E-mails reveal Sonics owners intended to bolt from Seattle

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Jun 13, 2002
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E-mails reveal Sonics owners intended to bolt from Seattle

By Jim Brunner
Seattle Times staff reporter

E-mails obtained by lawyers for the city of Seattle show Sonics owners were talking enthusiastically last April about moving the franchise to Oklahoma City — despite telling the public and the NBA they were still interested in keeping the team here.

The city cited the e-mails in a motion filed Wednesday in a New York federal court seeking to enforce a subpoena for NBA financial documents and other records.

On April 17 last year, team co-owners Clay Bennett, Aubrey McClendon and Tom Ward talked about whisking the Sonics away to Oklahoma as soon as possible even though it would mean breaching the KeyArena lease, according to the city's motion filed in U.S. District Court in New York City.

"Is there any way to move here [Oklahoma City] for next season or are we doomed to have another lame duck season in Seattle?" Ward wrote.

Bennett replied: "I am a man possessed! Will do everything we can. Thanks for hanging with me boys, the game is getting started!"

Ward: "That's the spirit!! I am willing to help any way I can to watch ball here [in Oklahoma City] next year."

McClendon: "Me too, thanks Clay!"

That exchange occurred just after the Washington Legislature refused to authorize taxpayer money for a $500 million Renton arena Bennett had proposed.

In an e-mail exchange later in April, Bennett told McClendon it was "quite likely" the team would play in Seattle another year but that he was "attempting quietly and without litigation" to "work through the lease."

Bennett's spokesman Dan Mahoney had no immediate comment Wednesday night. NBA spokesman Tim Frank said the league would have no comment.

When his Renton-arena plan failed last April, Bennett said publicly that there was "little hope" of the Sonics remaining in Seattle. But he continued to insist he'd explore any reasonable arena plan to keep the team here.

Seattle City Attorney Tom Carr said the e-mails reinforce what many Sonics fans have suspected all along — that Bennett's group never had any intention of keeping the Sonics in Seattle.

"We all believed it. We didn't know it. Now we know it," Carr said.

The city obtained thousands of e-mails from Bennett's ownership group, the Professional Basketball Club, as part of its lawsuit seeking to hold the Sonics to the team's KeyArena lease through September 2010. Carr said those e-mails provide further evidence that Bennett's group did not live up to its promise — made when it purchased the team in 2006 — to make a good-faith effort through October 2007 to keep the team in Seattle.

The city's immediate goal in filing Wednesday's motion in New York is to enforce a subpoena for 20 categories of internal NBA records, including financial statements from every team in the league.

The city's filing in New York, written by Paul Lawrence, an attorney with K&L Gates, also argues that Bennett lied to NBA Commissioner David Stern last year about his ownership group's intentions.

Last August, Stern was angry about comments by McClendon that appeared in an Oklahoma newspaper. McClendon, the billionaire founder and chief executive of Chesapeake Energy, told The Journal Record, "we didn't buy the team to keep it in Seattle; we hoped to come here."

Stern e-mailed Bennett that if McClendon really made that remark there would be a "HUGE fine." Indeed, Stern later imposed a $250,000 fine on McClendon.

Bennett apologized in a lengthy e-mail to Stern, praising the NBA commissioner as "a role model and an extraordinarily gifted executive" and "just one of my favorite people on earth."

"I would never breach your trust. As absolutely remarkable as it may seem, Aubrey and I have NEVER discussed moving the Sonics to Oklahoma City, nor have I discussed it with ANY other member of our ownership group."

The city's federal-court motion says that statement was "a cover up" and could not be accurate given Bennett's earlier e-mail exchanges with McClendon and Ward.

The city also filed copies of e-mail in which Bennett's ownership group reacted to its purchase of the team in July 2006 from the Seattle owners led by Starbuck's CEO Howard Schultz.

In one e-mail sent to Bennett and Ward, McClendon celebrated the news with the subject line: "the OKLAHOMA CITY SONIC BOOM (or maybe SONIC BOOMERS!) baby!!!!!!!!!!"

Other e-mails cited by Seattle's court filing reveal early discussions with Oklahoma City leaders about incentives to move the Sonics.

In June 2007, Tim Romani, an arena consultant for the Sonics, e-mailed Bennett that he would start "reaching out" to Oklahoma City Manager Jim Couch to "engage him in deal negotiations," the e-mails said.

Oklahoma City voters in March approved $120 million in taxes to upgrade the city's Ford Center arena and build an NBA practice facility.

Jim Brunner: 206-515-5628 or [email protected]

Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
 
May 9, 2002
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didn't we already know all this?
There was suspicion, but this is HARD evidence.

From ESPN's blog's:

Reading Clay Bennett's E-Mail

April 10, 2008 11:56 AM


Unbelievable.

Attorneys for the City of Seattle, as part of their legal tussle with Sonic owners over the KeyArena lease, have discovered some shocking emails.

Jim Brunner of the Seattle Times tells the story. (The Times has also posted copies of actual emails. Like this.)

