Article 37
Alliance Strategy
Collective Defense
Alliance Building: Finding Other MCA Victims and Fighting Together
Velocity Business LLC and MCAWars.com are not a law firm and do not provide legal advice.
Rodney O’Rourke is not an attorney. This article provides educational guidance on alliance formation strategies for MCA defense. Whether coordinated legal action, class action litigation, or collective settlement is appropriate for your situation requires analysis by a licensed attorney. Attorney-client privilege rules vary by jurisdiction; information shared outside a privileged relationship may not be protected. Consult a licensed attorney before sharing any legal strategy or case-specific information with other parties.
Why Alliance Defense Multiplies Every Individual Leverage Element
| Leverage Element | Solo Defense Value | Alliance Defense Value (5 Businesses) | Multiplier Effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| Forensic accounting report | $2,500 cost; identifies over-collection in one account | $3,500 total shared cost; forensic accountant identifies over-collection pattern across five accounts, producing cross-case testimony that individual errors were systematic, not accidental | Pattern evidence vs. isolated finding; funder cannot attribute systematic over-collection to data entry error |
| FDCPA violations documented | $1,000 per violation in statutory damages; isolated collection conduct | Same $1,000 per violation, but violations across five cases establish systematic collection conduct supporting pattern evidence and class action threshold evaluation | Systematic violation pattern is the predicate for class action, which creates liability exposure potentially 50 to 500 times larger than any individual claim |
| AG complaint filed | One complaint from one business; often low priority in busy AG office | Five coordinated complaints from five businesses describing the same practices; pattern complaints from multiple independent complainants are treated as priority investigations in most AG offices | Coordinated multi-business AG complaints produce investigations; isolated complaints produce acknowledgment letters |
| Settlement negotiation leverage | Funder evaluates one case’s litigation cost against settlement economics | Funder evaluates resolution of five simultaneous contested cases, each with full documentation stacks; five contested cases’ combined litigation cost estimate of $140,000 to $440,000 changes the settlement arithmetic entirely | Collective settlement offers administrative efficiency that funders will price into the settlement terms; volume resolution produces better individual terms than isolated negotiation |
| Discovery threat value | Deposition of collection staff and document production for one case | Discovery coordinated across five simultaneous cases; the same internal documents and practices that one case’s discovery request produces are produced for all five; deposition testimony in one case is available as evidence in all five | Discovery cost is largely fixed per entity, not per case; five cases sharing one set of produced documents costs the funder roughly the same as one case while serving five defense teams |
| Media and public pressure | One business owner’s story; minimal media interest without pattern evidence | Five business owners with documented similar experiences; pattern story is publishable by business and finance reporters; multiple independent corroborating accounts meet editorial standards for investigative publication | One business owner is an anecdote; five business owners with documented similar experiences is a story; ten is an investigation. Media coverage produces regulatory attention and settlement motivation that no individual complaint generates. |
Finding Your Allies: Four Discovery Methods
Search the funder’s full legal name as plaintiff in the PACER civil case search. Every federal lawsuit filed by the funder produces a case record that includes the defendant’s business name and, often, contact information in the court filings. The case number and court assignment are public. A business owner who identifies three other defendants in federal cases filed by the same funder has found three people who share their adversary and are likely fighting the same collection tactics.
Access PACER at pacer.gov ($0.08 per page, $3.00 maximum per document). Search: Civil Party Search, Party Name = [funder full legal name], Party Type = Plaintiff. Sort results by date filed to find recent cases first.
pacer.gov
New York state court records (nycourts.gov) are particularly important for MCA disputes because New York is the primary jurisdiction for COJ enforcement and collection litigation. Search the funder’s name as plaintiff in New York Civil Supreme Court and New York Civil Court. New York cases will produce defendant contact information in the publicly available case filings.
Additional state searches: Delaware (courts.delaware.gov), the business owner’s home state court system, and any state named in the MCA agreement’s forum selection clause. Each state’s search interface differs but provides the same publicly available defendant contact information.
nycourts.gov
Business owner communities where MCA defense discussions occur include MCAWars.com (the primary forum for documented MCA defense strategy and case sharing), Reddit communities including r/smallbusiness and r/legaladvice, Facebook groups for small business owners, LinkedIn groups focused on small business finance, and Trustpilot and Google review pages for the specific funder where other business owners have documented their experiences.
