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SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORKCOUNTY OF SCHENECDATY
AQUEDUCT ENTERTAINMENT COMPANY, Index No. _____________LLC (f/k/a Aqueduct Entertainment Group, LLC)and RICHARD MAYS,
VERIFIED ARTICLE 78
Petitioners/Plaintiffs, PETITION
~ against ~ AND
NEW YORK STATE DIVISION OF LOTTERY; COMPLAINT FOR AHON. DAVID PATERSON, as Governor; HON. DECLARATORY JUDGMENTMALCOLM SMITH, as Senate President; HON.JOHN SAMPSON, as Senate Democratic MajorityLeader; and HON. SHELDON SILVER, asAssembly Speaker,
Respondents/Defendants.
Aqueduct Entertainment Company, LLC (AEC) and Richard Mays lodge this combined
Petition and Complaintrequesting declaratory and injunctive reliefto end the mounting and
irreparable injury they presently suffer as a result of the arbitrary, capricious, unauthorized, and
discriminatory actions taken against them by the New York State Division of Lottery (Lottery),
Governor David Paterson, Senate President Malcolm Smith, and Assembly Speaker Sheldon
Silver.
NATURE OF SPECIAL PROCEEDING AND ACTION
1. Under a procedure enacted by the New York State Legislature in 2007, the three
heads of New York State government, in January of this year, selected AEC from six competing
bidders to develop and operate a video lottery terminals facility at Aqueduct Racetrack in Queens
Borough. The contract award was unanimous and conditioned on AEC obtaining a video lottery
gaming license.
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2. Nearly a year after the bidding process had commenced and AEC had been
selected, the Assembly Speaker changed the licensing rules. One change required all members
of AECeven if they were passive investors who maintained negligible interests in the
companyto apply for a video lottery gaming license and submit highly detailed personal and
financial information to Lottery, an agency known for leaking confidential information. He
unilaterally imposed this condition and others solely on AEC, conjuring them out of thin air and
supplanting applicable video lottery gaming regulations. Indeed, the Speakers nonnegotiable
conditions were so far out of left field Lotterys general counsel called them arbitrary and
capricious.
3. Then, as if singling out AEC for unauthorized licensing requirements was not
enough, the Speaker asked the Inspector General to investigate how he (the Speaker) came to
select AEC as the top bidder jointly with the Governor and Senate President. An investigation
ensued that relied entirely on media speculation and innuendo. Numerous subpoenas were
issued and news leaks were made to pressure the subpoena recipients. But absolutely no one
associated with AEC has been accused of any wrongdoing since they did nothing improper.
4. Nonetheless, Lottery got the hint from the Speakers less-than-subtle efforts to
derail AECs selection, and it summarily found the company ineligible for a video lottery
license. The agency claimed, which was true, that AEC had not submitted individual licensing
applications for former passive investors who no longer were part of the company and who, but
for the Speakers unauthorized condition, were not required by law to be licensed. That
failure, Lottery claimed, created an appearance that AEC was concealing something because
two unrelated investigationsone the Speaker instigated and one conducted by the U.S.
Attorneywere ongoing. Of course, no concrete evidence was ever presented to Lottery by
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those agencies (or anyone else) of what AEC allegedly was hiding or from whom AEC was
hiding it. In the end, Lottery never gave AEC an opportunity to address the medias gossip
before the agency rejected the companys license application.
5. On the same day of Lotterys decision, the Governorin an unprecedented
procedure not provided for in the 2007 video lottery gaming legislationunilaterally withdrew
his support for AECs bid. Apparently, although it is by no means clear, since AECs selection
was no longer unanimous, the Governor took the Aqueduct contract from AEC and rebid it on
May 11, 2010.
6. Neither Lottery nor the Governor provided AEC adequate notice of important
deadlines in the licensing process, made decisions free of bias and conflict, or afforded AEC an
opportunity to be heard on Lotterys denial of its license application or the Governors single-
handed rescission of the Aqueduct contract. The irreparable injury AEC has suffered from
Respondents unlawful actions will be magnified exponentially when a new top bidder is
selected on August 3, 2010. Interestingly, the unauthorized licensing conditions the Speaker
specially imposed on AEC have been abandoned in the new bid process.
7. Petitioners, therefore, sue Respondents for imposing ultra vires conditions on
AEC (Count I), failing to follow administrative procedures (Count II), due process violations
(Count III), equal protection violations (Count IV), freedom of association violations (Count V),
and breaches of good-faith and fair dealing (Count VI). In support of this combined Petition and
Complaint, Petitioners state as follows:
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PARTIES
8. Aqueduct Entertainment Company, LLC, was formerly known as Aqueduct
Entertainment Group, LLC. It is a limited liability company formed, headquartered, and doing
business in New York. AECs membership includes natural persons and business entities.
9. Former Arkansas Supreme Court Justice Richard Mays is a member of AEC and
Chairman of its Board of Directors. Although he is a resident of Arkansas, he regularly does
business in New York. He sues in his official capacity as AECs Chairman and in his personal
capacity as a member of AEC.
10. The Honorable David Patterson is Governor of the State of New York. He is
being sued in his official capacity.
11. The Honorable Malcolm Smith is a New York State Senator and serves as
President of the Senate. He is being sued in his official capacity.
12. The Honorable John Sampson is a New York State Senator and serves as
Democratic Majority Leader. He is being sued in his official capacity.
13. The Honorable Sheldon Silver is a New York State Assemblyman and serves as
Speaker of the Assembly. He is being sued in his official capacity.
14. The New York State Division of Lottery is part of the New York State
government. Among other things, Lottery oversees New Yorks video lottery terminal facilities
and is responsible for issuing video lottery gaming licenses.
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JURISDICTION AND VENUE
15. This Court has jurisdiction because it has original jurisdiction over special
proceedings, because all parties may be found here, and because the material events giving rise
to this dispute occurred here.
16. This Court is the appropriate venue because Lottery is located here, because the
unlawful acts and omissions by Respondents that Petitioners challenge were committed here, and
because other material events giving rise to this dispute occurred here.
ADMINISTRATIVE PREQUISITES
17. AEC was not required to exhaust administrative remedies before bringing this
special proceeding because (a) this challenge is based on unconstitutional and extra-jurisdictional
actions by Respondents; (b) no further administrative process exists to challenge Respondents
actions; and (c) Respondents are the agency and officers to whom further administrative process
would have been taken, if one existed, and, therefore, would have been futile.
FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS
History of Video Lottery Gaming at Aqueduct Racetrack
18. Video lottery terminals are lotteries permitted under the New York State
Constitution. The Court of Appeals has described the gaming machines in this way:
The video lottery is played using video lottery terminals, which are eachconnected to a central system through the use of site controllercomputers thatconnect several VLTs both to each other and to the central system. In the mostcommon form of video lottery gaming, participants at individual VLTs playagainst each other by purchasing electronic instant tickets from a finite pool. Inorder to play, individuals place cash or other currency into the VLT to purchase
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an electronic instant ticket. The player then determines the game identifier andthe price of the electronic ticket to be purchased. The VLT receives the nextticket from the site controller and displays the predetermined outcomewin orloss. If the player wins, the VLT will print an electronically coded instrumentwhich can be used to play additional video lottery games or can be redeemed for
value.
Dalton v. Pataki, 5 N.Y.3d 243, 265 (2005).
19. Video lottery terminals are in use at eight locations in New York. The sites are
run by licensed operators and include Batvia Downs Casino in Batvia, Empire City Casino at
Yonkers Raceway in Yonkers, Fairgrounds Gaming & Raceway in Hamburg, Finger Lakes
Gaming & Racetrack in Farmington, Monticello Casino & Racetrack in Monticello, Saratoga
Gaming & Raceway in Saratoga Springs, Tioga Downs Casino in Nichols, and Vernon Downs
Casino & Hotel in Vernon.
20. In 1955, the New York Racing Association (NYRA) was awarded the exclusive
franchise right to conduct racing and pari-mutuel betting at Aqueduct Racetrack. That right
included authorization to conduct video lottery gaming. In 2003, NYRA reached an agreement
with MGM-Mirage to install video lottery terminals at Aqueduct. But delays, including those
caused by NYRAs indictment, led to MGM-Mirage abandoning the project.
21. In 2008, after a settlement was reached with a bankrupt NYRA, the State issued a
solicitation to develop and operate video lottery gaming at Aqueduct. A company called
Delaware North was selected as the winning bidder by the Governor, Senate President, and
Assembly Speaker under a new procedure that had been enacted by the State Legislature in
February of 2007. See Tax Law 1612-e. But the video lottery terminals facility was not built
because Delaware North failed to raise the $370 million it had pledged by the payment deadline.
22. So, on April 16, 2009, the State issued another solicitation to develop and operate
a video lottery terminal facility at Aqueduct Racetrack. See Exhibit 1.
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23. The solicitation envisioned the installation of 4,525 video lottery terminals at
Aqueduct, which would require 243,132 square feet of renovation and expansion. The
solicitation also explained the State would enter into a thirty-year development agreement and
facility ground lease with the winning bidder. On information and belief, the State anticipated
earning no less $1 million a day through a profit-share once the Aqueduct video lottery terminals
were operational.
24. The solicitation provided, however, that, before the winning bidder was to be
selected, all bidders had to be reviewed by Lottery to determine their licenseability:
Through [Lottery], the State intends to conduct a pre-qualification review of allpotential Vendors. The purpose of such review will be to determine whethereach potential Vendor, including any associated entities and principal and keyindividuals, meets the Lotterys standards for a video lottery license. Thereview will concentrate on the skills, experience and financial resources eachentity proposes to employ at the Aqueduct [video lottery terminal] facility, as wellas the reputation of each entity and individual for honesty and integrity.
See Exhibit 1, at 3 (emphasis added). Lotterys standards are codified in the Video Lottery
Gaming regulations. See NYCRR Sections 28361 to 283624. On information and belief,
Lottery used those standards to vet the six bidders.
25. Pursuant to Tax Law 1612-e, the solicitation further provided that the winning
bidder would be selected by a triumvirate of the Governor, the Senate Majority Leader, and the
Assembly Speaker:
The Vendor selected will be chosen by the unanimous agreement of the Governor,Senate Majority Leader and Speaker of the Assembly, and will enter into theMOU [memorandum of understanding] promptly thereafter.
See Exhibit 1, at 3. While the solicitation refers to the Senate Majority Leader, the statute refers
to the Temporary President of the Senate. The two, ordinarily, are one in the same; however, a
recent disaggregation of power in the Senates Democratic leadership split the positions. On
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information and belief, Senate President Malcolm Smith selected AEC as the winning bidder in
consultation with Democratic Majority Leader John Sampson, satisfying the statute and the
solicitation.
26. According to the solicitation, an MOU that was attached to the solicitation, see
Exhibit 2, obligated the winning bidder to pay $1 million to the State upon selection and, after
executing the MOU, to pay the full bid amount called a Licensing Fee:
Located on the Governors webpage (www.ny.gov/governor/) is a memorandumof understanding (MOU) relating to the development and operation of a [videolottery terminal] gaming facility at Aqueduct Racetrack. This MOU is structuredto be a binding obligation of the potential Vendor for payment of an upfront
Licensing Fee with the State within 10 business days of execution of the MOU,without conditions precedent. No minimum bid has been established. Uponselection of the Vendor by the Governor and Legislative leaders, $1 million shallbe payable to the State toward the State Expenses Fund, as such is defined in theMOU.
As detailed in the MOU, the structure of the transaction will be as follows: uponthe parties entering into the MOU, the Vendor shall pay to the State thenonrefundable License Fee. The parties then will enter into a developmentagreement and a ground lease for the site of the [video license terminal] facility.
See Exhibit 1, at 2.
27. Six companies, including AEC, competed for the Aqueduct video lottery contract.
AEC Wins Bid, but Licensing Rules Change
28. On January 29, 2010, Governor Patterson announced that he and Legislative
Leaders [had] selected [AEC] to operate the video lottery terminals at Aqueduct Racetrack. See
Exhibit 3. The selection of AEC by the three heads of the New York State government was
unanimous.
29. The Governor, shortly after announcing AECs selection, issued a press release
fully explaining that AECs well-rounded, community oriented bid was the best overall bid:
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The final selection was based on a broad range of criteria including speed ofpayment, pay out over time, marketing/branding appeal, union support,construction capacity, win per slot, gaming expertise, community support,MWBE program, expansion plan, SEQRA footprint and lack of conditions onmeeting the above criteria.
[AEC] was at or near the top in most of these categories. AEGs strengthsincluded: a proposal that provided the fastest construction of a new permanentgaming facility with more VLTs at opening than other bidders; experienceddevelopment, gaming and construction executives; a high and attainable win perday estimate of $350; broad local support; full compliance with [Lotterys] pre-qualification license review, a statutorily required project labor agreement and theStates MWBE goals.
See Exhibit 4.
30. Community leaders hailed the selection of AEC as good for the Queens
community. In expressing her agreement with the top politicians unanimous choice,
Assemblywoman Audrey Pheffer said in a press release that AEC is an organization that has
long ties to the Queens community and has a unique and vast knowledge of the needs of our
neighborhoods. The future of Aqueduct Racetrack is vital to our community. Her sentiments
were echoed by several community leaders.
