James Sheldon: The Serial TCPA Litigator Caught on Tape Saying “Pillaging Them, That’s the Point”

James Sheldon: The Serial TCPA Litigator Caught on Tape Saying “Pillaging Them, That’s the Point”

James Everett Sheldon — an 88-year-old resident of New Holland, Pennsylvania — is one of the most notorious and well-documented serial litigators in the history of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA). Unlike the high-volume Texas filers (Callier, Salaiz, Gonzalez) who operate quietly through technical pleadings, Sheldon was caught on tape describing his litigation enterprise in his own words.

Sheldon is not a consumer advocate. He is not a victim of widespread telemarketing abuse. He is a serial litigator whose business model depends on extracting statutory damages through lawsuits — and he has admitted it on tape. In recorded conversations, Sheldon said: “Pillaging them, that’s the point… We’re absolutely pillaging them.”

Legal commentators, defense firms, and federal courts have explicitly recognized Sheldon as a serial plaintiff and professional litigant. Since 2016, he has filed over 50 cases, securing hundreds of thousands of dollars in agreed and default judgments. He has used bankruptcy filings as a tactic to shield himself from counterclaims. And he has been caught on tape coaching others to file similar lawsuits. The evidence confirms an accurate title: an abusive serial litigator who admitted his profit motive on tape.

Who Is James Sheldon? An 88-Year-Old Serial Litigator in Pennsylvania

James Everett Sheldon is a New Holland, Pennsylvania resident associated with an extraordinary volume of TCPA litigation. Court records confirm that Sheldon is a hyperactive serial plaintiff whose lawsuits focus on telemarketing calls, automated dialing systems, and National Do Not Call Registry violations.

Personal profile (from public records):

Field Details
Full Name James Everett Sheldon
Aliases James Sheldon (no additional aliases found)
Age 88 (date of birth not on record)
Current Address 430 W Main St Apt 4, New Holland, PA 17557
Primary Phone 717-355-0265 (residential)
Email Addresses None found
Employment No records found
Property Ownership None found
Vehicles None found

Very limited address history (only one location on record):

Address Last Seen
430 W Main St Apt 4, New Holland, PA 17557 07/18/2002
430 W Main St, New Holland, PA 17557 07/18/2002

Possible relatives (4 found):

Name Age Notable Location Likely Relationship
Dorothy Sheldon 82 Denver, PA Spouse
Tina Sheldon 60 Holtwood/Pequea, PA Child
Robert Dukeman 57 Holtwood/Lancaster, PA Son-in-law
Randy Hauser 60 Pequea, PA 2nd degree

What the sparse public record reveals:

Observation Implication
Age 88 Elderly litigant — unusual for high-volume filing
Lives in an apartment No owned property (unlike Salaiz with $580k+ in real estate)
Very limited digital footprint No email, no social media — consistent with age
Longtime Pennsylvania resident Has filed cases primarily in Pennsylvania courts

The key distinction from other serial litigators: Unlike the Texas-based filers who own luxury homes and fleets of vehicles, Sheldon lives modestly in an apartment. His motivation appears to be pure profit extraction rather than maintaining a lifestyle — as he admitted on tape.

The “Pillaging” Tape: Sheldon’s Own Words Expose Him

The most damaging evidence against James Sheldon is a recorded conversation that caught him describing his litigation enterprise in his own words. Defense firms obtained recordings of him talking about how he sues companies.

What Sheldon said on tape:

Quote Implication
“Pillaging them, that’s the point… We’re absolutely pillaging them.” Direct admission of profit motive — not consumer protection
“We’re absolutely pillaging them.” Repeated for emphasis — he knows exactly what he is doing
Talks about targeting companies for money by calling them Deliberate claim manufacturing
Describes suing for $1,500 per call using the Do Not Call Registry Exploiting statutory damages as a business model
Tells others (like Craig Cunningham) to sue these companies too Coaching others to replicate his scheme
Gives them a plan to follow Providing a litigation playbook

Why the tape matters for Sheldon’s lawsuits:

Legal Principle Application
Standing requirement If a plaintiff admits he welcomes calls for the purpose of bringing lawsuits, he cannot argue he has been harmed by the call
Credibility attack Defense attorneys use the tape to argue Sheldon is not a genuine victim
Pattern of conduct The tape proves Sheldon’s litigation enterprise is intentional and systematic

As the Institute for Legal Reform reported: “Recorded conversations prove that a Pennsylvania man who has filed dozens of lawsuits is intentionally taking advantage of a federal law to extort settlements from defendants.”

