San Diego Union-Tribune

FUTURE OF KAABOO STILL IN QUESTION

More lawsuits filed over music festival last held in 2019

- BY GEORGE VARGA

The saga of the dormant KAABOO music festival has taken a new twist, with lawsuits in San Diego and Delaware that pit the event’s new owners — whose identity appears to be shrouded in mystery — against the San Diego Padres.

The latest turn comes three years after KAABOO concluded its five-year run at the Del Mar Fairground­s in 2019.

It was then that the festival announced a new, multiyear partnershi­p with the Padres and a 2020 move to the major league baseball team’s Petco Park stadium downtown. That prompted the fairground­s’ board to threaten a breach-of-contract lawsuit, although it appears no litigation ensued.

Concurrent­ly, the name of the upscale three-day music and food festival was changed from KAABOO Del Mar to KAABOO San Diego. The event’s social media page names were changed to reflect the new moniker.

But the 2020 edition of KAABOO, scheduled for Sept. 18-20 of that year, was shelved because of the COVID-19 pandemic before any lineup of performers was ever announced.

Last year’s edition never took place, despite a statement by the event’s producers in May 2021 promising “exciting news and announceme­nts coming soon via social and email.”

There have been no further announceme­nts, and KAABOO’s social media pages have not been updated in the past year. To further complicate matters, the festival appears to have undergone at least three changes of ownership since the 2019 partnershi­p with the Padres was announced.

Now, the newest owners and at least one of the past owners of KAABOO have teamed up against the Padres in a pair of lawsuits quietly filed earlier this year in

San Diego Superior Court and the Superior Court of the State of Delaware.

Both suits allege that the Padres are preventing KAABOO from returning to Del Mar this fall, or in the future, unless certain conditions are met. The suits further allege that the Padres are asking KAABOO to pay approximat­ely $2 million in return for the team — which operates and co-owns Petco Park — voiding its contract with the festival and allowing KAABOO to be held in Del Mar, or anywhere else within a 100-mile radius of the baseball stadium.

The two sides strongly disagree over the partnershi­p the Padres and KAABOO’s then-owners entered in 2019, which KAABOO maintains is a written-term agreement that was never finalized.

“The only thing I’ll say on the record, because it’s a pending legal matter, is that we don’t comment on the record,” Padres CEO Erik Greupner told The San Diego Union-Tribune on Friday.

Del Mar return murky

The feasibilit­y of KAABOO returning to Del Mar is difficult to gauge, at least for now.

In a written statement provided to the Union-Tribune on Friday, Del Mar Fairground­s CEO Carlene Moore said: “We are not in negotiatio­ns or discussion­s with KAABOO.” There was no response to a follow-up question asking if any negotiatio­ns or discussion­s had taken place previously.

“The bottom line is, the Padres have a binding agreement with KAABOO,” said a person familiar with the lawsuit, who would only speak to the Union-Tribune on the condition of anonymity.

With or without a new iteration of KAABOO on the horizon, an untold number of people who purchased tickets for the festival’s 2020 edition have repeatedly been stymied in their efforts to obtain refunds from KAABOO or its ticketing agency, See Tickets. According to the weekly music industry magazine Billboard, the festival owes at least $500,000 in refunds to ticket holders.

“We paid $3,400 for a pair of 2020 VIP tickets,” said Sacramento resident Jon Gianulias, who had planned to attend that year’s edition of KAABOO with his wife, Nica.

In lieu of a refund, the couple accepted the festival’s offer to give them two free general admission tickets if they rolled their 2020 VIP passes over to 2021. When last year’s edition of

KAABOO failed to materializ­e, the couple made repeated attempts to obtain a refund.

“No one ever responded,” Nica Gianulias said.

“We’re not lawyers,” her husband added, “but if anyone is filing a class-action suit, we’d join in.”

So would San Marcos resident Kara Rentch, who with a friend bought six general admission tickets in late 2019 for the following year’s edition of KAABOO. She, too, has failed in repeated efforts to obtain a refund.

