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"Schultz
says Stern warned him about
lawsuit"
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)—Former
SuperSonics owner Howard Schultz
said he was warned by NBA commissioner
David Stern that it would be
“very expensive”
to pursue a lawsuit seeking
to return the team to Seattle
from Oklahoma City.
Schultz made the claim in a
declaration filed Thursday in
U.S. District Court in Seattle.
Schultz has sued to try to reverse
his sale of the franchise to
Clay Bennett, claiming the
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Oklahoma
City businessman failed to follow
through on a promise to negotiate
in good faith to keep the team
in Seattle. On July 2, Bennett’s ownership
group and city of Seattle officials
announced a settlement in another
lawsuit, allowing the team to move
immediately to Oklahoma City, where
it will play during the upcoming season.
That settlement did not cover Schultz’s
lawsuit.
Six days later, the NBA filed a motion
asking U.S. District Judge Marsha
Pechman—who is presiding over
the Schultz case—to allow the
league to intervene. The NBA claimed
the lawsuit would interfere with the
stable operation of the franchise.
Schultz said in his declaration that
when he learned on June 23 of the
potential settlement between the city
of Seattle and the franchise, he told
his lawyers that he could not support
that settlement “because my
primary objective was to secure an
NBA team in Seattle, and that objective
was not adequately insured by that
settlement.”
Schultz said Stern tried to contact
him on July 24. He said it was the
first contact he’d had with
Stern since Schultz, the chairman
and president of Starbucks Coffee
Co., filed his lawsuit in April.
A day later, Schultz said the commissioner
“told me he wanted ‘to
hear it from the horse’s mouth’
why I was not joining in the city’s
settlement and dismissing my lawsuit.”
Schultz said Stern told him “that
if I did not join in the settlement
… I should realize that it will
become very expensive for me and my
partners, and he implied that I should
reconsider my position.”
Schultz said he then told Stern the
settlement did not contain strong
enough assurances about the NBA locating
a team in Seattle and that Stern told
him “the NBA would offer no
further assurances in that regard.”
As part of the settlement, the team
was to pay the city $45 million immediately.
The team also will pay another $30
million to Seattle in 2013 if the
Washington state legislature authorizes
at least $75 million in public funding
to renovate KeyArena by the end of
2009 and Seattle doesn’t obtain
an NBA franchise of its own within
five years.
Asked about Schultz’s recollection
of their conversation, Stern said
in a statement to The Oklahoman that
“we had a friendly conversation
at the close of which we both had
stated our positions. There were no
threats expressed or implied.”
Schultz owned the team from 2001 to
July 2006, when he sold it along with
the WNBA’s Storm to Bennett
for $350 million. The NBA claimed
in its motion to intervene that the
transfer of the franchise to a court-appointed
receiver and a subsequent transfer
back to Schultz would both be prohibited
by the league’s constitution.
The league also claimed in the motion
that if a court-appointed receiver
were to be appointed, the NBA’s
constitution allows for the league’s
owners to put that team “under
the management and control”
of Stern.
Schultz also has asked Pechman to
split his lawsuit into two phases,
one for liability and the other to
determine a remedy. In a joint status
report filed Friday by attorneys for
both sides, the team said it will
oppose that request.
Bennett has called Schultz’s
lawsuit “baseless” and
without merit.
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