ONLINE GAMBLING COMPANY SUES INTABILL
19 June 2009
Australian entrepreneur Tzvetkoff hit with
A$52 million lawsuit
The Australian newspaper Courier-Mail this week reports
new developments in the financially troubled Intabill
payment processor debacle (see previous InfoPowa
reports) including the news that the man behind Intabill,
the 25-year-old entrepreneur Daniel Tzvetkoff and his
partner Sam Sciacca (38) are being sued for A$52 million
by the Aruba registered online gambling company Kolyma
Corporation AVV - owner of the world's second largest
online poker operation Full Tilt Poker.
The
Courier-Mail reports that the massive lawsuit is the
latest in a series of blows in recent months for the
young entrepreneur and his troubled company, an online
billing, payments and fraud-detection system which
helped him and partner Sciacca rapidly build a business
empire at one time worth an estimated A$120 million.
Kolyma Corporation AVV is suing Intabill
Incorporated for Full Tilt and other payments which
Kolyma says were not passed on.
Kolyma was one
of the biggest clients of Intabill, which is based in
Brisbane, Australia, and it is seeking payment of an
alleged debt of $US43 million ($A52.75 million) plus
interest, which it claims has been increasing at $US13
532 a day (about A$16,590) since May 25.
The
action, lodged in the Supreme Court in Brisbane on May
25, names as defendants Intabill, which is registered in
the British Virgin Islands tax haven, and the
Australian-registered holding company BT Projects. It
also targets Tzvetkoff and Sciacca individually, saying
they gave a guarantee to pay Kolyma money claimed to be
owed.
Tzvetkoff told Australian weekend media
that the action would be defended but that he could not
comment further.
Intabill had more than 5000
customers in 70 countries, the Courier-Mail reports. It
is understood that about half its revenue came from
businesses linked to online gambling operations, with
fees from just one operator topping more than A$150 000
per day.
In April this year, Intabill laid off 96
employees - keeping about 20. Tzvetkoff blamed market
conditions and increased loan funding costs at the time
(see previous InfoPowa reports).
In May, Intabill
withdrew a multimillion-dollar sponsorship of the Team
IntaRacing V8 Supercar team, announced only months
earlier.
Commenting on he current status of the
company to the Courier-Mail, Tzvetkoff said: "We are
continuing to work to rebuild during these tough times."
Tzvetkoff was raised in Brisbane's southern suburbs
by a school teacher mother and a father who runs weekend
markets. Benefiting from the boom times of his business,
he drove a black Lamborghini Gallardo with the number
plate BALLER and owned a Ferrari 599, an Audi S6, Range
Rover and a Ford GT40. He had a luxurious boat, used
chartered private jets and also was part-owner of the
Zuri Lounge celebrity nightclub in Brisbane.
It
is understood the boat and most of the cars have been
sold.
A year ago, Tzvetkoff emerged as the
mystery buyer of the $27 million half-built mansion on
"millionaire's row" at Mermaid Beach, which was formerly
owned by tourism tycoon Tony Smith.
The property,
spread over four waterfront lots, was to be a family
home for Tzvetkoff, his fiancee Nicole Crisp and their
son Hugo, now aged two, however the property is still
unfinished and they have not moved in yet.
Tzvetkoff's partner Salvatore "Sam" Sciacca is a lawyer
with a background in commercial and corporate work,
including e-commerce. He is a cousin of former federal
minister for veterans' affairs Con Sciacca, and has kept
a much lower profile than Mr Tzvetkoff.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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