Friday, May 22, 2026
Law

Suns Keep Getting Sued By Employees, Even After Sale to Ishbia

The Suns have been sued by four different current or former employees since Mat Ishbia took over from Robert Sarver as owner.

Ishbia
Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

The Suns were supposed to turn over a new leaf after Mat Ishbia bought the team from embattled ex-owner Robert Sarver for a then-record $4 billion in December 2022. But instead, the team keeps getting sued in federal court over allegations of workplace mismanagement, including racial discrimination, retaliatory firings and sexual harassment—with four suits filed since November of last year.

The most recent is from a former director of security who accuses the franchise of racial discrimination and claims it has serious security deficiencies. 

All of the suits have been filed in Arizona federal court and concern claims that allegedly took place under Ishbia’s leadership. Each of the plaintiffs is represented by the same attorney—Sheree D. Wright of IBF Law Group.

In an email to Front Office Sports, Stacey Mitch, the team’s senior vice president of communications, called the latest allegations “delusional and categorically false.”

Most recently, on May 13, Gene Traylor—the team’s former director of safety, security and risk management who is Black—accused the franchise of ignoring urgent security concerns that he says preceded multiple high-profile incidents, one involving the Suns’ CEO and another which saw former Phoenix Mercury player Britney Griner harassed at an airport. (Ishbia bought the Mercury from Sarver as well.)

Traylor claims that the teams’ arena is “highly vulnerable” and that he tried to alert his superiors. During multiple subsequent field tests undertaken by the Phoenix Police Department’s Homeland Defense, aimed at assessing the safety of public venues, plainclothes officers were able to enter the area with concealed weapons, including knives and handguns, the complaint says.

The complaint says Traylor’s insistence that these deficiencies needed to be addressed were “disregarded” as an attempt to question the authority of his higher ups, “rather than as good-faith efforts to protect the organization and its guests.”

Instead of viewing those, and other, instances as proof that Traylor’s proposed security measures should be implemented, the team initiated a plan to get rid of him, according to the lawsuit. Ultimately, he was demoted, not terminated. Traylor claims his demotion “was not performance-based but rather a direct result of his identity as an educated, accomplished Black professional who is respected in his field—qualities that intimidated Defendant and their leadership.”

Traylor’s suit comes not long after a Hispanic woman, identified in her complaint as Jane Doe, sued the team in April for discrimination, retaliation and a hostile workplace. Before that, a 46-year-old video engineer alleged in March that the team pressured him to change his employment status to contractor and then pushed him into unsanitary working conditions. The first suit of the bunch, lodged last November, came from the Suns’ former head of diversity, equity and inclusion, who alleged that the workplace environment did not improve at all after Sarver sold the team to Ishbia.

“The through line in these lawsuits is the credible, detailed, and independently corroborated testimony of multiple current and former Suns employees—across departments, races, and roles—who allege a culture of racial discrimination, retaliation, hostile work environments, and systemic failures in accountability,” Wright wrote in an email to FOS

Additionally, Wright said that others have come forward and she anticipates additional lawsuits once their claims have been properly vetted.

“I’m not the one creating these lawsuits—the Suns’ own internal conduct has brought us here,” she said.

The Suns, however, say Wright is essentially extorting the team with frivolous lawsuits. 

“The Suns will not be extorted and will seek to hold Ms. Wright and her accomplices fully responsible for their actions,” Mitch, the team spokesperson, said. 

As to how the organization has changed since Ishbia took over, Mitch said “there were significant challenges with the culture under the previous ownership. We’re very proud of the work we’ve done to create a new culture under the leadership of Mat Ishbia.”

Mitch also noted that Wright has been disciplined by the Supreme Court of Arizona two times for “committing numerous violations of the rules of professional conduct, and she is currently serving a two-year probation with the State Bar of Arizona.”

Wright defended her record, telling FOS that while it’s true she entered into a stipulated agreement, the Suns are misrepresenting the matter in order to smear her.

