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ownerLee, during a hearing before the New Jersey Casino Control Commission in 2008, referred to the news agency as "a really tawdry adult bookstore." Lee's comments were reported in a front page story published in The Press of Atlantic City on Sept. 21, 2008.Stuart Weiss, owner of the news agency, responded by suing Lee and Pinnacle. However, a state Superior Court judge dismissed the suit in 2011, concluding there was no defamation. The appeals court agreed, further noting that signs at the Atlantic City News Agency advertised "adult books, videos, and viewing rooms" among its products and services."Whether ACNA was a bookstore that sold adult materials, products and services, or an adult bookstore is insignificant given the undeniable underlying reality: ACNA was in the adult entertainment business," the court wrote in an 18 page opinion. "Lee's additional modifiers, 'really tawdry,' expressed his opinion, nothing more. Importantly, that opinion was grounded on the irrefutable fact that ACNA distributed adult books and videos."Kerry Andersen, a spokeswoman for Las Vegas based Pinnacle Entertainment, declined to comment on the ruling other than to say "the decision speaks for itself." An unidentified man who answered the phone Friday at the news agency said Weiss was unable for comment and then hung up.The court battle was rooted in Pinnacle's failed attempts to buy Weiss' business to create more space for a proposed $1.5 billion megacasino on the site of the old Sands Casino Hotel. Pinnacle abandoned the casino project in 2010.While the project was still alive, Pinnacle and Weiss'