Los Angeles Times

Activists seeks ouster of Pistons owner over prison telecom stake.

- By Laurence Darmiento

An activist group is pressuring the NBA to oust Detroit Pistons owner Tom Gores unless his private equity f irm divests itself of a prison telephone company.

Amid a growing national referendum on criminal justice reform, Gores stepped down from the board of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art two months ago over the deal, and now the Los Angeles billionair­e finds himself under fire again.

Worth Rises, a New York nonprofit, made the demands in a letter sent Dec. 10 to NBA Commission­er Adam Silver and the league’s board of governors, contending Gores has failed to live up to pledges to lower the rates charged by Securus Technologi­es.

It accuses the suburban Dallas telecom of “pricegougi­ng families — that are disproport­ionately Black, brown, and low- income — as they struggle to keep in touch with their incarcerat­ed loved ones,” and cites the league’s commitment to the Black Lives Matter movement.

“Put simply, he is a prison profiteer who has no place on the board of one of our nation’s favorite cultural institutio­ns: the NBA,” the letter reads. “The NBA cannot allow Mr. Gores to whitewash his active exploitati­on of marginaliz­ed communitie­s by simply asserting that Black Lives Matter.”

In response, Mark Barnhill, a partner at Gores’ firm Platinum Equity and an alternate on the NBA’s board of governors, said in an email statement that the company is “collaborat­ing with a broad coalition of groups and individual­s on the sweeping transforma­tion of Securus Technologi­es.

“Our commitment to the community and to social justice is visible every day in impactful programs in Detroit supporting education, economic developmen­t, community involvemen­t, civic and voter engagement, athletics and philanthro­py,” the statement said.

Worth Rises founder Bianca Tylek said she received an email response from league officials encouragin­g her to take her concerns to Gores and Barnhill. She said she emailed the league back that her group had already done that over nearly two years of discussion­s with Platinum Equity.

“We have exhausted that channel. We are not going anywhere,” said Tylek, a Harvard Law School gradu

ate and former Wall Street analyst.

NBA spokesman Mike Bass said in a statement that league officials understand “Worth Rises’ passion for prison reform and have been in regular communicat­ion with Tom Gores regarding their concerns. Mr. Gores and his colleagues have had ongoing discussion­s with a number of nonprofit organizati­ons focused on similar reform and we support their efforts to address these important issues.”

The campaign against Gores began not long after his Beverly Hills private equity f irm acquired Securus for $ 1.6 billion in 2017. Last year, activists called on him to lower rates and sell the telecom, lobbying public pension funds to not invest in the latest buyout fund by Platinum Equity.

In the face of the criticism, the f irm still raised $ 10 billion, its biggest fund yet. Activists had more success this fall when they demanded Gores step down from the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, where he had been a trustee since 2006. More than 200 members of the Los Angeles arts community signed on to the effort, which was spurred by Worth Rises and Color of Change, another activist group that did not sign on to the NBA letter.

Gores has characteri­zed himself as a “change agent,” defending his ownership to the museum board during a meeting in which he talked about his efforts to lower rates and reform Securus. But Gores ultimately stepped down from the board in October, saying in his resignatio­n letter he did not realize the investment would become a “nexus for addressing the political, social, racial and economic issues roiling America today.” The letter also said he was returning his personal profits from the investment into reforming Securus.

Platinum Equity, which specialize­s in turning around troubled companies, announced in January that it had replaced management at Securus and pledged a series of reforms, including broader “rate relief.” The company, which had been accused of charging nearly $ 25 for a 15- minute call at a handful of jails, said this fall amid the museum controvers­y that it had brought the average cost of a call to less than 15 cents a minute and renegotiat­ed 58 contracts that had rates that “previously exceeded national averages,” lowering them in some cases by 60% or more.

Worth Rises is not satisf ied with the pace of reductions, contending in its news release Sunday that Securus still “routinely” charges as much as $ 15 for a 15- minute phone call. A large share of such charges is often returned to correction­s agencies to help fund their department­s in the form of commission­s, a regressive tax that activists call a kickback. Last year, the group successful­ly lobbied New York to become the first major city to offer free phone calls in jails. This year, San

Francisco became the f irst county in the nation to offer free phone calls.

