diminished in value, or squandered; the inadequacy of the available legal remedies; the probability that harm to plaintiff by denial of the appointment would be greater than the injury to the parties opposing appointment; and, in more general terms, plaintiff's probable success in the action and the possibility of irreparable injury to his interests in the property.
TLL-001
Tell
Cyberlux Financial Distress Indicators
Fairwinds identifies multiple financial distress signals at Cyberlux: net loss from operations exceeding $3.1 million in most recent financial report, stockholders' equity deficiency exceeding $16 million against only $37 million in current assets, active litigation by multiple creditors across jurisdictions, and recent UCC-1 filings suggesting fraudulent transfers.
Page 9 — Cyberlux maintains active litigation by creditors, hiring attorneys in multiple jurisdictions, and is facing financial hardships. The most recent financial report showed the company reported a net loss from operations in excess of $3.1 million. [...] Its most recent balance sheet showed a "deficiency in stockholders' equity" in excess of $16 million against only $37 million in current assets. [...] Cyberlux is not a healthy company. [...] Finally, recent UCC-1 filings in Nevada suggest that Fraudulent Transfers have occurred.
TLL-002
Tell
Cyberlux Does Not Dispute Contract Validity
Fairwinds asserts that Cyberlux does not dispute the validity of either the October 2022 Teaming Agreement or the June 2023 Contract, suggesting tacit acknowledgment of contractual obligations.
Page 4 — Cyberlux does not dispute the validity of the TA. [...] Cyberlux does not dispute the validity of this contract.
TEN-001
Tension
Multiple Creditor Claims vs. Limited Assets
Tension exists between numerous competing creditor claims and Cyberlux's limited and depleting assets. Multiple parties have intervened as claimants, while Cyberlux faces $16M equity deficiency and ongoing operational losses, creating urgency around asset preservation and equitable distribution.
Page 9 — Indeed, the fact that so many claimants and creditors of Cyberlux have intervened in this Interpleader suggests that the assets of the company will be siphoned away from legitimate creditors for other purposes. [...] Its most recent balance sheet showed a "deficiency in stockholders' equity" in excess of $16 million against only $37 million in current assets.
TEN-002
Tension
Interpleader Forum vs. Bankruptcy Forum
Tension exists over the appropriate forum for resolving competing claims. While parties are in federal district court interpleader action, Fairwinds suggests bankruptcy court may be better equipped to rank and prioritize creditor claims, with the court having noted this possibility at first status conference.
Page 9, 10 — As this Court recognized in its first status conference with the parties, bankruptcy court may be the appropriate federal forum to adjudicate, rank, and prioritize the competing claims against Cyberlux. [...] The appointment of a federal receiver with the authority to file a bankruptcy petition will allow these parties to be fairly ranked inside the only federal system designed to protect creditors from the debtor and from other creditors.
QST-001
Question
Validity of Legalist and U.S. Government Perfected Claims
Whether Legalist and the United States government have validly perfected security interests in the interpleaded funds remains unresolved. Fairwinds acknowledges these two parties assert facts that could constitute perfected interests but expressly does not comment on the truth of those assertions.
Page 6 — Here, only two parties, Legalist and the United States government, assert facts that, if true, could constitute them having a perfected security interest in the funds interpleaded with the Court. Whether those facts are true, Fairwinds does not comment on at this time. Rather, Fairwinds will address the sufficiency of those claims in its response to the motions for summary judgment filed by the parties to this action.
QST-002
Question
Nature and Timing of Fraudulent Transfers
What fraudulent transfers occurred at Cyberlux and when? Fairwinds references recent UCC-1 filings in Nevada suggesting fraudulent transfers but provides no details about the nature, parties involved, or timeline of these alleged transfers.
Page 9 — Finally, recent UCC-1 filings in Nevada suggest that Fraudulent Transfers have occurred.
QST-003
Question
Scope of Discovery on Other HII-Cyberlux Transactions