The terms of her probation, which are available on the State Bar of Arizona website, show that she was disciplined for offenses such as not submitting a timely court-ordered document, responding to a client’s request for information too slowly and failing to keep them “adequately appraised,” and failing to “withdraw properly from the representation.” Under the terms of the probation, Wright was required to pay the state bar’s costs and expenses, which amounted to a little more than $1,511.

“When organizations are unable to disprove the truth, they often attack the truth-teller,” Wright said. “That is exactly what’s happening here. Instead of defending themselves on the merits, the Suns have chosen to publicly smear a Black woman attorney while ignoring the voices of the people who were actually harmed. They’ve already attempted to settle these cases privately, so their public denials ring hollow.”

Sarver sold the Suns following a one-year suspension and $10 million fine he received after an investigation conducted by law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz, which found he “engaged in conduct that clearly violated common workplace standards,” including racist and misogynist behavior.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Sign up for
The Memo Newsletter

Get the biggest stories and best analysis on the business of sports delivered to your inbox twice every weekday and twice on weekends.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Fever Get Warning, No Fine Over Caitlin Clark Injury Report

A WNBA source confirmed that they were not fined.

Caitlin Clark’s Late Scratch Sparks WNBA Injury Report Questions

The Fever said she woke up with back soreness ahead of Wednesday’s game.

Will Wade’s LSU Is Pushing College Basketball to the Absolute Limit

The notorious coach has assembled a team of international pros.
Mark Cuban

Mark Cuban: ‘Betting Isn’t the Problem’

These wagers have been behind the recent MLB and NBA gambling scandals.

Featured Today

NFL Rivalries Are Made on the Field, Mocked in Schedule Release Videos

Every year, teams find new ways to one-up themselves (and their rivals).
Bart Swings/Falyn Fonoimoana/Avery Poppinga
May 14, 2026

OnlyFans Is Paying Pro Athletes What Their Sports Won’t

The adult-content platform is a reliable income source for niche athletes.
May 13, 2026

How Sports Graphic Designers Are Grappling With the Rise of AI Art

The release of ChatGPT 2.0 Images sparked a conversation among sports designers.
May 12, 2026

Collectible Cups Are Sending Sports Fans Into a Frenzy

The drink is secondary to the wild vessel it comes in.
Mar 16, 2025; Chester, Pennsylvania, USA; Competitive eater Joey Chestnut entertains fans during the game between the Philadelphia Union and Nashville SC at Subaru Park.

Nathan’s Hot Dog Contest Won’t Punish Chestnut After Guilty Plea

Chestnut was charged for misdemeanor battery at an Indiana bar.
May 18, 2026

Nike Under Fire Amid Growing Wave of Tariff Refund Lawsuits

Adidas and Lululemon also face proposed class actions from consumers.
May 19, 2026

Brian Flores Subpoenas Dozens of Teams As NFL Lawsuit Grows

The Vikings assistant is now seeking records from 31 teams.
Sponsored

Mark Cuban Peels Back the Curtain

Mark Cuban discusses sports ownership, the rise of NIL, and the evolving media landscape.
May 14, 2026

Tennis Lawsuit Sparks Courtroom Fight Over Grand Slam Credentials

Wimbledon and the French Open denied credentials to the PTPA.
May 11, 2026

NBA Cut Out Middleman From Lucrative Emirates Deal: Lawsuit

The NBA denies it had an agreement with Paul Edalat.
Mar 9, 2026; Tuscaloosa, AL, USA; Bowlero has rebranded itself as Lucky Strike. It is in the same location new to the mall on McFarland Blvd.
May 7, 2026

Lawsuit Claims Lucky Strike Built Bowling Monopoly

The company has allegedly caused bowling prices to triple in some cases.
Oct 8, 2025; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Professional boxer Floyd Mayweather attends the game between the Las Vegas Aces and the Phoenix Mercury for game three of the 2025 WNBA Finals at PHX Arena.
May 6, 2026

Floyd Mayweather Jr. Calls Off $100M Legal Fight With Business Insider

The boxer voluntarily dismissed his lawsuit.