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Itria Ventures Sues Stellar Plumbing and Jorge Coronel Osorio in Alamance County

Itria Ventures filed a civil suit in Alamance County against Stellar Plumbing and owner Jorge Eliyonahi Coronel Osorio, docketed as case no. 26CV001144-000, filed Feb. 18, 2026.

Sarah Chen2 min read
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Itria Ventures Sues Stellar Plumbing and Jorge Coronel Osorio in Alamance County
Source: media.wfmynews2.com

Itria Ventures, LLC filed a civil complaint in Alamance County Superior Court on Feb. 18, 2026, naming Stellar Plumbing LLC and its owner Jorge Eliyonahi Coronel Osorio as defendants in case no. 26CV001144-000. The filing lists Joseph Walker Fulton as plaintiff counsel and is designated a general civil action in the Alamance County docket.

The public filing identifies Itria Ventures as the plaintiff and Stellar Plumbing LLC and Jorge Eliyonahi Coronel Osorio as the defendants, but the complaint available through the court clerk’s office must be obtained to see the specific causes of action and the relief Itria is seeking. The court caption, case number 26CV001144-000, and the Feb. 18, 2026 filing date are recorded on the Alamance County Superior Court docket for this matter.

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Separately, an excerpt from a different complaint circulating in legal reporting alleges detailed loan transactions involving Itria and describes advances of “more than $244,000” with required total repayments of $305,000. In that text, the first loan is described as carrying a stated daily repayment rate of $1,452.38 per day, and the complaint asserts, “That translates into $60,812.50 in interest in only 210 days or an annualized interest rate of approximately 43.29% which is well over any reasonable interest rate and fully criminally usurious,” the complaint alleges.

The same excerpt describes a second loan entered in September 2019 for “more than $244,000” with an accelerated daily repayment of $1,613.76 and alleges “more than $60,000 in interest in only 189 days,” or an annualized interest rate “of more than 47 percent.” Those figures, if reflected in court pleadings, would be central to any claim that loan terms exceeded statutory usury limits or that repayment schedules functioned as disguised high-interest loans rather than true receivables purchases.

That circulated complaint also characterizes Itria’s paperwork as “fraudulently and deceptively designed” and alleges that the company’s electronic and mailed dissemination of such contracts “constitutes mail and wire fraud.” The excerpt further seeks to represent “all persons or entities who borrowed money from Itria and Biz2Credit using a nominal ‘future receivables sale agreement’ or similar arrangement within the last four years and whose funding was treated as a loan by the defendants seeking repayment under all circumstances, specifically ‘even when the percentage of the receivables set forth in the contract is less than the nominal daily amount of repayment.’”

It is not yet clear whether the usury, fraud, and class-action allegations recited above are included in the Feb. 18 Alamance filing for case no. 26CV001144-000 or instead arise from a separate suit. A review of the complaint and docket entries for 26CV001144-000 at the Alamance County Superior Court, and any related pleadings naming Itria or Biz2Credit, is necessary to determine whether those numerical calculations and quoted allegations are part of this local case. If those allegations are in the Alamance filing, they would raise questions about alleged high effective interest rates, potential state usury claims, and whether a broader class of borrowers in the past four years could be affected.

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