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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Settlement reached for Sonics’ move

Associated Press

OKLAHOMA CITY – Clay Bennett’s ownership group has reached a final settlement with the city of Seattle allowing the former SuperSonics franchise to move to Oklahoma City.

Attorneys filed a document Tuesday in federal court in Seattle, noting that the parties had agreed to pay their own court costs after reaching the settlement.

Bennett announced last month that a settlement was being negotiated that would involve him making a payment of as much as $75 million to Seattle to get out of the final two years of a lease at KeyArena.

At that time, he had expected the settlement to be finalized by Aug. 1. Instead, a time extension was sought from the court and terms weren’t reached until now.

Seattle City Attorney Tom Carr said in an e-mail to the Associated Press that the city had reached an agreement superseding the memorandum of understanding the parties reached on July 2.

“It’s a more detailed agreement on the same principles,” Carr wrote in the e-mail.

The initial memorandum called for Bennett to pay $45 million to the city of Seattle to break the lease, and make another $30 million payment if the city doesn’t have a new NBA team within five years despite the Washington Legislature approving funding for a new arena by the end of next year.

That agreement also allowed Seattle to retain the rights to the SuperSonics’ name, logo and team colors. The NBA hasn’t yet announced what the Oklahoma City team will be called, and Bennett has refused to confirm a television station’s report that the name would be “Thunder.”

The federal court didn’t release terms of the final settlement, and Carr didn’t immediately have them available. Dan Mahoney, a spokesman for Bennett, did not immediately return a telephone call from the Associated Press.