An Irish hotelier, Qatari royals and a federal lawsuit involving a Beverly Hills hotel
As Irish hotelier Patrick McKillen tells it, he met the former emir of Qatar on a yacht in Doha to discuss a business opportunity in California, more than 8,000 miles away.
McKillen and Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani were discussing the purchase of a Beverly Hills hotel, which McKillen said he committed to managing and redeveloping.
Now that hotel — the Maybourne Beverly Hills — is at the center of a civil racketeering complaint filed in the Central District of California on Tuesday, in which McKillen accuses Qatari royals of orchestrating "a global scheme" to defraud him and his company of hundreds of millions of dollars for work completed on several luxury properties.
In the lawsuit, McKillen, who reportedly co-owns a whiskey distillery with U2 frontman Bono, said he and his team 'undertook a massive redevelopment effort' on the Beverly Hills hotel — where rooms go for more than $1,000 a night — over a two-year period, but were not paid millions of dollars allegedly owed for the work done.
McKillen, a citizen of Ireland and the United Kingdom, brought the complaint against senior members of the royal family, including Hamad bin Khalifa; and Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber Al Thani, the former prime minister known as 'HBJ'; as well as the family's agents, representatives and controlled businesses.
In the complaint, which encompasses claims already being litigated in courts around the world, McKillen alleges that the schemes against him and his company, Hume Street Management Consultants Limited, "are part of a years' long pattern of illegal racketeering orchestrated by the Qatari royals and are in line with a history of illicit, lawless actions."
McKillen's lawyers declined to comment.
'This is the latest of many vacuous claims made by Paddy McKillen and associated parties across multiple jurisdictions, all of which are either on-going or have been struck out by the courts," the Qatari-owned Maybourne Hotel Group said in a statement. "As with the other claims, we will contest this latest claim and prove the allegations to be entirely false.'
The federal lawsuit filed in Los Angeles is the latest action taken by McKillen in his long-running legal dispute with the Qatari royal family, a conflict that has made headlines around the world. He has filed actions in the U.S., France and the United Kingdom.
The Maybourne Beverly Hills is also the subject of a breach of contract lawsuit that was filed by McKillen's company in Los Angeles County Superior Court in 2022. That court denied a motion by the company that owns the hotel to force McKillen's company into arbitration. The decision is under appeal.
"It appears that Mr. McKillen would prefer to litigate in the press rather than continue the actions he initiated in the United States, UK, and France and await their outcome," Jason D. Russell, who is representing Hamad bin Jassim in California actions, said in an email. "Our client remains confident that these claims, like the myriad others he has filed, will be found to lack merit in a court or by an arbitrator."
Earlier this year, the High Court in London set aside McKillen's company's permission to serve a claim on Hamad bin Jassim outside of the jurisdiction, finding it had failed to show a real prospect of success, according to court documents. The claim, for around £3.6 million (about $4.8 million), was tied the development of a private home in London for Hamad bin Jassim. The company's appeal was refused earlier this month, according to British court records.
McKillen was also convicted in Paris earlier this year of being physically and verbally aggressive to a bailiff who was in his apartment in the city because of the alleged nonpayment of a loan to the Luxembourg-based Quintet Private Bank.
McKillen's lawyers told the Irish Times that their client 'vigorously denies any violence or any wrongdoing' against the bailiff and claimed the allegations against him were 'false." McKillen, who was reportedly fined €10,000 (about $11,377) over the incident, has appealed the conviction.
By the time the Qatari royal family approached McKillen about the California hotel in 2019, he said he had been working on projects with them for years.
According to the federal complaint filed in California, in 2004, McKillen acquired shares in a group of luxury hotels that came to be known as the Maybourne Hotel Group. Despite later selling his shares in the group to a company owned by Hamad bin Jassim, McKillen said he continued to manage and redevelop the Maybourne Hotel Group and its hotels at the direction of the royals.
Hamad bin Khalifa later acquired an interest in the Maybourne Hotel Group, according to the complaint.
McKillen said he and his company had been tasked with the management and redevelopment of the refurbishment of a Manhattan mansion owned by Hamad bin Jassim in 2018; the construction and development of a new Parisian hotel on the site of the historic Îlot Saint-Germain building in 2019; and the management and redevelopment of the newly branded Maybourne Beverly Hills hotel in 2019.
McKillen alleges that for each of those projects, the Qatari royals told him he would be compensated through fees for services performed, but that at some point, 'the Qatari Royals decided, in secret, that they would not, in fact, be compensating Mr. McKillen or HSMC.' McKillen alleged in the complaint that he and his company were strung along 'under false representations' that they would be paid.
The complaint detailed the October 2019 meeting on a yacht in Doha, Qatar, between McKillen and Hamad bin Khalifa to discuss the opportunity for the royal family to acquire the California hotel, then known as the Montage Beverly Hills.
