CEA Industries (better known by its ticker symbol BNC to many traders) has recently become a focal point of controversy. Over the past year, the stock has experienced extreme volatility, with its price once surging to just over $30 before rapidly falling to the mid-$3 range.
Now, the related disputes are no longer confined to discussions on platform X or within investor communities but are escalating into a public conflict involving corporate governance and capital structure.
The first to speak out was YZi Labs. The institution publicly demanded that 10X Capital and CEA director Hans Thomas disclose their beneficial ownership positions in CEA Industries and raised questions about whether they have fulfilled their disclosure obligations under the Securities Exchange Act. It should be noted that this challenge is not about the legal ownership of corporate control but focuses on whether the relevant shareholdings have reached the threshold requiring disclosure of beneficial ownership to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
Subsequently, the dispute further evolved into formal litigation.
On February 24, 2026, investor Abraham Gomez filed a lawsuit in the Tulare County Superior Court of California against CEA Industries and Hans Thomas, alleging fraud, promissory estoppel, unjust enrichment, and quantum meruit, among other claims.
According to the complaint, Gomez is not an ordinary investor. He initially proposed an investment plan of up to $100 million, a scale that would have made him one of the company's most significant shareholders. CEA ultimately did not accept the full investment amount, and Gomez actually invested $14 million.
The reason the scenario depicted in the complaint has attracted attention is not merely because an investor suffered losses, but because it alleges that CEA Industries and its director failed to fulfill related promises after utilizing the investor's funds, resources, and credibility to support the company's operations.
The complaint states that after completing the initial investment, Gomez visited CEA's offices to understand the company's situation on the ground and found the company to be in a state of near "operational vacuum." The filing claims that at the time, the company had: no CFO, no COO, lacked an operations team, lacked a marketing team, had no investor relations or public relations function, no fund management system, no registered domain name, and not even a functioning website.
For most investors, such a situation would likely mean an immediate exit. However, according to the complaint, Gomez chose to continue investing his energy, partly out of support for CEO David Namdar (a long-time friend) and partly hoping to protect the capital he had already invested.
Therefore, he did not merely hold shares as a passive shareholder but directly participated in company affairs.
The complaint alleges that over a weekend in August 2025, Gomez led the writing and release of two press releases. According to the court documents, this move quickly boosted market sentiment: CEA's stock price rose from $17.10 on August 8, 2025, to $27.34 on August 11, a gain of nearly 60%.
In the following months, Gomez and his team members continued to help the company build out its infrastructure, including: website construction, public and media relations, and external communication systems.
The core dispute in this case centers on an investment arrangement proposed by Hans Thomas.
Gomez claims that around August 11, 2025, Thomas suggested to him that an additional investment of $3 million would secure him CEA stock worth $4 million. The complaint also states that before making this proposal, Thomas asked CEO David Namdar to temporarily leave the room.
Gomez states that based on this promise, he wired an additional $3 million.
However, the stock ultimately delivered was worth only $3 million, with the remaining $1 million worth of stock never issued. This unfulfilled portion of shares forms a key basis for his fraud and promissory estoppel claims.
More critically, the complaint alleges that Thomas did not deny the related promise when confronted directly. The filing cites a WhatsApp message from September 29, 2025: during a chat discussing the shares to be delivered to Gomez, CEA director Alex Monje was involved, and Thomas confirmed in the message that Gomez should receive an additional $1 million in stock. In other words, he had confirmed this obligation in writing but ultimately failed to fulfill it.
The lawsuit also points out that this is not simply a fee dispute.
Gomez states that the consulting and operational support services provided by him and his team were worth millions of dollars, and the company knowingly accepted and profited from them.
According to the complaint, Thomas had agreed to pay Gomez a monthly advisory fee of $250,000 for strategic consulting, marketing, operations, and business support. However, Gomez claims that despite working continuously for several months, the company made only one partial payment of $50,000, which was primarily described as a vendor expense reimbursement, not consulting compensation.
According to his calculations: unpaid advisory fees, unreimbursed service expenses.
Cumulative losses exceed $2.75 million, including: $1 million in undelivered stock, 7 months of unpaid advisory fees.
The complaint also raises questions about CEA's supplier expenditures.
The filing states that the company paid over $4 million to a certain advertising supplier in one month and allegedly continued to pay over $4 million per month to the same supplier thereafter.
In this context, a company allegedly paying millions of dollars monthly to a third-party supplier, yet refusing to pay an investor who claims to have built its foundational operational systems, has drawn further scrutiny.
Meanwhile, the role of Hans Thomas makes the controversy even more sensitive. As a CEA director and a key figure at 10X Capital, he is at the intersection of corporate board governance, capital market strategy, and supplier relationships. For some external investors, this concentration of power itself may pose governance risks.
In broader market discussions, a certain investor perspective is gradually forming.
Many believe that PIPE financing (Private Investment in Public Equity) in some transaction structures resembles more of an "endpoint" rather than a starting point for corporate growth. The economic incentives primarily come from: completing the deal, securing financing, obtaining transaction fees, while long-term shareholder returns may be placed secondary.
Reviewing several SPAC transactions involving 10X Capital, some critics mention previous cases, such as REE, African Agriculture, and VCXB. These projects performed poorly post-listing, leading some investors to question whether the related transaction models rely more on fee generation rather than sustainable operational performance.
Simultaneously, such structures also spark discussions about potential conflicts of interest.
In structures similar to BNC's, board seats, compensation arrangements, supplier relationships, and capital market strategies are often concentrated among sponsors, affiliated directors, and management, while truly independent oversight力量 representing public shareholders may be relatively limited.
For many shareholders, the real concern is not just a single lawsuit itself.
But the gradually emerging overall scenario: a major investor alleging unfulfilled stock promises, unpaid service compensation, an institutional investor publicly demanding disclosure of shareholding structures, the company itself experiencing severe stock price volatility and governance controversies.
And now, a formal legal challenge has emerged.
Because beyond all the governance disputes and incentive structure discussions, one fact is already on the table: a core investor has formally accused the company of fraud in a court of law.
The case is titled: Abraham Gomez v. CEA Industries, Inc. and Hans Thomas.