The Bankruptcy Tactic: Using Chapter 11 to Avoid Counterclaims

Sheldon has done something that legal observers have noticed: he has filed for bankruptcy as a litigation tactic.

The bankruptcy strategy:

Step Action Purpose
1 File TCPA lawsuits against multiple defendants Generate potential recovery
2 Defendants file counterclaims Threaten Sheldon with liability
3 Sheldon files for bankruptcy Triggers automatic stay on all lawsuits against him
4 Counterclaims are paused Sheldon gains negotiating leverage
5 Settle TCPA claims from bankruptcy protection Shield personal assets

Why this is controversial:

Problem Explanation
Automatic stay protection Bankruptcy halts all collection efforts against the debtor — including counterclaims from TCPA defendants
Strategic bankruptcy Sheldon appears to use bankruptcy not because he is insolvent, but to gain tactical advantage
Class certification impact Courts question whether a plaintiff in bankruptcy can adequately represent a class

The problem for Sheldon: This tactic makes people question whether he is a suitable person to represent a group of people in a class action lawsuit. Courts think that because he has filed for bankruptcy, he might not be able to make impartial decisions about any money that is won in the case.

The “Home Court Advantage” Stripped Away (March 2025)

In March 2025, Sheldon faced a significant procedural setback when a court stripped away his “home court advantage” in Pennsylvania.

Shelton v. Freedom Forever, LLC (2025-2026)

The transfer decision:

Field Details
Original filing location Pennsylvania (Sheldon’s home state)
Transferred to Central District of California
Reason for transfer Nationwide class action — Sheldon’s individual residence in PA was less important than the location of defense witnesses and corporate policies
Judge Otis D. Wright II

Why this matters:

Before Transfer After Transfer
Sheldon had home court advantage in Pennsylvania Case litigated in California — defense-friendly venue
Sheldon could file in familiar court Now subject to Ninth Circuit precedent
Lower travel costs for Sheldon Potential travel burden for 88-year-old plaintiff

The October 2025 ruling:

In October 2025, Judge Otis D. Wright II made a decision that kept Sheldon’s case alive:

Issue Ruling
Motion to dismiss DENIED — Sheldon’s case could proceed
Article III standing Sheldon had standing because unwanted communications continued during the litigation
“Real and immediate threat” The ongoing calls proved future harm was likely
Post-filing calls as evidence Sheldon documented calls he received after filing the lawsuit to prove the defendant’s internal Do Not Call procedures were broken

The key insight: Sheldon’s unique pattern is documenting calls he receives after a lawsuit is filed. He uses these “post-filing calls” to prove that the defendant’s internal Do Not Call procedures are broken, which helps him win permanent injunctions.

Current status (May 2026): The case is now in discovery — the phase where both sides share information. The case might go to trial, or it could be settled before that.

RICO Counterclaims: Attempts to Sue Sheldon Fail

Defendants in 2025 attempted to sue Sheldon under RICO (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations) statutes, claiming his TCPA enforcement enterprise constitutes an illegal business.

The RICO allegations:

Allegation Details
Pattern of racketeering activity Multiple TCPA filings as predicate acts
Enterprise Final Verdict Solutions (his debt collection business)
Profit motive Extracting settlements through litigation

The outcome:

Ruling Explanation
RICO claims DISMISSED Federal courts ruled that using the law to sue for violations — even frequently — is not “racketeering”

What this means: Even Sheldon’s most aggressive critics could not convince federal courts that his TCPA litigation constitutes criminal racketeering. However, the RICO threat itself may deter some serial litigants.