Are there other transactions between Cyberlux and HII beyond the drone contract at issue? Fairwinds states that 'none of the discovery exchanged by the parties to this case references another transaction between Cyberlux and HII,' but this phrasing suggests the question was raised or uncertainty existed.
Page 4, 5 — Based upon the representations made by Cyberlux, and the fact that none of the discovery exchanged by the parties to this case references another transaction between Cyberlux and HII, it is beyond dispute that Cyberlux contracted to pay Fairwinds 8% of what it received from HII in the transaction at issue in this case.
Stage 4
Interpretive — Inferences, Omissions, Patterns
5 nodes
INF-001
Inference
CEO Calculation as Admission of Debt
The fact that Cyberlux CEO Mark Schmidt proactively sent a detailed spreadsheet calculating the exact commission amount owed to Fairwinds, attached supporting invoices, and confirmed the funds would come from the HII payment suggests Cyberlux acknowledged the debt's validity and was preparing to pay before the interpleader action intervened.
Page 2 — On July 8, 2025, Cyberlux's CEO, Mark Schmidt, sent Fairwinds a spreadsheet detailing the accounting breakdown of the value of the amount in commission owed to Fairwinds in connection with Cyberlux's sale of the Drones and valued the amount owed to Fairwinds as $2,348,542.40. [...] Mr. Schmidt confirmed that the funds due to Cyberlux from HII referenced in the spreadsheet were from the sale of the Drones referenced in the Contract and that Cyberlux would pay Fairwinds that amount from funds HII was to pay Cyberlux
INF-002
Inference
Fraud Environment Threatens Asset Preservation
The combination of the Rosen indictment for securities fraud and market manipulation involving Cyberlux stock, ongoing litigation involving RB Capital Partners and Atlantic Wave, UCC-1 filings suggesting fraudulent transfers, and severe financial distress suggests a pattern where Cyberlux assets are at substantial risk of dissipation through irregular channels.
Page 9 — On January 21, 2026, "Brett Rosen and Deborah Rosen were indicted by a federal grand jury on charges that they, through their joint investment business, RB Capital Partners, Inc., engaged in a years-long securities fraud and money laundering scheme." [...] The indictment alleges that the Rosens "engaged in a market manipulation scheme through financing, promoting, and selling the stock of . . . Cyberlux Corp." [...] Cyberlux remains in litigation regarding its stock transactions against RB Capital Partners, Atlantic Wave, and Secured Community. Finally, recent UCC-1 filings in Nevada suggest that Fraudulent Transfers have occurred.
INF-003
Inference
Strategic Receiver Proposal
Fairwinds' proposal for federal receiver appointment appears strategically designed to move the dispute toward bankruptcy forum while establishing Fairwinds as a constructive creditor advocating for collective creditor protection rather than solely pursuing its individual claim, potentially strengthening its position as a cooperative stakeholder.
Page 9, 10 — While not properly before the Court at this juncture, Fairwinds suggests that a federal receiver with the power to file bankruptcy may be the only solution that protects all parties' rights and moves this adjudication to the forum most-equipped to handle it. [...] A federally appointed receiver may decide that the competing claims against Cyberlux's limited pot of assets necessitates the filing of a federal bankruptcy petition.
OMI-001
Omission
No Discussion of Defenses to Commission Claim
Fairwinds' memorandum presents no discussion of potential defenses Cyberlux or other parties might raise to the commission claim, such as contract formation issues, condition precedent failures, offset claims, or dispute over drone delivery counts. The brief asserts Cyberlux 'does not dispute' validity but provides no substantive engagement with possible counterarguments.
Page 4 — Cyberlux does not dispute the validity of the TA. [...] Cyberlux does not dispute the validity of this contract.
OMI-002
Omission
Limited Detail on Competing Creditor Claims
While Fairwinds lists six other unsecured creditors by name, the memorandum provides no details about the nature, amounts, or factual basis of their claims. This omission makes it impossible to assess the total creditor exposure versus available assets or evaluate relative equities among unsecured claimants.
Page 6, 7 — By contrast, the remaining claimants-including Advanced Navigation & Positioning Corporation, Thin Air Gear, LLC, Robert W. Berleth (as Receiver), The ARG Group, LLC, Atlantic Wave Holdings, LLC, and Bilal Maadarani-have not demonstrated a perfected security interest or perfected lien

