August 1, 2010

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White Marlin Open Controversy Settled




 

By Shawn J. Soper, News Editor
Originally published July 18, 2008

SNOW HILL – The multi-party lawsuit asking the court to sort out who among the top three finishers in the blue marlin category of last year’s White Marlin Open should be paid the prize money was resolved this week when a Worcester County Circuit Court judge ruled the first-place finisher deserved to his money and the third-place winner was entitled to his prize money and the money earmarked for the now disqualified second-place winner.

Amid confusion over alleged failed or untimely polygraph tests, White Marlin Open organizers last September filed a complaint of interpleader in Worcester County Circuit Court essentially asking a judge to intercede on its behalf and assess who among the top three winners in the 2007 tournament’s blue marlin division should be awarded the several hundred thousand dollars in prize money at stake. The complaint was filed after it came to light there were irregularities in two separate polygraph tests taken by the second-place winner and the first-place winner did not take his required polygraph test until after the tournament’s award ceremony.

After months of legal posturing during which the case was made more complicated by the winners of the tuna division laying claim to all of the blue marlin category prize money, Worcester County Circuit Court Judge Thomas Groton on Monday granted a motion for summary judgment filed by angler Carl Hurlebaus essentially qualifying him as the first-place winner in the blue marlin division.

Groton also granted a motion for summary judgment filed by third-place winner Robert Belansen, disqualifying second-place winner William Mathews and the winners of the tuna division from any claim to the blue marlin division prize money. In the end, Groton ruled Hurlebaus was entitled to his $378,210 in first-place money, while Belansen was entitled to the rest of the blue marlin prize money because he was entered in the blue marlin Level F, or winner take all, entry level.

In short, Hurlebaus was awarded his $378,000-plus for catching the biggest blue marlin in the tournament, while Belansen, who came in third, was awarded the rest, including the $289,640 for second place and the $176,569 for his third-place blue marlin, giving him a combined $466,209.

White Marlin Open founder and organizer Jim Motsko was generally pleased with the judge’s decision and happy to put the complicated case behind him with the 2008 version set to begin in a little over two weeks.

“I’m glad it was resolved the way it was,” he said. “The judge’s decision removes any doubt about the integrity of the tournament and adds to the credibility of how the prize money is dispersed. We’re ready to move on with another White Marlin Open just around the corner.”

Motsko said the judge’s decision represented what tournament officials hoped for the outcome all along. He said the various claims by the many parties involved in the case left him with little choice but to ask a judge to sort it out in the interest of fairness to all involved.

“It basically went the way we would have done it,” he said. “I’m glad the judge did what he did. We would have liked to have resolved this ourselves without getting to this point, but the White Marlin Open was forced to defend ourselves when these claims were made.”

Belansen, fishing aboard the “Beast” out of Cape May, N.J., weighed the first qualifying blue marlin, a 567-pounder weighed on the tournament’s first day that briefly took the top spot in the standings. On Tuesday, of White Marlin Open week, Mathews, fishing aboard the “Gale Force II,” weighed a 590-pound blue marlin, jumping into first-place in the division and knocking Belansen and the “Beast” into second.
On Thursday of the tournament, angler Carl Hurledaus, fishing aboard the “Wireless,” hauled in a 632-pound blue marlin, taking the tournament’s top prize in the division and knocking Mathews and Belansen down to second and third place, respectively. While each of the winners participated in the tournament’s award ceremony and were photographed with their ceremonial “big checks,” the official prize money checks were not immediately awarded to the winners. Instead, tournament officials attempted to sort out who should be paid what after the third-place winner, Belansen, through his attorney, made a formal complaint demanding the first- and second-place money as well because of the alleged failure to pass the required polygraph test by the second-place winner, Mathews, and the untimely taking of the test by the first-place winner, Hurlebaus. Unable to reach a conclusion on their own, White Marlin Open officials filed a complaint for interpleader, asking the court to sort out the prize money mess.

According to court documents, tournament officials met with Hurlebaus at his boat, the “Wireless,” at Sunset Marina in West Ocean City on Saturday, Aug. 11 and told him he had missed the scheduled polygraph exam required of anglers who win more than $50,000 in prize money in the tournament. According to court documents, tournament officials told Hurlebaus at the time it was no big deal and provided him with contact information for the tournament-approved polygraph test administrator and instructed him to arrange to take the test. Hurlebaus later took the test and passed, but the test was taken after officials received a letter from Belansen’s attorney on Aug. 13 demanding the first- and second-place prize money.

Groton ruled on Monday the untimely nature of Hurlebaus’ polygraph test did not warrant knocking him out of the first-place prize money. Attorney Hugh Cropper IV, who represented Hurlebaus in the case, said the judge got it right in terms of his first-place client.

“At the end of the day, Mr. Hurlebaus got his first-place money, which he was absolutely entitled to,” he said. “It was ridiculous that anybody challenged that. Now he did take the test 18 days after the end of the tournament, but there was nothing in his test to suggest he wasn’t entitled to his prize money.”

Cropper, who had the unique experience of representing both Hurlebaus, the first-place winner, and Mathews, the second-place winner, in the case said he felt Mathews was short-changed in the end result. Mathews did take the polygraph test on two separate occasions and there were “inconsistencies” each time according to court records, but in the end, it was an error in how he filled out his pre-tournament paperwork that sealed his fate, according to Cropper

“I really think the second-place winner, Mr. Matthews, really deserved to get his money,” he said. “Nobody ever accused him of cheating and there were no allegations of him doing anything wrong. His biggest problem was a clerical error in the way he filled out his paperwork. He registered as a mate and not as an angler, which is why he didn’t get his money in the end.”

Cropper acknowledged there were problems with Mathews’ polygraph test results, but said there was nothing in them to suggest he cheated in any way and, therefore, nothing to preclude him from winning the prize money.

“He did fail two separate polygraph exams, but there is a lot of dispute about that,” he said. “Those things aren’t infallible which is why they are not admissible in court in the first place.”

When all was said and done, one of the big winners in the case was the White Marlin Open itself, which avoided a protracted legal battle on the eve of this year’s tournament and resolved the issue of the blue marlin prize money equitably without dispersions cast on the integrity of the tournament.

“The judge basically said two things: the White Marlin Open was within its rights to schedule the polygraph tests when it saw fit, and the winner in the blue marlin division, Mr. Hurlebaus, was entitled to his first-place money,” said Motsko. “In the opinion of the White Marlin Open, we felt all along this was the fairest outcome.”

 

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