31. Then, four days after AEC was selected, on February 3, 2010, the Speaker of the
Assembly wrote the Governor to unilaterally impose four conditions on AECs selection and
licensing eligibility. See Exhibit 5. He said that AEC needed to meet those conditions in order
to continue to receive his support.
32. The Speakers conditions were not enacted by New Yorks legislative bodies, not
founded in any preexisting law or regulation, not derived from past agency precedent, and not
based on any term of the Aqueduct solicitation or MOU. He just made them up. And he
commanded that AECand AEC alonebe held to a different standard from the five other
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bidders who had participated in the Aqueduct bidding process and from the eight video lottery
terminal operators who had previously been licensed by the State.
33. The Speakers conditions exceeded his limited authority under Tax Law 1612-e.
AEC and its membership had no notice prior to winning the bid that they would be subject to his
nonnegotiable conditions. The four conditions changed the licensing rules midway through the
process and caused some of AECs members to rethink their participation.
All Members Required to Submit to Probity
34. The Speakers third condition required that all investors, at any level, partners,
directors, managers, contract holders, consultants, principals and other selected employees must
obtain a license from Lottery. See Exhibit 5. This requirement, which was never subject to any
rulemaking process and had never been applied to any bidder in the state, contravened and
supplanted video lottery gaming regulations.
35. The regulations applicable to limited liability companies like AEC only require
its principal members to obtain a license. Under NYCRR Section 2836-1.2(ci)(5), a
[p]rincipal of a video lottery gaming agent means[,] if a limited liability company, each of its
members. But only managing members of a limited liability company are required under
NYCRR Section 2836-4.2(b)(3) to apply for a license as a principal:
Each person who is a principal of a video lottery gaming agent or the operator of avideo lottery gaming facility on behalf of such an agent is required to be licensedby the division. A video lottery gaming agent principal application and disclosureform shall be filed with the division.... [W]here the video lottery gaming agent principal is other than a natural person, each person(s) exercising control as
principals over the video lottery gaming agent principal applicant.
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In other words, only the members exercising control over the entities that are members of AEC
are required to have a license. The Speaker, however, required every member of AEC to have a
license, regardless of whether they exercised control over the company.
36. A day after receiving the Speakers letter laying out his conditions, the Governor
issued a press release explaining exactly why AEC was selected as the winning bidder:
[AEC] was selected to operate video lottery terminals at Aqueduct racetrack in aunanimous decision reached through the equal votes of the leader of the Senate,the Speaker of the Assembly, and myself. Each leader had equal statutoryauthority, equal responsibility and is equally accountable in this selection.
[AEC] has both the financial viability and ability to pay the required upfront
licensing fee. [AEC] complied with every request made during the review processand addressed satisfactorily all matters related to licensability. [AECs]compensation to the State, both in the short term and the long term put it near thetop or at the top compared to other bidders. Further, [AECs] gaming operator,Navegante, has a verifiable record for establishing successful gaming operations.[AECs] plan fits well within the very diverse and middle class community thatexists around Aqueduct and its approach to operations will attract localcommunity members to the site in the largest numbers and create local jobs forpeople in the surrounding area. [AECs] commitment to diversity and inclusionwas also an important consideration in choosing it to operate at Aqueduct.
All information about the bidders and their bids was presented to all involvedparties as we weighed this selection. After a lengthy evaluation process, I canonly assume that the other leaders made their decision, as I did, because [AEC]offered the bid that received both unanimous support and is good for New York.
See Exhibit 6. The Governor did not address the conditions the Speaker made just for AEC.
37. But William Murray, Lotterys Deputy General Counsel, did. He openly stated in
a meeting with AEC that the Speakers conditions were arbitrary and capricious and would
slow down the licensing process. He assured AEC that Lottery did not intend to strictly enforce
the Speakers licensing conditions.
38. In light of the Deputy General Counsels statement and the knowledge that the
Speakers conditions were targeted at specific members of AEC and not the company as a whole,
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it decided to take the path of least resistance and comply. It informed its members, on February
9, 2010, that the licensing rules had unexpectedly changed and that each of themno matter
whether they were passive investors who were not key operations personnel and who only
maintained negligible percentages of the companyhad to submit to probity and apply for an
individual video lottery gaming license. AEC gave them copies of the license application.
39. The application is forty-five pages long. See Exhibit 7. Ostensibly, it focuses on
the applicant, but it actually requires personal information about the applicant and the applicant's
spouse (and former spouses), children (and step-children), in-laws (and former in-laws), siblings,
and the siblings spouses. The applicant must provide a current picture, a fingerprint card, and
tax returns for the last five years (for the applicant and spouse, if separate filers). In addition, the
license application seeks detailed information for the last ten years about the applicants
residences, work history, corporate governance positions, and participation in any civil or
criminal proceedings. Finally, the application requests highly detailed financial information
about the applicants, spouses, and dependent childrens current business ownership interests,
securities and real estate holdings, cash on hand, retirement benefits, mortgages and other
indebtedness, and life insurance policies.
40. Some members of AEC balked at turning over such extensive and sensitive
materials to Lottery because the agency is notorious for leaking confidential information. So,
theytwo of whom were public figures locally and nationallymade very personal judgments
about whether the potential financial gain from their negligible percentages in AEC was worth
losing control over their private family and financial information. Several decided, quite
reasonably, that it was not worth it and withdrew from the company over the ensuing weeks.
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The Speaker Initiates an Investigation
41. Then, the Speaker did a curious thing. Two weeks after voting to select AEC as
the top bidder, he, in a letter dated February 11, 2010, asked the New York State Inspector
General to investigate how he, the Governor, and the Senate President came to unanimously
choose AEC over five other bidders:
I am respectfully requesting that the Office of the State Inspector General ...[c]onduct a review of the process and procedures used by [Lottery] and otherrelevant state agencies involved in the evaluation of bids and in the making ofrecommendations for the selection of such operator, and determine which bidderswere recommended pursuant to such process.
See Exhibit 8.
42. His request was odd for a several reasons. First, Lottery had made no
recommendations for the selection of one bidder over another, which the Speaker knew before
requesting the probe. Second, the only bidders evaluated by Lottery and the three politicians
were the six that had bid, which the Speaker also already knew. Third, Lotterys evaluations of
the bids were not binding on the selection triumvirate, which the Speaker absolutely knew.