“I tried everything and never got a response. I want my money back,” Rentch said. “I would think they’d want to respond, refund and apologize, but none of that has happened.”

Silent treatment

The radio silence from KAABOO is not new.

Between 2020 and now, representa­tives for KAABOO repeatedly did not respond to inquiries from the Union-Tribune. One exception, in mid-2021, came via email from an unnamed KAABOO representa­tive who declined to identify themselves. Their email address no longer exists.

In Union-Tribune articles about the festival’s unknown status published in 2020, 2021 and earlier this year, representa­tives for the Padres said they were in the dark about KAABOO.

Or, as team CEO Greupner told the Union-Tribune early this year: “Unfortunat­ely, we don’t have any regular communicat­ions with them and are not sure what they’re planning. We don’t have any clarity from KAABOO that they are going to hold the festival at the ballpark.”

KAABOO is represente­d in its San Diego lawsuit by the Los Angeles law firm of Carlton Fields LLP and in the Delaware suit by the Pittsburgh office of the internatio­nal law firm K&L Gates.

Representa­tives for both law firms did not respond to messages left by the UnionTribu­ne. Neither did Jason Felts, who was involved in the production of KAABOO Del Mar for several years as well as the lone editions of KAABOO Grand Cayman and KAABOO Texas, both held in 2019.

The Texas event, at AT&T Stadium near Dallas, was poorly attended and lost $19 million, according to Billboard. At least two lawsuits by investors have been filed as a result.

In 2018, Felts founded Virgin Fest, which acquired KAABOO in September

2019 for $10 million from its co-founders, Bryan E. Gordon and Seth Wolkov. Two months later, Gordon and Wolkov sued Felts, who they alleged had pursued “a Trojan Horse strategy” to “infiltrate KAABOO” and “take possession of its most valuable assets.”

Felts and Virgin Fest countersue­d, alleging that Gordon had misreprese­nted KAABOO’s financial viability. Gordon was also sued in 2019 by his former wife, Molly Kingston, who alleged that he had misappropr­iated $22 million from the couple’s holding company to help fund KAABOO.

In 2020, Virgin Fest — facing a threat of foreclosur­e from an unnamed lender — sold the rights to KAABOO and the rights to use its name and brand to the lender outright. The lender in turn transferre­d those rights to other companies.

The 2022 San Diego lawsuit against the Padres was filed on behalf of two companies, Live Holdings and Festival Licensing and Acquisitio­n Corporatio­n LLC. Both are registered in Delaware, which does not require companies to identify who owns them.

A third company — Fest Founders LLC, which is registered in the Cayman Islands and is not a plaintiff in the lawsuit — on June 2021 transferre­d licensing rights to KAABOO’s name and brand to Live Holdings and Festival Licensing and Acquisitio­n Corporatio­n LLC.

As of last summer, Gordon was facing at least six lawsuits related to KAABOO. He is not part of the two latest suits filed by KAABOO’s new owners against the Padres. But Virgin Fest, which Felts stepped down from in 2020, is. So is Ownco, a company Felts founded in 2019 that is now known as San Diego Fest Ownco.

“What exacerbate­s this,” the person familiar with the lawsuit told the Union-Tribune, “is that the people the Padres entered into an agreement with have told the Padres they are no longer involved with KAABOO. However, they are involved in the litigation, so it’s all kind of confoundin­g, which is par for the course with the last couple of iterations of KAABOO.

“It seems like they just leave ruin, destructio­n and lawsuits in their wake, and have a history of doing so.”

 ?? K.C. ALFRED U-T FILE ?? Fans surround the Grandview Stage at KAABOO Del Mar. The festival was sold to Virgin Fest on Sept. 18, 2019. The event has not been held since that year, and owners have not said when it will be held again.
K.C. ALFRED U-T FILE Fans surround the Grandview Stage at KAABOO Del Mar. The festival was sold to Virgin Fest on Sept. 18, 2019. The event has not been held since that year, and owners have not said when it will be held again.

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