World Patent Marketing


World Patent Marketing was a Miami-based invention promotion firm, founded in 2014 by Scott J Cooper, and shut down by the Federal Trade Commission in 2017 for defrauding investors seeking to market inventions. The company deceived consumers with false success stories and used threats and intimidation to discourage complaints by its victims. WPM employed Matthew Whitaker, who served as acting United States Attorney General from 2018 to 2019, as an adviser, and featured him in promotional videos.

Business model

The company's business model was to lure in would-be inventors. Potential customers learned of the company through television or internet advertisements. Those who visited the World Patent Marketing website would find a listing of WPM's Advisory Board and a series of misrepresentations including success stories, testimonials, and major retailers in which customers' products were sold. Retailers included various nationwide online and/or retail giants including: AutoZone, Bed Bath & Beyond, Best Buy, The Home Depot, HSN, Lowe's, PetSmart, QVC, Sears, SkyMall, Staples, Target, Toys "R" Us and Walgreens, as well as "World Patent Marketing Shop". On its Facebook page, in December 2015, it posted that "Mattell partners with World Patent Marketing to Retail Latest Toy Inventions".
The company boasted, in a news release for the launch of New York Inventor Exchange on January 1, 2015, of being "the only patent assistance company in history to be awarded a five star review rating from Consumer Affairs, Google, Trustpilot, Shopper Approved, Customer Lobby and ResellerRatings.com. They claimed to have an "A" rating from the Better Business Bureau. On its website, the firm linked to positive reviews from sites all offering remarkably high satisfaction ratings of the service, albeit with just a few negative reviews.
WPM billed itself as a champion of military veterans, offered them military discounts, and made special efforts to outreach to veterans in its marketing. World Patent Marketing would charge its inventor clients up to $400,000 for marketing and development assistance for helping them with their inventions, ignored them once they paid their fees, and responded to complaints with threats and intimidation.
Following a criminal investigation, in May 2017 the Federal Trade Commission issued a preliminary report in which they outlined the company's method of operation. According to the FTC, when potential customers submitted their proposed product ideas they were first told that World Patent Marketing's "review team" was researching the proposal because "the company is so selective with the ideas they choose to work with." They told potential customers that their review included a "Global Invention Royalty Analysis" containing a marketability study created by a "Harvard University & MIT Research Team." Shortly thereafter the company contacted the customer with a sales script saying:
We had our final meeting with the Review Team regarding your idea. And basically from all the research that's been done on , the research tells us there's definitely potential to patent your idea. Because of that, I have the green light from the company to let you know that WPM wants to be a part of your new product idea and help you to protect it and bring it to the commercial marketplace. So, first of all congratulations!... The company loved your idea! They think it has a lot of potential. Especially the Sr. Product Director, who is in charge of which ideas are considered for the upcoming trade show. He sees some good opportunities ahead.

However, the FTC concluded that the company had no Review Team and no association with Harvard or MIT, nor had it appeared to ever turn down an idea for a new product.
Several of the more unusual inventions and partnerships that World Patent Marketing listed in their press releases included the "Masculine Toilet" for unusually well-endowed males, a partnership arrangement with "World-renowned physicist, author, and scholar Dr. Ronald Mallett believes time travel is possible, perhaps within the next decade," and a website that claims that "DNA evidence collected in 2013 proves that Bigfoot does exist," which sells Bigfoot items such as stuffed animals. The company also planned a celebrity event called "You Have Been Squatched!"

Suppression of complaints

According to the FTC, World Patent Marketing used threats of criminal prosecution and intimidation to discourage and suppress complaints. A review of emails done by Forbes featured an example of a woman who had filed a complaint with the Better Business Bureau after she had been unsuccessful in her attempts to negotiate a refund. She then received an email from a company lawyer telling her that seeking a refund constituted extortion and "since you used email to make your threats, you would be subject to a federal extortion charge, which carries a term of imprisonment of up to two years and potential criminal fines. See 18 U.S.C. § 875."
Another dissatisfied customer who filed a complaint with the Better Business Bureau when he was unable to find a satisfactory agreement received an email from the firm's advisory board member Matthew Whitaker in which Whitaker claimed that the customer's actions appeared to be an attempt at possible blackmail or extortion and there could be "serious civil and criminal consequences" for filing a complaint. Claiming that he, too, was an attorney, the customer wrote back: "Stop with your bullshit emails...You are party to a scam...You will be exposed. I hope I make myself clear, Mr. Whitaker."
The FTC reported that World Patent Marketing also attempted to frighten their customers by sending them emails describing a company security team of "all ex-Israeli Special Ops and trained in Krav Maga, one of the most deadly of the martial arts...The World Patent Marketing Security Team are the kind of guys who are trained to knockout first and ask questions later."
In their 2017 report the FTC included an example of emails that the company used to prevent or retract complaints:
Hey Genius I understand you emailed one of my board members telling her you think my company lacks integrity and you think we might be a fraud. Just wanted to let you know that is probably going to be the most expensive email you ever sent. I hope it was worth it... meet my attorneys Eric Creizman and Andrew Levi they really enjoy meeting new people.

In early 2015, when posts critical of WPMI appeared on Ripoff Report, a consumer complaint company's website, Whitaker phoned the operator of the website and, using vulgar language, threatened to sue the owner and ruin his business for allowing "false" reports, even threatening the owner with Department of Homeland Security intervention.

