Miomni lays out Dealware North’s ulterior motives in counter complaint

A legal battle between Miomni Games and Delaware North Games (dNG) has been brewing for some time. The former partners, who split after a fishy failure of Miomni’s sports betting platform, are now duking it out in the state of Delaware. Calvinayre.com has gotten a peak at the complaints and counter complaints, and received some inside analysis to what it all means.

DNG, owner of Wheeling Island Casino and Mardi Gras Casino, are the plaintiff in the case, and accuse Miomni of entering into a Joint Venture (JV) agreement to establish BetLucky, while giving DNG a picture of the platform that was “knowingly false.” Specifically, they argue that EnterG Software Solutions owned a part of this platform, and that Miomni never divulged this.

As we’ve covered before, Miomni have gone to court in the U.K. to prove that EnterG set them up to fail with DNG. EnterG was contracted to simply work on a part of the platform, but installed kill switches. Through a U.K. High Court Justice ruling, Miomni have been deemed the sole owner of their platform, and total control of their platform.

In their response to DNGs complaint, Miomni denied any false representation in the JV agreement. They pointed to a lucrative partnership prior to EnterG’s kill switches turned off operations, their U.K. ruling, and their intent to return to a profitable status quo.