Since the closure of Dreamwave, Pat Lee has been criticized for his business practices. In an interview with
Newsarama,
Transformers writers Adam Patyk and James McDonough stated they had been laid off before the Dreamwave bankruptcy following a controversy about their payment, and had subsequently filed a lawsuit against Dreamwave for lack of payment. In another interview,
Transformers writer
Simon Furman claimed that Lee, "looked [him] square in the eye and said everything’s hunky-dory" a mere month before the bankruptcy. Comic book journalist
Rich Johnston repeatedly reported controversial details concerning Pat Lee, including the allegation that Dreamwave's assets and employees were shifted over to the new company
Dream Engine, started by Pat Lee's brother Roger Lee in January 2005, before Dreamwave declared bankruptcy; the allegation that Lee had transferred ownership of a company-owned
Porsche to himself prior to the Dreamwave bankruptcy; the allegation that Lee had bought an apartment for half a million Canadian dollars before the bankruptcy; a list of Dreamwave's debt and creditors; and the allegation that artist
Alex Milne had been working as a
ghost artist for Lee on
Top Cow's
Cyberforce title without being credited, with Lee eventually stopping payment to Milne when Top Cow had asked for confirmation that Lee was indeed the sole artist of the book and Milne refused to comply. In December 2010, Pat Lee gave Johnston an interview, in which Johnston reiterated all of the above claims. While Lee admitted that "many artists had delays in payment" even before the bankruptcy and "regret[s] not being able to speak to everyone" beforehand, he also claimed that "most creators at Dreamwave were aware that we were going through financial difficulties. We didn’t announce it, but people were not being paid in full, and it was pretty obvious." He also claimed that "I barely paid myself at Dreamwave, and didn’t pay myself for extended periods so that the company could pay other bills." Regarding the Porsche, Lee claimed that it "was leased by Dreamwave and I was personally responsible for the vehicle at the end", whereas the apartment was a "small apartment in Toronto that I paid a mortgage on". Regarding Alex Milne's work as a ghost artist on
Cyberforce, Lee claimed that he "forgot to adjust the credits at the end of the job", which was "definitely my error", and offered Milne to "provide me the appropriate documentation and evidence" that "Dream Engine owed him money." He also claimed that he didn't recall firing Alex, and that he "expressed to him via email in May 2007 that I understood he was paid in full". Other allegations brought up by Johnston in the interview, namely that Top Cow had told him [Johnston] that Lee had specifically assured them that he was doing all the work on
Cyberforce himself and that Marvel had told him [Johnston] that they were "asked to stop paying money to Dreamwave [for outsourced projects such as the
X-Men/Fantastic Four limited series] but send it to
Dream Engine instead", were not addressed by Lee. Lee did not respond to the specific request to offer evidence to counter the claim that he was trying to "siphon money from big gigs away from Dreamwave to
Dream Engine in the months before the bankruptcy." However, Lee announced plans to set up a "Creative Refund Movement" with the specific intention to "raise funds to pay former Dreamwave artists who were financially affected by the bankruptcy." As of 2015, no Dreamwave employees have received any monetary compensation for their work at the company through the "Creative Refund Movement." ==Footnotes==