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A 19-year-old chess grandmaster is looking for $100 million in a government claim charging an opponent chess player and
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others obliterated his profession with misleading indictments of cheating, hoisting a contention that has irritated the chess world since September.
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Hans Niemann documented the claim Thursday in U.S. Area Court in St. Louis against chess best on the planet Magnus Carlsen,
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Magnus Carlsen swindled Hans Niemann during his success over Carlsen at the Sinquefield Cup competition in St. Louis.
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Hikaru Nakamura, an American grandmaster who is a persuasive streaming accomplice on Chess.com; and Chess.com chief Danny Rensch.
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Niemann is looking for harm from Carlsen; Carlsen's organization Play Magnus Gathering; online chess webpage Chess.com
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It claims the respondents cooperated to slander and criticism Niemann after his Sinquefield Cup win.
"Regardless of the lie of the Litigants' allegations, Respondents' malignant criticism and unlawful plot have, by configuration, annihilated Niemann's wonderful vocation thriving and destroyed his life," as indicated by the claim.
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Niemann says competitions have prohibited him, matches have been dropped and respectable chess schools won't recruit him over the fraudulent allegations.
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The claim fights Carlsen is trying to save his status as the "Lord of Chess" and
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to finish an arrangement with Chess.com to secure Play Magnus for almost $83 million.
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