1 estrella2 estrellas3 estrellas4 estrellas5 estrellas (Ninguna valoración todavía)
Cargando...

DraftKings Settles ‘Corporate Espionage’ Lawsuit Vs. Former Exec

27

DraftKings Settles ‘Corporate Espionage’ Lawsuit Vs. Former Exec

DraftKings has settled a legal spat with its former head of VIP, Michael Hermalyn, whom the operator accused of “” after the executive jumped ship to its rival, Fanatics.

Michael Hermalyn, DraftKings, Fanatics, Michael Rubin, corporate espionageMichael Hermalyn, above, denied DraftKings’ allegations, but he is severely restricted in the duties he can perform for Fanatics until February 1. (Image: Cheddar)

The terms of the settlement have not been disclosed, but it comes three months after the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston rejected Hermalyn s bid to overturn a lower court injunction that severely restricted the type of work he could do at Fanatics.

The lower court determined last April that a noncompete clause Hermalyn signed while at DraftKings was enforceable.

‘Stolen’ Super Bowl Plan

Boston-based DraftKings sued Hermalyn in Massachusetts in February 2004 claiming he plotted to join Fanatics for over a year before leaving. The lawsuit alleged he took with him confidential information about DraftKings’ VIP clients, along with its Super Bowl business plan.

Fanatics is best known as a platform that sells licensed sports merchandise, trading cards, and collectibles, but in late 2004, it launched a sportsbook. At some point, the company invited Hermalyn to join as president of its VIP program, although when this actually happened is disputed.

the DraftKings allegations. He claimed he didn’t have an offer to join Fanatics until January 2024 and denied secretly discussing employment with anyone else at the company in 2023.

He also denied sharing any documents with Fanatics or having access to any DraftKings files after his resignation.

Hermalyn further argued that California’s Business Professions Code prohibits an employer from enforcing a noncompete agreement regardless of whether the contract was signed outside of California. While Fanatics is based in Jacksonville, Fla., Hermalyn was hired to head up its Los Angeles office.

California Suit

As such, he filed his own lawsuit in California to challenge the noncompete agreement. The judge in that case determined Hermalyn would likely prevail under California law, but declined to act because he said there would have to be exceptional circumstances to interfere with a court ruling in another state.

Hermalyn is enjoined from providing services to Fanatics that relate to any aspect of DraftKings business for a year from the date he started his new job – a period that is due to end on February 1, 2025.

All litigation between them has been settled and dismissed on confidential terms, and Mr. Hermalyn will abide by his contractual commitments to DraftKings, Russell Beck, a lawyer for Hermalyn, said in a statement to Reuters.

1 estrella2 estrellas3 estrellas4 estrellas5 estrellas (Ninguna valoración todavía)
Cargando...

Manila Casinos Reopening at 30 Percent Capacity, Operators Report $271M Loss in Q2  A Penn/Portnoy Marriage? Penn National Gaming Rumored to be Betting on Barstool Sports  Detroit’s Greektown Casino Brawl Raises Questions Over Police Inaction  California Lottery Won’t Pay Out on Courier-Bought Tickets  Cosmopolitan Las Vegas Issues Apology to Meek Mill for Banning Rapper from Casino  Federal Judge Sides With New Hampshire in Wire Act Case, Says Law Applies Only to Sports Betting  Colossus Bets, Spinola Gaming Linked to $95M Texas Lottery Syndicate Win  NFL Sunday Divisional Playoffs: Bettors Like Chiefs at Home, Prefer Seahawks on the Road  MGM Doing Business With Phil Ruffin Again as Billionaire Real Estate Investor Considers Buying Circus Circus  Warren Buffett Has Millions at Stake on March Madness, But Doesn’t Support Sports Betting