I implore you to read this entire email exchange between Sonics Chairman Clay Bennett and NBA Commissioner David Stern, in which Bennett swears that he and his co-owners always intended to keep the team in Seattle. Their conversation comes in August 2007, in the wake of the mini-scandal when one of Bennett's co-owners, Aubrey McClendon, was quoted last summer saying that the owners always intended to move the team to Oklahoma City:

I am concerned that you may feel I have betrayed your trust. David you know how I feel about our relationship both personally and professionally. You are among a very few, notwithstanding our relative brief actual physical time together that have significantly affected my life. I view you as a role model as an extraordinarily gifted executive, a deep and compassionate thinker, and a person with a rare and unique charisma that brings out the best in everyone you touch. You are just one of my favorite people on earth and I so cherish our relationship Sonics business aside. I would never breach your trust. As absolutely remarkable as it may seem, Aubrey and I have NEVER discussed moving the Sonics to Oklahoma City, nor have I discussed it with ANY other member of our ownership group. I have been passionately committed to our process in Seattle ...

Now, let that soliloquy ring in your head as I tell you that Clay Bennett's emails are also littered with what could best be described as "smoking gun" type evidence that the Sonic owners, despite a contractual obligation to make a good faith effort to stay, always intended to leave Seattle.

For instance, in the Seattle Times, Brunner writes about many examples that precede Bennett's pledge to Stern:

  • "In one e-mail [at the time of the team's purchase] sent to Bennett and Ward, McClendon celebrated the news with the subject line: 'the OKLAHOMA CITY SONIC BOOM (or maybe SONIC BOOMERS!) baby!!!!!!!!!!'"
  • "On April 17 last year, team co-owners Clay Bennett, Aubrey McClendon and Tom Ward talked about whisking the Sonics away to Oklahoma as soon as possible even though it would mean breaching the KeyArena lease, according to the city's motion filed in U.S. District Court in New York City. 'Is there any way to move here [Oklahoma City] for next season or are we doomed to have another lame duck season in Seattle?' Ward wrote. Bennett replied: 'I am a man possessed! Will do everything we can. Thanks for hanging with me boys, the game is getting started!' Ward: 'That's the spirit!! I am willing to help any way I can to watch ball here [in Oklahoma City] next year.' McClendon: 'Me too, thanks Clay!'"
  • "In June 2007, Tim Romani, an arena consultant for the Sonics, e-mailed Bennett that he would start 'reaching out' to Oklahoma City Manager Jim Couch to 'engage him in deal negotiations,' the e-mails said."
  • In an e-mail exchange later in April, Bennett told McClendon it was 'quite likely' the team would play in Seattle another year but that he was 'attempting quietly and without litigation' to 'work through the lease.'"
    Unless someone comes forward to prove these emails are not what they appear to be, I'd say that's game, set, match, for anyone who wants to prove that Clay Bennett has acted like a weasel.

It's also convincing in terms of documenting that the team's efforts to stay have not been in good faith.

But ... does any of this influence David Stern's support for Clay Bennett's ownership group? Does it affect the upcoming vote on relocating the team? Does this inspire a meaningful new level of public outcry? What new legal challenges might this present to relocation?

In short, does this do anything to help Sonic fans keep their team? We'll see.
 
Sep 4, 2002
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On April 17 last year, team co-owners Clay Bennett, Aubrey McClendon and Tom Ward talked about whisking the Sonics away to Oklahoma as soon as possible even though it would mean breaching the KeyArena lease, according to the city's motion filed in U.S. District Court in New York City.

"Is there any way to move here [Oklahoma City] for next season or are we doomed to have another lame duck season in Seattle?" Ward wrote.
thats fucked up, fuck those guys, and fuck the previous owners for selling it to them
 
Jun 13, 2002
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#9
I also liked what Shaq said about the Sonics moving:

"I will tell my kids no such team exists (referring to a OKC Sonics team)."
LOL I heard that in my head as Shaq's voice as I read it.

thats fucked up, fuck those guys, and fuck the previous owners for selling it to them
What if Schultz was lied to by them as well? From what I know, he lied to the organization and had certain people in the organization believing they would stay.
 
Apr 25, 2002
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#10
Jesus, this is some good shit.

I just hope the city grows a pair and does NOT settle. Take it all the way to court, try to keep them here for 2 more years, maybe Bennett will lose patience and try to get another team, we just need time.

But even if given a 100% guarantee the team is leaving after 2010, I still want to hold them to that lease. Anything that will piss Bennett off (and two more years of the Sonics in Seattle would really piss him off) I want to happen.

I've actually even gone over in my head what I'd do if I bumped into him down in these parts, b/c it could happen. They're retarded in Oklahoma on the real, I was listening to their sports radio when I was driving down here through OK, and they don't know what the hell's going on, they're just desperate for a team.
 
Jan 10, 2008
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Shcultz didnt give a fuck who bought the sonics he new the deal. He was pissy because he didnt get his way with a new arena he wanted us the taxpayers to pay for it. Fuckin sellout piece of shit sells coffee for 4 dollars and wants us to pay.

Clay Bennett is the brown nosing cocksmokin thief. Here is the proof;

Bennett apologized in a lengthy e-mail to Stern, praising the NBA commissioner as "a role model and an extraordinarily gifted executive" and "just one of my favorite people on earth."