But Mikkelson says Snopes' very existence is in question.
After he and his former wife, Barbara Mikkelson, divorced, she sold her 50 percent stake in Snopes and its parent company to five officers of Proper Media — as individuals.
Proper Media is contending that it corporately owns half of Snopes and wants a judge to acknowledge that.
The company alleges David Mikkelson unfairly enticed a former Proper Media official to work for him, and in so doing secured that official's 6.7 percent voting stake, once more giving him effective voting control over Snopes. And it alleges Mikkelson inflicted "substantial economic loss" on Proper Media.
Mikkelson tells NPR he severed that contract for cause, and was entitled to do so.
Moreover, he argues that Proper Media as a corporation has no claim over Snopes' parent company, only the five individuals.
"The person in question, I did not lure or hire him away or entice him to leave Proper Media," Mikkelson tells NPR.
"They fired him immediately after I told them to their faces how valuable he was."
Will Snopes stick around in its current form?
Rate that "unproven."
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