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Pacers owner says sister-in-law has no stake in team

INDIANAPOLIS -- The owner of the Indiana Pacers has asked a court to declare that his late brother's estate and widow have no financial stake in the team.

That's according to wording in a Hamilton County court document that The Indianapolis Star reported was meant to be redacted but instead was visible.

The court has scheduled an Oct. 16 hearing on the request from Pacers owner Herb Simon to keep documents on the matter under seal. He argues that public release would create "significant risk of substantial harm" to people who signed a confidential settlement in 2012 pertaining to Melvin Simon's estate.

The brothers, who became billionaires from their Simon Property Group shopping mall business, owned the Pacers together from 1983 until months before Melvin Simon's death in 2009, when an agreement transferred full ownership to Herb Simon.

Melvin Simon's widow Bren is in litigation trying to recover more than $21 million in federal taxes she paid, saying the IRS improperly interpreted as a gift the $83 million that her husband received from the Pacers ownership reorganization.

The visible wording from the Herb Simon document where redactions were intended showed up in Bren Simon's request to move the case to federal court in Indianapolis.

It says Herb Simon wants a legal finding that "Melvin Simon Family Enterprises Trust, Bren Simon, nor any of their successors, assigns, owns or has any right, title, interest, or expectancy in or to Pacers Basketball, LLC."

Alan Brown, an attorney for Bren Simon, declined to discuss the case in more detail.

"If they [the court] say it's confidential, we can't walk through that stop sign," Brown said. "I just can't get into the merits of the complaint in any way."

Parts of court documents not redacted included Herb Simon noting that since 2009 Bren Simon has been in litigation with Melvin Simon's children regarding his estate. The filing said Herb Simon has "consistently and earnestly" tried to help Bren Simon and her stepchildren resolve the dispute.

"Herb has done so in an effort to uphold the Simon name, to preserve some measure of family harmony, and to facilitate the charitable giving that his brother Melvin intended under his estate plans," the court document said.