Particle.news
Download on the App Store

France Reaffirms No Permanent Charters as Plaintiffs Rest in NASCAR Antitrust Trial

The case shifts to NASCAR’s witnesses following testimony that the 2024 charter offer set a midnight deadline without granting permanent rights.

Overview

  • Chairman Jim France testified he has not changed his position against permanent, or evergreen, charters despite pleas from top owners.
  • Commissioner Steve Phelps described two years of hard negotiations, said a $720 million annual team ask would have bankrupted NASCAR, and noted the new deal pays teams $431 million a year from a $1.05 billion media package.
  • Richard Childress told jurors he felt forced to sign the 112‑page offer by a same‑day deadline and said his team would have gone under without outside business income.
  • Economist Edward Snyder testified the plaintiffs are owed $364.7 million and that chartered teams were shorted $1.06 billion from 2021–24, claims NASCAR says its own experts dispute.
  • Judge Kenneth Bell extended juror hours to speed the trial, the plaintiffs rested after France’s testimony, and NASCAR began its defense with expected witnesses including Rick Hendrick and Roger Penske.