Jordan Brown’s Naples, Florida-based Jet Agency is facing a fourth customer lawsuit, as his JetCharter.com was found liable for $77,900.
Naples, Florida-based private jet charter broker Jet Agency is being sued again.
It is the fourth time customers have sued Jet Agency since last November.
At the same time, private jet charter broker JetCharter.com was found liable for $77,900 in a separate lawsuit.
Jordan E. Brown owns both charter brokers.
Brown and his various companies have been sued by customers, charter operators, former employees, a business partner, a company that sells billboard advertising, and American Express twice.
The most recent lawsuit was filed on June 26, 2026, in Collier County, Florida.
Morris Dudgeon names Jet Agency Global, LLC, Jet Genius Florida Holdings, and Jordan Brown in the new filing.
It was first reported by The Naples Press last week.
The filing follows a pattern similar to other customer lawsuits.
In the other lawsuits, Brown is alleged to have either sold the customers prepaid jet cards or ad hoc charter flights.
In those cases, the customers say Brown and his various companies failed to deliver the flights.
Brown then failed to provide a refund.
Dudgeon bought a jet card from Jet Agency in October 2025.
He paid $103,425.00 for 15 flight hours in a light jet, according to court documents.
Dudgeon’s deal also included a free first flight from Jet Agency.
That flight was fulfilled.
Dudgeon booked a flight for April 11, 2026, from Tucson, Arizona, to Stillwater, Oklahoma.
On the day of departure, he received an email from Jet Agency that it “had been unsuccessful in securing an aircraft.”
Jet Agency cited “high demand, fleet positioning constraints, and ongoing operational congestion.”
Dudgeon’s next flight via Jet Agency was to attend the Kentucky Derby.
The flight was scheduled for May 2, 2026.
On May 1, 2026, Jet Agency canceled the flight, costing Dudgeon $7,462.00 spent on nonrefundable Kentucky Derby tickets, according to the filing.
After the cancellations, Dudgeon sought a refund to no avail.
Dudgeon’s lawyers write in the filing:
‘Brown operates a network of interrelated entities, including but not limited to Jet Agency Global, LLC, Jet Genius Florida Holdings, Inc., Jet Genius Holdings, Inc., Charter Flight Group, JetCharter.com, LLC, C3 Jets, LLC, C3 Limo, LLC, and Bowman Aviation, Inc. Brown has used these entities interchangeably to collect membership deposits and charter fees from customers while failing to perform the contracted services, failing to pay charter operators for flights, and refusing to issue refunds. Multiple courts have entered judgments against Brown’s entities for this same pattern of conduct. The corporate form of Jet Agency and Jet Genius should be disregarded because Brown has used these entities as mere instrumentalities to perpetrate fraud and injustice upon Plaintiff and similarly situated consumers.’
Dudgeon’s lawyers cite Breach of Contract, Breach of Implied Covenant of Good Faith and Fair Dealing, Fraudulent Inducement, and Conversion.
Dudgeon is seeking both his initial jet card funds and the cost of Kentucky Derby tickets, as well as costs related to the first canceled flight.
DOWNLOAD: Dudgeon vs Jordan Brown, Jet Agency, Jet Genius Florida Holdings
Separately, a court in Palm Beach County, Florida, issued a final default judgment against JetCharter.com on June 29, 2026, in favor of Mike Pinkert.
It found JetCharter.com liable for $77,900.70, including interest.
Pinkert signed a contract with Boca Raton, Florida-based JetCharter.com to fly six passengers from Fort Lauderdale to Puerto Vallarta and back last year.
The outbound flight was set for December 27, 2025, with the return scheduled for January 3, 2026.
After paying $49,972.40 via wire transfer, the lawsuit alleges “Jet Charter failed to provide the services for which Mr. Pinkert contracted.”
While Pinkert asserts that Brown agreed to offer a refund, the lawsuit alleged that the company failed to honor that agreement.
Pinkert says the replacement flights cost $73,385.
Pinkert then filed the lawsuit on January 22, 2026.
He is also entitled to legal fees per the ruling.
Last month, Steven V. Gonzalez filed a lawsuit against Jet Agency and Bown in Collier County, Florida.
It alleges Brown failed to refund $30,595 in unused jet card funds.
Under a settlement agreement and release, Brown agreed to refund the money in exchange for Gonzalez removing a review he posted on Google about Jet Agency.
Gonzalez tells Private Jet Card Comparisons he bought a jet card in December 2023 from Jet Agency.
He flew twice in 2024 without issues.
Then, in the Spring of 2025, Jet Agency failed to secure a charter jet for his flight reservation “after providing…multiple tail numbers.”
In the Fall of 2025, he alleges, “confirmed flight with tail number, no show.”
He says, “The latter convinced me to take action, beginning with Google and other posts, as well as an attempt to settle for half of my proceeds back.”
Brown signed the settlement agreement in February 2026, committing to pay within 60 days.
“That date has come and gone,” Gonzalez notes.
The lawsuit was filed on June 23, 2026.
Last month, Paul Shirley obtained a default judgment against Jet Agency Global after it failed to respond to the initial complaint.
Shirley’s lawsuit was filed in Collier County, Florida, on May 21, 2026.
Last December, California-based Shirley paid $100,000 for membership in Jet Agency’s jet card program.
The lawsuit alleged Breach of Contract, Civil Theft, and Fraud in the Inducement.
Another ongoing lawsuit against Jet Agency was filed last November in Collier County by Ledge Rock Apartments II, LLC.
Ledge Rock Apartments prepaid Naples, Florida-based Jet Agency $312,500 for 25 hours on a heavy jet in May 2025 under its Jet Agency Membership program.
After it says Jet Agency failed to deliver on flights, it sought a refund before filing its lawsuit.