Search specifically for the funder’s name in each platform. A business owner who has publicly reviewed a funder negatively is someone who has already decided their experience is worth sharing; direct message outreach to these individuals produces alliance candidates who have self-selected for willingness to discuss their situation.
mcawars.com
Attorneys who specialize in MCA defense know which other business owners are fighting the same funders because those businesses have contacted them for representation. Attorney-client confidentiality prevents direct disclosure, but a defense attorney can, with each client’s permission, make introductions between clients fighting the same funder. The attorney-facilitated introduction is the highest-quality alliance formation because both parties have been vetted by the attorney’s client engagement process.
Ask your defense attorney directly: “Do you represent other businesses fighting [Funder Name]? If so, would they be willing to be introduced?” The attorney’s answer and facilitation, or inability to facilitate, informs how broad the existing defense network for this funder already is.
Intelligence Sharing: What to Share, What to Protect
- Successful legal defenses that produced dismissals, favorable rulings, or favorable settlements in similar cases
- Settlement amounts achieved and the documentation stack that produced each settlement; specific percentages and the conditions that enabled them
- FDCPA violation documentation: specific language used in collection communications that constitutes documented violations, with exhibit numbers and statutory references
- Attorney and forensic CPA recommendations with specific assessments of each professional’s value to MCA defense cases
- Expert witness contacts: forensic accountants, MCA industry experts, and their case-specific experience relevant to shared funder
- Court filing strategies that worked: motions to dismiss, transfer, compel arbitration, or challenge COJ; actual outcomes from each strategy
- Over-collection patterns identified through forensic audits: if the same factor application error appears in multiple members’ agreements, that is pattern evidence worth documenting collectively
- Collection tactic patterns: the specific psychological pressure scripts, the timing of escalation, and the specific threats used across multiple members’ experiences
- Regulatory complaint outcomes: which AG offices responded, how quickly, and what the investigation produced for each filing member
- UCC filing defects identified through StopUCC.com audits: specific defect types and their impact on secured creditor status arguments
- Specific legal strategy before deployment: the element of surprise is a genuine advantage; if the funder learns that multiple defendants plan to file coordinated motions to dismiss on the same day, they can prepare responses rather than being overwhelmed
- Privileged attorney-client communications: anything your attorney has told you in the course of representation is protected by attorney-client privilege; sharing it outside that relationship destroys the privilege and potentially waives the protection
- Personal financial details beyond what is necessary for settlement math discussion: your personal bank account balances, home equity position, retirement account values, and personal asset inventory are not relevant to the collective defense and create personal security risks if the alliance is infiltrated
- Information that could help the funder if alliance communications were intercepted or if an alliance member turned out to be a plant: do not share your weakest defenses, your most vulnerable positions, or the settlement floor below which you will not go
- Specific bank account information or the location of the new account opened during the migration protocol: the purpose of the new account is to protect assets from unauthorized debits; sharing the account details within the alliance creates a vector for that information to reach the funder
- Details of any ongoing settlement negotiation before it closes: active negotiation strategy shared within the alliance can reach the funder through infiltration or inadvertent disclosure, undermining the leverage the strategy is designed to deploy
Coordinated Legal Action: Five Mechanisms
When multiple businesses file Answers to the same funder’s lawsuits within a short time window, the funder’s collection attorney must respond to multiple contested cases simultaneously. A collection operation built around 70 to 80 percent default judgment economics is not staffed or resourced to handle five simultaneous contested cases efficiently. Simultaneous filing converts five isolated defense situations into a coordinated response that overwhelms the funder’s litigation capacity at the most favorable moment: before they have adjusted their staffing or litigation budget to accommodate contested cases.
Practical implementation: Each business works with their own attorney to prepare their Answer and counterclaims. Coordinated filing means agreeing on a target date for simultaneous filing across all cases, then executing on that date. The coordination is the timing; the legal content of each Answer is specific to each business’s facts and defenses.