Advisory board

According to the FTC and journalists who have read the email exchanges between the company and its customers, the company relied heavily on the influence of its board members to both attract customers and threaten them. In an April 2016 email Scott Cooper replied to an angry customer, "Do you think all these powerful and influential people would join forces with me if what you said were true? We have former US Attorneys, members of President Obama's advisory council, military generals, famous doctors. Think about it." Promotion scripts used by company representatives also instructed them to boast about the company's "incredible advisory board" and mention Matt Whitaker by name. Whitaker was also used in broader marketing; on November 2014, Cooper, the CEO, wrote an email to a brand building company with the subject line, "Let's build a Wikipedia page and use Whitaker to make it credible."
Members of the advisory board included Matthew Whitaker, who later became the 2018 acting United States Attorney General, Republican Congressman Brian Mast, the scientist Ronald Mallett, Omar Rivero, founder of Occupy Democrats, Moti Horenstein, Nitzan Nuriel, Dell L. Dailey, Christopher R. Seaver, and New York attorney Eric M. Creizman.
Matthew Whitaker was named to the advisory board of World Patent Marketing in 2014. He also appeared in promotional materials and assisted in emailing threats to disgruntled customers. Two months into his association with the firm, Whitaker said in promotional material, "As a former US Attorney, I would only align myself with a first class organization. World Patent Marketing goes beyond making statements about doing business 'ethically' and translates those words into action."
Following the shut down the other advisory board members returned fees they had received, however according to news reports, Whitaker did not respond to a request for fees to be returned.
Omar Rivero, founder of Occupy Democrats, joined the firm in February 2015. In a news release Rivero stated he hoped to assist Cooper "to rid our country of the patent troll scam forcing startups to shut down and they are putting a stranglehold on the American Dream."
Attorney Eric M. Creizman joined the firm in October 2015. He was advertised as one of the top ten lawyers in New York and "a trained legal assassin," who had authored many publications that exposed white collar and federal crimes. Creizman accepted his advisory position with the firm saying, "I am delighted and honored to join the World Patent Marketing Advisory Board. It's an honor to be affiliated with Scott Cooper – he is a visionary and a philanthropist working hard to push innovations that can make a real difference in people's lives."
In August 2015, the firm hired Moti Horenstein as Director of Security Risk Management with a mission "to update and modernize security at the World Patent Marketing Headquarters in Miami Beach and in their offices worldwide." Horenstein is a well-known martial arts fighter and instructor. He is considered an expert in Krav Maga, a discipline developed in Israel.
In July 2015, the company announced that they had brought in Christopher R. Seaver, a Florida surgeon who specializes in robotics, "to head up our Medical Advisory Board." Claiming to "dominate the fields of medical patents and prototypes," they said they planned to "maintain competitive edge by forming alliances with the most brilliant minds on the planet." The release quoted Seaver: "World Patent Marketing is an exciting company whose ideas and innovations are cutting edge. Combining technology, customer service and street smarts, World Patent Marketing is leading the industry into a very bright future."
The Advisory Board included two military terrorism experts. In April 2016, World Patent Marketing announced "Ambassador-at-Large for the United States Counter-Terrorism effort, Dell Dailey, has joined the World Patent Marketing Advisory Board." Dailey commented, "The work that World Patent Marketing and The Cooper Idea Foundation does in developing countries is inspiring and is a true model of corporate social responsibility." Existing board member Israeli Defense Forces General Nitzan Nuriel, who joined the company in 2015, welcomed the new addition to the board saying, "Safety and security are the most challenging issues of our day. Winning the war against terror requires integrity and advanced technology. At World Patent Marketing we are committed to making the world safer, more secure and more prosperous."
In 2017, former advisory board member Brian Mast made a statement to court that he was appointed to the advisory board without his consent.
Another board member, Aileen M. Marty, a professor of infectious disease at Florida International University in Miami, said she had been told that she would be sent patent ideas to review. She never received any and returned the check she had received when she heard the company might be committing fraud. She commented, "I wish I had never heard of the company and I wish that my name were not in any way associated with it. I can't turn back time and not accept the offer to be on their board — believe me if I could, I would."

Shut down

In April 2016 when an irate customer, Crystal Carlson, received a threatening email from Cooper she searched Facebook and found dozens of other inventors who had also been scammed. Most notably she tracked down the inventor of "Teddy's Ballie Bumpers," which World Patent Marketers were using as a star success story, saying that the inventor had seen sales "skyrocket". However, the inventor told Carlson that the Patent Office had rejected his application and he was left with thousands of bumpers stored in a warehouse, selling only 15. Carlson organized victims and they filed a class-action lawsuit in December 2016 alleging deception, fraud, and violations of the American Inventors Protection Act's disclosure rules. Cooper's firm claimed to not be bound by the American Inventors Protection Act and accused the claimants of blaming the company for the failure of their invention ideas. However, by 2017 negative comments from other customers began to pour in online.
In January 2017, an undercover FTC investigator contacted the firm with his idea for an invention, a recipe. As usual, a salesperson responded he "had a great idea with lasting power" and "should expect a revenue stream for decades" even though recipes are almost impossible to patent.
The company was shut down by the FTC in March 2017. According to the FTC, "consumers paid Scott Cooper and his companies, World Patent Marketing Inc. and Desa Industries Inc., thousands of dollars to patent and market their inventions based on bogus 'success stories' and testimonials promoted by the defendants. But after they strung consumers along for months or even years, the defendants did not deliver what they promised. Instead, many customers ended up in debt or lost their life savings with nothing to show for it."
In 2018 Cooper was banned from running businesses that promote inventions. Inventors invested a total of $26 million with the company, of which the FTC had only located $2 million. Cooper denied wrongdoing but was ordered to pay $1m as well as the proceeds from selling his $3.5m mansion in Miami. According to a November 9, 2018 news release by The Wall Street Journal, a criminal investigation by the U.S. Postal Inspection Service and the FBI's Miami office was ongoing.