The Times reports that Rangers has said that Fox’s claims about Campbell Danesh, 41, who was found dead at his home in Rochester, Minnesota last month, are to “distract” from her fraud.
It’s alleged that Fox set out a “circuitous route” in which the document was passed on by Campbell Danesh, his involvement in which Rangers has dismissed.The club said in a filing to a court in Miami this week: “KRF Capital protests too much, outlining the circuitous route that the investor deck took from Fox, to her friend Gordon Dickson, to a musician named Darius Campbell, to Mr Campbell’s unnamed ‘cousin in Scotland’.”Rangers added that whatever Fox’s planned “trajectory” was for the document, it “made it all the way from the United States to Rangers’ board in Glasgow”.“Rangers has no way of knowing how much further and to who else the investor deck has travelled,” the club added.Additionally, Rangers said that KRF is correct to say that the club is a public limited company whose shares can be bought and sold, however, no one has requested a copy of its shareholders register for approximately five years.“Rangers is unable to see how KRF Capital has identified enough shareholders to offer 25 per cent of the club up for sale,” the club added.In a witness statement Fox said that the only person she showed a draft of the document at the heart of the Rangers complaint to was a lawyer, Gordon Dickson, with whom she had a non-disclosure agreement (NDA).Fox has claimed that Dickson later shared the draft investor document with Campbell Danesh to provide “strategic feedback regarding the Rangers”.Dickson added in a witness statement: “Without informing me beforehand, Mr Campbell [Danesh] then shared the draft deck with his cousin in Scotland,.
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