Fourth and finally, as New York State Senator Joseph Addabbo observed, the process the
Speaker wanted investigated mirrored the process in 2008 when the Speaker, himself, helped
pick Delaware North as the winning bidder for the Aqueduct contract:
The process used in that selection was the same used this year. There wascontroversy then, as there is now, about the use of that previous process.Rumors of the political fix ran rampant in the local area. Yet no call for aspecial investigation or media attack was evident then when the selection tookplace a couple years ago.
See Exhibit 9. These observations show the Speaker had no good or legitimate reason to request
an investigation by the Inspector General.
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Lottery Finds AEC Ineligible for a License
43. On top of the Speakers baseless probe and unlawful criteria, Peter Kiernan,
Counsel to the Governor, told AEC on March 5, 2010, that all its members license applications
had to be submitted within four days on March 9th. Failure to meet the sudden deadline, he
said, would cost AEC the Aqueduct contract:
Lottery still has not received a significant number of completed licenseapplications from [AECS] investors. As Lottery has informed AEG, March 1,2010 was the latest date that applications could be received in order for theappropriate background checks to occur prior to March 31, 2010.
As a result, all completed license applications must be received no later than12:00 p.m. Tuesday, March 9, 2010. If Lottery does not receive such informationby said deadline, the Executive will withdraw support for AEG being approved asthe developer and operator of an Aqueduct VLT facility.
See Exhibit 10. Actually, Mr. Kiernans concerns were unfounded.
44. In point of fact, at the time of his letter, all members of AEC who were required
to be licensed as part of the application had already submitted applications. See NYCRR
Section 2836-4.3. The only outstanding applications were from former members, who, but-for
the Speakers third condition, would not have been required by law to apply for a license, even if
they had still been part of the company.
45. These former members had been passive investors who never had any control
over AEC. They were not key operating personnel or managing members of AECs principals.
And, before they had withdrawn, they collectively never owned more than three percent of the
company. When they were members of AEC, the regulations would not have required them to
submit to probity. More importantly, after they had withdrawn their interests in AEC, they
became former AEC members whose personal and financial information no longer was relevant
or material to determining AECs eligibility for a video lottery license.
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46. AEC gave Lottery notice of the nonmaterial changes in its membership on March
8, 2010, which were triggered by the Speakers requirement of probity from all investors. See
Exhibit 11. An amendment to a license application is permissible under NYCRR Section 2836-
3.11 and may occur at any time with notice to Lottery:
It shall be the continuing duty of each applicant or licensee to promptly file withthe division a written amendment to the application explaining any new orchanged facts or circumstances whenever any material or significant new orchanged facts or circumstances occur with respect to any matter set forth in theapplication or other papers relating thereto. Any applicant or licensee may bepermitted by the division to file any other amendment to his or her application at
any time prior to final action thereon by the division. The failure of an applicantor licensee to comply with this Part shall be grounds for rejection of the
application or for suspension or revocation of a license.
AECs notification to Lottery complied with the regulation.
47. When the March 9th deadline arrived, AEC had already submitted the individual
licensing applications of its members who remained. Of course, it did not (and could not) submit
license applications for its former membersindividuals who no longer wanted to be involved in
the Aqueduct contract because of confidentiality concerns.
48. On March 11, 2010, despite AECs timely submission of the remaining individual
license applications, Lotterys Deputy Director, the official who had assured AEC the Speakers
arbitrary and capricious criteria would not be strictly enforced, informed AEC it was ineligible
for a video lottery license because it had not submitted its former members license applications:
[Lottery] has determined that [AEC] is not eligible for a video lottery license....The determination is based on [AECs] failure to comply with the March 9, 2010deadline for submitting video lottery license applications in time for the Lottery tocomplete background reviews by March 31, 2010.
The Lottery rejects [AECs] claim that certain individuals and entities (including,but not limited to, Floyd Flake and Empowerment Development Corporation)should have been excused from the application requirement because they werewithdrawing from, or were being dropped by, [AEC]. Such belated removalscould not be accepted during the ongoing federal and State investigations into
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[AECs] selection, since they would have created the appearance that [AEC] wasbeing allowed to conceal relevant material information.
See Exhibit 12.
49. AEC pointed out the absurdity of Lotterys ineligibility determination in a letter
written the same day as the announcement of the license denial. Lottery, in making its decision,
had disregarded the appropriateness of AECs license application amendments. The agency had
unlawfully required applications from former members who had withdrawn and who had never
been required by law to submit applications. The mere existence of investigations by other
agencies with their own subpoena power could not justify an outright denial of AECs license by
Lottery. Finally, Lottery had assumed without any evidence or information from AEC that the
former members license applications were, in fact, relevant and material to the investigations by
other agencies. In the end, Lottery disregarded all of AECs valid complaints.
50. The Governor, relying entirely on Lotterys finding that AEC was unlicenseable
and making no independent review of the correctness of that finding, immediately issued a press
release withdrawing his support for AECs selection:
The Division of the Lottery has concluded that it cannot issue a gaming license to[AEC]. Therefore, the State has officially withdrawn its support for [AEC] todevelop and operate a video lottery terminal [ ] facility at Aqueduct Race Track.
See Exhibit 13.
51. The Governors knee-jerk response was irregular, at best. It is unclear what
authority he relied on to nullify a unanimous selection of AEC by three duly elected officials
simply taking back his individual vote with no consultation with or unanimity of the Senate
President or Assembly Speaker. The statute under which the Governor derived his power to
participate in the selection process does not provide for reneging on his vote once it is cast. See
Tax Law 1612-e (The video lottery gaming operator selected to operate a video lottery
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terminal facility at Aqueduct will be subject to a memorandum of understanding between the
governor, temporary president of the senate and the speaker of the assembly.).
52. On information and belief, neither the Senate President nor the Assembly Speaker
has withdrawn support for AEC like the Governor.
New Aqueduct Bid Issued Without Unauthorized Conditions
53. On May 11, 2010, Lottery issued a new solicitation for the development and
operation of a video lottery terminals facility at the Aqueduct Racetrack. See Exhibit 14.
54. The bidding closed on June 29, 2010, with only three bidders. Two of those
bidders, SL Green and Penn National, lost to AEC during the prior solicitation.
55. Interestingly, the new solicitation does not include the condition the Speaker
imposed on AEC that each member of the bidder apply for a license. The new solicitation
exempts passive investorsindividuals who own one percent or less of a limited liability
companyfrom the licensing application process. Section 1.3 of the new solicitation describes
who must submit a licensing application:
Since potential bidder consortiums may be comprised of different types ofinvestors and investment vehicles, applications are required according to thefollowing guidelines:
Any individual with a direct personal investment in the consortium;
For a publicly traded company, every individual or entity with beneficialownership of more than 5% of the companys common, preferred or convertiblestock, and every officer and member of the Board of Directors;
For a privately held company, any entity or individual with beneficial ownershipof more than 1% of the company; [and]
For a private equity or similar investment firm, every principal, key manager,officer, partner, general partner, limited partner and/or member of the boards ofthe firm itself. Also, within the firms specific fund making the investment in the
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overall bidder consortium, any individual or entity with an investment thatcomprises more than 1% of the invested capital of that fund.