A forensic accountant who reviews five MCA agreements from the same funder does not charge five times the rate of a single-case review. The analytical framework for the first case is developed once; subsequent cases require applying the same framework to different account data. Alliance members who share one forensic expert’s services typically each pay 20 to 40 percent of the solo engagement cost while receiving more powerful testimony: an expert who has identified over-collection patterns across five cases is a more credible witness than one who examined a single account.
The shared expert’s testimony across multiple cases also creates a consistency that strengthens each individual case: the same methodology produced the same type of finding in five independent accounts, which supports the argument that the over-collection is systematic rather than coincidental. This cross-case consistency is available only through alliance-coordinated expert engagement.
Class action litigation against MCA funders requires a pattern of common violations affecting a definable class of plaintiffs. An alliance of five to ten businesses with documented similar violations from the same funder provides the factual foundation an attorney needs to evaluate class certification viability. Class certification is not guaranteed and requires specific legal criteria; the attorney assessment is the prerequisite for any class action strategy.
Even if class certification is not pursued, the credible threat of class action is itself a settlement lever. A funder’s attorney who knows that five organized, documented plaintiffs have consulted a class action attorney and are evaluating certification is negotiating against a different risk profile than one negotiating against five isolated individual claims. The class action threat, properly communicated through counsel, can produce group settlement terms unavailable through individual negotiation.
The threshold question for class action evaluation: Are the alleged violations common to all class members (same type of over-collection applied across all accounts, same illegal collection tactics deployed against all members, same UCC filing defect pattern across all security agreements)? Common violations support certification; individualized violations that vary from case to case do not.
A funder that has five simultaneous contested cases has an administrative incentive to resolve all five through a single negotiated process rather than through five separate litigation timelines. Collective settlement offers the funder certainty of resolution across multiple cases in exchange for settlement terms that each business owner could not achieve individually. The collective settlement typically structures each individual settlement at the business owner’s specific corrected balance and specific leverage position, but conditions all individual settlements on all members accepting: the group settles together or none settles.
The mutual dependency structure prevents the funder from settling the weakest cases first (isolating the strongest ones) while pressuring the strongest cases to accept worse terms. When all settlements are conditioned on all settling, the funder must offer terms acceptable to the member with the strongest leverage position in order to close the group, which produces better terms for every member including those with weaker individual positions.
Implementation caution: Collective settlement agreements that condition individual settlements on others’ participation create coordination among the settling parties that may have antitrust implications in some jurisdictions. Attorney review of the collective settlement structure is required before proposing or accepting any terms that condition one settlement on another.
Business journalists and regulatory affairs reporters cover MCA industry practices when they have multiple independent sources describing the same pattern. One business owner’s account of aggressive MCA collection is an anecdote. Five independent business owners with documented similar experiences, corroborating each other’s accounts, is a publishable story. Ten documented cases is an investigative piece that produces AG attention, legislative interest, and reputational pressure that affects the funder’s ability to raise new capital and attract new ISO broker relationships.
Coordinated review campaigns on Trustpilot, Google, and the Better Business Bureau that document specific, accurate experiences (truth is an absolute defense to defamation claims) create a public record that prospective MCA customers encounter before signing agreements. The reputational cost of coordinated honest reviews is a form of market accountability that collection operations, which rely on obscurity and information asymmetry to operate, are structurally unable to prevent.
Media outreach coordination: one alliance member serves as media liaison, identifying reporters who cover small business finance and MCA practices, coordinating interview availability across multiple members, and ensuring that the specific documented violations are communicated through corroborating accounts rather than individual testimony.
