Parsons, who said this week that a sale of water park is under contract but not finalized, has denied that conditions at the park led to Stabile’s death.

“Only God knows where he got the amoeba,” Parsons has said.

Parsons’ attorney, Brittney Angelich, of Dallas, declined comment after a pretrial hearing in the case Thursday. Parsons did not return a phone message Thursday.

Fass filed motions to compel BSR officials to comply with ongoing discovery requests in the case and told Judge Vicki Menard on Thursday he does not trust Parsons and his staff to fully provide evidence he is seeking.

Angelich told the judge her clients have complied with discovery in the case to the best of their abilities. The judge granted the plaintiffs’ motions, ordering them to provide documents BSR officials have not yet supplied.

Mendard has set a Jan. 27 trial date for the lawsuit.

Fass told Menard he seeks emails and text messages relating to “BSR’s cover-up chlorination” purchases and is skeptical of Parsons’ claims he did not have a backup system in place for his cellphone data that would allow information to be recovered from the phone he said was lost in Lake Whitney.