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Joe Gibbs Racing Accuses Former Director of Stealing Trade Secrets

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Joe Gibbs Racing Accuses Former Director of Stealing Trade Secrets

Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) has launched a high-profile legal battle, accusing former competition director Chris Gabehart of stealing critical trade secrets as he prepared to depart the organization. The lawsuit claims Gabehart copied sensitive engineering data, proprietary performance analytics, and internal strategy documents before leaving for a new role in motorsports.

According to filings, the alleged data theft occurred shortly before Gabehart’s contract ended. JGR argues that the information taken includes years of work tied to car setups, race strategies, wind tunnel testing, and other performance-driving insights that give the team a competitive edge.

Gabehart, a longtime figure in the NASCAR world, has not publicly commented on the allegations.

Why It Matters

At the top levels of motorsports, data is everything. Teams invest millions to gain even the smallest edge, and any leak of that intellectual property can shift competitive balance. JGR claims that the materials taken could be used by rivals to replicate performance advantages that took years to develop.

While the dispute is national in scale, its implications reach deep into the larger sports technology landscape. Intellectual property protections—especially for analytics-driven organizations—are becoming increasingly important, and this case could set precedent for how teams defend their competitive data.

What’s Next

The case is expected to proceed quickly given the upcoming racing season. JGR is seeking both damages and an injunction restricting the use of any copied information. If the court grants the request, Gabehart and any new employer could face severe limitations on what data they may use moving forward.

This article is a summary of reporting by KRQE. Read the full story here.