Shared Expert Cost Structure: The Economics of Alliance Defense
Member Vetting: Protecting the Alliance From Infiltration
Secure Communication Infrastructure
| Communication Channel | Appropriate Use | Avoid Using For | Security Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Signal (encrypted messaging) | Time-sensitive coordination, specific action timing, settlement negotiation updates | Document sharing (file size limitations) | High: end-to-end encrypted, no metadata storage |
| Password-protected Google Drive or similar | Document template sharing, forensic report summaries, case outcome documentation | Anything containing privileged attorney communications | Moderate: encrypted in transit, accessible to platform with legal process |
| Private video conference (Zoom, Google Meet with password) | Alliance meetings, expert witness presentations, legal strategy discussions (without privileged content) | Discussions of specific settlement floors or specific legal strategy not yet deployed | Moderate: recordings are discoverable if litigation produces a subpoena |
| Standard email | Administrative coordination only: scheduling, document routing confirmations | Any strategic content; email is discoverable and routinely monitored | Low: fully discoverable in litigation; easily intercepted; permanently stored |
| Public social media, Facebook groups, Reddit | Finding initial alliance candidates; sharing general publicly available information | Any alliance-specific content; assume funder representatives monitor all public business owner communities | None: fully public, fully searchable, fully discoverable |
The Alliance Leadership Structure
The Alliance Agreement: Formalizing the Structure
A basic alliance agreement should address: confidentiality obligations (what each member agrees not to disclose outside the alliance and to whom within the alliance certain information categories are limited); information sharing protocols (what is shared freely, what requires coordinator approval, and what is never shared regardless of circumstances); cost sharing arrangements (how shared expert costs are allocated, how cost disputes are resolved, and what happens to the shared cost account if the alliance dissolves); decision-making process (whether the alliance operates by consensus or majority vote on strategic decisions, and which decisions require unanimous agreement versus simple majority); exit terms (under what conditions a member may leave the alliance, what information they may take with them, and what obligations survive exit including confidentiality requirements that last beyond membership); and dispute resolution (how disagreements between alliance members are addressed, and whether mediation is required before any legal action between members).
When Alliance Building Is Not the Right Choice
Your case has unique defenses not generalizable to other business owners fighting the same funder. If your forensic audit reveals a specific over-collection methodology unique to your account (perhaps a custom calculation error specific to your factor type that does not appear in other accounts), sharing that defense within an alliance produces no benefit to others and may alert the funder to address the specific vulnerability before it is deployed in your case.
Settlement is imminent. If your negotiation is in its final stages with a specific settlement amount agreed in principle, introducing alliance coordination at that point creates delays and complications that produce no benefit for your specific resolution. Complete your individual settlement, then consider joining the alliance to contribute your experience as intelligence for other members who are earlier in the process.
Your attorney advises against coordinated action for privilege or strategy reasons. An attorney who advises that coordinating with other defendants in related cases creates privilege waiver risk or tactical disadvantage specific to your case is providing jurisdiction-specific analysis that overrides the general alliance benefits described in this article. Attorney guidance on coordination in your specific jurisdiction and case posture takes priority over general strategic principles.
The alliance you have found is not properly secured or vetted. Joining an unvetted, unsecured group of business owners claiming to fight the same funder is worse than fighting alone if the group has been infiltrated or if the communications are accessible to the funder through unsecured channels. The security requirements in this article are prerequisites for alliance membership, not optional enhancements. An alliance that does not meet minimum security standards provides the funder with intelligence about your defense at the cost of providing you with intelligence of uncertain provenance.
Three Failure Cases
A group of seven business owners fighting the same funder organized through a Facebook private group. The group was private but not vetted; any business owner who claimed to be fighting the funder was admitted by the group administrator. Over six weeks, the group shared settlement offer amounts and, critically, the lowest settlement number each member said they would accept. Four months into the group’s operation, one member’s case went to settlement negotiation. The funder’s opening counter was $2,000 above the settlement floor that member had stated in the group chat, a figure the member had never disclosed in any communication with the funder directly. The funder’s attorney had access to the group’s communications through a member who was, in the group administrator’s subsequent review, a shell account with no verifiable business identity. The five-step vetting protocol would have excluded the shell account in step one (no verifiable Secretary of State registration). The settlement floor shared in the group became the funder’s starting point rather than the end point of their negotiation, costing the business owner approximately $18,000 in settlement money they did not need to spend.
