WASHINGTON – A New Jersey state judge on Friday punished Vikings owners Zygi and Mark Wilf and their cousin, Leonard Wilf, with $103 million in damages, fees, interest and expenses for defrauding and deceiving business partners in the operation of an apartment complex in the New Jersey suburbs of New York City.
Judge Deanne Wilson ordered the Wilfs to post a $110 million bond by Jan. 8 that will be held for three years or until they exhaust their appeals in the long-running case.
Wilson also allowed the Wilfs to file a second appeal of her order that their personal wealth be made public as part of the suit.
"If the appellate court denies that appeal, we'll be able to disclose their wealth in mid-February," said Alan Lebensfeld, the lawyer for Josef Halpern, who was awarded roughly $40 million in judgments. Halpern's sister and co-plaintiff, Ada Reichmann, was awarded roughly $63 million.
"On the merits [the Wilfs' personal wealth] should be disclosed, and we believe it will be," Lebensfeld said.
The case still has "a long way to go" before any potential payout, he said, but he felt "a tremendous sense of relief" that Wilson had entered an order in a case that had its beginnings in 1992.
The Wilfs' legal team leader, former New Jersey Attorney General Peter Harvey, promised a comprehensive appeal of what he called "a number of serious errors" by the judge.
"Many of her rulings are without precedent," said Harvey, who now works in private practice. "She has created her own rules."