See Exhibit 14. Undoubtedly, the State scrapped the Speakers third condition because it was
unworkable. As one aide to the Governor observed, Were going to have to have something in
that goes to the spirit of what the speaker wants, but its got to be one thats actually practical
and feasible. New Rules for Aqueduct Racino,N.Y. Daily News (Mar. 15, 2010). On
information and belief, the Speaker did not object to the new conditions that replaced the ones he
imposed solely on AEC.
56. Under the rules of the new solicitation, the former members of AEC who
withdrew would have been exempt now (as they were then) from submitting licensing
applications since none of them maintained more than a one percent membership interest in
AEC.
57. In fact, under the new solicitation rules, AECs former members would have been
immaterial to the companys membership composition, which would have allowed them to
withdraw from the company without notice to or permission from Lottery. Section 1.21 of the
new solicitation permits changes to the composition and ownership of the bidder without notice
to Lottery if such changes constitute less than five percent of the equitable ownership interests or
if the changes involve an individual who is not a principal or serving in a key role:
If a Vendor makes any material change in the composition of the members of theteam identified in the Vendors Proposal or in the ownership of any entityincluded in the Vendors Proposal prior to approval of the MOU or after a licenseis awarded, the Lotterys Licensing unit must be notified in writing at the time thechange occurs or is identified pursuant to 21 NYCRR 2836-16.
For the purposes of this requirement, a material change is any change of an
individual in a principal or key role, as defined in 21 NYCRR 2836-1.2, or any
change of more than 5% of the equitable ownership interest of an entity.
See Exhibit 14.
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58. This new rule recognizes that changesboth material and immaterialare
inevitable during such a review process and have occurred in the licensing processes for each of
the other video lottery facilities in New York.
CLAIMS FOR RELIEF
COUNT I
(Illegal Imposition ofUltra Vires Licensing Rules)
59. AEC incorporates paragraphs 1 through 58 into this Count.
60. Article III of the State Constitution grants the Senate and the Assembly legislative
power, while Article IV grants the Governor executive power. The New York Court of Appeals
has held that these separate grants of power imply that these branches of government necessarily
exercise power only within their given spheres of authority. The Legislature is limited to
promulgating law and policy for the State; the Executive is limited to implementing and
enforcing that law and policy.
61. Article III of the State Constitution vests no legislative power in a single member
of the Senate or the Assembly. Nor does it vest legislative power in any executive agency. In
this particular instance, Lotterys powers are limited to those enumerated in the regulations for
video lottery gaming.
62. The licensing conditions unilaterally and singly imposed by the Speaker on AEC
exceeded his power and authority as a New York State legislator. The Legislature did not
authorize the Speakers conditions and has not authorized, approved, or consented to them at any
time before, during, or after the Aqueduct bidding process commenced. Consequently, the
conditions were ultra vires, without lawful authority, and in violation of properly enacted law
and regulations.
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63. Lotterys enforcement of the conditions unilaterally and singly imposed by the
Speaker on AEC exceeded the agencys power and authority under the video lottery gaming
regulations and other applicable law. The Legislature did not authorize Lottery to enforce the
Speakers conditions and has not authorized, approved, or consented to Lottery enforcing the
conditions at any time before, during, or after the Aqueduct bidding process commenced.
Consequently enforcement of the Speakers conditions were ultra vires, without lawful authority,
and in violation of properly enacted law and regulations.
64. Lottery exceeded its authority when it denied AECs license application for a
reason other than the ones enumerated in NYCRR Section 2836-3.14. That regulation lists
permissible reasons Lottery can deny a license application. They include an applicants criminal
history, financial instability, involvement in fraud or deceit that affects public confidence in
Lottery, or a refusal to cooperate in the licensing process. Absent from that list is the reason
Lottery denied AEC application: the possible appearance that AEC was hiding something from
other investigating agencies through the withdrawal of inconsequential members from the
company. On information and belief, Lottery has never denied a video lottery gaming license
for that reason. It has not done so in the past and cannot do so now because the enabling
legislation, from which Lottery derives its power, does not authorize it.
65. Tax Law 1612-e vests no power in a single member of the video lottery operator
selection triumvirate of the Governor, Senate President, and Assembly Speaker. The selection
had to be unanimous, and AECs was. The statute provides no mechanism for any single
member of the triumvirate to later invalidate a unanimous selection by unilaterally withdrawing
support.
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66. The ultra vires actions of the Speaker, Lottery, and the Governor had no rational
basis and were arbitrary, capricious, and an abuse of discretion. They substantially and
irreparably injured Petitioners by requiring them to comply with illegal rules that, ultimately,
were used by Lottery to deny AEC a video lottery gaming license.
COUNT II
(Failure to Follow Agency Procedure)
67. AEC incorporates paragraphs 1 through 66 into this Count.
68. Throughout AECs license application process, Lottery deviated from its own
procedures in materially significant ways that violated agency policies, practices, and
regulations.
69. Lotterys first deviation from established procedure was enforcing the Speakers
requirement that each of AECs members submit to probity. Under NYCRR Section 2836
4.2(b)(3), for limited liability companies like AEC, Lottery was only authorized to require
managing members of AECs principals to submit to probity. On information and belief,
Lotterys actions were an unwarranted break from its policies, practices, and procedures in
reviewing the license applications of the other eight video lottery operators in New York.
70. The second procedural deviation was Lotterys refusal to permit AEC to make
nonmaterial amendments to its license application that reflected the withdrawal from the
company of passive investors. Under NYCRR Section 2836-3.11, the amendments were
permissible at any time with due notice; had no effect on AECs management, financing, or
operations capabilities; and would have facilitated Lotterys completion of the application
process by the March 31, 2010 deadline, which the Counsel to the Governor was concerned with
missing.
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71. Lottery claimed that AECs members withdrawal was too late, indicating that the
agency had set a time limit for when amendments to the license application could be made.
Lottery, however, never informed AEC of the amendment filing deadline.
