Nevada court rejects bid to revive claim against UFC chief

FILE - UFC President Dana White speaks at a news conference in New York, Sept. 19, 2019. A Nevada Supreme Court panel has rejected an appeal in a legal battle between White and a Las Vegas man who went to prison for trying to extort White in a sex-tape case. (AP Photo/Gregory Payan, File) (Gregory Payan, Copyright 2019 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

LAS VEGAS ā€“ A Nevada Supreme Court panel has rejected an appeal in a legal battle between UFC President Dana White and a Las Vegas man who went to prison for trying to extort White in a sex-tape case.

A lawyer representing Ernesto Joshua Ramos in his breach-of-contract lawsuit against the mixed martial arts mogul said Monday he will ask the full seven-member court to reconsider the decision handed down Thursday by a three-justice panel.

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Attorney Ian Christopherson said he believes a U.S. District Court judge who in 2016 sentenced Ramos to 366 days in federal prison for the extortion attempt ruled that Ramos had a right to assert his claims against White.

Whiteā€™s lawyer, Donald Campbell, did not immediately respond to telephone and email messages seeking comment.

The state high court panel noted Ramos and White previously reached a nondisclosure agreement and said Ramos didnā€™t specify an error by a state court judge in Las Vegas who dismissed his claim.

The Supreme Court decision was first reported by the Las Vegas Review-Journal.

Ramos, a Las Vegas real estate agent and personal trainer, pleaded guilty to threatening to post on the internet video of his girlfriend having sex with White in a hotel room during an Ultimate Fighting Championship event in Brazil in October 2014. Ramos was accused of demanding $200,000 from White.

The federal judge overseeing the criminal case in 2015 had ordered prosecutors, defense lawyers and Ramos not to reveal Whiteā€™s identity while the case was open.

Ramos filed the state court lawsuit against White in April 2020 ā€” revealing Whiteā€™s name as the victim of the extortion attempt and accusing White of failing to pay Ramos an agreed-upon $450,000 to keep Whiteā€™s name secret after the criminal case against Ramos was closed.

Whiteā€™s lawyers argued there was no agreement and called the lawsuit a new attempt to use the courts to extort money from White.

The Supreme Court panel also concluded that Ramos did not have a valid contract with White to compensate him in return for his silence.

ā€œWithout a valid contract, Ramosā€™ breach-of-contract claim necessarily fails and the district court properly dismissed it,ā€ the justices said.


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