Extracted text

11 pages · 21200 characters

IP HII EDVA 00483 Doc. 0178 Main — Formatted Extract

Type: document
Court: EDVA
Matter: HII v. Cyberlux interpleader
Docket: 3:25-cv-00483
Filing Header

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA Richmond Division

HII MISSION TECHNOLOGIES CORP.,

Interpleader Plaintiff

v. CYBERLUX CORPORATION, et al.,

Civil Action No: 3:25-cv-483-JAG

Interpleader Defendants/Claimants

FAIRWINDS TECHNOLOGIES, LLC'S MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF ITS MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

Pursuant to the Court's Orders dated February 11, 2026 and March 31, 2026 (Dkt. Entries 145, 158) and Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56, Fairwinds Technologies LLC ("Fairwinds"), through its undersigned counsel, hereby respectfully submits this memorandum in support of its motion for summary judgment in the above-captioned action.

STATEMENT OF UNDISPUTED FACTS

Fairwinds intervened in the case as an Interpleader Defendant asserting a claim to funds that HII Mission Technologies Corp. ("HII") has deposited with the Court on March 6, 2026, as an unsecured creditor of Cyberlux Corporation ("Cyberlux").

Fairwinds became an unsecured creditor of Cyberlux initially through an October 3, 2022, Teaming Agreement (the "TA") entered into by the parties by which Fairwinds assisted Cyberlux in securing a contract vehicle award for the shipment of Cyberlux's Model K8 Aircraft ("Drones"). Declaration of Thomas O. Wirth, 12, Exhibit 1.

The TA provided Fairwinds, in consideration for its services, either: (i) the opportunity to serve as prime contractor for any subsequent award; or, (ii) in the event that a party other than

Fairwinds was chosen to serve as the prime contractor for the subsequent award, Fairwinds would receive eight percent (8%) of the contract value associated with the first one thousand (1,000) Drones delivered. Id.

The U.S. government ultimately awarded the prime contract to HII. Id. 3. As a result, Cyberlux and Fairwinds entered into a valid and enforceable Strategic Business Development, Service and Supply Teaming contract (the "Contract") on June 7, 2023. Id. 14, Exhibit 2. Under the Contract, Cyberlux and Fairwinds agreed that Cyberlux was to pay Fairwinds a fee of eight percent (8%) of the value of the first one thousand (1,000) Drones delivered in connection with the services provided by Fairwinds described in the Contract. Id., Exhibit 2 |5.1; Appendix A.

On July 8, 2025, Cyberlux's CEO, Mark Schmidt, sent Fairwinds a spreadsheet detailing the accounting breakdown of the value of the amount in commission owed to Fairwinds in connection with Cyberlux's sale of the Drones and valued the amount owed to Fairwinds as $2,348,542.40. Id. 15, Exhibit 3. This was based upon amounts that Cyberlux had invoiced HII for the sale of the Drones, which Mr. Schmidt attached to his spreadsheet as support for his calculations. Id. 6, Exhibit 4. That amount due to Cyberlux from HII listed on that spreadsheet, $25,769,369.03, was the same amount HII sought to deposit with the Court in its motion for interpleader deposit. [Dkt. No. 144]. On July 9, 2025, Fairwinds submitted an invoice for $2,348,542.40 to Cyberlux reflecting the amount listed in the spreadsheet. Id. P 7, Exhibit 5. Mr. Schmidt confirmed that the funds due to Cyberlux from HII referenced in the spreadsheet were from the sale of the Drones referenced in the Contract and that Cyberlux would pay Fairwinds that amount from funds HII was to pay Cyberlux that ultimately were deposited with the Court. Id. 5, Exhibit 3.

