Judge warns lost cell phone and records represent ‘conspicuous offense’ in latest UFC anti-trust case

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Judge warns lost cell phone and records represent ‘conspicuous offense’ in latest UFC anti-trust case

UFC chiefs Dana White and Hunter Campbell were responding to questions in a Nevada court this past week regarding the lack of disclosure material for another series of anti-trust lawsuits launched by the fighters.

Like Lay v. Zuffa — which ended in a $375 million settlement for fighters from 2012 to 2017 — Johnson v. Zuffa accused the UFC of using monopoly power to artificially suppress fighter pay this time starting in 2017. Cirkunov v. Zuffa argues that UFC fighters who signed class action arbitration clauses are still subject to Johnson v. Zuffa must be able to participate, and Davis v. Zuffa represents fighters outside the UFC who claim they have been harmed by the UFC’s anti-competitive behavior.

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All of these antitrust cases are being handled simultaneously by Judge Richard Boulware, the same judge who oversaw the Ley v. Zuffa settlement. According to the fighter’s attorneys, years’ worth of communications from White, Campbell, and UFC lawyer Tracy Long were completely missing from discovery documents, leading to this past week’s embezzlement hearing.

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