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DFS Class Action Names MLB, NBA, Jerry Jones, Kraft Holding Co, Others (1 Viewer)

BassNBrew

Footballguy
From ESPN

An amended class-action suit filed Saturday targets not only embattled daily fantasy sports operators DraftKings and FanDuel, but also the companies' high-profile investors from the sports world, including the NBA, NHL and Major League Baseball, a holding company owned by New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, a hospitality firm co-owned by Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones and the New York Yankees, and MSG Sports and Entertainment, owned by the New York Knicks' James Dolan.

An amended class-action suit filed Saturday targets Major League Baseball, along with the NBA, NHL and high-profile investors from the sports world, alleging negligence, breach of contract unjust enrichment and Civil RICO. Tom Szczerbowski/Getty Images

In the nationwide class-action suit filed in the Southern District of Florida, plaintiffs and daily fantasy players Antonio Gomez and John Gerecs amended their existing complaint to charge 40 individuals with claims of negligence, breach of contract, unjust enrichment and Civil RICO, which targets individuals engaged in organized crime. The plaintiffs, who are represented by Florida attorney Ervin Gonzalez, claim DraftKings and FanDuel "saturate television, particularly commercials airing during sporting events, with seductive advertising."

In addition to the sports leagues, media companies, banks, credit cards and successful daily fantasy players also were named as defendants. The 132-page complaint, first reported by Sports Illustrated, alleges parties were engaged, facilitated or invested in illegal gambling.

"As far back as 1991, Florida's then Attorney General Robert A. Butterworth opined in an Advisor Legal Opinion that fantasy sports gaming, structured like FanDuel and DraftKings activities, constituted illegal gambling under Florida law," the complaint states.

Although dozens of class-action suits have been filed against DraftKings and FanDuel in the last three months, a suit filed Saturday in Florida is believed to be the first to include the sports leagues. AP Photo, Reuters/Lucas Jackson

Although dozens of class-action suits have been filed against DraftKings and FanDuel in the last three months, this suit is believed to be the first to include the sports leagues. MLB, the NHL, the Kraft Group and Jones' Legends Hospitality LLC have equity deals with DraftKings. The NBA has equity in FanDuel.

Major League Baseball and the NBA each declined comment to ESPN on Saturday.

The suit accuses three successful daily fantasy players of being "apex predators or sharks bettors" and claims they used "elaborate computer programs and algorithms called 'robots,' 'spiders,' 'scrapers,' 'sniping software, 'scripts' and other methods to gain an unfair advantage over unsuspecting Class Representatives and Class Members."

According to multiple legal sources, a Florida grand jury is investigating DraftKings and FanDuel. At the same time, the two daily fantasy operators are trying to stop New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman from stopping them from operating in the Empire State. DraftKings and FanDuel will be in New York Supreme Court on Wednesday to argue they are legal under state law and that Schneiderman's request for a preliminary injunction should be denied.

 
Anyone can sue anyone. Putting all these together into one case only makes it sound more crackpot. Like when the local homeless guy sues the mayor, the sheriff, the governor, the President, the Vice President, the Secretary of Defense, Secretary of State, the Pope, the Queen of England, and his high school guidance counselor.
Yeah, sure buddy.. It's exactly like that. Lay off the crackpot.

 
This is a joke - just a couple of scumbags who can't handle a loss, thinking they are now entitled to a handout. These clowns have no chance of winning, but the lawyers are laughing all the way to the bank.

 
Idk - I've played FanDuel this year for the first time ever... quadrupled my money so far (and they still owe me about $150 of their deposit bonus). I guess I get all the vitriol of people losing money, but it seems pretty simple to me...

If you stick to cash games (50/50s, double-ups, etc.) you basically need to be above average for the week and you win money. I consider myself to be an above average fantasy football player, and I'm winning money as a result.

IMO the tournaments are the equivalent of the lottery, only with slightly more control. That's where the FD and Draftkings employees got in trouble (ownership %s don't affect a 50/50 100-team pool nearly as much as a 100,000 entry tournament). To win a tournament you have to hit on every one of your players, and have players that no one else has... that's the lottery, IMO. It's like filling out a perfect NCAA bracket... fun to try, but most of the time you're just chasing your tail.

I tend to be a bit more live and let live in my approach to society, and I think these lawsuits are a ridiculous display of our litigious society run amuck. You entered a contest. You lost. How's it any different from buying a lottery ticket and losing? Suing the leagues, the banks, etc. Just a bit out of control.

 
I was happy playing DFS until I started Devonta Freeman in all my lineups yesterday. now I think the whole thing is a scam.

 

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