The debate over prison telephone companies comes as criminal justice reform has found broad purchase, with newly elected Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. George Gascón announcing on his first day in office that he would eliminate the use of cash bail. Criminal justice activists want for- profit companies out of the system, including private prison operators and service providers, such as Securus.

Gores has said he will not sell Securus until Platinum is f inished with its changes at the company, which involve advancing its communicat­ions technology. A forced sale could also lower the price any buyer might be willing to pay for the company, now a subsidiary of Aventiv Technologi­es after a corporate reorganiza­tion. It would appear that Gores would be even less likely to want to part with the Pistons, whom he rooted for growing up in nearby Flint, Mich.

Gores acquired a controllin­g stake in the team and its suburban arena in 2011 for $ 325 million and bought out the remaining 49% stake in 2015. At the time, Forbes valued the franchise at $ 810 million. This year, Forbes said the Pistons, who play in a new downtown arena, were worth $ 1.45 billion.

Sports franchise owners have been forced to unload teams, but that typically has involved f inancial troubles or questionab­le personal behavior, such as the racist remarks made by former L. A. Clippers owner Donald Sterling and former Cincinnati Reds owner Marge Schott. NBA bylaws allow the league to revoke a team’s ownership under certain conditions by a threefourt­hs vote of owners.

David Carter, a sports business consultant and professor at USC, said leagues consider both objective metrics, such as financials, as well as subjective “intangible considerat­ions” when weighing such controvers­ies.

“Some [ subjective] things certainly rise to the level of being untenable, maybe Marge Schott with the Cincinnati Reds and Donald Sterling with the Clippers,” he said. “Certainly there is a tremendous amount of sensitivit­y right now regarding social justice, and the NBA is very concerned and always has been about its brand and staying true to what it represents, but I don’t think it’s necessaril­y that crystal clear.”

Carter expects the league and its owners to move cautiously, given how some owners might be wondering if their own business interests could stand up to scrutiny.

“Are you concerned now about Big Tech? Are you worried about Big Pharma? Do you get concerned about the oil and gas industries as opposed to clean tech and solar? I think some owners would view it as a very slippery slope, and therefore I think they would be reticent to rapidly want to wrap their arms around this,” he said.

Gores, worth an estimated $ 5.7 billion by Forbes, has forged a reputation as a progressiv­e owner who is close with his players and gives back to the Detroit community even while he lives in Southern California, where in 2017 he bought a home in the exclusive Beverly Park neighborho­od of Los Angeles for $ 38 million.

He led a campaign that raised $ 10 million for Flint amid his hometown’s water crisis, was lauded for returning the Pistons to Detroit from the suburbs and was one of the few profession­al sports team owners to support his players kneeling amid the Colin Kaepernick controvers­y. He also allowed his team’s new practice facility to serve as a polling place this year.

George Floyd’s death while in Minneapoli­s police custody this summer reinvigora­ted the Black Lives Matter movement and heightened sensitivit­ies about racial injustice. When the NBA resumed play July 30 after a hiatus for COVID- 19, “Black Lives Matter” was emblazoned in huge black letters across the court where games were played in the bubble, and on players’ jerseys.

In August, NBA players spontaneou­sly refused to play games for two days in protest of the police shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wis. NBA owners also agreed to collective­ly contribute $ 30 million annually for a decade to fund a new NBA foundation with a mission “to drive economic empowermen­t for Black communitie­s through employment and career- advancemen­t” — which was noted by Worth Rises in its letter.

To heighten awareness of its campaign, which comes days before the league starts its new season, the group took out a full- page ad in the sports section of the New York Times on Sunday that asks league owners, “If Black Lives Matter, what are you doing about Detroit Pistons owner Tom Gores?”

Tom Gores ‘ is a prison profiteer who has no place on the board of one of our nation’s favorite cultural institutio­ns: the NBA.’

— Worth Rises, an advocacy group, in a letter

to the NBA

 ?? Paul Sancya Associated Press ?? ACTIVISTS want Tom Gores to sell the Detroit Pistons unless he unloads a prison telephone company.
Paul Sancya Associated Press ACTIVISTS want Tom Gores to sell the Detroit Pistons unless he unloads a prison telephone company.

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