WSOP Champ Sued for $6 Million

RollTide72

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LAS VEGAS (AP) -- Jamie Gold's win at the World Series of Poker might be only half as sweet.

A Nevada judge has frozen half of the $12 million top prize after a Gold acquaintance sued, saying the two men agreed to split the winnings.

Bruce Crispin Leyser, a Los Angeles-based TV development executive, alleges in a suit filed Monday in Clark County District Court that Gold, a former Hollywood talent agent, agreed in July to split his winnings in exchange for Leyser helping him find celebrities to play in the main event while wearing the "Bodog" label of an offshore Internet gambling site.

Bodog paid the $10,000 entry fee for Gold, who beat 8,772 players to win the world's largest poker tournament.

Leyser alleges he fulfilled his end of the deal -- getting Scooby Doo star Matthew Lillard and Punk'd comedian Dax Shepard to wear the brand -- but claimed Gold has refused to hand over $6 million.

After winning the tournament, Gold said he would share the money with friends and supporters.

Clark County District Judge Kathy Hardcastle issued a temporary restraining order Monday preventing the Rio hotel-casino, site of the poker tourney, from disbursing $6 million for 15 days. A hearing was set for Sept. 1 to determine whether the freeze would continue.

Leyser said he has evidence to support his claim -- an Aug. 10 voicemail left by Gold just hours before play began at the final table.

"I promise you -- you can keep this recording on my word -- there's no possible way you're not going to get your half ... after taxes," it says, according to the lawsuit. "You've trusted me the whole way, you can trust me a little bit more. I promise you there's no way anybody will go anywhere with your money. It's your money."

Gold's publicist Alfred Hopton said Gold's lawyers would issue a response later Thursday.

Harrah's Entertainment Inc., which owns the Rio, declined comment.

"Harrah's does not comment on pending legal matters, particularly those in which it is not directly involved," the company said in a statement.
 

vinnie

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Looks like he's pulling the old worm44 :scared :scared :scared
 

BleedDodgerBlue

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the story makes zero sense.

why would gold care who wore the bodog brand. he qualified from there. he doesn't own the book or have investments in it. why would he pay someone else to get celebrities to wear the label of the squarest book out there.

if he does have ownership or interests in it, hello jail time.

guy is a putz anyway.
 

RollTide72

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the story makes zero sense.

why would gold care who wore the bodog brand. he qualified from there. he doesn't own the book or have investments in it. why would he pay someone else to get celebrities to wear the label of the squarest book out there.

if he does have ownership or interests in it, hello jail time.

guy is a putz anyway.

Exactly... plus if the only two "celebrities" Leyser could get were these two, "...Leyser alleges he fulfilled his end of the deal -- getting Scooby Doo star Matthew Lillard and Punk'd comedian Dax Shepard to wear the brand -- but claimed Gold has refused to hand over $6 million." they aren't worth $6 let alone $6M.
 

Tha Animal

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Maybe that explains why he claimed he didnt want to win the tournament. He said it was because he didnt want to be a celebrity... but it looks to me now that he just didnt want to split any of the money.
 

hedman

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This coupled with his alleged $2 million tip to the dealers would leave this guy with around $4 mil pretax or $2.6 million, not bad, but not $12 million.
 
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