The appointment of the Arbitration Panel for the 36th America’s Cup presented by Prada has been announced today by the
Defender, Emirates Team New Zealand and Challenger of Record, Luna Rossa Challenge in accordance with the requirements
of the Protocol governing the event.
As in previous editions of the America’s Cup, the role of the Arbitration Panel will be to resolve off-the-water
disputes, whilst being responsible for the interpretation of the Protocol and other specific areas of rule compliance.
The three person panel consists of:
David Tillett (AUS) - Chairman
Dr. Henry Peter (SUI)
Graham McKenzie (NZL)
All three are respected lawyers who have experience working with previous America’s Cup adjudication bodies and bring
considerable acumen to their roles as panel members.
Background
David Tillett - Chairman
David is a Member of the Order of Australia and was awarded the Australian Sports Medal for Services to Yachting in
2000. He has a long list of governance roles in sailing, including three times being chairman of the Olympic Games Jury
and serving on the Volvo Ocean Race juries (twice as Chairman). He has been involved as an umpire and member of the Jury
at six previous America’s Cups, twice as Jury Chairman. A member of the World Sailing Council and Constitution
Committee, he is also a previous Chairman of the Racing Rules Committee.
Dr. Henry Peter
A partner in a large Swiss law firm and a professor at the University of Geneva, he specializes in corporate and sports
law, fields in which he is an academic author and often acts as an arbitrator. Vice-chairman of the Swiss disciplinary
chamber of the Swiss Olympic Association in charge of doping cases, he is also on the board of the Swiss Arbitration
Association and the Sanction Commission of the Swiss Stock Exchange. He has previously served on an America’s Cup Jury
and twice been a member of the America’s Cup Arbitration Panel (once as Chairman).
Graham McKenzie
A long-standing member of the New Zealand legal and corporate governance fraternity, he has previously served as a
member of the America’s Cup Arbitration Panel and the America’s Cup Jury (three times) and was on the independent panel
advising the New York Supreme Court during the litigation leading up to the 2010 America’s Cup Deed of Gift Match.
Currently a member of the World Sailing Constitution Committee and their Ethics Commission.