Corso in Legal Battle with Former Business Partners

GoLocalProv News Team

Corso in Legal Battle with Former Business Partners

Micheal Corso suing former partners.
Michael Corso is in a legal brawl with his former partners, GoLocal has learned. Corso, the former mastermind behind the financing scheme of the 38 Studios deal in Rhode Island, has filed a multi-count lawsuit in Rhode Island Superior Court claiming that his former partners cheated him out of substantial funds as well as other claims.

The attorney for Corso’s two former partners — Scot Butcher of Massachusetts and Anthony Gudas of Rhode Island — says Corso’s claims are false and his clients will be counter-suing.

Butcher and Gudas are partners in Tax Incentive Finance — a Providence-based firm that focuses on tax credits. 

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Mark Russo of the Providence-based firm Ferrucci Russo tells GoLocalProv, “They [Butcher and Gudas] severed all ties to Corso back in 2014.”

“Corso’s claims are not even close to the truth,” said Russo.  

Corso, who was a key player in the 38 Studios bankruptcy, was a longstanding insider in the inner circle of former Speaker of the House Gordon Fox, who recently completed a federal prison stint, serving 25 months for wire fraud, bribery and filing a false tax return. He presently resides in a halfway house in Pawtucket.

In October 2016, 38 Studios founder Curt Schilling said he was stunned that Fox's crony and 38 Studios consultant Corso was not charged criminally. 

In the lawsuit, Corso claims that Butcher and Gudas breached contracts, asserts that the two were guilty of unjust enrichment, wrongful conversion of Corso’s assets, and fraud. 

Coffee Marketer Too

On Monday, GoLocal unveiled that Corso has launched Bramo — “Whole Bean Vanilla is now available in a convenient 12FL oz aluminum resealable bottle!  Bring your favorite brew on the go with you anywhere!…The taste is always smooth and never bitter. Bottoms up!”

Corso does not hide his involvement in the Bramo brand. On the company's website Corso signs the message to consumers.

The Bramo corporation filed papers with the Rhode Island Secretary of State’s office in September of 2015, prior to the release of the report by Attorney General Peter Kilmartin and then—Rhode Island State Police Colonel Steven O’Donnell.  At a July, 2016 press conference, Kilmartin and O'Donnell announced that no criminal charges would be filed. 

Bramo products can be found at Whole Foods Markets in Providence and Cranston as well multiple locations in Massachusetts, according to the company's website.

Request for comment by Corso were not responded to.


INVESTIGATION: Fox, Corso and 38 Studios

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