LAW AND ARGUMENT

Summary judgment is required when a "movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). No triable issue exists where "the record taken as a whole could not lead a rational trier of fact to find for the non-moving party[.]" Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 587 (1986). "Once the movant meets its burden, the opposing party, to defeat the motion, must set forth specific facts showing a genuine issue for trial." Nifong v. SOC, LLC, 234 F. Supp. 3d 739, 750 (E.D. Va. 2017) (Ellis, J.). The non-moving party "cannot create a genuine issue of material fact through mere speculation or the building of one inference upon another." Beale v. Hardy, 769 F.2d 213, 214 (4th Cir. 1985); see also Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 252 (1986); Ennis v. Nat'l Ass'n of Bus. & Educ. Radio, Inc., 53 F.3d 55, 62 (4th Cir. 1995). Rather, to survive summary judgment, the party opposing the motion must prove there is sufficient evidence to support a jury verdict in its favor. Anderson, 477 U.S. at 249. In doing so, the non- moving party "must do more than simply show that there is some metaphysical doubt as to the material facts." Matsushita, 475 U.S. at 586.

"Summary judgment is appropriate 'if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.' Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). '[A] scintilla of evidence' in support of the nonmoving party's position is insufficient to defeat summary judgment. Anderson, 477 U.S. at 252. Rather, '[w]here the record taken as a whole could not lead a rational trier of fact to find for the non-moving party, there is no genuine issue for trial.' Matsushita, 475 U.S. at 587 (internal quotation marks omitted)." United States ex rel Gugenheim v. Meridian Senior Living, LLC, 36 F.4th 173, 178 (4th Cir. 2022).

I. THERE IS NO DISPUTE THAT FAIRWINDS IS ENTITLED TO A PORTION OF THE FUNDS DEPOSITED WITH THE COURT

There can be no dispute that Fairwinds has a valid and enforceable interest, equaling $2,348,542.40 in the funds deposited with the Court by HII.

Fairwinds entered into a valid and enforceable TA with Cyberlux whereby Fairwinds would provide Cyberlux with certain services and assist Cyberlux in securing a contract with the U.S. government for Cyberlux to provide to the government the Drones. Wirth Decl. Ex. 1. In exchange, Fairwinds would receive the opportunity to serve as prime contractor or, if the government chose some other entity to serve as prime contractor, Cyberlux would pay Fairwinds a commission of 8% of the amount it received for the first 1,000 Drones sold. Id. Cyberlux does not dispute the validity of the TA.

When the government chose HII as prime contractor, Fairwinds entered into the Contract with Cyberlux that guaranteed, in exchange for services already provided and services provided going forward, Fairwinds would receive the 8% commission on the sale of the first 1,000 Drones. Id. 4, Ex. 2. Cyberlux does not dispute the validity of this contract.

When it was time for Cyberlux to fulfill its obligations to Fairwinds, Mr. Schmidt contacted Fairwinds and provided a calculation as to what Cyberlux owed Fairwinds. Mr. Schmidt based that calculation on a series of invoices connected to Cyberlux's transactions with HII. Id. Ex. 3. The total amount Cyberlux charged HII in those invoices is the same amount HII ultimately deposited with the Court (minus fees and expenses), meaning the sale of Drones referenced in the Contract is the sale of Drones Cyberlux made to HII. [Dkt No. 144]. Based upon the representations made by Cyberlux, and the fact that none of the discovery exchanged by the parties to this case references another transaction between Cyberlux and HII, it is beyond dispute that Cyberlux contracted to pay Fairwinds 8% of what it received from HII in the transaction at issue

in this case. Accordingly, the Court should grant summary judgment in favor of Fairwinds that it is an unsecured creditor of Cyberlux's owed $2,348,542.40 by Cyberlux in connection with the HII transaction.