72. On information and belief, when individual investors pose an obstacle to the
licensure of the entity that will operate the video lottery terminals facility, Lotterys preferred
policy and practice is to allow those individuals to withdraw from the entity. Consistent with
that policy and practice, on at least two occasions during AECs licensing-application process,
Lottery permitted or ordered withdrawals of AEC members. For example, Lotterys Deputy
Director confirmed the forced withdrawal of three AEC investors and indicated that the company
was otherwise licenseable because of their withdrawal:
Lottery concludes that AEG, Clairvest, and any other person or entity acting by oron behalf of AEG or Clairvest (i) do not intend to make any payment directly orindirectly to Karl OFarrell, Andrew Goodell, or Aqueduct CommunityEnterprise, (ii) will, in any legal proceeding by or on behalf of such personsseeking payments by or on behalf of AEG or Clairvest, raise a defense based onmaterial misrepresentations made to AEG and Clairvest, and (iii) will not makeany payment directly or indirectly to such persons pursuant to a settlementagreement unless approved by the Lottery.
.
Assuming that it is correct, the only remaining requirements are that (i) the videolottery license application submitted by Greenstar be completed by the submissionof individual license applications by Messrs. Roman, Kornfeld, LoCurto, Tully,and Segal, and (ii) the Lotterys review of the pending application submitted byMr. Levine and the expected applications by Messrs. Roman, Kornfeld, LoCurto,Tully, and Segal does not uncover disqualifying information. If thoserequirements are satisfied, the Lottery will conclude that AEG has a suitablebackground to be granted a license for the operation of a video lottery facility at
Aqueduct racetrack.
See Exhibit 15 (emphasis added).
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73. In addition, on information and belief, during the licensing of the eight other
video lottery operators in New York, Lottery permitted and ordered withdrawals similar to that
of AECs former members.
74. Even the Speaker expected that his conditions, which were not known or required
at the beginning of the selection process, would affect the makeup of AECs investors and cause
some to withdraw or become ineligible to participate. Silvers fourth condition explicitly
provided that Lottery must review changes to AECs membership and, then, let the Governor,
Senate President, and Assembly Speaker approve the changes:
[T]hroughout the final approval process, all changes in the proposal including butnot limited to partners, consultants, investors at any level, management,development or principal employees, and contracts must be reviewed by [Lottery]and approved by the three leaders prior to the conclusion of the approval process.
See Exhibit 5. No rational basis existed for Lotterys denial of AECs nonmaterial license
application amendments. It was an illegal departure from established policy, practice, and
procedure.
75. Lotterys third failure to follow procedure was requiring probity from the former
members, who essentially had become disinterested third parties when they withdrew. AECs
former members no longer held any stake in the company, having no financial or influential
interest in it. Lotterys licensing authority encompasses only owners of a video lottery gaming
facility and principals of a video lottery gaming agent. See NYCRR Section 2836-4.2. Former
members of a company are not owners or principals since they are not stakeholders in the
video lottery gaming facility or agent. Consequently, they do not come within Lotterys
regulatory purview and could not be required to submit licensing applications in support of
AECs application. Cf. NYCRR Section 2836-4.3 (No video lottery gaming agent license shall
be issued ... unless the applicant, and each person required to be licensed as part of the
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application, provides all information, documentation and assurances required to establish its
qualifications pursuant to these regulations.). Denying AECs license application because of
disinterested third parties refused to submit to an intrusive licensing review was a profound
departure from settled agency policy, practice, and procedure.
76. Lotterys final deviation from procedure was refusing to allow AEC an
opportunity to cure the alleged failure to submit license applications for its former members.
Under Section 2836-3.15(c), AEC was entitled to submit curative evidence to Lottery before it
determined finally, as it did, that AEC was forever ineligible for a video lottery gaming license:
[A]ny person whose application has been denied ... may reapply upon submissionof sufficient evidence demonstrating that the factual circumstances upon whichthe denial was based have been cured to the satisfaction of the division.
This procedure was not followed and AEC could not show it could not by law or contract compel
or coerce its former members into submitting to probity or show that the former members
information was no longer relevant or material to AECs license eligibility.
77. AEC attempted, through its attorneys, to challenge Lotterys decision in a letter to
Lottery and the Governor on the day Lottery found AEC unlicenseable. But the agency and the
executive did not act on that letter.
78. Each of Lotterys deviations from, and failure to follow, its normal procedures
was without rational basis, was arbitrary and capricious, and was an abuse of discretion.
79. Lotterys acts and omissions irreparably harmed AEC by causing the denial of its
application for a video lottery gaming license and, ultimately, costing it the Aqueduct contract.
COUNT III
(Due Process Violation)
80. AEC incorporates paragraphs 1 through 79 into this Count.
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81. In processing AECs video lottery license, Lottery abandoned several licensing
policies, practices, and procedures without adequate notice; imposed on AEC unreasonable
deadlines without adequate notice to submit each of its members video lottery gaming license
applications and to make any amendments to the license applications; relied onto AECs
detrimentunsubstantiated media gossip without affording AEC an opportunity to address it;
and denied AEC an opportunity to cure alleged deficiencies in its license application. These acts
and omissions violated AECs right to due process under the State Constitution.
82. Midway through the licensing process and, therefore, without adequate notice,
Lottery supplanted its regular policies, practices, and procedures with ad hoc and unauthorized
policies, practices, and procedures: (i) Lottery required each of AECs members to submit
licensing applications, rather than just its managing members; (ii) Lottery insisted that
nonmembers who had no interest in AEC submit to probity in support of AECs license
application; (iii) Lottery set a new, unspecified time limit for amending license applications,
when its rules permit such amendments at any time with notice; and (iv) the agency denied
AECs license for a reason not previously listed in the regulations as a permissible reason for
rejecting an application. None of these agency actions were subject to a rulemaking procedure
with a period of time to comment. Consequently, AEC was not given adequate notice of
Lotterys rule changes.
83. Additionally, Lottery enforced a four-day deadline imposed by Counsel to the
Governor on AEC to submit license applications for all of its members and certain former
members. Given the length of the application, the number of people involved, and the breadth of
the information requested in the application, four days to comply was unreasonable and
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insufficient notice that AEC would be penalized with denial of its license application if it failed
to comply.
84. Lottery, ultimately, found AEC ineligible for a video lottery gaming license based
on news reports of federal and state probes that Lottery mischaracterized as looking into
[AECs] selection. Actually, the U.S. Attorneys investigation did not concern AECs selection
at all. On information and belief, the investigation concerned the acquisition of certain real
estate by public officials who were not members of AEC, except for one.
85. The Inspector Generals probe, which was instigated at the insistence of the
Assembly Speaker, concerns Lottery and the procedures it used to evaluate the six bids from
which the Speaker, the Governor, and the Senate President selected AEC as the winner. It is
based entirely on media speculation and innuendo. A memorandum of law filed by the Inspector
General in opposition to a motion to quash cites to one newspaper article after another as
evidence justifying the scope of its subpoena. See Exhibit 16. That filing, however, is barren
of concrete evidence against AEC and its members because they did nothing wrong.
