thehog
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Race Radio said:Lance does not have $9 million liquid.
Correct. No cash flow. There could be a fire sale!
Maybe those 7 jerseys in the frame are up for grabs!
Race Radio said:Lance does not have $9 million liquid.
Scott SoCal said:Yep. This is about more than money, at least that is my sense. The SCA attorney Tillotson appears to want his pound of flesh.
Interestingly, I have an attorney buddy who thinks this may be a downfall for SCA. According to him, if suit is brought "on principle" it's almost always a loser.
thehog said:Correct. No cash flow. There could be a fire sale!
Maybe those 7 jerseys in the frame are up for grabs!
Scott SoCal said:Yep. This is about more than money, at least that is my sense. The SCA attorney Tillotson appears to want his pound of flesh.
Interestingly, I have an attorney buddy who thinks this may be a downfall for SCA. According to him, if suit is brought "on principle" it's almost always a loser.
Race Radio said:Lance does not have $9 million liquid.
BroDeal said:SCA probably has a weak case. The settlement undoubtedly contained language to make the deal final. Setting that aside will be very difficult. A lot of time has passed, ten years in the case of the 2002 bonus. SCA will ratchet up the pressure until they get the maximum amount of money that Armstrong is willing to part with in exchange for not being deposed and not paying any more legal fees. They now know that is worth at least $1M. The final number will likely be $3-4M.
Velodude said:Armstrong's only exit would be to settle on SCA's terms to avoid being exposed under cross-examination and create a run of actions against him
M Sport said:We currently have a demand of 12 million and an offer of 1 million, I would imagine the settlement would be around 9 million done and dusted by the end of November.
Dr. Maserati said:Tillotson is working for SCA at Bob Hammans behest - that's (IMO) who is calling the shots, and Bob is a professional gambler.
The original case was lost, a poor gamble - yet it did not sink the company, basically a write-off.
But this is new - anything they retrieve will be looked at like a bonus, throw it on the pile. So i agree it is a lot more personal - and Hamman will work out his odds and risk and as LA appears vulnerable he may well stick him for a large fee.
Interesting game.
autologous said:It's a shame the legal expenses are gong to be so large.
How fun it would be to have a fund similar to the Kimmage defense fund!
A Get Lance Under Oath Fund, encouraging SCA to refuse any settlement. I'd chip in.
Too bad that even Kimmage level support of 80,000 would only be a drop in the 2-3 million dollar bucket.
Ryo Hazuki said:how would you know?
thehog said:Not at all. Their in-house lawyer who's probably on 150-200k has sent two letters and has already been offered $1m.
They'll have 12m in two months and have spent nothing.
They don't need QC's unless they go to court. Which won't be happening.
Velodude said:And the in-house lawyer is an ongoing SCA fixed cost whether there is a LA case or not.
By QC's you mean local US eminent litigation specialists?![]()
Velodude said:And the in-house lawyer is an ongoing SCA fixed cost whether there is a LA case or not.
By QC's you mean local US eminent litigation specialists?![]()
Merckx index said:Let me play the devil’s (i.e., LA’s) advocate here. The SCA agreement stipulated that if LA were the winner of the Tours, SCA owed him the money. At the time of the trial in 2005, LA was the winner, so they did owe him the money.
SCA is now arguing that since LA is no longer the winner of those Tours, they don’t owe him the money. But there was nothing in the SCA agreement that said that if, in the future, LA lost those titles, the agreement would be void. On the contrary, there was a clause that said the agreement was final, and could not be changed.
It seems to me that for SCA to have a claim, they have to argue that the USADA/UCI decisions mean that LA never was the winner of the TDF. If that were the case, then the original agreement would indeed be invalidated. He was awarded the money fraudulently, under false pretenses. But that is not what the USADA decision says. It says he no longer is the winner, from this point in time forward. His loss of the titles now does not mean that he was not the winner at the time of the trial, and again, after the trial, the decision was supposed to be final.
USADA/UCI can strip LA of his titles, but they can't go back in time and say that in 2005 LA was not the winner. It seems to me that LA's lawyers could say USADA's inability to do this means that SCA has no case for reversing the decision. How would SCA respond?
thehog said:Haven't we been here 1000 times before?
Winning or losing the Tour titles is irrelevant.
If the original and subsequent contracts along with any settlement agreements are entered into by one party in a fraudulent manner unbeknown by the other party then all monies shall be returned plus damages.
The basis of the original contract were formed under false pretences. They're not going to look at the language of the contract as the "fraud" took place in the initiation of the discussion prior to contact signing.
Can't understand why you guys keep missing this obvious point.
ChewbaccaD said:No, it isn't. The problem with your chain of events is that there was an interrupter, that being the settlement agreement. For some reason, you want to pretend that the settlement agreement is irrelevant, and it just isn't.* Sorry, but you're wrong.
* Unless Lance settles.
ChewbaccaD said:No, it isn't. The problem with your chain of events is that there was an interrupter, that being the settlement agreement. For some reason, you want to pretend that the settlement agreement is irrelevant, and it just isn't.* Sorry, but you're wrong.
* Unless Lance settles.
thehog said:If the original and subsequent contracts along with any settlement agreements are entered into by one party in a fraudulent manner unbeknown by the other party then all monies shall be returned plus damages.
The basis of the original contract were formed under false pretences. They're not going to look at the language of the contract as the "fraud" took place in the initiation of the discussion prior to contact signing.