II. I. THE LAW RECOGNIZES NO PRIORITY AMONG UNSECURED CLAIMANTS, AND ONLY TWO PARTIES HAVE CLAIMED TO HOLD PERFECTED INTERESTS IN THE INTERPLEADED FUNDS

Secured creditors take priority over unsecured creditors when creditors seek to have their debts satisfied by the same source of funds. In order to possess a valid security interest in the HII funds deposited with the Court, a creditor must hold a perfected lien or perfected security interest in the property that has been interpleaded. Only creditors with a perfected interest in the interpleaded funds are entitled to priority over claimants whose rights amount only to general, unsecured claims.

Virginia recognizes priority rules for perfected interests. As a general matter, priority among perfected interests turns on perfection and timing-Virginia follows a first-in-time principle for interests that are properly perfected, and, in the real-property context, it is a "race notice jurisdiction" in which the interests perfected first in time take priority. Lewandowski v. F. & M. Mortg. Servs., Inc., 50 Va. Cir. 394, 397 (Cir. Ct. 1999). By contrast, where a claimant cannot demonstrate a perfected interest in the interpleaded property, that claimant stands as an unsecured creditor as to that property, and unsecured claimants share on equal footing absent a proven basis for priority. See generally, 11 USCS § 507 (certain unsecured claims are given priority, such as domestic support obligations or wages, salaries, or commissions); see also Union Bank & Trust Co. v. Haley, 15 Va. Cir. 507, 508 (Cir. Ct. 1989) (Va. Code Ann § 64.1-157 "creates eight classes of debt or claims and provides 'no preference shall be given in the payment of any claim over any other claim of the same class").

Judgment liens, however, in and of themselves are not perfected interests. A judgment lien arises when a party obtains a money judgment in a federal or state court. Va. Code Ann § 8.01- 458. In order to convert that judgment lien into a perfected interest in property, a judgment creditor must record the lien in the judgment lien docket book in the office of the county or city where the property is situated. Va. Code Ann § 8.01-458. The recorded lien though may only attach to real property located in the county or city where the lien was recorded - any intangible, moveable property is excluded. Va. Code Ann § 8.01-458. The act of docketing the lien is a necessary prerequisite to perfect the judgment lien into the real property over which the judgment creditor seeks to assert a secured interest. Turshen v. Bennett Heating & Air Conditioning, Inc. (In re Brisbane), 2 B.R. 636, 1980 Bankr. LEXIS 5596 (Bankr. E.D. Va. 1980); Bartl v. G. Weinberger & Co. (In re Claxton), 32 B.R. 215, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 5662 (Bankr. E.D. Va.), aff'd, In re Claxton, 30 B.R. 199, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6230 (Bankr. E.D. Va. 1983).

Here, only two parties, Legalist and the United States government, assert facts that, if true, could constitute them having a perfected security interest in the funds interpleaded with the Court. Whether those facts are true, Fairwinds does not comment on at this time. Rather, Fairwinds will address the sufficiency of those claims in its response to the motions for summary judgment filed by the parties to this action.

By contrast, the remaining claimants-including Advanced Navigation & Positioning Corporation, Thin Air Gear, LLC, Robert W. Berleth (as Receiver), The ARG Group, LLC, Atlantic Wave Holdings, LLC, and Bilal Maadarani-have not demonstrated a perfected security interest or perfected lien that attaches to the funds deposited with the Court and are all unsecured

creditors with the same priority.1 11 U.S.C. § 726(a)(2) (providing that under the Bankruptcy Code all unsecured creditors' claims are treated with the same priority); Fairchild Dornier GmbH v. Unofficial Comm. Of Unsecured Creditors, 453 F.3d 225, 231 (4th Cir. 2006)(citing the order of priorities in the bankruptcy code and noting that only a bankruptcy court may prioritize unsecured creditors through such means as equitable subordination).