86. No member of AEC has been accused of any improper or criminal act or of
refusing to cooperate in the investigation. The Governor, for his part, rejected the medias
sensationalism as baseless and reminded everyone that his was but one of three required votes.
87. The information that Lottery claims AEC possibly was concealing by not
submitting applications for former members is not material or relevant, as Lottery
speculated, to the investigations by other agencies. The video lottery gaming application is very
specific. Materials that might have been produced by AECs former members in their
applications would shed no light on the appropriateness of Lotterys bid evaluation process (the
state probe) or on the real estate acquisitions by individuals and entities that were never part of
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AEC, save one person (the federal probe). Moreover, both the Inspector General and the U.S.
Attorney enjoy the power of subpoena. They do not require Lotterys license applications to
gather information they believe is relevant to their investigations.
88. Public opinion gathered through news reports provides no rational basis for
agency action. The New York Supreme Court pointed out inMatter of G.J. & S. Pizza, Inc. v.
McLaughlin, 78 A.D.2d 653 (App. Div., 2nd Dept. 1980), what should have been obvious to
Lottery before it denied AEC a license:
Based so far as the record reveals, solely on the concerns expressed by residentsand community leaders and without any factual data contravening petitioners
presentation, the [liquor license] application has been rejected. Denial of a licenseon the speculation that it will be operated in violation of the law is impermissible.The likelihood of future violation can furnish a basis for denial only when thereare facts in the record to which rationally support doing so.... It should also bepointed out that the Court of Appeals in Circus Disco [v. New York State LiquorAuth., 51 N.Y.2d 24,] was confronted with a decision-making process by theauthority similar to the one in the instant matter. There, as here, public opinionstrongly opposed the issuance of a license to a particular applicant. Letters ofprotest were received and considered by the authority. And the adverse publicopinion in Circus Disco, as in the case at bar, was given weight and affected theauthoritys final determination. This was condemned by the Court of Appeals,holding that While it is not always inappropriate for the authority to receive theviews of others, the authority cannot deny an application without a reason otherthan the recommendation or views thus expressed.
Id. (citations omitted). In this case, Lotterys reliance on public opinion denied AEC a fair,
regular, predictable, and transparent administrative process. Mere speculation that something
inappropriate may have occurred is not a basis for agency action.
89. Lottery drew a final conclusion about AEC before the investigators did. That
determination violated Respondents due process rights. Basing an administrative decision on
unsubstantiated news reports and guesses as to what other agencies investigations might
uncover or might find relevant and material is improper. That determination, necessarily, was
arbitrary, capricious, and an abuse of discretion.
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90. The agency made no independent findings of fact, only a final determination
using second-hand, unconfirmed information. Lottery held no hearings to determine the
accuracy of the media innuendo and the extent to which AEC and any of its members might be
involved in any alleged wrongdoing or might have information relevant and material to the
ongoing investigations. After Lottery made its decision, it did not afford AEC an opportunity to
show that its former members, as nonmanaging members, were not required to apply for video
lottery license applications or show that AEC could not compel those individuals to submit to
probity against their will and, thus, should not be held responsible for their very personal and
reasonable decisions not to participate.
91. Finally, Lotterys determination that AEC is forever ineligible for a license was
too harsh a punishment for the compliance failure the agency cited. There were less severe
alternatives available to Lottery that it should have, but did not, consider. For example, as it had
already done once, Lottery could have permanently barred the future involvement of the former
members in AEC in any manner. See Exhibit 15. Then, at least, the punishment would be on the
people who actually committed the alleged offense.
92. Lotterys actions had no rational basis and were arbitrary, capricious, and an
abuse of discretion. Moreover, the State had no compelling public interest in meting out the
maximum punishment to AEC.
93. Because Lottery denied AEC due process by failing to give it adequate notice of
rule changes and short deadlines, relying on public opinion as report in the news without giving
AEC an opportunity to address the speculation, and not considering a less severe punishment
than permanent ineligibility, Respondents have suffered substantial and irreparable injury,
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having lost the exclusive right to develop and operate the video lottery terminals facility at
Aqueduct Racetrack.
COUNT IV
(Equal Protection Violations)
94. AEC incorporates paragraphs 1 through 93 into this Count.
95. Lottery denied AEC equal protection under New York law by treating AEC
differently from similarly situated bidders in the Aqueduct Racetrack bidding process and from
previous video lottery gaming license applicants who were granted licenses.
96. Lottery refused to permit AEC to amend its licensing application to reflect the
withdrawal of some, but not all former members. On information and belief, Lottery has
previously permitted other video lottery gaming license applicants to abandon members who
frustrated licensure.
97. On information and belief, each of the eight video lottery gaming operators in
New York made changes to their membership structure during their license application
processes. Lottery did not find any of the present operators ineligible for a license due to a
change in their membership.
98. On information and belief, it is Lotterys policy and practice to permit an
applicant to restructure its membership instead of denying the applicant a license.
99. On information and belief, some of the present video lottery gaming operators
were licensed because they changed their ownership structure per the instruction of Lottery by
dropping certain people or entities from their membership.
100. Because Lottery has treated AEC differently from other bidders and other video
lottery gaming operators, it has unfairly subjected AEC to a more rigorous license application
process. It enforced the Speakers conditions against AEC alone. It also refused to allow AECs
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former members to withdraw, unlike members of other Aqueduct bidders and other video lottery
gaming operators in New York. Lotterys actions had no rational basis and were arbitrary,
capricious, and an abuse of discretion.
101. The changes made to the new Aqueduct solicitation and reissued by the State on
May 11, 2010, dispense with the Speakers condition that all members submit to probity and
allows immaterial membership amendments to occur without notice to Lottery. The rule changes
in the new solicitation underscore the unequal treatment to which Respondents subjected AEC.102. Because Lottery denied AEC equal protection under the law, AEC suffered
substantial and irreparable injury because it lost a valuable financial opportunity in developing
and operating the video lottery terminals facility at the Aqueduct Racetrack.
COUNT V
(Freedom of Association Violations)
103. AEC incorporates paragraphs 1 through 102 into this Count.
104. Lotterys refusal to allow changes in AECs membershipchanges that were
immaterial to its management and financial stabilityviolated AECs and its members right to
freedom of association under the State Constitution.
105. AEC and its members have a right to govern and determine the companys
membership and their relationship to each other. Implicit in the right to freely associate is the
right not to associate. AEC members had the right to withdraw from the company for whatever
reason and at any time in accordance with AECs operating agreement, the New York Limited
Liability Company Act, and the State Constitution. And AEC could not compel their
participation by law or contract.
