Whistleblower Challenges Wellpath Holdings Bankruptcy, Alleging Procedural Misconduct

A federal whistleblower has filed an unprecedented 75-motion legal challenge against Wellpath Holdings' bankruptcy proceedings, claiming systematic suppression of objections and constitutional violations by private equity firm H.I.G. Capital.

April 29, 2025
Whistleblower Challenges Wellpath Holdings Bankruptcy, Alleging Procedural Misconduct

A federal whistleblower has filed a comprehensive legal challenge against Wellpath Holdings' bankruptcy proceedings, alleging systematic procedural misconduct and constitutional violations by private equity firm H.I.G. Capital.

Dr. Kanwar Partap Singh Gill, a board-certified physician, submitted a 300-page emergency motion suite containing 75 separate motions challenging the bankruptcy reorganization process. The filing claims the bankruptcy was not a legitimate debt restructuring, but a strategy to eliminate billions in potential legal exposure through manipulative tactics.

The whistleblower asserts that between April 14 and April 22, 2025, eight verified objections were submitted but deliberately not publicly docketed. These objections covered issues including Americans with Disabilities Act retaliation, ERISA fiduciary breaches, and governance violations.

Dr. Gill's motions seek to strike plan documents, invalidate voting ballots, disqualify legal representatives, and enforce constitutional due process rights. The filing invokes multiple statutory protections, including provisions under the Americans with Disabilities Act and bankruptcy regulations.

A confirmation hearing is scheduled for April 30, 2025, in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas. Dr. Gill contends that the hearing cannot proceed legally while 75 verified motions remain unresolved.

The unprecedented legal challenge represents a significant potential intervention in corporate bankruptcy procedures, highlighting potential systemic vulnerabilities in judicial processes involving private equity restructuring.