Advanced Navigation, Thin Air Gear, and Atlantic Wave Holdings claim only to have judgment liens against Cyberlux property. Those liens, however, cannot be converted to perfected interests in the funds deposited with the Court by operation of law. ARG, the Receiver, and Mr. Maadarani make no claim to have a judgment lien but rather assert that they have general unsecured claims. Accordingly, those parties, including Fairwinds, are unsecured creditors standing in pari passu with one another with respect to the funds deposited with the Court and take no priority over each other.2

III. THE DISTRICT COURT SHOULD CONSIDER USING ITS EQUITABLE POWERS TO APPOINT A FEDERAL RECEIVER

In this complex multi-party dispute, the District Court has the discretion to appoint a federal receiver over the assets of Cyberlux. See, generally Fed. R. Civ. P. 66. "[T[he district court has within its equity power the authority to appoint receivers and to administer receiverships." Gilchrist v. GE Capital Corp., 262 F.3d 295, 302 (4th Cir. 2001). When receivers are appointed by a federal court, they may sue and be sued as provided by federal law. Id. (citing 28 U.S.C. §§ 754, 959)). And receivers appointed by a federal court are directed to "manage and operate" the

1
Fairwinds has never claimed to have a perfected security interest in the funds deposited with the Court.
2
Fairwinds will address whether those unsecured claimants have asserted valid claims in its response to the motions for summary judgment filed by all of the claimants.

receivership estate "according to the requirements of the valid laws of the State in which such property is situated, in the same manner that the owner or possessor thereof would be bound to do if in possession thereof." Id. (quoting 28 U.S.C. §959(b))(quotation marks removed). Fairwinds recognizes that the appointment of a receiver "is an extraordinary remedy that should be employed with the utmost caution,"3 but suggests that this is the extraordinary case that calls for such appointment.

Neither the Supreme Court nor the Fourth Circuit has provided a concrete list of factors for courts to weigh in considering whether to appoint a receiver. LNV Corp. v. Harrison Family Business, LLC, 132 F. Supp. 3d 683, 689 (D. Md. 2015)(citing Manuel v. Gembala, No. 10-4, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 105167. At *6 (E.D.N.C. Sept. 30, 2010)). The LNV court considered the following considerations from Wright & Miller, § 2983:

fraudulent conduct on the part of defendant; the imminent danger of the property being lost, concealed, injured, diminished in value, or squandered; the inadequacy of the available legal remedies; the probability that harm to plaintiff by denial of the appointment would be greater than the injury to the parties opposing appointment; and, in more general terms, plaintiff's probable success in the action and the possibility of irreparable injury to his interests in the property.

This formulation is similar to approaches taken by the Fifth Circuit and the Eighth Circuit. See Aviation Supply Corp. v. R.S.B.I. Aerospace, Inc., 999 F.2d 314, 316-17 (8th Cir. 1993); Santibanez v. Wier McMahon & Co., 105 F.3d 234, 241-42 (5th Cir. 1997).

Here, there remain facts that are unknown about Cyberlux, but what has been learned is that there are serious allegations of fraud and criminal activity surrounding Cyberlux. On January

3
Wilmington Trust v. Homes4families, LLC, No. 19-1896, 2019 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 192492, at *7 (D. Md. Nov. 6, 2019)(quoting First United Bank & Trust v. Square at Falling Run, LLC, No. 11-31, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 44409, at *3 (N.D. W. Va. April 25, 2011))

21, 2026, "Brett Rosen and Deborah Rosen were indicted by a federal grand jury on charges that they, through their joint investment business, RB Capital Partners, Inc., engaged in a years-long securities fraud and money laundering scheme." Declaration of Alexander N. Breckinridge V, 1 2, Ex. 1. The indictment alleges that the Rosens "engaged in a market manipulation scheme through financing, promoting, and selling the stock of . . . Cyberlux Corp." Id. Cyberlux remains in litigation regarding its stock transactions against RB Capital Partners, Atlantic Wave, and Secured Community. Finally, recent UCC-1 filings in Nevada suggest that Fraudulent Transfers have occurred.