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106. Lottery infringed on AECs right to govern and determine its membership when it
determined that the former members, despite withdrawing, still had to submit to probity if AEC
was to be licensed. There was no rational basis for such infringement, which was arbitrary,
capricious, and an abuse of discretion. No compelling state interest was served in denying AEC
and its former members the right to freely disassociate through withdrawal from the company.
107. Because Lottery infringed on AECs and its members freedom of association,
AEC lost a valuable financial opportunity to develop and operate the video lottery terminal
facility at the Aqueduct Racetrack and has been harmed substantially and irreparably.
COUNT VI
(Breach of Good Faith and Fair Dealing)
108. AEC incorporates paragraphs 1 through 107 into this Count.
109. AEC was selected to develop and operate video lottery gaming at Aqueduct
Racetrack.
110. When AEC agreed to the selection, it entered into an agreement-in-principle with
the Governor, Senate President, Speaker of the Assembly, and the State as expressed in the bid
solicitation and MOU (together, the Bid Agreement).
111. Implicit in the Bid Agreement was the parties agreement to deal fairly with each
other and discharge their contractual obligations in good faith.
112. The Bid Agreement expressly states that the bid-award and the video lottery
licensing processes would comply at all timesfrom bid submission to final execution of the
MOUwith New York law and regulations. See Exhibit 1, at 3; Exhibit 2, at 2 & 2627.
113. AEC fulfilled its obligations under the terms of the Bid Agreement.
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114. But Respondents, through conscious and deliberate acts and omissions, have
repeatedly failed and refused to discharge their obligations. Respondents acts and omissions
have frustrated the purpose of the Bid Agreement and disappointed Petitioners expectations
under the Bid Agreement.
115. Throughout the bid award and licensing processes, Respondents have imposed
conditions and licensing criteria on AEC that improperly supplant existing law and regulations;
deviated significantly from numerous policies, practices, and procedures of Lottery; failed to
give Petitioners adequate notice of deadlines essential to the terms of, and obligations under, the
Bid Agreement; and treated AEC differently from similarly situated Aqueduct bidders and video
lottery license operators. This intentional and malicious conduct was not in good faith or fair
dealing.
116. Additionally, Respondents instigated a pointless and harassing state investigation
in order to derail AECs selection and embarrass its members. The investigation was a dirty
trick that allowed Respondents to justify denying AEC a video lottery gaming license and
withdrawing support for its selection as the winning Aqueduct bidder.
117. Respondents breaches of good-faith and fair dealing have deprived Petitioners of
the benefits of the Bid Agreement, including becoming the developer and operator of the video
lottery terminals facility at Aqueduct Racetrack.
118. Respondents material breaches of the Bid Agreement have caused AEC to suffer
irreparable injuries and significant economic losses.
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RELIEF REQUESTED
WHEREFORE, Petitioners respectfully request this Court grant it declaratory and
injunctive relief, based on the allegations made in this Petition, and issue an Order and
Judgment:
A. Finding that Lotterys determination that AEC was ineligible for a video
lottery gaming license had no rational basis, was arbitrary and capricious, and was an
abuse of discretion;
B. Declaring that the Governors withdrawal of support for AEC based on
Lotterys determination that AEC was permanently ineligible for a video lottery gaming
license was unlawful, ultra vires, in excess of lawful authority, without effect, and void;
C. Declaring that the conditions imposed by the Speaker of the Assembly on
AEC without the consent or approval of the State Legislature were unlawful, ultra vires,
in excess of lawful authority, without effect, and void;
D. Finding that the newly promulgated regulations by Lottery without a
rulemaking process that enforce the Speakers conditions; set a time limit for when an
amendments to a video lottery gaming license application must be made; create an
additional statutory reason for denying a license application; and abandon the right to
cure application deficiencies were unlawful, ultra vires, in excess of lawful authority,
without effect, and void;
E. Finding that Lottery violated AECs right to due process by failing to give
AEC adequate notice of deadlines to submit its members video lottery gaming license
applications and to amend its own license application; relying on public opinion found in
unsubstantiated media reports; failing to give AEC an opportunity to be address that
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public opinion and to cure alleged license application deficiencies; and failing to consider
an alternative, less severe punishment than permanent license ineligibility for alleged
application deficiencies;
F. Declaring and finding that Respondents violated AECs right to equal
protection by treating it differently from similarly situated bidders and from successful
video lottery gaming license applicants;
G. Finding that Lottery violated AECs and its members right to freedom of
association by disallowing the withdrawal of certain former members of the company;
H. Declaring and finding that Respondents breached an implied agreement to
deal fairly and in good faith with each other by failing to conduct the bid process under
applicable law and regulations and by instigating an investigation by the Inspector
General without good or legitimate cause;
I. Declaring and finding that Petitioners have been substantially and
irreparably injured by Respondents actions as alleged in the combined Petition and
Complaint;
J. Directing Respondents to immediately discontinue the new bidding
process for the development and operation of the Aqueduct Racetrack video lottery
terminals facility, which began on May 11, 2010;
K. Restoring AEC to the position of the winning bidder for the development
and operation of the Aqueduct Racetrack video lottery terminals facility; and
L. Directing Lottery to immediately resume the video lottery license
application process for AEC with the membership it had on March 11, 2010, and that
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Lottery complete the process in compliance with applicable law and regulations and
consistent with Lotterys established policies, practices, and procedures;
M. Awarding Petitioner the costs and disbursements of this special
proceeding and action, including reasonable attorneys fees; and
N. Granting such further and other relief the Court deems just, proper, or
necessary to make Petitioners whole.
_______________________________________Daryl Davis
Latif Doman (pro hac vice application to be filed)
DOMAN DAVIS LLP
245 Park Avenue, 39th FloorNew York, NY 10167Phone & Fax: (888) [email protected]
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STATE OF NEW YORK INDIVIDUAL VERIFICATION
ss.:
COUNTY OF NEW YORK
Richard Mays, being duly sworn, deposes and says that he is a Petitioner in this action, and that
he is the Chairman and authorized representative of Petitioner Aqueduct Entertainment Company
LLC, and has read the foregoing Verified Petition and Complaint and knows the contents thereof
and that the same is true to his own knowledge, except as to the matters therein stated to be
alleged upon information and belief, and as to those matters he believes them to be true.
__________________________________
Richard Mays, individually, and
on behalf of
Aqueduct Entertainment Company LLC
aka
Aqueduct Entertainment Group LLC
Sworn to before me this
_____ day of ___________, 20__.
_____________________________________
Notary Public
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