The hearings have been held and almost all the briefs are in. It will be up to a federal judge in Nevada to decide if the Las Vegas Sun will ever see the light of print again. A ruling could come soon. In my view, it’s a loooong shot for the 76-year-old daily newspaper.
To recap: In 2019 the Sun, owned by founder kin Brian Greenspun, sued its business partner, the Las Vegas Review-Journal, owned by the mega-multi-billion-dollar Adelson family, claiming violations of federal antitrust laws. In 1989 the two papers had entered into a Joint Operating Agreement under which the RJ would handle advertising, printing and circulation for both papers while sending the Sun a small cut of cash flow to cover its editorial costs for an separate publication. In 2005 JOA arrangements were changed to make the Sun a daily ad-free section within the RJ. The JOA was set to expire in 2040.
All this happened amid the meltdown in newspaper revenues thanks to online sources like Craigslist, which siphoned away lucrative classified ads. In 2020 I estimated in this space that the Las Vegas JOA was losing $10 million a year. Remarkably, that figure was later confirmed by an RJ executive in open-court testimony. But it really was no surprise; even counting new digital subscribers, circulation of the RJ has declined 77% under Adelson ownership.
Earlier this year, Anne R. Traum, the patient federal district judge hearing the matter in Las Vegas (although she is based in Reno), gave the Sun the latest in a series of injunctions requiring the RJ to continue printing the Sun pending outcome of the federal litigation. But the RJ won a ruling from the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco voiding the injunction as well as the JOA. The reason: That 2005 change in the JOA required permission of the U.S. Attorney General, which was never given. After the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the Sun‘s appeal, the RJ daringly stopped printing the Sun on April 3. That led to the present flurry of legal activity in which the Sun, which is still online, seeks another must-print injunction. Two days of hearings took place last month. Greenspun testified he doesn’t have the wherewithal to finance the print product on his own. Continue reading

In 2024 I wrote in this space about how far-away reporters won a Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting about events that happened in the Las Vegas area. A team from Reuters writing about the nefarious business activities of Elon Musk described a suburban Las Vegas office of his Tesla devoted to talking Tesla buyers out of demanding better battery performance for their electric vehicles. That Reuters story is still online (
Six years ago I