Five business owners formed a verbal alliance to negotiate a collective settlement with a shared funder. After three months of coordinated documentation work and two months of negotiation, the funder offered a group settlement that was acceptable to four of the five members but not to the fifth, whose corrected balance justified a lower individual settlement than the group’s average. Under the verbal alliance understanding, all five had agreed to settle together or not at all. When the fifth member refused the funder’s group offer, the four who wanted to accept had no enforceable agreement preventing the funder from approaching them individually and offering the individual terms the fifth member’s refusal had freed the funder to make. Two of the four settled individually at terms worse than the group offer would have produced. The other two held with the fifth member and eventually settled at better terms six months later after additional documentation work. The written alliance agreement’s mutual dependency clause, with defined exit terms and collective action requirements, would have either kept the group together through the fifth member’s negotiation until a satisfactory collective resolution was reached or would have defined the conditions under which individual settlement was permitted, preventing the funder from exploiting the informal alliance’s dissolution.
An alliance of eight business owners fighting the same funder launched a coordinated public review campaign, posting detailed accounts of their experiences on Trustpilot, Google, and the BBB. Six of the eight accounts were factually accurate, documented, and legally sound. Two included statements that went beyond the members’ documented experiences: one characterized the funder’s CEO as personally having “committed fraud” (a legal conclusion the member was not qualified to make and had not proven), and another described a collection agent as having “threatened my family” when the documented incident was a voicemail left at the member’s home phone number that referenced the personal guarantee, not a direct family threat. The funder’s attorney sent defamation demand letters to all eight alliance members, not just the two whose statements were problematic, leveraging the coordinated nature of the campaign to implicate all members in the two actionable statements. The six members whose statements were entirely accurate still required legal representation to respond to the demand letters, at a cost of $1,200 to $2,500 each. The settlement pressure the campaign was designed to create was neutralized by the defamation defense posture the funder adopted. Factual accuracy review by the media liaison before any public statement is published, and the specific legal standard that truth is a defense to defamation while legal conclusions and characterizations not supported by direct evidence are not, would have protected all eight members while achieving the campaign’s settlement pressure objective.
Implementation Checklist
- PACER search completed for funder’s full legal name as plaintiff; all federal defendants identified with case numbers; outreach plan to defendant businesses developed through court filing contact information
- State court searches completed in New York, Delaware, and home state; additional defendants identified; outreach initiated through court record contact information or direct search
- Online community search completed on MCAWars.com, Reddit, Facebook, and LinkedIn using funder’s name; potential alliance candidates identified and direct message outreach sent
- Defense attorney asked about introductions to other clients fighting the same funder; attorney response documented and any facilitated introduction accepted
- Five-step vetting protocol in place before any prospective member receives access to alliance intelligence; vetting officer role assigned; graduated access protocol implemented
- Secure communication infrastructure established: Signal for time-sensitive coordination, password-protected document repository for shared resources, private video conference for alliance meetings; standard email used for scheduling only
- Alliance agreement drafted and signed by all founding members; confidentiality, cost sharing, decision-making, exit terms, and dispute resolution provisions all addressed
- Leadership roles assigned: coordinator, intelligence officer, legal liaison, media contact, financial officer, vetting officer; each role understood and accepted by the member filling it
- Intelligence sharing protocol communicated to all members: share/protect categories explicitly defined; every member understands what settlement floor information is never shared and that specific coordinated action timing is held until deployment
- Coordinated legal action plan developed with each member’s attorney; simultaneous Answer filing dates coordinated; shared expert witness engagement initiated; class action evaluation requested from lead attorney if violation pattern supports it
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Last Updated: February 2026. The coordinated legal action strategies described in this article, particularly simultaneous Answer filing, collective settlement with mutual dependency structure, and class action evaluation, require jurisdiction-specific legal analysis and attorney guidance. Attorney-client privilege rules vary by jurisdiction and by the specific nature of information shared between co-defendants; sharing specific legal strategy or privileged communications outside an attorney-client relationship may waive privilege protections. The defamation standard referenced (truth as a defense) is a general legal principle; specific statements require attorney review for compliance with applicable law in the relevant jurisdiction. Class action certification requirements vary by court and jurisdiction.
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