I'm mostly staying out of this because I have a number of friends on all sides of it. But I happen to know Alec, and I remember when he very openly sold of a load of screen-used stuff to buy this house for his godson. The story is true, to the best of my knowledge, and it's sad to see a genuinely nice gesture being painted in a dubious light.
I am confused by this statement. Alec seemed to have the same confusion, so let me clarify this in case I may have muddled up some of the information, or simply wasn't that clear.
This is not about the purchase of a townhouse. It was not part of the original discussion, until Peters made a clarification.
This is about a Florida corporation that Alec Peters and a woman in Florida who has her name listed near the top of Axanar's leadership created in February 2015, about 11 months ago. The question pointed to the corporate record that is available to anyone doing even a cursory search on the Internet for the name of the company. On that record was an address, listed as this company's business address, which was located in Orange County.
In cross-referencing the business address, I found publicly available information that the business address was purchased by Peters in March 2013, most likely from the developer (considering the seller had purchased the property when it was deemed "vacant.")
The purchase of the house itself in March 2013 was not the question. The question was what Alec Peters was doing creating what he called an "investments" company in February 2015, around the same time his group was raising $1.1 million for Axanar. What was the investments that Peters was looking to do, and with what capital?
Tying it to the "purchase" of the house was drawn by Peters, telling me that he was advised by counsel in early 2015 to put the house under a corporate ownership. If that is actually the case, he only half-followed the advice, because he formed the corporation, but the property has not been transferred to the company — something that could be solved inexpensively and quickly with a quitclaim deed.
Nearly a year after the corporation was filed, nothing has happened with the corporation, including using it as the new owner for the property. So it returns to the question of what the company was for? And it could be a very innocent answer. It's just that so far, there are no actions — including actions that are apparent — that would match up with the answers provided.