Carpe Pulse
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LITIGATIONJUNE 16, 2026

Singleton Schreiber

Synthesized by Claude Opus 4.8 from the signals

Singleton Schreiber's playbook is to convert routine compliance gaps into narratives of deliberate concealment—the Khan v. Pacific Foods verdict (CA, 2026) reframed SDS noncompliance as intentional cover-up and returned $31.6M, signaling how a documentation lapse becomes a jury-facing story of bad faith. At $223,765 in monthly ad spend across the demo book, the firm is actively sourcing claimants, with 15 book businesses currently targeted or named and 4 open suits in play. What's known is the mechanism and the spend; the remaining exposure depends on which of those 15 the advertising pipeline converts next.