At the end of last year, after the acquisition of bankruptcy accounting start -up benches at the end of last year, Jesse Tinsley’s CEO promised to respect past customer payment in LinkedIn and elsewhere.
In an interview with the founder and investor Julian Weisser, Tinsley said, “We respect all prepaid bench services even if we don’t see the prepaid bench service directly.
However, some benches say they are being charged to receive a previously paid book or tax return.
The lawsuit submitted by the bench customer Qorum on Tuesday insisted that the bench should pay for the 2023 tax return despite the fact that the bench has already paid the cost of the bench.
“The defendant Jesse Tinsley made a false statement when he falsely mentioned employer.com that he would respect the prepaid bench service,” the lawsuit insisted.
According to Techcrunch’s letter, other customers who requested anonymity were shocked that they had to renew the subscription to complete the accounting book when they paid for the service two years ago.
When they questioned this, the bench manager told them that “bench 2.0” had no partnership with pre -duty and the employer.com could not work unpaid labor.
CMO MATT CHARNEY on EMPLOYER.COM strongly challenges that benches are previously charged for paid work. “We respect prepaid services for our customers,” he said.
Charney also said that tax 2023 returned to Qorum without any additional payments. But Qorum’s founder Andrew Pietra told TechCrunch that he had to continue to subscribe for the first time to profit.
According to the previous ownership, the bench ran $ 135 million and the AI struggled to replace the human vice president. According to a former employee, there is still a pile of books and a pile of books to be completed.
Many benches told TechCrunch that the employer had previously notified TechCrunch to click on the consent button that had no refund for prepaid services.
When the bench was suddenly closed on December 26 last year, many books and returns were incomplete. US company, employer.com, announced plans to purchase Canada Fintech within 72 hours.
Employer.com bought a bench for $ 9 million in bankruptcy reports submitted at the Canadian show.
Fintech’s sudden collapse was due to lack of liquidity after the Canadian National Bank, the major creditors, refused to rent an additional $ 7.7 million in December 2024. The NBC said it has already provided a $ 55 million credit credit.
Ironically, it led to the rescue with the sudden closure of the bench. The company previously shopping on its own but did not find serious buyers.