Active 2026 Dockets and New Filings

Sheldon continues to file new lawsuits, though he is facing more aggressive motions to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction.

Case Name Docket Number Filing Date Current Status (May 2026)
Shelton v. Pure Energy USA 2:25-cv-03590 July 2025 Motion to Dismiss Granted (Nov 2025); Leave to Amend in progress
Shelton v. Freedom Forever 2:25-cv-01970 March 2025 Active Discovery; Rule 26(f) plan established
Shelton v. Fastenere Inc. Related filing Early 2026 Unsolicited marketing to business lines

The Fastenere case issue: Focused on unsolicited marketing to business lines — a recurring problem for Sheldon, who operates a debt collection business named Final Verdict Solutions. Defendants frequently argue that his phone is a business line not covered by the Do Not Call Registry. Sheldon argues it is his personal cell phone.

The Craig Cunningham Connection: Coaching Other Litigants

The “pillaging” tape revealed that Sheldon does not just sue companies by himself. He actively recruits others to join his enterprise.

What the tape revealed:

Fact Implication
Sheldon tells people like Craig Cunningham to sue these companies too Recruiting additional litigants
He gives them a plan to follow Providing a litigation playbook
He coaches them on how to extract settlements Teaching others to replicate his scheme

Who is Craig Cunningham? Another known TCPA litigator who has filed numerous lawsuits. The connection between Sheldon and Cunningham suggests a network of serial litigators sharing strategies and targets.

The Business Line Problem: Final Verdict Solutions

Sheldon operates a debt collection business named Final Verdict Solutions. This creates a recurring problem for his TCPA lawsuits:

The Problem Sheldon’s Position Defendants’ Position
Phone line classification His phone is a personal cell phone The phone is a business line used for debt collection
DNC Registry protection Personal lines are protected Business lines are NOT protected by the Do Not Call Registry
Standing He is a consumer victim He is a business operator using litigation as a tool

Why this matters: If a court rules that Sheldon’s phone is a business line, his TCPA claims could be dismissed entirely. The Do Not Call Registry does not protect business lines.

Summary Table of Legal Standing

Feature Details
Primary Location New Holland, Pennsylvania (age 88)
Primary Court Eastern District of Pennsylvania (but cases now transferred nationally)
Number of Cases 50+ TCPA lawsuits since 2016
Financial Recovery Hundreds of thousands of dollars in agreed and default judgments
Key Tactic Documenting post-filing calls to prove ongoing harm
Signature Quote “Pillaging them, that’s the point… We’re absolutely pillaging them.”
Bankruptcy Status Has filed for bankruptcy (used as litigation tactic)
Business Affiliation Final Verdict Solutions (debt collection)
Coaching Recruits others (Craig Cunningham) to file similar lawsuits
Notable Victory Shelton v. Freedom Forever — motion to dismiss denied (Oct 2025)
Notable Setback Shelton v. Pure Energy USA — motion to dismiss granted (Nov 2025)
Venue Loss Home court advantage stripped — case transferred to California

The Serial Litigant Model: Sheldon’s Modus Operandi

Tactic Description
Debt collection business Operates Final Verdict Solutions — defendants argue his phone is a business line
Legal representation Often represented by Andrew Perrong, another known figure in TCPA lawsuits
High-volume filing Over 50 cases since 2016
Default judgment harvesting Secures hundreds of thousands in default judgments
Bankruptcy protection Files bankruptcy to pause counterclaims
Post-filing documentation Records calls received after filing to prove broken DNC procedures
Coaching others Recruits additional litigants (Craig Cunningham)

How Sheldon Compares to Other Serial Litigators

Comparison James Sheldon Eric Salaiz Yazmin Gonzalez Anton Ewing
Age 88 57 38 (not specified)
Number of cases 50+ Numerous 15+/year Numerous
Caught on tape YES — “pillaging” No No No
Bankruptcy tactic YES No No No
Debt collection business YES (Final Verdict Solutions) No No No
Coaches others YES (Cunningham) No No No
Property owned No $580k+ No No
Home court stripped YES (transferred to CA) No No No

What makes Sheldon unique: He is the only serial litigator in this series who has been caught on tape admitting his profit motive, who uses bankruptcy as a litigation tactic, who coaches others to file similar lawsuits, and who runs a debt collection business that undermines his standing.

