Riot Games has banned Griffin director Cho Gyu-Nam and head coach Kim “cvMax” Dae-Ho permanently from all business activities related to the game developer. Riot also fined Griffin $85,000 in the aftermath of its investigation into Seo \u201cKanavi\u201d Jin-hyeok’s contract.<\/p>
The case is also now under formal criminal investigation in South Korea, according to Riot’s statement<\/a>.<\/p>
Last month, Griffin competed at the 2019 League of Legends <\/em>World Championship without their head coach, cvMax, who was removed from the team right before the tournament. Internal tensions didn’t seem to ease when the dismissal of director Cho Gyu-Nam<\/a> was announced two weeks after. <\/p>
Seo Kyung-jong, the CEO of Griffin\u2019s parent company, Still8, announced that an investigation would be conducted with Riot once Worlds ended. On Oct. 29, Riot released updated elements of the investigation<\/a>, conducted both by the publisher and the Korean Esports Association (KeSPA), that mainly involved the contract proposal that Griffin player Kanavi received from the China-based team JD Gaming. <\/p>
Related: Faker extends his contract with T1 until 2021<\/a><\/strong><\/p>
As for the judicial investigation, some elements were revealed<\/a> by Ha Tae-Kyung, a member of South Korea’s National Assembly, earlier today. They indicate that Griffin’s law firm, VEAT, forged an agency seal to pretend that the transfer contract was made that respected international laws and to trick Kanavi and his parents into signing it. Former director Cho Gyu-Nam also allegedly threatened Kanavi’s life to get his signature, according to the report.<\/p>