Suns Minority Sues Ishbia for Records Access: Details

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Suns Retailers Sue Mat Ishbia for Access to Records

Two minority owners of the Phoenix Suns, who remained from the previous regime under former owner Robert Sarver, are suing the team. They allege that the current Suns owner, Mat Ishbia, has denied them access to internal records. The lawsuit was filed in Delaware on August 21 and a redacted version was made available on Wednesday. The lawyers who filed it represent Kisco WC Sports II and Kent Circle Investments. Andy Kohlberg is the founder, chairman, and CEO of Kisco Senior Living, and Scott Seldin is the president of Kent Circle Partners. Both men were minority owners under Sarver, who sold the Suns and the Mercury in 2023. Ishbia bought a controlling stake of 57% for $2.28 billion, with Sarver selling his 37% stake for $1.48 billion. At the time of the 2023 sale, 14 of the 16 partners in the Suns ownership group accepted Ishbia’s purchase offer at a valuation of $4 billion. Kohlberg and Seldin were the only two who did not sell.

“Our clients demanded to obtain records to which they are entitled as minority owners of the Suns,” wrote Michael Carlinsky and Michael Barlow of Quinn Emanuel, who represent the minority owners, in a statement on Wednesday. “They are concerned about the manager’s approach to minority owners and want more information about certain expenses and capital increases in which the manager has participated. Transparency with minority owners is not optional, and our clients believe it is critical to the success of the Suns.”

Michael Carlinsky and Michael Barlow, lawyers for the minority owners
The Suns declined to comment on the lawsuit, the sixth against the organization since November 2024. The other five were filed by current or former employees. Some of their accusations include discrimination, retaliation, harassment, and wrongful termination. In the complaint, the lawyers representing Seldin and Kohlberg claim that in September 2024, Kohlberg began negotiating a purchase with an advisor to Ishbia. Seldin, for his part, did not seek a purchase. Kohlberg’s conversations continued until 2025, with a request for a final response from Ishbia by June 1st. At that time, the lawyers say that Ishbia convened a capital call the next day, June 2nd, to “exert pressure and dilute” the ownership shares of the minority owners of the Suns. In the complaint, the lawyers representing Seldin and Kohlberg also claim that they learned that Ishbia “may have entered into undisclosed side agreements with other Suns members, including side deals, related to the capital call.” They say they have been unable to obtain information about the team’s expenses, and raised issues with the financing of the Mercury’s $100 million training facility, which the team presented in July 2024. They claim that Ishbia refused to provide information on how the facility was financed, except to say that the team “fulfilled its duties under the LLC Agreement”. On Tuesday, the lawyers representing the Suns and Ishbia sent a letter to the lawyers representing Kohlberg and Seldin. In the letter, the Suns say that Kohlberg and Seldin demanded that the Suns buy their stake in the ownership for $825 million, a figure that would put the team’s value at about $6 billion, a 60% increase over the value when Ishbia bought his controlling stake in 2023. The Suns say they have no obligation to buy them. The letter continues…
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