Soros Fund Management is urging a Connecticut court to throw out claims by Connoisseur CEO Jeff Warshaw, arguing that his alleged deal tied to its acquisition of Audacy is too vague to be enforced.
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| Jeff Warshaw |
That lack of clarity is especially significant when it comes to the disputed 5% profit-sharing provision. SFM contends the parties never agreed on how profits would be calculated, when they would be realized, or how they would be distributed—critical details in what it describes as a complex distressed-debt transaction. The fund also dismisses Warshaw’s attempt to rely on industry norms, arguing he failed to show that the defendants were aware of or agreed to any such standards.
Warshaw, for his part, insists the agreement was real and enforceable, even if not every detail was spelled out. He points to more than 100 calls with Del Nin over the course of a year and an April 2024 meeting where he says he was reassured he would become Audacy’s CEO. His legal team argues the case hinges on factual disputes that should be decided by a jury, not dismissed at an early stage.
The court’s upcoming decision on the motion to strike will determine whether the case moves forward into discovery. If it does, the dispute could head toward a jury trial currently projected for 2027, setting up a closely watched legal battle with broader implications for how media deals—and informal agreements—are structured and enforced.


