LGBTQ+ Alliance Escalates Case Against Former CEO With New Defamation, Tortious Interference ClaimsBy Clarissa Garza
The LGBTQ+ Real Estate Alliance has filed a First Amended Complaint against former CEO Ryan A. Weyandt in the U.S. District Court for the District of Minnesota, seeking substantial damages across eight counts, and claiming he misappropriated the organization’s valuable 10,000-member customer list and engaged in a pattern of false statements designed to damage its reputation.
The First Amended Complaint, filed Jan. 22, significantly escalates the nonprofit’s legal action following a July 2025 court order that required Weyandt to return control of the organization’s financial accounts and digital assets. The new filing adds defamation claims and allegations of tortious interference with prospective economic advantage to the original trade secret misappropriation charges. In addition to violations of the Minnesota Uniform Trade Secrets Act and the Federal Defend Trade Secrets Act, the amended complaint now alleges civil theft, conversion, defamation and tortious interference with prospective economic advantage. The Alliance seeks compensatory damages, punitive damages, injunctive relief and attorney’s fees, with damages estimated to exceed $300,000 across multiple counts. “Due to defendant’s willful and malicious misappropriation of plaintiff’s trade secrets, plaintiff is entitled to exemplary damages,” the complaint states, highlighting the severity of the alleged conduct. The customer list—a comprehensive database of over 10,000 LGBTQ+ and industry professionals, corporate executives, association leaders, agents and potential homebuyers developed over 5.5 years—is at the heart of the dispute. The nonprofit maintains that this list is a critical trade secret that provides a significant competitive advantage and generates substantial revenue through membership profiles, partnerships and sponsorships. “The Customer List is not generally known or readily ascertainable,” the complaint states, noting that “only Alliance’s employees, staff and Board have access” to it. “The Customer List provides a competitive advantage to Alliance, as it distinguishes Alliance from all other competitors in this market.” The June 2025 takeover According to the amended complaint, tensions escalated dramatically in June 2025 when Weyandt—six months after resigning in December 2024, citing personal struggles with addiction—took unilateral control of the organization’s digital infrastructure. On June 25, 2025, Weyandt allegedly:
Pattern of false statements The amended complaint details a pattern of allegedly false and defamatory statements made by Weyandt starting in December 2024 and continuing through at least early July 2025. On July 2, 2025, the complaint alleges Weyandt made additional false claims, including:
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