Las Vegas Review-Journal

LVCVA tells staff to fight promoter

Meddling alleged in Strip race plans

- By Richard N. Velotta

The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority board of directors has authorized its staff to proceed with legal action against a Henderson-based promotiona­l group intent on blocking the agency from hosting a Formula One car race.

In a unanimous vote Tuesday, the board gave President and CEO Steve Hill permission to file a court action against P2M Motorsport­s LLC and seek an order that a nondisclos­ure agreement P2M holds is “void, unenforcea­ble and inapplicab­le” to the LVCVA’S efforts to bring a Formula One race to the Strip.

Formula One vehicles are high-performanc­e, open-cockpit, open-wheel cars, and their races are followed by millions of fans around the world. Formula One fans are known for traveling worldwide to see races on courses that often are set up on city streets.

The LVCVA’S action comes on the heels of a lawsuit filed March 3 in District Court by Formula One World Championsh­ip Ltd. and

Liberty Media Corp. against P2M.

According to that lawsuit, Formula One World Championsh­ip, a London company that holds the worldwide rights to Formula One racing, has been trying since 2013 to re-establish a race in Las Vegas after staging races in Southern Nevada in the 1980s. The Caesars Palace Grand Prix was last run in 1981.

Formula One, which was sold to Englewood, Colorado-based Liberty Media Corp. in January 2017, had discussion­s with P2M on a Las Vegas race eight years ago, but a contract was never signed giving P2M a promotiona­l role for the event, the lawsuit said.

After Liberty acquired Formula One, P2M and its owner, Farid Shidfar, continued to try to convince Liberty that it should promote the race, though no contract had been signed.

“Formula One never committed to working with P2M in its efforts to hold a race in Las Vegas,” the lawsuit said. “But that did not stop P2M from falsely holding itself out to others as Formula One’s organizer and promoter.”

The LVCVA entered the picture when P2M approached it and R&R Partners, the LVCVA’S contracted marketing and advertisin­g consultant, in March 2017 and persuaded them to sign nondisclos­ure agreements forbidding the LVCVA to communicat­e with anyone but P2M to establish a race.

Despite that, Formula One reached out to the LVCVA with its views.

“P2M’S threats (from the nondisclos­ure agreements) were legally and factually empty,” the lawsuit said. “As a direct result of P2M’S wrongful interferen­ce, Formula One has been unable to contract with LVCVA or R&R to bring a race to the Strip.”

The Formula One-liberty Media lawsuit asks that the companies receive general, compensato­ry, punitive and exemplary damages from P2M.

Review-journal efforts to get comments from P2M or Shidfar on Wednesday by email or phone were unsuccessf­ul.

The cost to the LVCVA to enter the legal fray would be a $1,530 filing fee. Las Vegas Mayor Carolyn Goodman, an LVCVA board member, asked if the organizati­on could be liable for any other expenses in the lawsuit. Staff representa­tives said it was possible but not likely that the LVCVA could be asked to pay legal fees if it loses in court.

 ?? Luca Bruno The Associated Press file ?? The LVCVA wants to bring back a Formula One race to Las Vegas. The last one was held in the 1980s.
Luca Bruno The Associated Press file The LVCVA wants to bring back a Formula One race to Las Vegas. The last one was held in the 1980s.

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