McKillen said he presented a vision for the hotel to Hamad bin Khalifa and 'gave his commitment to manage and strategically redevelop' it. A holding company owned by Hamad bin Khalifa purchased the hotel later that year, according to the complaint.
In the complaint, McKillen said a representative of the family confirmed that he and his company would be compensated with fees paid for work performed on the hotel. During the next two years, McKillen said he and his team transitioned the hotel to the Maybourne brand and led the hotel's development and management.
In July 2021, according to the complaint, McKillen submitted a fee proposal to an advisor to the Al Thani family, stating that his company was owed $6 million in project management fees on an annual basis, to be paid quarterly, from January 2020 to January 2025. That proposal was 'met with stonewalling by the Qatari Royals,' the complaint alleges. After months passed with no payment, McKillen said, he wrote a letter to Hamad bin Khalifa and Hamad bin Jassim telling them about the refusal to pay him fees owed and stating that he could no longer work on the project.
McKillen later sent an additional invoice for $12 million in project management fees for work performed in California in 2020 and 2021, according to the complaint. He alleges that none of those fees had been paid.
The Qatari royals are facing a separate legal battle over the Maybourne Riviera, after French authorities sued them for allegedly breaching planning and environmental regulations and illegally building on land exposed to 'seismic risks," according to an Irish Times article. The newspaper reported that, at a recent hearing, a representative for the Al Thani family blamed McKillen.
McKillen told that news outlet that the alleged breaches occurred two years after he was fired from the project in April 2022.
'The damage was done after we left," he told the outlet. "The French state isn't suing me, it's suing the Qataris.'
Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Conservative outlet says WNBA denied them press passes to games
Anti-trans 'activist' Riley Gaines and the Fox-owned sports news outlet OutKick claim they are being unfairly targeted by the WNBA. Gaines and OutKick insist they were denied press credentials for two recent Atlanta Dream games and allege that the WNBA is trying to suppress their reporting. Advertisement Gaines, who never became a professional swimmer after leaving college, rose to fame among Republicans after publicly targeting trans former NCAA swimmer Lia Thomas and now has an OutKick podcast where she frequently talks about trans athletes in women's sports. Recently, she has been laser-focused on the WNBA's Brittney Griner, claiming that the Atlanta Dream star center called Indiana Fever point guard Caitlin Clark 'trash' and a 'f*cking white girl' based on Gaines' lip-reading from footage of the game where Griner's statements couldn't be heard. Gaines also implied that Griner didn't deserve to be rescued from a Russian prison back in 2022, Them reported. It's this allegation that Gaines says the WNBA is trying to cover up by keeping her from attending games as press. In an Instagram post over the weekend, Gaines claimed that the WNBA was 'self-imploding' and was attempting to 'suppress any uncomfortable inquiries.' Advertisement Sports writer Jemele Hill disputed Gaines' version of the game, writing on X that Clark wasn't even part of the play Griner was seemingly frustrated by, and that she was actually talking about the referee and said 'trash' and 'f*cking wack call.' 'I get that your whole personality is caught up in stuff like this, so you don't care about spreading misinformation,' she wrote. Gaines and OutKick, which is owned by the Fox Corporation that also owns Fox News, claim that the WNBA is targeting them because they are the only ones reporting on the supposed things Griner said about Clark. The meritless claims about Griner made by Gaines and OutKick have fueled the flames of hate that Black players like Griner and Angel Reese have experienced from right-wing commentators, social media, and even WNBA fans who have been heard making racist comments at a game . Advertisement OutKick attempted to gain press credentials for the Dream's game against the Los Angeles Sparks on May 27 and a second game against the Connecticut Sun. The outlet told Fox News that they were denied access in an email from the Sun, where they were told, "Unfortunately, we cannot accommodate your request for a media credential for Connecticut Sun vs. Atlanta Dream on Friday, June 6. Due to very limited space, priority is given to those that are associated with outlets that have consistently covered the organization for previous seasons." Gaines has turned her ultra-conservative views into a career, becoming a paid 'culture war' speaker. According to GLAAD , Gaines' anti-trans hate is well-documented. She has declared a 'Real Women's Day' holiday, was part of a lawsuit to challenge trans eligibility in college sports, launched the Project BOYcott campaign to 'celebrate' female athletes who refuse to compete against trans women and girls, and travels nationwide speaking at panels advocating against trans people. She is also currently embroiled in a controversy with Simon Biles, after Biles defended trans athletes in the face of Gaines' misgendering and criticizing a trans high school athlete.

