Las Vegas Sands hid evidence in former executive's lawsuit-court
By Peter Henderson
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept 14
(Reuters) - Las Vegas Sands deceived a Nevada court in an attempt to stall a
lawsuit by the former head of its Macau operations, a state judge ruled on
Friday, fining the casino operator and abridging its right to object in a fight
over key evidence.
The ruling gives former Sands China Chief Executive Steve Jacobs new room to
pursue his wrongful termination case, which has become a public fight over the
leadership and business methods used by Sands Chief Executive Sheldon
Adelson.
Adelson is a prominent Republican Party donor, as well as one of the richest
men in the world, who led U.S. casinos into Macau, a gambling market which
dwarfs Las Vegas.
Jacobs contends Adelson directed him to investigate officials in the Chinese
gambling haven for information to use against them and that Adelson told him to
hire a Macau government official in a potential conflict of U.S. anti-bribery
law.
The U.S. Department of Justice, Securities and Exchange Commission and Nevada
casino regulators have all launched investigations in the wake of Jacobs'
charges.
Sands has denied Jacobs' claims and says the former executive exceeded his
authority and conducted "improper acts" before he was fired in 2010, the year
after he was hired.
At issue are emails and other electronic data sought by Jacobs. Sands China,
a subsidiary of U.S.-based Las Vegas Sands Corp, told the court the data could
not be removed from Macau due to a local data protection law.
"The transferred data had already been copied; the copy removed from Macau;
and reviewed in Las Vegas by representatives of Las Vegas Sands," District Court
Judge Elizabeth Gonzalez wrote in a ruling published on Friday.
Sands' repeated inaccurate statements over several months showed an intention
to deceive the court, and the purpose appeared to be to stall the discovery
process, she wrote.
"The Defendants concealed the existence of the transferred data from this
Court," she concluded.
As punishment, she said the casino company could not use the Macau data
privacy law as a defense against producing documents, a clear procedural win for
the fired executive.
She also fined Sands $25,000 and some plaintiff's attorney fees. The ruling
came after three days of testimony this week.
Neither Sands nor Jacobs' attorney immediately responded to a request for
comment.
http://in.reuters.com/article/2012/09/14/lasvegassands-lawsuit-idINL1E8KEHFO20120914
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