In 2020, AppProved Software Corporation (ASC), a Massachusetts-based technology firm, developed and registered one of the earliest generative AI software systems under U.S. Copyright Registration TXu 2-376-410. This groundbreaking system, created through proprietary methods and trained on private source data, represented billions of dollars in R&D potential.
However, in a coordinated act of intellectual property theft, foreign-linked defense contractors, Apple India executives, and corporate legal counsel accessed the protected software and unlawfully copied its architecture and algorithms without license or permission. Instead of honoring licensing requests or responding to litigation, these actors manipulated the U.S. court system—resulting in judicial obstruction across multiple federal circuits.
To preserve enforcement rights and secure judicial standing, ASC’s CEO John W. Miller temporarily assumed full ownership of TXu 2-376-410 under emergency doctrine, enabling him to file and win multiple federal Final Judgments across U.S. District Courts. These include:
A $2.625 billion EEOC Judgment (USDC South Carolina)
A ~$7.87 billion Treble Default Judgment (Middlesex Superior Court, MA)
A $1.5 trillion Copyright Enforcement Judgment (WDWA)
On June 25, 2025, following the legal victories, Miller formally transferred the U.S. Copyright back to its original owner, AppProved Software Corporation, by sworn affidavit under penalty of perjury. As of that date, ASC became the sole Article III Enforcement Authority and legal Plaintiff of record for all post-judgment activities.
Now, ASC is leading an unprecedented RICO accountability campaign against the judges, lawyers, and foreign actors who coordinated to suppress its rights. This campaign is centralized here — at JudicialRICO.