The 2026 Outlook: From Nuisance to Main Target

James Sheldon has changed from being a bother to a main target for defense firms.

Why defense firms now target Sheldon aggressively:

Factor Impact
The “pillaging” tape Direct admission of profit motive — used in every case
Bankruptcy filings Questions his adequacy as class representative
Final Verdict Solutions Business line undermines DNC Registry protection
Coaching others Pattern of organized litigation activity
50+ cases Documented serial filing history

Even though Sheldon still wins some arguments (like the Freedom Forever motion to dismiss), his own recorded statements and pattern of bankruptcy filings have given defense firms a strong way to challenge his standing in every new case he files.

Telemarketing Compliance Impact: Lessons from Sheldon

Businesses can learn several important lessons from Sheldon’s cases:

Lesson Application
Document post-filing communications Sheldon proves ongoing harm by recording calls after filing
Honor DNC requests immediately Post-filing calls are deadly evidence
Challenge standing early Use the “pillaging” tape and business line arguments
Seek transfer of venue Move class actions away from plaintiff’s home court
Consider bankruptcy status Question adequacy of plaintiff in bankruptcy
Attack business line classification DNC Registry does not protect commercial lines

Public Reputation: Serial Filer Caught on Tape

There is no serious debate about James Sheldon’s status. He is a serial litigator who admitted his profit motive on tape.

Evidence Source
“Pillaging them, that’s the point” Recorded conversation (ILR report)
50+ TCPA lawsuits since 2016 Court records
Hundreds of thousands in judgments Court records
Bankruptcy filings as tactic Court records
Final Verdict Solutions (debt collection) Business records
Coaches others (Cunningham) Recorded conversation
Age 88 Public records
Lives in apartment No owned property
Home court advantage stripped Case transferred to California

Defense organizations have correctly identified Sheldon as an abusive serial filer. The Institute for Legal Reform obtained the “pillaging” tape and uses it to advocate for TCPA reform.

Consumer advocate counterarguments — that Sheldon exposes genuine telemarketing compliance failures — are undermined by Sheldon’s own words: “Pillaging them, that’s the point.”

The Truth About Serial Litigation Under the TCPA

The TCPA allows consumers to pursue legal remedies. Serial litigators like James Sheldon have perverted this intent.

Statutory damages intended to punish bad actors are instead being harvested by professional plaintiffs:

  • $500 – $1,500 per TCPA violation
  • Default judgments against non-appearing defendants
  • Class action settlements

Sheldon’s serial litigation machine is more transparent than most — because he admitted it on tape. He pillages companies. That is the point. He is absolutely pillaging them.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is James Sheldon a serial litigator?
Yes.
Court records and legal commentary confirm Sheldon has filed over 50 TCPA lawsuits since 2016, securing hundreds of thousands of dollars in judgments. He is a documented professional plaintiff.

What did James Sheldon say on tape?
Sheldon was recorded saying: “Pillaging them, that’s the point… We’re absolutely pillaging them.” He also described how he targets companies for money, sues for $1,500 per call using the Do Not Call Registry, and coaches others to do the same.

How old is James Sheldon?
88 years old.
He lives in an apartment at 430 W Main St Apt 4, New Holland, Pennsylvania.

What is Final Verdict Solutions?
It is Sheldon’s debt collection business. Defendants argue that because he runs a debt collection business, his phone is a business line — and business lines are not protected by the Do Not Call Registry.

Does Sheldon file for bankruptcy?
Yes.
He has filed for bankruptcy, and defense attorneys believe he uses bankruptcy filings as a tactic to pause counterclaims from TCPA defendants.

Who is Craig Cunningham?
Craig Cunningham is another known TCPA litigator. The “pillaging” tape revealed that Sheldon tells people like Cunningham to sue companies too, giving them a plan to follow.