Indeed, the fact that so many claimants and creditors of Cyberlux have intervened in this Interpleader suggests that the assets of the company will be siphoned away from legitimate creditors for other purposes. Cyberlux maintains active litigation by creditors, hiring attorneys in multiple jurisdictions, and is facing financial hardships. The most recent financial report showed the company reported a net loss from operations in excess of $3.1 million. Breckinridge Decl. T 3, Ex. 2. Its most recent balance sheet showed a "deficiency in stockholders' equity" in excess of $16 million against only $37 million in current assets. Id. Cyberlux is not a healthy company.

A federally appointed receiver may decide that the competing claims against Cyberlux's limited pot of assets necessitates the filing of a federal bankruptcy petition. See, e.g. In re Statepark Bldg. Group, Ltd., 316 B.R. 466, 472 (Bankr. N.D. Tex. 2004); JY Creative Holdings, Inc. v. McHale, No. 14-2899, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15970 (M.D. Fla. Feb. 10, 2015). As this Court recognized in its first status conference with the parties, bankruptcy court may be the appropriate federal forum to adjudicate, rank, and prioritize the competing claims against Cyberlux.

Courts have reiterated the reasoning expressed in the Bankruptcy Commission Report. "The central policy behind involuntary petitions," one court explained, is "to protect the threatened depletion of assets or to prevent the unequal treatment of similarly situated creditors." In re Manhattan Indus., Inc., 224 B.R. 195, 200 (Bankr. M.D. Fla. 1997); see also In re Letourneau, 422 B.R. 132, 138 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 2010) (same). "Creditors are justified in filing an involuntary bankruptcy against a debtor where exclusive bankruptcy powers and remedies may be usefully invoked to recover transferred assets, to 'insur[e] an orderly ranking of creditors' claims' and 'to protect against other creditors obtaining a disproportionate share of a debtor's assets.' "In re Hentges, 351 B.R. 758, 772 (Bankr. N.D. Okla. 2006) (quoting In re Better Care, Ltd., 97 B.R. 405, 411 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 1989)); see also In re Tichy Elect. Co. Inc., 332 B.R. 364, 372 (Bankr. N.D. Iowa 2005) ("The goal or purpose of an involuntary filing should be the equal distribution of assets among creditors.").

In re Datacom Sys., No. 14-11096-abl, 2015 Bankr. LEXIS 4579, at *41 (Bankr. D. Nev. June 25, 2015).

Yet, this is precisely the position that creditor defendants are in right now. The appointment of a federal receiver with the authority to file a bankruptcy petition will allow these parties to be fairly ranked inside the only federal system designed to protect creditors from the debtor and from other creditors.

While not properly before the Court at this juncture, Fairwinds suggests that a federal receiver with the power to file bankruptcy may be the only solution that protects all parties' rights and moves this adjudication to the forum most-equipped to handle it.

CONCLUSION

For all the foregoing reasons, the Court should grant this Motion, enter summary judgment in favor of Fairwinds Technologies, LLC in the amount of $2,348,542.40 and post- judgment compound interest at 8% from the date of judgment until the judgment is fully satisfied, and order that all creditors without perfected security interest in those funds be treated equally.

Furthermore, Fairwinds respectfully requests that the Court appoint a Receiver pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 66 to resolve this matter.

April 15, 2026

Respectfully submitted,

/s/ Alexander N. Breckinridge V ALEXANDER N. BRECKINRIDGE V (VSB #74708)

MARK A. MINTZ (admitted pro hac vice) JONES WALKER LLP 1 M Street SE, Suite 600 Washington, DC 20003 Telephone: (202) 203-1021 Facsimile: (202) 203-0000 abreckinridge@joneswalker.com mmintz@joneswalker.com

Counsel for Interpleader Defendant/Claimant, Fairwinds Technologies, LLC

CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE

The undersigned hereby certifies that the following was electronically filed using the court's CM/ECF system, which will automatically send email notification to counsel of record. This, the 15th day of April, 2026.

/s/ Alexander N. Breckinridge V ALEXANDER N. BRECKINRIDGE V

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