Miami Herald
4 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Walmart analysts reboot stock price targets on credit card deal
Look up, look down, Walmart (WMT) is all around. First, we'll go high. The world's largest retailer, which has a store within 10 miles of 90% of the U.S. popuation, recently said it would expand its drone delivery service through Alphabet-owned (GOOGL) Wing. The expansion will reach customers from 100 stores in Atlanta, Charlotte, Houston, Orlando and Tampa within the coming year. Don't miss the move: Subscribe to TheStreet's free daily newsletter With the expansion, Walmart's drone deliveries will be available in five states: Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and Texas. "As we look ahead, drone delivery will remain a key part of our commitment to redefining retail," Greg Cathey, senior vice president of Walmart U.S. Transformation and Innovation, said in a statement. Meanwhile, the "Tonight Show"'s Jimmy Fallon hosted Walmart's annual meeting, which also included such musical acts as the Killers, Noah Kahan, Camila Cabello and Post Malone. Walton Goggins, who is appearing in Walmart's new ad campaign, and Chris Paul, guard for the NBA's San Antonio Spurs, also showed up. "Walmart is No. 1, so shove it, Target," Fallon sang, digging at one of the company's key rivals. "There is no place I would rather be on Friday at 8 a.m." Walmart President and CEO Doug McMillon told the audience that the company wanted "to be a lab of opportunity," the Arkansas Democrat Gazette reported. Bloomberg/Getty Images "The real magic happens with the combination of our people and technology," he said. ""We love people and we embrace change." More Retail Stocks: Halloween retailer sounds warning consumers need to hearTarget expands same-day delivery to 100s of retailersWalmart makes surprise cuts as it looks at tariff price hikes And then there was the news that Synchrony Financial (SYF) and OnePay, a fintech majority-owned by Walmart, would launch a new credit card program. That's scheduled to go live in the fall. OnePay, which Walmart created in 2021 with the venture firm Ribbit Capital, will handle the customer experience for the card program through its mobile app. In 2023, Walmart sued Capital One to end their credit card partnership early, alleging that McLean, Va., financial services company was not fulfilling its contractual obligations. A federal judge ruled in Walmart's favor, but Capital One was evaluating its right to appeal. The companies settled last year and the lawsuit was dismissed. The Walmart card program had 10 million customers and roughly $8.5 billion in loans outstanding last year, when the partnership with Capital One ended, according to Fitch Ratings. TD Cowen noted that Synchrony would not purchase the existing Walmart card portfolio from Capital One (COF) , so this new program will have to be built from scratch, according to The Fly. Similar to any new portfolio, TD Cowen said, it will likely be dilutive to holders at first, as Synchrony will need to build reserves, the analyst tells investors. However, while the investment firm said it would need more details from the Bentonville, Ark., retailer, the fact that Walmart, via OnePay, decided to come back to Synchrony indicates "favorable negotiating position/economics" for Synchrony in this deal. It views the plan as a positive for the financial services group. TD Cowen has a buy rating and $68 price target on Synchrony shares. Related: Walmart quietly launches new same-day delivery option in 5 more US cities Walmart shares are up 7% this year and up nearly 45% from this time in 2024. RBC Capital raised its price target on Walmart to $103 from $102 and affirmed an outperform rating on the shares. Having attended the company's Annual Associates & Shareholders Week meeting, the investment firm said management's tone and messaging were consistent with the Q1 earnings call in mid-May. Management said it was working on an artificial-intelligence-enabled offering that will reorder core grocery items when they're running low. The company is working to leverage AI to pair consumer-purchases data and smart-fridge technology, the firm said. KeyBanc raised its price target on Walmart to $110 from $105 and maintained an overweight rating after the annual meeting. The firm came away incrementally positive on Walmart's ability to drive share gains in 2025 and beyond; growth of e-commerce and advertising; and Walmart's ability to grow operating profit faster than sales over a multiyear horizon. Importantly, KeyBanc said that it continues to believe Walmart's digital business is exhibiting flywheel characteristics, where growth should drive additional growth. While it still sees potential risks to consumer spending as the Trump administration's tariffs start to flow through to store-shelf prices, the firm says Walmart is among the best positioned in retail. Related: Fund-management veteran skips emotion in investment strategy The Arena Media Brands, LLC THESTREET is a registered trademark of TheStreet, Inc.
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Sask. to put American-made booze back on the shelves
The Saskatchewan Liquor and Gaming Authority (SLGA) is resuming the purchase and distribution of American-made alcohol. All American alcohol products will now be available for purchase through all distribution centres and private liquor distributors in the province, said David Morris, a spokesperson for the corporation, in a statement to CBC on Tuesday. "This change gives Saskatchewan people the option to choose whether they want to buy these products or consider alternatives," Morris said. The federal government's 25-per-cent tariff on U.S. alcohol remains in effect. Morris said Saskatchewan consumers are still encouraged to support Saskatchewan and Canadian products when there is an option. The change comes nearly three months after the province reversed its decision to stop selling some American-branded alcohol products made in Canada. In March, the province announced a ban on all American alcohol products. It then walked back that ban for 54 brands that, while American-owned, are produced in Canada. It said in a statement the move aligned with other provinces and that it would focus its ban on alcohol produced in America.