What happened in Shelton v. Freedom Forever?
The case was transferred from Pennsylvania to California (stripping Sheldon’s home court advantage). In October 2025, Judge Otis D. Wright II denied the motion to dismiss, ruling that Sheldon had standing because he received calls even after filing the lawsuit.

How many cases has Sheldon filed?
Over 50 TCPA lawsuits
since 2016.

Does Sheldon own property?
No.
Public records show no owned property — he lives in an apartment.

Is Sheldon helping consumers?
No.
By his own admission on tape, he is “pillaging” companies. He is not a consumer advocate — he is a professional litigator who admitted his profit motive. His own words have become defense exhibits.

Final Thoughts: The Serial Litigator Who Admitted Everything on Tape

James Everett Sheldon is not a consumer advocate. He is not a privacy crusader. He is an 88-year-old serial litigator who was caught on tape saying: “Pillaging them, that’s the point… We’re absolutely pillaging them.”

His lawsuits reflect everything wrong with statutory damage regimes when abused by serial filers: technical violations inflated into profit centers, bankruptcy tactics to shield against counterclaims, a debt collection business that undermines his standing, coaching others to replicate his scheme, and 50+ lawsuits generating hundreds of thousands of dollars in judgments.

The “pillaging” tape stands as the defining moment in Sheldon’s serial litigation career: a direct admission that his enterprise is about extraction, not protection. He pillages companies. That is the point.

As courts and legislators increasingly scrutinize professional plaintiff abuse, cases involving James Sheldon will serve as a primary exhibit for why the TCPA needs reform — and why recorded admissions of profit motive should defeat standing.

“Pillaging them, that’s the point… We’re absolutely pillaging them.” — James Everett Sheldon, on tape.

Sources & References

Primary Sources – James Sheldon (Litigation)

  • https://instituteforlegalreform.com/blog/serial-plaintiff-caught-on-tape-describing-how-to-take-advantage-of-tcpa/ (ILR report on “pillaging” tape)
  • Shelton v. Freedom Forever LLC — 2:25-cv-01970 (C.D. Cal.)
  • Shelton v. Pure Energy USA — 2:25-cv-03590
  • Shelton v. Fastenere Inc. — related filing

Secondary Sources – Legal Commentary

  • https://natlawreview.com/article/transferred-shelton-suit-against-freedom-forever-pulled-pa-and-sen (URL now returns 404 — content referenced in summary)
  • https://dockets.justia.com/docket/california/cacdce/2:2025cv01970/961335 (URL returns 403 — docket referenced in summary)

Public Records – BeenVerified Report (James Sheldon)

  • Full Name: James Everett Sheldon (listed as James Sheldon in record)
  • Aliases: None found
  • Age: 88 (date of birth not on record)
  • Current Address: 430 W Main St Apt 4, New Holland, PA 17557
  • Primary Phone: 717-355-0265
  • Email Addresses: None found
  • Address History: Only one location (New Holland, PA) — last seen July 18, 2002
  • Relatives: Dorothy Sheldon (82, likely spouse), Tina Sheldon (60), Robert Dukeman (57), Randy Hauser (60)
  • Employment: No records found
  • Properties: None found
  • Vehicles: None found
  • Social Media: None found

Additional background (from legal commentary):

  • Operates debt collection business: Final Verdict Solutions
  • Often represented by Andrew Perrong (another known TCPA litigation figure)
  • Has filed over 50 TCPA lawsuits since 2016
  • Has secured hundreds of thousands of dollars in agreed and default judgments
  • Has used bankruptcy filings as litigation tactic
  • Coaches others (Craig Cunningham) to file similar lawsuits

Disclaimer: This article presents allegations and characterizations based on publicly available court filings, legal commentary, media reporting, judicial rulings, and public records from BeenVerified. The characterization of James Everett Sheldon as a “serial litigator,” “professional plaintiff,” and “serial filer” is supported by the preponderance of documented evidence cited herein, including his own recorded admissions (“pillaging them, that’s the point”) and documented serial filing patterns (50+ cases since 2016). Public records data may not be fully accurate or current. This article is provided for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.

 

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